Epiphanies

EPIPHANIES

[1] A government that taxes its citizens is incompetent; a competent government attracts all the resources it needs to sustain itself, without having to force its citizens to support it through their labors.

[2] A just and righteous judge pardons those who commit iniquity without realizing it, and, who upon discovering they have done wrong, are filled with guilt and regret; but a vindictive judge condemns those who commit iniquity, regardless of whether they were aware of what they were doing or not, and regardless of whether or not they felt remorse upon discovering the truth.

[3] A disloyal woman who expects love and then gets angry when she does not find it is like an idiot farmer who refuses to plant the seeds but still expects to produce a crop, and then gets angry when he has nothing to plow come harvest time; even the unlearned will say: “You fool! First plant the damn seeds!”

[4] Those who approach love as commanders approach war are but dogs chasing after their own tails, or fools trying to catch the wind.

[5] The only reason people seek after multiple partners, and to its extent, is to compensate for the degree to which they secretly feel unloved and unworthy; but those who feel most loved and worthy seek after but one.

[6] Wise are those who seek first after knowledge and understanding, for love and prosperity shall also be added unto them, and in exact relation to the stock of the resulting wisdom; but foolish are those who chase after money and sex as a substitute for the pursuit of knowledge, for poverty and loneliness shall surely come to be their closed ally.

[7] The wicked love to bestow great honors on those who practice evildoing, that they may be encouraged to continue in their follies; they also love to punish those who do good, that the righteous might turn from what is right and true and be converted into workers of iniquity. For the wicked feel foolish, unless those surrounding them act as stupid as they do.

[8] The ignorant man tries to win the love of his beloved by showering her with luxuries and pleasures, which, if she accepts them, work a penalty against her; but the wise man simply loves her to the inclusion of no other, and then there is no dissatisfaction left in her heart. Only in this way may he become her champion.

[9] Those who seek to put a wedge between their king and his queen destroy nations and peoples, and take peace and prosperity from them; for the state of the relationship between a king and queen is reflected in their entire kingdom.

[10] Only a man who rules over himself is fit to rule over others; otherwise he will oppress rather than serve.

[11] The advent of the Kingdom of God is like waiting to wed the noblest and fairest of maidens; it is both frustratingly painstaking, and yet gloriously exciting at the same time!

[12] There is no greater ecstasy than direct communion with the LORD; if even the most debauched heathen had but a small taste of its bliss, he would instantly seek to abandon the pleasures of the flesh and the love of money, glory and power, and commit himself to vanquishing these evils forevermore.

[13] He who knows and understands the causes and effects of the natural laws can predict the future as surely as the sun rises: wise men give him their ears that they may not fall into calamity, but that they may prosper; but fools deride him, and scoff at his every word; thus, they are rewarded for their deafness and stupidity with the fruits of their transgressions.

[14] The man who masters the focus and direction of his attention masters the use and function of his body, and the man who masters his body masters his environment; nothing is accepted within it without his consent.

[15] The fool who today confesses his foolishness is tomorrow’s wise man for who would willingly continue to live in his follies after becoming aware of how they harm him?

[16] Those who envy the strong or wise man his abilities prevent themselves from developing that which he possesses in themselves; for what is possible for one is possible for all.

[17] The wicked seek for themselves that which the righteous seek for others.

[18] The prideful woman boasts in her many suitors; but the humble woman simply smiles, because she knows she is truly loved.

[19] A man only becomes great when even the worst injustice may be inflicted upon him and yet he has the power to refrain from reacting to it in anger and retaliation; for it is a sure sign that he has already succeeded in completely mastering himself.

[20] The wicked use the proverbs of scripture to justify and excuse the practice of their own cruelty and injustice, but the righteous recognize that when punishments are spoken of, they are but natural consequences of the law, and that they come upon transgressors without men having to make of themselves judges and executioners.

[21] When a wise man offends his neighbor and his neighbor becomes cross with him, he holds his tongue and listens to his neighbor’s rage with an understanding ear, for he knows that he deserves the contempt he is receiving.

[22] The ignorant blame those whom they offend for getting upset with them, for they lack the awareness to see and acknowledge that the fault lay first with themselves.

[23] The wicked mistake wrong for right and right for wrong; they are delusional, and their delusions are as a noose that slowly tightens around their necks.

[24] The wisest of men will be the first to admit that his stock of knowledge and the length of his understanding are as a grain of sand on a long stretch of beach; but the most foolish is he who boasts that he has fully cured his own ignorance.

[25] The proud consider themselves teachers, that they may be exalted in the eyes of others; but the humble consider themselves students, that they may be exalted within themselves.

[26] Out of injured pride comes forth life’s greatest lessons; a horse must be broken before a rider may mount and command it.

[27] The man who truly knows himself often finds that he knows others better than they know themselves, for he understands why they do what they do while they often remain ignorant to their own motives.

[28] Sometimes the best way to become truly convicted in what is right is to first experience the penalties of that which must always follow what is wrong.

[29] Continual study of the works of the learned and wise, constant observation of their revelations made manifest on the stage of life, and solemn meditation in the aforementioned pair is the way by which hopeless paupers may turn themselves into enduring kings.

[30] The belief that there is no right and wrong is in itself wrong.

[31] Isolation and deprivation force a man to reflect, and in his reflection he comes to discover that which is denied to those who merely eat, drink, and make merry.

[32] The depth of a man’s sorrow will later become the exact height of his ecstasy, if he but thirst after righteousness and seek all that is good and true.

[33] Kings that endure are those who seek to serve the people, instead of using the people to serve themselves.

[34] World peace is only possible when everyone seeks to refrain from causing others to feel that which they do not wish to feel.

[35] The husband who seeks to satisfy his wife, not that he may gain her approval to validate his manhood (for how does that serve her?), but so that her soul knows no dissatisfaction is the man who will not go without love and favor.

[36] The man who truly loves humanity is the one who treats his enemies with the same respect and courtesy as he does his truest and most loyal friends.

[37] The LORD uses the wicked to discipline His servants when they commit iniquity, that they may repent and correct themselves; He also uses the evil works of the wicked to test and refine those of His servants who are already exalted in their righteousness, that they may be made known and further prepared to receive their just reward.

[38] Those born of woman are made subject to those born not of the womb.

[39] People are most willing to serve those who serve them best.

[40] To take advantage of a woman’s love and desire to please him and uses it against her to the fulfillment of his own selfish gratification makes a man worth less than the dust of the earth. He crawls only with the worms.

[41] The greatest of men perform even the lowest of tasks, if they be necessary; but the lowliest of men, in their arrogance and haughtiness, demand others do it for them, that they may gloat over their servant’s reluctant and resentful obedience.

[42] Truth is as a bright light that dispels the darkness of lies and deceit; for in darkness people stumble and come to injury, but in the light their path is made known to them and no blemish comes to mark their skin.

[43] A good king establishes his kingdom for the glory of his people; but a wretched king establishes his for the glory of himself.

[44] The lusty and deceitful admonish men to be chaste, so that by their abstinence the former’s pleasure of the flesh may be better indulged in.

[45] A proverb is but a revelation of which seed bears what fruit.

[46] Fools love to condemn most in others that which they fail to see is most prevalent in themselves.

[47] When a foolish man is rebuked for his faults and errors, he fumbles to present any flimsy evidence he can find that may justify himself in clinging to his foolishness, rather than seeking to confront and remove it.

[48] Wicked kings deceive the people into accepting their evil designs by presenting them in such a way as to appear to benefit the people; but when the truth reveals the true intents and purposes of such vile schemes, the people finally realize it comes to their chagrin instead.

[49] People of wisdom place their trust in a righteous king, even when they do not understand the reasons for his actions and instructions; for they know that his wisdom extends far beyond their own, and that everything he does is not for his own benefit but for theirs.

[50] Ignorant men waste their efforts attempting to add things to themselves in hopes of becoming worthy of woman’s love, when all they need do is subtract the thoughts that prevent them from receiving it.

[51] He who becomes wise often first partakes in much foolishness, for often only in this way does he discover the penalties of his errors and thus the reasons for why his follies and foibles require correction.

