I do not wish to command so much as to persuade. I wish to induce people to see themselves as others see them, to regard what they are doing in reference to its far-off effects on the consciences of others, to cultivate a truer sense of proportion of things, to deal more with ideas than with the clothing of ideas; to pay more attention to the reason of a thing than to its antiquity; to remember that the chief danger that besets those who are pursuing a high object is to confuse means with ends; to examine themselves very fully, lest they confuse Christian zeal with the desire to have their own way.


Lecture at the Diocesan Conference (April 1899)


I do not wish to command so much as to persuade. I wish to induce people to see themselves as others see them, to regard what they are doing in...

I do not wish to command so much as to persuade. I wish to induce people to see themselves as others see them, to regard what they are doing in...

I do not wish to command so much as to persuade. I wish to induce people to see themselves as others see them, to regard what they are doing in...

I do not wish to command so much as to persuade. I wish to induce people to see themselves as others see them, to regard what they are doing in...