Gems written at the age of 15
Gleanings from the journal of
at the age of 21. He died in 1856, and was the son of Octavius Winslow.
every refined feeling. It is devoid of all sources of true happiness to its earnest seekers, and produces no end of evils, embittering the life of man, and ensnaring his heedless steps.
It is a field of conflict between two opposite powers.
The one winning his foes to his side by overwhelming love, and subduing them into perfect submission by the power of irresistible goodness.
The other, enlisting his adherents by the offer of false happiness, alluring them by spurious pleasures, only to disappoint their hopes, and when life has spun out its last thread of existence to engulf them
in eternal despair.
I am persuaded that a Christian cannot remain in worldly company, or be engaged in anything
worldly, without his heavenly mindedness being damaged, and his holy feelings and resolutions being vitiated and weakened.
Cheer up, tried and tempted Christian!
A blissful eternity will make up for all the crosses and trials, the bitters and woes of the present. Then
shall real happiness dawn upon your spirit, warming and delighting your soul through eternity.
Strive not for the world’s smiles; they are deceitful. And fear not its scorn while God smiles upon you.
Oh, how have I seen this in myself and in others! Friends whom I have most trusted have suddenly
grown cold and indifferent, freezing my affections by their unfaithfulness and wavering.
But, oh, has not this some end? Methinks I see it.
The world’s charms have too much allured my gaze from Jesus and fixed it upon its empty bubbles.
And was not this trial sent to deaden my affections to the world, and fix them upon something more
substantial? O yes, it was all for my good.
May I be weaned from them, and attracted to Jesus, finding the center of my happiness in leaning in sweet repose upon His bosom who never changes nor forsakes those who put their trust in Him.
How little do we value a blessing until it is takenfrom us; and yet how unconcerned and lifeless we are until stirred up by adverse circumstances. O how should we value every chastisement we receive!
that He chastises us.
The ungodly He leaves to themselves until their ternal punishment. But He watches over His children with the eye of a father, and all that He does is for their good now and hereafter.
O what a blessing to be one of His children, to have such a Protector, such a Friend! He is worth all the dearest friends the world can produce.
We shall soon leave our present abode, full of sin and full of sorrow, changeful as the wind. Friends
change, circumstances change, age changes; soon the light and joyous childhood of our youth begins
to taste the bitters of life, and his sincere and happy brow becomes wrinkled with anxiety and care; old age creeps on, and we apparently are insensible of it. But soon it will be over, and a happy eternity follows.
The Christian has his happiness to anticipate; the sinner his eternal misery to look forward to.
Oh, it is better to be at the disposal of God than at any moment to have the full control of ourselves!
heavenly Father to bring you back again to His bosom.
Look not for happiness in anything connected with the world.
I, as a youth, have done so, and have been disappointed.
There is no pleasure of any description, I am fully persuaded, that is not accompanied with some bitter.
God has wisely ordained that Christians in general should partake but little of this world’s enjoyments, that they may not make the world their home, but that, all their thoughts taken up with Christ, their eyes may be blind to its pleasures and enjoyments.
wonder and amazement when we arrive at heaven than another, it will be, first, that we ever got there; and second, the vast difference of the world we have left to the one we shall then enjoy!
And yet we are so mad and so blind as to fear to die, still clinging to this poor world! Sometimes in solitude I look forward and enjoy the anticipation of a better state.
Oh, if this should ever meet the eye of an afflicted child of God, whatever may be your trials, dry up
those untimely tears, brighten up that saddened countenance, and look forward with the confident
and blessed assurance of an eternity of bliss.
Your thoughts of affliction are not as God’s thoughts.
If your limited comprehension cannot take in the wisdom of all His plans with regard to you. What
you deem most unfavorable, God regarding as most beneficial. Yet thank Him, if He is weaning
you from this poor world, although the means He uses may appear to you most grievous.
In the matter of his salvation he has not to do with churches, or with opinions, or with creeds, but with God.
No sect, or church, or religion, can possibly be honoring to God which sets aside Christ and His
atonement, and lays its foundations in wretched SELF.
When it brings us near to Jesus.
When it fixes our wandering thoughts and desires upon One that is mighty; mighty not only to save,
but to make us happy in this dark valley of tears.
Oh, it compensates us for all the humblings and disappointments which we may experience.
’Sweet affliction, That brings Jesus to my soul.’
A glimpse of Jesus is a little heaven below.
Who would not part with the world’s honors, reputation, or wealth, to gain it? And yet we are so prone to fix our affections upon these poor baubles which must soon pass away.
Happy is he whose lot is cast with the tried, the poor, the humble of Christ’s flock, for there Jesus abides.