[52] The hallmark of a wise man is that he knows what he knows and also knows what he knows not; but a foolish man thinks he knows everything and, in this, confines his knowledge to a small portion.

[53] Only when a bride has made herself ready does her bridegroom come.

[54] Nobody but fools punish themselves to punish others, for not one jot and tittle of good comes of it, to either the fool or their victims.

[55] If a husband but even thinks of another woman with desire, he has wronged his wife, and his marriage will suffer for his having harbored that secret thought.

[56] Just as joy is found in the delight of the LORD, so is happiness found in the delight of a virtuous and loyal spouse.

[57] Adhering to the means-whereby, with a thirst for righteousness as its motive, is the most practical way by which the chains of sin may be broken and shattered.

[58] When the secret evils of the wicked are revealed, instead of admitting their iniquities and correcting them, they seek vengeance by punishing those who made their sins known.

[59] To those who have conformed themselves to the moral law, and have observed the affairs of men through its lens, all proverbs become self-evident.

[60] What a man cannot refuse is his master, and he its slave.

[61] Wisdom is useless without humility.

[62] After a righteous man comes to expect unfairness and injustice from the wicked, it no longer stirs his wrath.

[63] When a man becomes too familiar with his sin, he often loses the capacity to recognize it as wrong; thus, he seeks to deny its immorality and excuse and justify its practice.

[64] A foolish woman attempts to force love by arousing jealousy; thus, she fails to find what she seeks, and her suitors’ unrequited love turns to wrath and vengeance against her life.

[65] The intellectually vain study to think themselves learned; but the learned study to remove their ignorance.

[66] The ignorant seek to mask symptoms; the learned, to remove their causes.

[67] A foolish wife fakes her husband’s pleasure, and thus trains him to be unsatisfactory to her; for why would he stop doing that which he thinks is pleasing to her?

[68] Love surfaces to the degree to which the desire to control one another vanishes; mastery over sin makes this condition manifest.

[69] A wife who takes not her husband’s seed into her mouth is a disappointment to him, just as is a husband who refuses to drink his wife’s juice is to her.

[70] A sincere apology is made not of mere words but in refraining to do in the future that which injured in the past.

[71] Fools waste time in pleasure; but the wise invest it in the pursuit of knowledge and the development of talent, that they may better serve others.

[72] A selfish, jealous lover turns into a wild beast who will destroy his beloved when it is made clear he cannot keep her; but as long as hope remains, he will wag his tail whenever she comes round.

[73] To the puritan healthy sexual practices appear to be shameful and abominable; but to the libertine, dull and boring.

[74] Backsides were made for defecation, and nothing else; those who use it otherwise sin against their own lives.

[75] What’s good for a righteous king is also good for his people.

[76] The way of a wicked king is simple: he oppresses the people through deception, and when his schemes are revealed and the people object to his injustice, he punishes them for their protests; thus, he earns their contempt and hatred.

[77] The seducer and seductress become such as a result of a broken heart; their conquests are as a sling around a broken arm that never heals.

[78] Wise is he indeed who rejects the advances of a boisterous woman, for should he submit to her charms, it will bring much trouble and distress into his life.

[79] A husband whose highest aim is the fulfillment of his wife’s needs finds his needs also met; but those who place their needs above their spouse’s soon find both go unsatisfied.

[80] He who keeps a record of wrongs lives in the past, and thus his future will become a replica of it; but if he abandon that record and instead thinks on the means whereby harmony may abide, his future will come to reflect those thoughts instead.

[81] A deceptive person with a secret to hide will reveal unnecessary information in hopes of removing any doubt before it arises; but in so doing, he only succeeds at arousing suspicion, and thereby betrays his attempt to conceal the truth.

[82] To please his wife, a husband must first cultivate the capacity to be aware of what she thinks and how she feels in response to everything he says and does.

[83] The limit of drink is before that boundary where those things shamefully done would not be so if sober.

[84] He who looks at what everyone else is doing and follows suit often falls off a cliff; a flock without a shepherd comes to ruin.

[85] Until a man sees the shame in his ways, he will not change them; therefore, he who desires change must seek out his own shame, else he is at the mercy of others revelations of it.

[86] He who states the obvious in hopes of garnering praise arouses contempt; but he who reveals an unknown truth for their edification earns for himself honor and praise among them.

[87] How wise is a man who fails to follow his own wisdom; therefore, it is better to ask for humility than it is for wisdom, for the latter may corrupt what the former cannot shatter.

[88] Rejection from a righteous king is far worse than a thousand bee stings; those who receive it have justly earned it, for they were given chances they didn’t deserve and still had no desire to practice righteousness in the end.

[89] A man who puts his own pleasure above his wife and children cannot rightly be called a man, for as a slave unto himself a servant unto them can he not be.

[90] Love without loyalty is dead.

[91] Those who hate money envy those who have it, but those who love it lust for the power they think it gives them over others; therefore, desire money but be indifferent to its coming and going.

[92] A woman only initiates with a man she gives not a damn about, for if she truly cared she wouldn’t risk the rejection; instead, she puts herself in the way of his attention and drops hints.

[93] The prideful revile at truthful rebuke, but the humble bow their heads.

[94] Fools justify their sin because their insecurity outweighs their ability to admit they could be wrong.

[95] A person who approaches their beloved as a conquest to be subjugated practices hatred, not love.

[96] A jealous love is nothing but an obsession; it is selfish and considers not the best interests of the beloved.

[97] Wicked are those who seek revenge against the indignation of those whom they’ve provoked or offended.

[98] A man is remembered not for who he once was but for who he became.

[99] The greatness of a man is measured by his sacrifice to others.

[100] Heap coals of kindness on a prideful and boastful man who attempts to subject you and he will scoff at your seeming weakness; but judge him righteously and he will not only see his shame but also respect you.

[101] Jealousy and lust are the enemies of love; patience and kindness are its emissaries.

[102] Talent may take a lifetime to develop but then it may be called upon at a moment’s notice.

[103] It is pleasure to think and joy to form thoughts into words.

[104] Uncover the shame of a fool, and he will curse you; but do so of the wise, and he will give you gratitude.

[105] A king who sees his position as an obligation rather than a privilege is the one who will best serve the people.

[106] Forced morality is itself immoral; he who executes a murderer becomes one.

[107] Better a little wisdom fully followed than a lot unheeded.

[108] A coward makes for a false friend; he flatters with his lips and even gives gifts, but then he strikes the back of the head when it is turned away.

[109] Selfish are those who expect that which they are unwilling to give in return; an unfaithful woman who demands loyalty is filled with doublespeak.

[110] Contrite is he not who fears the wages of sin instead of the rewards of righteousness.

[111] A king serves his kingdom, but a queen serves her husband; she either makes or breaks him, and he in turn either makes or breaks their kingdom.

[112] A husband and wife are each others’ possessions: they belong one to another; therefore, an adulterer gives away what is not his to give, and a fornicator takes that which belongs to another – he is a thief of the flesh, and in his wife’s debt.

[113] The bolder a man becomes in the truth, the greater grows the desire of the wicked to silence him.

[114] He who is always loyal in his acts and always honest in his words makes for a true friend; but he who is neither will be false: he is an enemy in disguise, for his heart is filled with selfishness, and he will seek to conceal it with lies and deceit.

[115] A person who lets their body deny or defy their heart throws their life into chaos, strife and distress; peace and poise are granted only to those who subject their flesh to their heart.

[116] A contentious wife manipulates her husband’s emotions to motivate him to do what she wants; thus, he resents her for it. But a good wife serves her husband in all things and he then eagerly does what she wants with joy and loving-kindness.

[117] Man’s greatest error is intimidation; woman’s, manipulation.

[118] Call a coward a coward, and he will deny it every time; for if he does not, he is already on the sure path to manhood.

[119] A man who speaks of truth, righteousness and justice in the congregation of the wicked is not only deprived of his honest reward, he is crucified for it.

[120] A husband’s lingum belongs to his wife, and her yanni belongs to him; in marriage, each is given, one to the other, until death do them part. Those who violate this law are thieves and traitors of the flesh.

[121] When wisdom is melded with simplicity, wonder ensues.

[122] World peace begins not with harmony between nations but fidelity between husbands and wives; therefore, an adulterer who preaches peace is a hypocrite and a fraud.

