Showing posts with label Farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Farming. Show all posts
Thomas Jefferson on Farming
Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: Farming, Thomas Jefferson | Posted On Wednesday, May 8, 2013 at 7:00 AM
"Those who labour in the earth are the chosen people of God, if He ever had a chosen people, whose breasts He has made His peculiar deposit for substantial and genuine virtue."
Thomas Jefferson
(Notes on the State of Virginia)
Chalres Spurgeon the Church Being God's Farm
Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: Charles Spurgeon, Farm Sermons, Farming | Posted On Thursday, June 7, 2012 at 9:00 AM
"The Lord has also made this farm evidently his own by cultivation. What more could he have done for his farm? He has totally changed the nature of the soil: from being barren he hath made it a fruitful land. He hath ploughed it, and digged it, and fattened it, and watered it, and planted it with all manner of flowers and fruits. It hath already brought forth to him many a pleasant cluster, and there are brighter times to come, when angels shall shout the harvest home, and Christ "shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied."
Charles Spurgeon
(From: Farm Sermons)
Charles Spurgeon on Farming
Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: Charles Spurgeon, Farm Sermons, Farming | Posted On Tuesday, June 5, 2012 at 9:00 AM
"Farmers should make brave Christians when grace renews them, for God is everywhere about them, and in his presence gracious souls are sure to thrive. Of old the Lord met men by the bush, the brook, and the well, and spake with them in the field, the threshing-floor, and the sheep-fold; and he still seems nearer in the country than in the grimy town. Never can the tiller of the ground open his eyes without learning something if he is willing to be taught. Weeds and plants, frost and sunshine, green shoots and yellow ears, drills and reapers, hedges and ditches, foxes and sheep, drought and flood, waggons and horses, harrows and ploughs—all reveal some spiritual mystery concerning God and our own souls. Surely those men should learn much who find a schoolmaster and a lesson-book in every acre which they cultivate."
Charles Spurgeon
(From: Farm Sermons)
Charles Spurgeon on Farming
Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: Charles Spurgeon, Farm Sermons, Farming | Posted On Monday, June 4, 2012 at 9:00 AM
"It is fit that farmers should have sermons gathered out of their own occupation, for it is one which, above all others, abounds in holy teaching; and, as it would be ill for dwellers in the Indies to go from home for gold and spices, so would it be unwise to leave the field and the plough in search of instruction. He who dwells at Newcastle wastes time when he goes far for coals; he who lives by the labour of the field will be foolish if he neglects the teaching of nature for the most glittering philosophy. Some of the mightiest of prophets and preachers came from the plough, and surely that must be a good college which has furnished such able divines. As all the world is fed by the produce of the farm, so may all men's minds find food in meditating upon the ways of God in nature and providence, as seen by the husbandman."
Charles Spurgeon
(From: Farm Sermons)
Charles Spurgeon on Farming
Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: Charles Spurgeon, Farming | Posted On Wednesday, January 25, 2012 at 8:00 AM
“Moreover, the farmer is in a very special sense made to see his dependence upon God from season to season. He has never done; his labour is never ending, still beginning; and his hopes are never all fulfilled. From the time he sows the seed to the day when he sees the corn in the ear he is every hour dependent upon the Lord for sunshine and shower; and even when the grain is ready for the garner a stretch of rainy weather will take his harvest from him and leave him mourning at the last. He can never count his profits till he has them in his pocket, and hardly then. This manifest, absolute, and daily dependence should help the good farmer to learn the lesson of faith right thoroughly. He must look up, for where else can he look? He must leave his business in the Lord’s hands, for who else can be his helper? Faith which is daily tried, and tried all the day long, has a fair opportunity of becoming unusually strong, and hence our agricultural Christians ought to be the strongest believers in the land. They have not of late been indulged with much temporal prosperity, but our hope is that a succession of adversities may have driven them to set less store by the world, to look more eagerly for the better portion, and to leave all things more believingly in the Lord’s hands. This will be good out of evil beyond all question, and such good we ought to look for. Sharp discipline should by this time have made good soldiers of our yeomanry. If it be so, the failing purse is more than recompensed by the enlarged heart: if our farmers are wiser men through their bad seasons, that will be better than being richer men.”
C. H. Spurgeon
(from: Farm Sermons)
Benjamin Franklin on Farming
Posted by Bluegrass Endurance | Labels: Benjamin Franklin, Farming | Posted On Thursday, November 17, 2011 at 8:00 AM
"Finally, there seem to be but three ways for a nation to acquire wealth. The first is by war as the Romans did in plundering their conquered neighbours. This is robbery. The second by commerce which is generally cheating. The third by agriculture the only honest way; wherein man receives a real Increase of the seed thrown into the ground, in a kind of continual miracle wrought by the hand of God in his favour, as a reward for his innocent life, and virtuous industry."
Benjamin Franklin
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