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Word: thinks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...name Brookline and Jamaica Plain as desirable towns, not only because we believe that concerts given in those places are successful financially, but also because we think that the auspices under which concerts are given in those towns are of the best influence socially...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Petition of the Ereshman Musical Clubs. | 12/22/1892 | See Source »

...young pioneer going out to work goes because God sends him. He says: This is God's kingdom; I shall devote this day to the living God and I think he will put me through. I am to God as he is to me and I am with Him. He has left his peace unfinished and now he has sent me out to put the jewel of today in that particular archway...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 12/19/1892 | See Source »

After reading portions of the third and fourth Philippians, Dr. Hale said: We can't read far in Paul without entering into his joy in the Lord. We are to think of Paul as a university man, influenced largely as young men are by great respect for the past. At first submissive to the duties imposed upon him he began to chafe under the restraint, and later keeps referring to the joyful day that made him free...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Vesper Services. | 12/16/1892 | See Source »

Some one may urge here that consciousness is necessary. No man can use power unless he is conscious that he has it. This is true. Individuality and personality are necessary but they are very different from that self-consciousness which leads a man to think primarily of his own virtues. Peter. Paul and John may have been self-conscious before Christ came, but when He came His mightier personality transformed them. They did not lose their own personalities; they simply forgot everything except the message of this greater Power...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 12/12/1892 | See Source »

...partly through indifference real or feigned and partly through a false and perhaps unmanly feeling that the services, especially morning prayers, are a part of college life unimportant and not worth attendance. The average college man recognizes morning prayers as an institution which must be, but which he thinks have no place in his every day life, and that the time spent in attending them would be but a waste on his part. It may perhaps be too strong to apply this to college men in general, or to assert that they think attendance at prayers unmanly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/5/1892 | See Source »