[123] A husband and wife who welcome an intruder into their bed is like freezing water in a cracked stone; it will be split apart.

[124] Unreceived compensation for service rendered is repaid with compound interest, just as short-changing masters are taxed on their thefts.

[125] A slave-owner guarantees his own bankruptcy; for when his slaves are freed, the debt-collector comes calling, and then how shall he pay?

[126] He who observes the affects of his thoughts upon his behavior, and his behavior upon his circumstances, soon becomes the master of his life.

[127] Cursed is the man who steals from his brother’s bag of gold in secret, then considers himself charitable by giving back one bronze coin in public.

[128] More deaf are those who hear but do not understand than those who hear not a single word.

[129] What is said with little and without sacrificing its meaning is that which is most accurately told.

[130] Traitors soon find the person they have betrayed most are themselves.

[131] To evade any suspicion of guilt, hypocrites publicly condemn the very evils they do in private.

[132] When wonderment becomes familiar it seems ordinary.

[133] He who places his trust quickly often has it betrayed.

[134] The intellectually vain preach what little knowledge they have in the company of the learned, and yet know not that they consider him a fool and a fraud; only the ignorant listen, and the fool falsely believes this justifies his superior intelligence.

[135] In their intellectual indolence, fools scoff at that which they do not understand; but the wise investigate the unknown before drawing conclusions.

[136] He who can have many yet chooses and commits to but one demonstrates true love; but fornicators and adulterers betray its habitation.

[137] The great sign of compassion is the capacity to forgive even the worst of wrongs.

[138] Anger and revenge are the rotten fruits produced from the seed of disappointment; sympathy and forgiveness are its good fruits.

[139] It is better to have none than even one unfit.

[140] To respond to injury with forgiveness instead of wrath is to become divine.

[141] Penitent is he not who plans his plea for absolution before he even commits the offense.

[142] Due to the desire of men to cling to what is familiar, the truth is often offensive.

[143] Pleasure becomes burdensome when often indulged; but joy and happiness increase the further prolonged in.

[144] A woman who believes she deserves not love will punish those who try to give it, lest her belief be proven false.

[145] The boy who seeks his manhood in women fails to recognize it resides within himself.

[146] A wife loves most a husband who remains poised in the midst of her chaos.

[147] Ability and skill come quickly to him who first invests in the coordination between his mind and body.

[148] The man who attempts to assert his dominance with force only succeeds at revealing that he is a slave to his own conceit.

[149] Jealousy and lust are the offspring of the fear of loneliness.

[150] In his journey from ideal to its realization, every man is bound to fall into some hypocrisy; only fools remain in it while the wise pass over onto the other side.

[151] Everything that causes bodily ill is wrong; thus, when the body goes amiss it attempts to reveal a vile cause in need of correction.

[152] A promiscuous woman is desired by many but respected by none.

[153] Compassion is the result of the recognition that those who do evil are but slaves to their own sin; therefore, why add more injury to their self-affliction?

[154] The husband who anticipates and satisfies his wife’s needs before she even recognizes them goes not without love and favor.

[155] What is beautiful in wedlock between a husband and wife is despicable out of it.

[156] A town often preserves in a man that which a city corrupts.

[157] A wife who commits adultery is as painful to her husband as if he fell in love with another woman is to her.

[158] When a husband and wife no longer bear one another’s sins, the perfect love relation is obtained.

[159] Authenticity cannot be mimicked; it must be developed from within, not engineered from without.

[160] Those who know not their true place come to shame and ruin.

[161] A man who idolizes his wife receives as his reward her contempt, for even she knows she is unworthy of such high praise.

[162] He who would be happy values a loyal and honest wife far above riches, power, honor, youth and pleasure.

[163] A good king questions and instructs in place of commands, for do not men revere their own choice?

[164] Until a person changes how they do what they do, they will not truly change what they do.

[165] The righteous only want power over themselves; the wicked, over others.

[166] Cursed are those who fail to acknowledge their indebtedness, for the longer and deeper their denial, the greater their debt increases.

[167] The pinnacle of morality is the foundation of happiness.

[168] The measure of a man’s humility is in relation to the speed to which he can admit his faults and errors.

[169] Accursed is the woman who rewards a boy as if he were a man, for he then falsely believes he deserves that which he receives and loses his desire to grow into manhood.

[170] There is nothing to polygamy but lusty vanity and conceit; many partners is false evidence of moral ascendency.

[171] A man who proclaims his title to inspire cooperation soon loses both.

[172] Those who approach love as a game ensure their loss, but those who seek in it a mutually loyal union both win.

[173] It requires desire and persistence to attain a thing, but to retain that thing once possessed, an adherence to the law must be effectively observed; if it is not, the thing acquired will be lost.

[174] All obstacles melt to those who believe; nothing can come between desire mixed with persistence and an adherence to the law. Time is but the only variable, which demands patience.

[175] Fools seek attention through abominable displays to compensate for rejection and to hide their loneliness; but wise men endure loneliness and learn from the circumstances that led to it.

[176] Ignoramuses rage when their arguments are revealed to be but masks by which to conceal their ignorance of their ignorance.

[177] Foolish are those who mistake attention for love, for contempt and loneliness are their rewards.

[178] A good king rewards the confession of a penitent sinner, for he knows their courage outweighed their shame; but a bad king punishes all sin, and thus increases it, for who will admit their iniquities when it bears a penalty?

[179] The best gift is the one which daily reminds the receiver of the giver.

[180] Only after a person has sought after knowledge, wisdom and understanding are they prepared to receive true love; for without these, they know not the conditions upon which its foundation rests.

[181] The measure of a man is found not so much in what he does as in what he refrains from doing.

[182] A jealous man will belittle his beloved before his competition, hoping they will perceive little value in her and pass by so that he may claim her for himself; but his insults only succeed at winning her contempt.

[183] A scorned woman is like a tornado; her wake is made of destruction.

[184] Whatever is hurtful to a spouse is a crime against love.

[185] Fools attempt to display knowledge to appear wise, because they court and covet praise; but a wise man recognizes the increase of knowledge but only furthers his awareness of the boundaries of his own ignorance.

[186] As a man treats others, so do they tend to treat him; what he gives, he often receives.

[187] Better is a peasant with love than a king without it.

[188] Wrath is a response to pain; therefore, the greatness and length of it is in exact relation to the size of the wound opened.

[189] Cursed are the guilty who blame the innocent for their own crimes; the man who curses the person he assails for bleeding on him is an idiot.

[190] When a people come to righteously and justly govern themselves, they no longer require a government over them.

[191] He who lacks control over himself overcompensates for this weakness by trying to control others.

[192] The wicked propose what is harmful as if helpful to get the people to consent to their evil schemes.

[193] When the wicked deprive the people of freedom and the latter seek to exercise their liberty in rebellion, the former respond by adding even more limitations.

[194] No one rightfully deserves to demand in a spouse that which they do not first have to offer in return.

[195] When they know they are favored, the self-abased harm themselves to hurt those who love them.

[196] Point out a proud man’s wicked ways, and instead of acknowledging and changing them, he will become hostile, refute them and retaliate.

[197] Disputes go unresolved because of the ignorance or unwillingness of those involved to hold themselves accountable for who instigated and who retaliated, then confess their roles in the disagreement to make peace and reconcile.

[198] Loving each other is the greatest boon a husband and wife can give their children.

[199] He who courts praise hates reproof and correction; but he who loves them is praised.

[200] A man who is blind to his character is a reproach to many.

[201] A wretched servant will seek to conceal his shortcomings by proclaiming only his virtues.

[202] Serenity comes to him who prays for and blesses those who persecute him.

[203] Longstanding deprivation leads to great gratitude for the boons when later bestowed.

[204] The longevity of an unfulfilled desire not only increases patience to the exact degree, but also the extent of gratitude for the thing once finally acquired.

[205] A wise man remembers not the shame of his past mistakes after they have led the way to their correction.

[206] A leader who has not first followed is a fraction as influential as he could be; for even in following a poor leader does he learn what makes a good one.

[207] A peasant’s acquaintances often envy and despise him when he later shows himself to be a king; for they secretly thought themselves superior to him, only to discover they were wrong.

