2 lines
1.3 KiB
HTML
2 lines
1.3 KiB
HTML
<p>Here is, 1. The great mischief-maker, and that is malice. Even where there is no manifest occasion of strife, yet <i>hatred</i> seeks occasion and so <i>stirs it up</i> and does the devil’s work. Those are the most spiteful ill-natured people that can be who take a pleasure in setting their neighbours together by the ears, by tale-bearing, evil surmises, and misrepresentations, blowing up the sparks of contention, which had lain buried, into a flame, at which, with an unaccountable pleasure, they warm their hands. 2. The great peace-maker, and that is <i>love</i>, which <i>covers all sins</i>, that is, the offences among relations which occasion discord. Love, instead of proclaiming and aggravating the offence, conceals and extenuates it as far as it is capable of being concealed and extenuated. Love will excuse the offence which we give through mistake and unadvisedly; when we are able to say that there was no ill intended, but it was an oversight, and we love our friend notwithstanding, this covers it. It will also overlook the offence that is given us, and so cover it, and make the best of it: by this means strife is prevented, or, if begun, peace is recovered and restored quickly. The apostle quotes this, <a class="bibleref" title="1Pet.4.8" href="/passage/?search=1Pet.4.8">1 Pet. 4:8</a>. <i>Love will cover a multitude of sins</i>.</p>
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