Thank you for visiting SNEWPapers!
Sign up free
Literary
May 31, 1805
Berkeley And Jefferson Intelligencer
Martinsburg, Berkeley County, Virginia
What is this article about?
A prose reflection extolling religion as a soothing balm for the wounded spirit, a guide through life's miseries, and a means to elevate human nature toward eternal divine realms, contrasting despair without it.
OCR Quality
98%
Excellent
Full Text
RELIGION.
Religion is the only balm for a wounded spirit. It is the only sure staff for a weary traveller through this wilderness of misery and sin. What an inexpressible grace does it throw over the countenance and actions of its sincere votaries? It purifies, it adorns, it ennobles our nature. By it we are lifted far above the little considerations of an existence, short as the winter twilight, and unimportant as the faint vision of a distant star: We are led by its influence to contemplate "the first good, first perfect, and first fair:" and, as without the aid of a telescope the shipwrecked sailor, could never discern in the far-off horizon the vessel that is to bring him relief, but might abandon himself to despair; so without religion, man's views would be confined to a narrow circle of melancholy incidents and thoughts; and he might resign his mind to the dreadful idea, that the earth was his only home, and that death was an eternal sleep. But now he soars in the certainty to other worlds of endless duration, where he shall join his parents and his friends in the presence of a common God.
Religion is the only balm for a wounded spirit. It is the only sure staff for a weary traveller through this wilderness of misery and sin. What an inexpressible grace does it throw over the countenance and actions of its sincere votaries? It purifies, it adorns, it ennobles our nature. By it we are lifted far above the little considerations of an existence, short as the winter twilight, and unimportant as the faint vision of a distant star: We are led by its influence to contemplate "the first good, first perfect, and first fair:" and, as without the aid of a telescope the shipwrecked sailor, could never discern in the far-off horizon the vessel that is to bring him relief, but might abandon himself to despair; so without religion, man's views would be confined to a narrow circle of melancholy incidents and thoughts; and he might resign his mind to the dreadful idea, that the earth was his only home, and that death was an eternal sleep. But now he soars in the certainty to other worlds of endless duration, where he shall join his parents and his friends in the presence of a common God.
What sub-type of article is it?
Essay
What themes does it cover?
Religious
Death Mortality
Moral Virtue
What keywords are associated?
Religion
Faith
Spirit
Eternal Life
Divine Contemplation
Moral Elevation
Literary Details
Title
Religion.
Key Lines
Religion Is The Only Balm For A Wounded Spirit.
It Purifies, It Adorns, It Ennobles Our Nature.
We Are Led By Its Influence To Contemplate "The First Good, First Perfect, And First Fair:"
Without Religion, Man's Views Would Be Confined To A Narrow Circle Of Melancholy Incidents And Thoughts;
But Now He Soars In The Certainty To Other Worlds Of Endless Duration,