[208] What the wicked are willing to do to one, they are capable of doing to all.

[209] Those who glorify fornication and adultery demonstrate they are not much more evolved than the animal.

[210] A person justifies their ignorance or unwillingness to change by proclaiming: “I do it; therefore, it cannot be wrong!” or “I do it not; therefore, it must be wrong!”

[211] A person who thinks on limitations soon realizes them.

[212] He who argues the highest issue holds the citadel and guards the keep of truth; but those who argue it with logic and mere opinion lose their foothold.

[213] A scoffer laughs at the truth because he is either too stupid or stubborn to understand it, or he envies the person who discovered it before he did, and he wishes the praise and honor received belonged to himself.

[214] Critics love to tear others down because they are too afraid to build themselves up; they are destined for a lifetime of mediocrity.

[215] A mocker makes sport of the person from whose lips pour forth words he is too self-righteous or intolerant to accept.

[216] A woman who fornicates with a man will later commit adultery against him.

[217] He who gets defensive in the face of criticism leaves himself at the mercy of his adversaries.

[218] Seduction only works on vain and conceited people.

[219] As a man grows in the capacity to evaluate his own character, so does he increase his discernment of those of others.

[220] He who continually meditates on the motives behind peoples’ behavior increases his understanding, and therefore his powers of influence.

[221] He who loves righteousness is ever vigilant in examining himself and his own motives.

[222] The fraud prospers only so long as the wise man remains silent or absent.

[223] A person’s freedoms end where others’ rights begin.

[224] Wicked is he who seduces the wives of others and scoffs and gloats over the cuckolds he has made as if it were something praiseworthy: for how great is a man who strikes his brother without cause, and then laughs and mocks him when he cries out in pain?

[225] The wicked praise what is shameful and abominable as if it were something to be revered.

[226] Only when a man corrects his faults instead of justifying them to himself can he realize his full potential.

[227] The wicked take offense at being called thus, because they are too ignorant or stubborn to see themselves as they truly are.

[228] A man is wise who refuses to listen to the criticism of those who envy and hate him, for they will further not the awareness of himself but only work to deceive him of his true character and talent.

[229] A good father often disciplines his son harshly in the beginning to heighten his tolerance for rebuke, so that later he may be reproved lightly and then be willing to listen and obey.

[230] A people who make themselves wise and righteous exalt their nation; but stupidity and wickedness bring it to ruin.

[231] The man who recognizes that rebuke and discipline are often required before his development may commence or continue, learns to love them; for he knows that when he receives them, he is about to grow in ways he does not yet understand.

[232] A good father disciplines his son for his son’s benefit, that he may walk in the paths of righteousness and come to profit; but a bad father does so that he may be served and satisfy his desire for power over others.

[233] A foolish man who commits adultery with another’s wife boasts that he is more favored than her husband; he is consumed with vanity and conceit, and his shame and ruin are not long before him.

[234] The people are eager to be righteous when they understand how it profits them; but ignorance produces wickedness in any people.

[235] He who becomes not defensive to rebuke quickly increases his self-awareness, and thus his own moral development.

[236] Blessed is the man who does a lot with little; but cursed is he who does little with a lot.

[237] A foolish servant seeks to point out his master’s flaws, so that his own might go unnoticed.

[238] Only the prideful take offense at their ignorance being revealed; but the humble put themselves in the way of knowledge, wisdom and understanding.

[239] Not until a man admits his ignorance can he learn or be taught.

[240] A man can only know others to the degree to which he knows himself; self-knowledge is the rarest of jewels.

[241] A fool babbles when sober like a drunkard when intoxicated.

[242] The envious criticize what they wish they could produce, hoping to deceive the creator out of his talent or the value of his creation.

[243] To the envious, confidence is often mistaken for arrogance; but the prideful boast in their personages and achievements and call it confidence, and thus bring shame upon themselves.

[244] A man easily conquered by a woman is quickly discarded.

[245] A good mother puts her child’s life above her own, just as a good husband puts his wife’s above his.

[246] The response of the foolish who are rebuked for practicing wickedness is offense followed by denial, excuses, justifications, blameshifting, or retaliating; pride and selfishness makes these things manifest.

[247] The wicked love to pervert justice and afflict and oppress the poor and needy, for their hearts take great delight in the suffering of others; they are cruel, they are merciless, and their destiny is everlasting perdition.

[248] A woman who seeks to rule over her man sabotages the true love her heart craves most; for it can only be found by surrendering to his headship if he is humble and wise.

[249] Cursed are those who become hostile at the indignation of those whom they transgress and offend.

[250] Cruelty and mercilessness beget not obedience, but only defiance and revolt.

[251] In battle, a real man is first to make contact with his enemies; but a coward hides behind his men, trembling in fear while they exhibit the courage he lacks. He considers himself a leader, yet he is last to follow.

[252] To those ignorant to their own characters, the truth about themselves is often offensive.

[253] A man’s humility is measured by the speed to which he can admit his faults and errors; but a proud man thinks he can do no wrong.

[254] The root of rebuke is love; but condemnation, hate.

[255] A lover who is always great soon comes to be known as mediocre.

[256] Scoffers laugh at that which they themselves are more guilty of.

[257] After the wicked plunder a man and divide the spoils amongst themselves, they condemn and punish him for his poverty.

[258] The true lover puts the best interests of their beloved before their own.

[259] Without humility, a student cannot be taught.

[260] A man who knows himself cares not what the critics proclaim about him.

[261] Intentions are thoughts completed; dreams are intentions manifested.

[262] Cursed is the man who retaliates against the indignation of one whom he has wronged.

[263] A great student is a teacher’s pride and joy.

[264] The wicked delight in inflicting upon righteous men the very things those men take great pains to prevent or remove.

[265] Injure a wicked man’s pride and he will hold a grudge for life; but a righteous man will ask himself if he has been in error.

[266] An unfaithful wife turns her husband’s allies into his enemies; she curses her household.

[267] What a child is repeatedly subjected to are the same conditions it tends to reproduce in adulthood.

[268] A man is foolish to ask for in a wife that which he is unwilling to offer her in return.

[269] Loyalty demonstrated amidst temptation begets more trust.

[270] Hero emulation leads eventually to becoming one’s own best man; for upon the foundation of others’ wisdom does he build his own.

[271] He who seeks to prove his value demonstrates he lacks it.

[272] Rehearsed acts of faith eventually manifest in reality; a child doesn’t walk with its first step.

[273] Thieves spend their spoils foolishly; for that which is not honestly earned is unappreciated and ill-used.

[274] Personality wins love; but only character keeps it.

[275] A righteous people require no courts and prisons; officers, lawyers, judges, and guards are made obsolete when people settle their own disputes.

[276] No wife is happy with a husband she reigns over; but a husband who seeks to force his wife into submission is greeted with her contempt.

[277] Spouses are each others’ servants.

[278] The wicked think themselves righteous; but whoever seeks to undermine another’s pursuit of love and prosperity is an evildoer.

[279] A small man takes offense at the pettiest of slights; he is mastered by the opinions of others.

[280] The end result of socialism is the dictator.

[281] A man who measures his greatness by how many he can control is a fool; for a man’s greatness can only be measured by how well he controls himself.

[282] Youths are eager to learn that which they know will profit them.

[283] Fornicators and adulterers, and sexually active homosexuals and transgenders make a mockery of love.

[284] Men revere and envy most those who find reciprocated, loyal love.

[285] The man who is unwilling to do the lowliest of tasks is unworthy of the highest.

[286] Liars question whether their deceits are known, which only make them so.

[287] Oftentimes a man must experience what he does not want to know that which he does.

[288] A reconciliation after a dispute often strengthens the bond.

[289] More than all else do the wicked hate their evil being met by good cheer; but the righteous feel deserved shame.

[290] Today’s church is tomorrow’s government.

[291] A whore offers that which does not belong to her.

[292] Solitude is better than the company of those who yet do evil; for a man becomes as those he most closely associates with.

[293] A woman who deliberately arouses jealousy in men goes without love.

[294] A king’s character is reflected in his nobles and citizens.

[295] Cursed is the man who condemns a fornicating woman when he himself lays with her, thus contributing to her condition; he is a fool and a hypocrite.

