Quiet Hints to Growing Preachers

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Charles E. Jefferson 1901
English
  • 01 - Wherefore All This
  • 02 - A Mirror for Ministers
  • 03 - The Man of Macedonia
  • 04 - Which Door?
  • 05 - Starts Good and Bad
  • 06 - The Foremost of the Demons
  • 07 - Cowardice
  • 08 - Impatience
  • 09 - Clerical Hamlets
  • 10 - Despondency
  • 11 - The Value of a Target
  • 12 - Building the Tower
  • 13 - Selfishness
  • 14 - Dishonesty
  • 15 - Autocracy
  • 16 - Vanity
  • 17 - Discontent
  • 18 - Pettiness
  • 19 - Foolishnes
  • 20 - Meanness
  • 21 - Mannerisms
  • 22 - "Thy Speech Bewrayeth Thee"
  • 23 - Books and Reading
  • 24 - Near to Men Near to God
  • 25 - Eagles, Race-Horses and Plodders
  • 26 - Unconscious Decay
Charles Edward Jefferson was pastor of the Broadway Tabernacle in Brooklyn, New York for 33 years. In Quiet Hints, published in 1901, he provided guidance to young preachers on what we would today call ministerial deportment, an old-fashioned word that refers to how a man carries himself, how he presents himself, his manners, his bearing, his habits, and his whole approach to life. Jefferson wrote in short, pithy statements that encapsulate practical truth in just a few words. (Summary by MaryAnn)

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