Boreham wrote more than 50 books and has been hailed as one of the greatest Christian essayists of all time. His work has been praised in recent days by Billy and Ruth Graham, Ravi Zacharias, and Warren Wiersbe. While almost all of his works are rare and out of print, some selling for hundreds of dollars, we are working to make more of them available through the Kindle store for modern readers.
"Of the books that have played the greatest role in molding me, I count many volumes by especially one writer: F. W. Boreham. He authored more than fifty books of essays and pastored congregations in New Zealand, Tasmania, and Australia. He was not the classical preacher, not even a profound, deep preacher, but he was marvelous at seeing beauty in the simple things of life. He heeded John Wesley's charge to young preachers to blend simplicity with sublimity, 'the strongest sense in the plainest language." —Ravi Zacharias
There is nothing really to be said that I have not already said in one of my Boreham reviews. I adore this man's mind and writings. Suffice it to say that there is one essay in here which deals with the messages found in both Shakespeare's As You Like It and Hugo's Les Miserables, so, there ya go. I will just go ahead and record the quotes I want to remember readily. (And, yes, I really do pick and choose, this is just a fraction of what I loved and marked in this volume.)
"It is worth remembering that victory lies not in accumulation but in exhaustion."
"Clocks were only invented after man's exclusion form Paradise, and are a badge of his fallen condition."
"The dog that follows everybody is no good to anybody."
"John laid great stress on the fact that you can widen the mouth of a river until it is so broad - and so shallow - as to be incapable of navigation. 'On the whole,' John said, impressively, 'it is better to be narrow - and deep.'"
"It seemed that the spiritual life of the church was decaying as the social life of the church was advancing."
"The charm about Simeon was that, though he had lived many years, he had not begun to grow old."
"Holiness is hopefulness. Those who really enter the kingdom of heaven become - so said the King of that Kingdom - like little children; and a little child is always confident that, come what may, some wondrous day the ship of which he has dreamed so wistfully will certainly come home."
"It is thousands of years since it was discovered that the stars make an excellent medicine for homesick hearts."
"The slothful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting. If this means anything, it means that a man is what he is at home. However strenuous he may be abroad, if he is slothful at home, you must write him down as a slothful man. No vigour on the hillside will atone for lethargy at the fireside."
"The slothful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting. If any man is lost at last, he will be lost through sheer, downright laziness in some form or other. Indeed, he as good as says this statement that it is only the incorrigibly slothful man who fails to appropriate and enjoy the wealthy spoils of life's great chase."
"When he was on his deathbed a clergyman went to him and asked him of there was anything he would like to say or any message he wanted to deliver. 'No,' answered the doctor, 'except that through life I think I have always closed the gates behind me!'"
"An age of persecution was always an age of rapid religious development."
"But we are all visitors from another world, and we are all being hoodwinked by the tricks and illusions of this one. Time seems so real and eternity so shadowy, the world is so loud and the world-to-come so silent, that we jump to the conclusion that things are what they seem. Paul knew better. No practical joke deceived him. 'We look,' says he, 'not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal.'"
"A fool may easily mistake a mosquito on the telescope for a monster on the moon. His perspective is all at sea, that is all."
"So many people explore mosques and cathedrals and minsters and temples; so few see the wonders of an insect's wing; the loveliness of a lily's petal, the charm of a gracious soul; and - ah, yes! - so very few fall in love with the chiefest among then thousand and the altogether lovely! But the wise understand! Bulk never deceives them. They scorn the extra cubit. They know the secret of the microscope."
"As a rule, one great law holds true. It is this: when you have discovered something essentially human, you have generally discovered something essentially divine."
"Like the bird Who, pausing in her flight Awhile on boughs too light, Feels them give way beneath her, and yet sings, Knowing that she hath wings." -Victor Hugo
"He knows that the only religion that has ever moved profoundly the lives of men is the religion of a divine heart that was broken for the healing of the world."
"It often happened, in those archaic days when courts and castles kept their fools, that the fool was the only wise man on the premises."
"He is no true Christian who is not the world's fool!"
"Man is by nature a believer: and, if you make it hard for him to believe the things that are best worth believing, he will still believe; but he will believe in the things that are least worth believing."
"Why gentlemen," said Napoleon, "it seems to me that you make up for believing nothing in the Bible by believing all the folly outside it!"
"It is sad enough to see men turn from the Church, from the Saviour, from the Cross; it is a thousand times sadder so see them, forsaking these things, become infatuated with frivolities and baubles."
"Homesickness is the only kind of sickness from which the world has very greatly benefited."
"The joy that made the Cross bearable to the Crucified was the joy of knowing that its anguish would turn the hearts of His prodigals towards Home."
Many Christian books are faithful, logical, and persuasive, but rarely are they fun. This book by a twentieth century Australian preacher is an exception. This collection of essays takes you on a meandering journey through stories and anecdotes that is a delight, not a trudgery, to read. Particular highlights for me were the essays: Dominoes, Janet, and the King's Jester.