[296] Rebuke arouses anger in the prideful, but when the outrage subsides the truth is accepted.

[297] He who takes advantage of a desperate seller or buyer is a cheat.

[298] The wise watch and listen; but fools either babble incoherently or remain muted in shame.

[299] A loving father disciplines his children harshly in the beginning, to raise their tolerance for receiving rebuke, that he may thus later admonish them lightly and have them be willing to listen and take heart.

[300] A father who loves his daughter is her light until she weds; he is the moral example of the kind of man he wants her to have in a husband.

[301] Forgiveness received can never be demanding or threatening, or else it arouses spite and goes ungiven.

[302] A good father never shames twice for the same offense after the child has learned its lesson; he is kind, loving, and merciful. 

[303] Women and children both love most a man who touches, plays and teases, for these are the great manifestations of love and affection; but jealous, envious men become resentful and discouraging of such conduct.

[304] Shame and guilt used as devices to win love repel it.

[305] A message reflects the man back of it.

[306] Wisdom astonishes the righteous, but baffles the wicked.

[307] The man who mimics without understanding the reasons for his actions is rebuffed.

[308] A man who strikes back is as guilty as him who attacks; both seek to cause injury.

[309] Wisdom is knowledge directed towards righteous and just ends.

[310] A man’s greatest fault is his failure to recognize all his others.

[311] The wise man often collects the envy of those who have less wisdom than he.

[312] The better a man uses his body, the greater control he exercises over the great unfoldment.

[313] A true friend looks at his fellows not just as they are but as they could be.

[314] He who faces no rejection receives not the coveted reward.

[315] A man often thinks himself good for seeking to help others who resent his instruction and guidance for want of consent.

[316] A man who examines his own motives soon comes to recognize those of others.

[317] No wise man is unwilling to be a student.

[318] It is foolish to make a friend of a man who struggles or refuses to recognize his own faults.

[319] The reason wise men are rejected by some is because they make known the follies of a multitude of fools.

[320] The greater the adversity a man endures, the greater his character becomes, if he thirsts for righteousness.

[321] The dogmatist makes religion seem boring and repulsive; but the hero, an adventurous battle.

[322] True religion teaches a man how to conquer his sinful nature which is to his greatest profit.

[323] A man who offends a king before he sits on his throne is the greatest of fools.

[324] Protest against the injustices of the wicked and they return punishment.

[325] A father favors most a child whose mother he loves.

[326] A man becomes his best by studying the best.

[327] When a man no longer questions his manhood has he become one; but a boy forever seeks to present evidence for validation through lusty conquests and competitive victories.

[328] The righteous use their forces to make peace amongst their citizens; but the wicked, to wage war against them.

[329] The righteous exalt a nation; but the corrupt bring it to ruin.

[330] Love is won; and respect is earned.

[331] He is a wretch who laughs and applauds at the prevalence of wickedness and injustice.

[332] A noble woman never makes a man’s love for her a tool to fulfill her own selfish desires and ambitions; instead, she uses it to inspire him into greater altruistic pursuits.

[333] He is a fool who considers himself superior to the husband of the wife he seduces; for disappointed women resort to causing men to fight over them, because they lack one man to fight for them.

[334] The wicked return punishment for rendering great service; they are a corrupt and perverted people.

[335] When a man realizes his own faults it comes with the epiphany that others have known them long before himself.

[336] The wicked know well that if they can confuse the genders and encourage promiscuity, they can soon subdue any people; but their rule comes at the cost of their civilization.

[337] A man who profits from the sale of teaching the practices of wickedness is himself accountable for his followers’ sins.

[338] Poise is the indifference to both praise and condemnation.

[339] A prideful woman hates the honorable man who refuses her charm.

[340] A good spouse gives their mate no reason to fear competition.

[341] The man who better vocalizes holds the frame; everyone else instinctively looks to him as either the leader, or a threat conjured by their own conceit.

[342] Better is reluctant obedience than none at all.

[343] It’s most pleasing to see a spouse pleased.

[344] The snitch exposes the evils of others in hopes that his own might remain concealed.

[345] Men retaliate immediately; but women postpone.

[346] Until a man is ready to die, he is ready for nothing.

[347] A fool seeks to change the world, but never himself.

[348] What the critic condemns, the world praises.

[349] A powerful man tolerates others faults without being influenced by them.

[350] Failure can’t cope with persistence.

[351] As a man speaks of others behind their backs, so will he of you behind yours.

[352] The wise man listens to his critics, lest they reveal a fault that yet requires his correction.

[353] A fool who meets an argument he can't rebuff resorts to name-calling and insults.

[354] The envious are quick to criticize and condemn those who excel them.

[355] A fool judges people by what their enemies claim about them.

[356] The humble admit their errors rapidly; but the proud deny, excuse, justify or blameshift them.

[357] The world reflects a man's attitude back at him.

[358] The man who remains unphased by false accusations comes to disprove them.

[359] A good friend sells his associates on their confidence in themselves, because he, himself, has such confidence.

[360] It is foolish to invest in combating a problem when it can be eradicated with the same time and effort.

[361] The most impossible obstacles vanish to him who can solicit cooperation.

[362] What a man doesn’t earn he seldom cherishes.

[363] The wise man recognizes that every offense against him has back of it a negative attitude that is working a continual hardship in the offender's life; this makes him forgiving and compassionate.

[364] An incompetent king compensates for his peoples’ problems; but a wise king remedies them at their cause.

[365] To meet complaints with unrequested council earns for the advisor a fortune of hidden contempt.

[366] A man’s worth is measured by the height of the benefits he bestows upon his fellows.

[367] A judge’s sentence should be decided upon by the victim of the offense, and a pardon only permissible with their consent.

[368] A people come to mimic their king's character.

[369] A democracy is always mediocre; but a monarchy is either heaven or hell.

[370] A government that teaches its youth the secrets to success with people and money exalts a nation.

[371] A political office should only be held by those who are directly paid no monetary compensation for the responsibility.

[372] Democracy is expensive and it divides and impoverishes a nation.

[373] Compassion comes with the recognition that people who are ignorant to the penalties of their follies harm themselves.

[374] A nation is united when the only agenda in its politics is its citizens happiness and contentment.

[375] Students are eager to learn that which they recognize will profit them.

[376] A politician should be paid what the people think he’s worth in relation to the degree of his service in uplifting their community and nation.

[377] A man’s right to pursue happiness and contentment should be protected from his conception till his last heartbeat.

[378] A king who spends his subjects money contrary to their best interests is despised and greeted with their contempt.

[379] An unfair king takes from the producer’s rewards and gives it to the indolent.

[380] A noble man wants for others what he desires for himself: love, prosperity and liberty.

[381] A wise king aligns his laws to mirror morality.

[382] Forced morality is itself immoral.

[383] The king who shows his subjects how moral conduct benefits them uplifts his people.

[384] A wise man is continually reminded of the scope of his ignorance; but a fool thinks he has all the answers in spite of his lack of evidence.

[385] The man who enters into a debate with the aim of winning is sure to lose.

[386] Even a wise man is the first to admit he is more foolish than wise.

[387] What a man’s heart craves does his body attract.

[388] Every woman’s craving is that a great man or woman will come from her womb!

[389] Superstition is but a symptom of the fear of illness and death.

[390] The king with the slippery tongue caters to the selfish demands of the people; but the moral king renounces the immediate benefits of such action at the expense of their long-term consequences.

[391] The great man treats an idiot with the same dignity as he would a genius.

[392] The wise man never scoffs at peoples’ ignorance; instead, he feels pity.

[393] A great government inspires the people to depend upon themselves; but an incompetent one encourages its citizens to depend upon its assistance.

[394] A noble man also recognizes his enemies’ virtues.

[395] A wise man prefers criticism to praise, for it puts him in the way improving himself to establish more harmonious relations and better render his services.

[396] A confident man refuses to entertain doubt, from others and most importantly, himself.

[397] Even with an inept government, there is no anarchy; we should find ourselves grateful, yet be prepared to make change.

[398] The man who solves his own problem, discovers he has found the solution to many a man’s problem, and shares his value with the world; he is sure to become highly regarded and prosperous.

[399] The man who identifies his virtue, determines how he can turn it into a service to benefit his fellow man, uses his imagination to come up with a plan for its realization, and puts that plan into action with persistence; he is soon remembered and revered in the history books.

[400] Our best teachers are those who show us what most not to do.

[401] A competent government keeps itself small and finances itself.

[402] The man who refuses to get offended and holds no grudges soon makes his personality a tool of vast influence.

[403] A man without a central aim in life deprives himself of much joy.

[404] The man who daydreams with a purpose trains his mind to experience what he imagines, causing his image to give birth in reality.

[405] An intelligent and wise woman chooses a husband she wants to surrender to; but a foolish woman chooses one she can rule over.

[406] A wise man subjugates his emotion to his reason.

[407] The man who loves people is never lonely.

[408] He who truly prospers first decides upon how he can best benefit his fellow man.

[409] A man’s greatest foes are the ugly thoughts harbored in his own mind.

[410] A government’s chief purpose should be to teach its citizens how to govern themselves.

[411] A moral anarchy is the highest form of social order.

[412] A man does not truly love those he tries to control.

[413] Wisdom leads to happiness; foolishness to misery.

[414] A foolish political candidate besmirches his opponent instead of proclaiming his own virtues and merits.

[415] A righteous king comes to produce happiness in his subjects; but a wicked king induces their misery.

[416] The man who admits his mistakes is shown mercy; but the one who defends them is condemned.

[417] Yesterday’s paupers make for tomorrow’s kings.

[418] A great man loves his neighbors often more than they do themselves.

[419] Resentment and grudges manifest as bodily ills.

[420] The slanderer eventually only succeeds at ruining his own reputation.

[421] The man who gives respect receives it.

[422] The great man treats a pauper with the same respect as he does a king.

[423] Integrity is the unification of thought, word and deed.

[424] Harmony is only established when a record of wrongs is not kept, and those involved desire to cease their transgressions.

[425] Peace of mind is only attained when we immediately forgive every annoyance or injury and hold bitterness towards no one, but rather have good will towards even our enemies.

[426] Foolishness is engaging in thoughts, words and deeds that result in unhappiness and misery.

[427] To bless a man is to desire for him what we do for ourselves; it's to sincerely wish him love, prosperity and liberty.

[428] The man who breathes shallow hinders himself in his relations and affairs.

[429] A government that provides a service to the people so that it can finance itself from the profits will be highly regarded and esteemed.

[430] To win love a man must but be loving.

[431] A wise man judges his fellows not by what others claim about them, but according to his own analysis.

[432] A wise man never insults another’s intelligence or manhood.

[433] The man who desires power over others overcompensates for lacking it over himself.

[434] A fool ridicules those he is too stupid to understand.

[435] The persistent pursuit of pleasure sabotages happiness and peace of mind.

[436] Egotism results from feelings of inadequacy and incompetence.

[437] The proud man rages against the protests of those he bullies.

[438] A wise man refuses to copulate with any woman he could not see being the mother of his child.

[439] Wisdom is knowing the right thing to think, say and do.

[440] There is a vast difference between inspiring another and seeking to reform them.

[441] The best way to make a terrible impression is to try to make a great one.

[442] Rejection prompts the wise man to seek out where he went wrong so he may correct himself.

[443] The fool blindly reveres rich and famous men; but the wise only recognize men of virtue and fortitude.

[444] The proud man covets praise and applause for his preachments and instruction; but the humble one delights in witnessing others overcome their ignorance and folly.

[445] A proud man resents being reprimanded for his ill treatment of others; but a humble man acknowledges his conduct requires reform.

[446] The man who is critical of others and continually finds fault with them repels love and friendship.

[447] The man who lacks self-control blames others for their negative reaction to his questionable conduct.

[448] The naysayer is ignorant to the power of a strong resolve.

[449] The greatest decision a man can make is to liberate himself from his unconscious choices.

[450] The confident man cares not how others misjudge his character; for he recognizes their capacity for analysis is unsound.

[451] A man is only as happy as the freedom he has first produced in his body that may then express it.

[452] The great king substitutes requests for orders.

[443] A grateful man honors those who show him the error of his ways.

[454] The proud man preaches his doctrine and offers his instruction without invitation, and then gets offended when it is rejected.

[455] What separates a philosopher from a layman is his ability to investigate the facts and reach justified conclusions.

[456] He who grows in wisdom remains ever open to the possibility that his beliefs could be fallacious.

[457] A man can’t correct a fault he hasn't first acknowledged to himself.

[458] The man who becomes enlightened remains calm and poised, even when he falls victim to the worst of injustices.

[459] A man who develops sound judgment and the capacity for truthful discernment becomes great.

[460] What a man complains about in others he fosters in himself.

[461] A nation’s laws reflect the collective consciousness of its people; change them, and so do its statutes.

[462] The qualities a man admires in another are exactly those that he is capable of in even greater abundance.

[463] The man who’s as interested in the lives of his fellow man as much as he is in his own wins love in excess.

[464] The crux of pride is that it incites us to deny the ills we should be recognizing within ourselves; for we can't correct that which we refuse to acknowledge.

[465] The greatest feat a man can accomplish is to immediately agree with those who accurately point out his faults.

[466] The man who quickly admits his faults corrects them with the same thrift.

[467] The envious man despises the happy and joyous more than he does the rich and influential.

[468] The man who understands that it is in man’s nature to be prideful commends before he rebukes.

[469] The man who has a purpose in life utilizes every experience to furnish himself with the knowledge and resources that will aid him in realizing it.

[470] The punctual man is so because he has a deep respect for others’ time.

[471] A woman who wants her man to succeed in his pursuits even more than he does makes for the greatest of wives.

[472] The man who grows in discernment observes his instinctive reactions to the conduct of others upon himself, and then refrains from enacting toward others that which he has determined elicits unharmonious responses.

[473] The man who seeks to make all his relations harmonious soon puts his affairs in order.

[474] The truly great man treats all as his equal, regardless of their endowments, talents, or achievements in relation to that of his own.

[475] The earnest and grateful student will find no shortage of worthy teachers.

[476] The man who genuinely seeks to understand his fellow man does the world its greatest service.

[477] A man’s relations can only be as strong as his character.

[478] The man who desires for his enemies the happiness he does for himself puts himself in touch with powers unknown to those who don’t, and even unto himself.

[479] Any religion that teaches its adherent not to hate those who disagree with him is one that most accurately represents the LORD.

[480] Blessed is the man who chooses friends he admires; for he learns much of their wisdom as a result.

[481] The man who continually questions whether or not all his motives are worthy soon irons out his every fault.

[482] Blessed is the man who seeks to make himself aware of his faults for the purpose of correcting them.

[483] The wisest man recognizes the knowledge and wisdom in everyone he meets.

[484] The man who sincerely wants others to succeed soon becomes a great success himself.

[485] A great man has the humility, courage and persistence to acknowledge his faults and correct them, for the good of himself and all he encounters.

[486] Every man should seek to make himself an asset to his country.

[497] It’s not how a man starts that counts; it's how he finishes.

[498] A wise man judges others by their character, not their differing beliefs.

[499] A man tends to treat others the way he treats himself.

[500] Worry is the result of a lack of faith in the LORD.

[501] Wise men listen more than they speak.

[502] Doubt is the act of using the imagination to envision outcomes as being unsuccessful efforts.

[503] People who are slaves to their sin, even though this causes them to offend or injure us, should be pitied rather than reviled and chastised, for they bring much strife into their own lives.

[504] The best followers eventually make for the greatest leaders.

[505] He who gushes when praised will rage when criticized.

[506] Time is best invested in emulating those who a multitude envy.

[507] He who criticizes others liberally is most hurt when subjected to even the slightest bit of it.

[508] It is often not till we’ve lived our destiny that we understand the reasons for our trials.

[509] A man attracts that which he is and repels that which he isn’t.

[510] A man’s capacity to accurately judge his fellow man’s moral character is commensurate with the development of his own.

[511] Invention is but the detection of the causes and effects of nature’s laws that may be utilized in the endeavors of practical use.

[512] A man is as enlightened as his ability to refrain from interfering with his breathing.

[513] The fool believes he’s entitled to respect; the wise recognizes he must earn it.

[514] A country only requires laws because its people fail to pursue and practice morality.

[515] The chief aim of government should be to make itself obsolete.

[516] As we do unto others, we do unto ourselves.

[517] The great king is not concerned with his own glory; he is only interested in satisfying the best interests of his citizens.

[518] The difference between righteousness and self-righteousness is that the former conforms their doctrines to nature; the latter to delusions.

[519] A strong man puts his convictions before his reputation, in upholding the strength and fortitude of his people.

[520] All political positions should be on a volunteer basis.

[521] What we applaud or condemn in others, that they will seek to exhibit more in the future.

[522] Knowledge and wisdom offends those too proud to admit their ignorance and folly.

[523] As a country is, so are its people.

[524] Money is nothing but a reward for service rendered.

[525] A wise man judges his neighbor not by how he did live, but by how he now lives.

[526] As a man treats another, so is he capable of treating you.

[527] The man who understands and overlooks peoples’ faults and shortcomings where they do him no real harm is loved by many.

[528] Strength of love is in proportion to peoples’ absence of desire to control each other.

[529] The jealous, envious man seeks to sleep with the love of the one he perceives to be better than him; his vanity reveals how inadequate he feels about himself.

[530] A good father never disciplines a child when he is angry.

[531] The purpose of the true religion is not to make followers, but leaders.

[532] The greatest kings are those who desire no power and authority over anyone but themselves.

[533] Cowards sabotage worthy works because they envy what they are incapable of producing themselves.

[534] The man who has mastered himself takes no offense to accusations of foolishness.

[535] The man who expresses illwill when he forfeits cooperation soon is shunned.

[536] A prayer for wisdom is a petition for endless adversity and discouragement; for wits only come forth from struggle.

[537] When a woman believes in her man and his abilities without doubt, it furnishes him with a superpower for making an impact.

[538] The path to wisdom is wrought with endless adversity, defeat, disappointment, and discouragement.

[539] An attack on a person’s religion is to induce them to reject an alliance whereby their cooperation would have otherwise been won.

[540] Revenge is an act that springs from a loss of self-control.

[541] A man’s worth is measured by how many he helps.

[542] There is no greater trigger for envy in others than to have lofty aims.

[543] A man must be a victim of himself before he can make one of another.

[544] A king’s character is reflected in his nobles’ and subjects’ conduct.

[545] Opinions can’t cope with facts.

[546] The best a man can do for his religion is not to impose it on those who disagree with it.

[547] Some men mistake confidence for arrogance.

[548] The penalty of standing by our convictions is that we will forfeit the cooperation of those who disagree with or oppose our doctrines and precepts.

[549] When it’s one man against the world, if he has faith, by and by, he will prevail.

[550] The hypocrite preaches forgiveness, but then shuns or persecutes wayward men.

[551] The scoffer gloats over the man who suffers defeats because he lacks the ambition and courage that man has.

[552] The injustice a government inflicts on one citizen is what it’s capable of to all.

[553] A master is in his slaves’ debt; he would be nothing had he not cheated and stolen from them.

[554] Service rendered is the only currency of life; but disservice demands recompense.

[555] The woman whose husband always abides by her whims never knows true romance.

[556] Treason is backing down from the personal conviction in what is righteous.

[557] Lost love makes gods of mortal men.

[558] Talent takes a moment to execute, but a lifetime to develop.

[559] The wise man refrains from refuting the beliefs of those he deems to be erroneous.

[560] Men most respect a man when he has the awareness to recognize his faults and how they inconvenience or harm others and he does his best to remedy them.

[561] Degenerates are deluded into thinking their doctrines are progressive.

[562] Corrupt kings kill their conscience so they can justify their evil schemes.

[563] Promiscuity is a vain search for love the lusty doesn't yet deserve.

[564] The deceitful man first deceives himself.

[565] Those who tolerate injustice are next of kin to the oppressor.

[566] Relentless, repeated disappointments and heartaches make a man exceedingly strong.

[567] Failures delight in the defeats of the bold because they are envious.

[568] The root of all evil is a lack of desire to become self-aware.

[569] The epitome of immorality is to cause another to feel that which we would not appreciate feeling.

[570] To revile enemies or kick against circumstance is to suffer a loss of manhood.

[571] The wicked think what is wicked is righteous; they also think the righteous are wicked.

[572] Man’s greatest affliction is that he prefers to rage against his faults being made known to him rather than using those revelations to accept and correct them.

[573] True liberty is found in controlling our sinful nature.

[574] The honest religionist seeks to turn his beliefs into truths founded on facts.

[575] Motivating offenders to later take the initiative to confess their crimes and make things right with their victims is the first step to erecting a moral society.

[576] The righteous contribute to the people what the wicked try to take from them.

[577] Wisdom mourns the youth of latter days; youth, it yearns for wisdom.

[578] To wish even an enemy illwill and misfortune is to turn our backs on and spite the LORD, who created them with as much love as he did us.

[579] The prudent man exercises miraculous powers of discernment in distinguishing the truth from its enemies: myths, lies and superstitions; this makes his counsel sound and valuable in instructing others.

[580] Only the man who is grateful with a little deserves much.

[581] When a people crave knowledge and wisdom, their evil kings are soon replaced by righteous ones, and when every citizen becomes righteous under their instruction and guidance, nations no longer require kings.

[582] A fool seeks to discredit the man he envies.

[583] A man cannot be cheated; for every loss there is a gain, which is often in the form of wisdom he and others may profit from.

[584] Blessed is the man who sets a high moral standard for his conduct; the day comes when he lives up to it.

[585] The boy who learns to remain untriggered by criticism and rejection becomes a man.

[586] The man who is ignorant to his own motives curses his relations and affairs.

[587] To bless a man is to simply wish for him all the benefits we want for ourselves.

[588] To receive criticism without feeling resentment and the urge to defend ourselves is to be a man.

[589] The pinnacle of masculinity is wisdom; of femininity, loving-kindness

[590] To harbor no illwill or illfortune against those who have wronged us produces the state of mind the LORD is most eager to commune with.

[591] A moral society seeks to reform its criminals and transform them into useful citizens who want to repay their debt, instead of locking them up and punishing them for their past faults and mistakes.

[592] The foolish and ignorant justify their own crimes by using those who have wronged them as their scapegoat; but retaliation makes a man just as guilty as those who instigate.

[593] The arrogant man denies, excuses, justifies or blameshifts his crimes; but the humble one admits them and seeks to correct them and make recompense.

[594] A man without a dream that will come to benefit many may as well be dead.

[595] Death is only the beginning for the righteous; but the end for the wicked.

[596] Treason is offending the LORD by not intervening when evil is being done.

[597] To seek to confuse the sexes is to blaspheme the LORD!

[598] Those who deny they have a sinful nature remain slaves it.

[599] The righteous take no offense to slights and insults, but forgive the iniquities of their brothers and sisters against them; but the wicked hold grudges and seek revenge, and to retaliate to up the score.

[600] A man who rages when his doctrine is questioned is full of folly.

[601] A wise man determines what he wishes his ideal lifestyle to be, then he thinks upon how he can best serve his fellow man to the degree necessary that will entitle him to the monetary compensation that will support it.

[602] The man who refuses to forgive others their sins against him will not be forgiven his own against others.

[603] Men infected by their superstitions are stiff-necked in their stubbornness to recognize and accept the truth.

[604] Celibacy ignites the genius in any man.

[605] Philosophers remold societies to conform to the visions of their imaginations.

[606] What is self-evident to the knowledgeable man is enlightenment to the ignorant.

[607] The first step to knowledge is to admit and accept our ignorance.

[608] A jealous person delights in seeing love go unfulfilled in others, and sometimes works to undermine it.

[609] A real man speaks the truth regardless of how it benefits or harms him.

[610] The world reflects a man’s character back at him.

[611] The LORD speaks to those who omit every grudge against others from their hearts and minds.

[612] The wicked are quick to seek to silence a man who rebukes evil and speaks the truth.

[613] A prophet is revered by everyone but those who think they know him.

[614] The man who knows recognizes those who don’t.

[615] To learn to love and forgive even those who seek endless injury against you is a preparation to see the LORD.

[616] The wicked love to hide their evil in plain sight.

[617] The strong man is the one who can take the most abuse from life and not crumble underneath it completely.

[618] Weak men think it makes them feel superior if they can persecute those they envy.

[619] A concubine who expands a great king’s lineage is blessed!

[620] To understand the LORD is to transcend the use of logic and reason.

[621] Celebrity fornication is an exchange of the lust for sex for the conceit of bragging rights.

[622] Much better than being desired by many is the love of the soulmate.

[623] The man who knows has no need for beliefs.

[624] The great personality takes an interest in the important relations in the life of the people he converses with.

[625] It is a wicked thing to rejoice at another man’s calamity; but the ways of justice is a mystery.

[626] The man who wishes unhappiness for others creates it in himself.

[627] The man who only sees the nobility in his fellow man is himself noble.

[628] Adversity is required to bring wisdom and shape character.

[629] It is the weak man who thinks exercising control over others is what makes him strong.

[630] A woman who fornicates with one man to spite and arouse jealousy in another is a wretch.

[631] A wise man always rejects any woman who seeks to seduce him; if a lady’s interested, she waits for him to pursue and court her, while she simply signals to him her receptiveness.

[632] If torn between the loyalty of a friend and a love interest, and if in conflict, a man will almost always choose the latter.

[633] The greater the trial and tribulation, the greater the lessons that then lead to greater soul evolution.

[634] As a man serves others, so do they come to serve him.

[635] To think on virtue leads to becoming virtuous.

[636] The tyrant seeks to force cooperation by threat of punishment, which only guarantees resistance against him.

[637] The difference between criticism and rebuke is the former tears down while the latter is an invitation for repentance and correction.

[638] The false teacher rages when his fallacious doctrines are exposed and seeks revenge against the one he thinks brought him to shame and ruin, when it was only himself.

[639] Blessed is the woman who weds a husband she wants to surrender to; such as these are the only ones who find harmony and happiness in marriage, free from conflict and misery.

[640] The man who runs his household like a dictator wins his wife and children’s contempt.

[641] The man who understands morality makes himself a perfect judge of character.

[642] Wisdom is nothing but the application of knowledge directed toward constructive and beneficial ends.

[643] The man who is afraid to get it wrong never gets it right.

[644] A noble man refrains from speaking behind another’s back that which he wouldn’t have the courage to say to their face.

[645] The greatest pleasure is to see a spouse pleased.

[646] The man who doesn’t get triggered by another’s wrath or violence is in control of the situation.

[647] The wicked relish in keeping the people ignorant; but the righteous delight in removing it.

[648] When a king changes his doctrine, so do his nobles and subjects.

[649] As a man treats his neighbor, so does he treat the LORD.

[650] Every man’s deepest fantasy is that he marries a wife who acts like a dirty whore with him, and no one else.

[651] Excellence wins the praise of the masses; but the hate of the envious few.

[652] A man completes his character when he ceases to get angry when others offend or wrong him.

[653] Cowards sodomize those they envy most, because they foolishly think it demonstrates their superiority; their punishment is coming.

[654] The man who cares about being the alpha male is not.

[655] The man who studies the best becomes his best.

[656] The muscles a man contracts when he speaks are the same that tend to tense in the listener; and those in them released when the speaker’s voice is free.

[657] A wicked king only acts righteous when it wins him the praise and approval of the masses, for he is motivated by selfishness; but when he no longer receives such blessings, his true evil is revealed with great wrath and vengeance against them.

[657] A righteous king is so even if it wins him the contempt of the world.

[658] A man and woman demonstrate and pledge their capacity for trustworthiness to one another by waiting till their wedding bed.

[659] The heightened measure of the mark and impact a man leaves upon the world is in direct proportion to the love he feels for a woman; if fornicators and adulterers were enlightened in such a manner as this, they would realize through their follies they are killing off their capacity to experience this, the greatest of all blessings under heaven, and, in relation to the extent of their wisdom, immediately change their path toward committing to abstinence until they marry a loyal woman, so that their high tolerance for lust reverts back to normal, increasing once again their capacity to love and bond with a single woman.

[660] True friendship is only ever possible when both friends have dreams, both believe in each others’, and one is as happy for the other realizing theirs in the same way they would be had their own been manifested.

[661] A domineering mother develops a stutter in her child.

[662] True altruism is learning from our suffering, and using the wisdom gained from that pain to prevent others from sharing in it.

[663] Man’s deepest desire is to appear great in the eyes of the woman he loves; therefore, a wise woman uses this power she exercises over him to the benefit of the multitudes.

[664] A child conceived and born in wedlock is greatly blessed.

[665] An unforgiving father makes liars of his children, for they come to fear the arousal of his temper at their confessions of honest or stupid mistakes.

[666] The fool who lacks control over himself seeks it over others.

[667] The great virtue of patience is cultivated in a man in direct relation to the persecution inflicted upon him; but his enemies remain ignorant to the service they render him by forcing him to build strength of character, a blessing they will never know themselves.

[668] The greatest bestowment of forgiveness fosters the greatest of allegiances; a rapist with remorse earns for himself the same blessings his crimes wrought for himself against others, if he be but penitent and suffer the consequences as repayment, which is excruciating physical torment: then it is all forgotten, forever.

[669] Men who become resentful when their errors and mistakes are made known and pridefully and indignantly justify their position make for false friends.

[670] The great man’s powers of influence came from the imagination of the LORD.

[671] Until a man has first learnt to sing well controlled and quietly, he has not yet earned the right to sing aloud and publicly.

[672] A man’s capacity to inhibit his sins is the direct measure by which harmony will abide in his every relation, and the height of the love his kinship will have for him.

[673] The greatest sin of any society is that it honors its ignorant, and despises its wise.

[674] The greatness of a civilization is in relation to the height to which it esteems its women’s counsel.

[675] A great love is born when a woman comes to love a man more than she does her father, and her man comes to love her more than he does his mother.

[676] Peace is impossible so long as even one man is oppressed; but the righteous fight for the liberty of the enslaved.

[677] A man who makes a prayer answered and is aware of it still answers it through divine guidance through their introduction and cooperation.

[678] A loving daughter perceives her father’s disapproval as a gentle reprimand to correct her ways, and lo! She does!

[679] Knowing scoundrels love to steal great ideas and profit from them themselves, the wise man creates plans that if stolen and replicated would do the world a great service in spite of the thefts; he puts the LORD in his debt, whom shall repay with compound interest.

[680] A great husband induces his wife’s mind to be submissive to his will without giving commands or otherwise being domineering.

[681] The man who ogles a woman imagines fornicating with her as he looks; but the man admiring beauty makes no such images.

[682] A foolish woman’s measure of success with love is by how many suitors she can make jealous; but a wise woman knows it’s to commit to one man she knows will never betray or forsake her.

[683] Cursed is the man who blames and shames the victim.

[684] A feminist can never find true love because her doctrines and precepts are the very obstacles that prevent its habitation.

[685] The extent of the rage is often commensurate with the size of the wound opened.

[686] The perfect marriage is wrought out when both husband and wife admit and confess their transgressions against one another and both forgive each other when trespassed against, and seek to refrain from repeating their offenses.

[687] The wise woman seeks to trigger positive emotions in one man; the foolish one, negative emotions in a multitude.

[688] A man only becomes a man when he ceases to act like a victim, even when he is one; instead, he cries the pain into exile.

[689] When equality defies identity, problems arise.

[690] A wise wife doesn’t meddle in her husband’s ways and affairs; but a wise husband requests her counsel concerning them.

[691] A great wife inspires her husband to want to correct his faults and she also brings out his hidden talents.

[692] A suitor’s role is to have a dream in life he’s pursuing; a maiden’s role is to find a man who’s dream she resonates with and believes in, and wants to work with him in realizing.

[693] A wise critic praises merits before he points out shortcomings.

[694] More important than what a man does is that which he doesn’t.

[695] The greatest war a man can win is to conquer his desire to curse and revile and damn those who torment and persecute him.

[696] A wonderful father invests himself in being a champion for his children’s dreams; but a wretched father is ignorant to what they even are.

[697] Gratitude blesses the giver.

[698] A man who threatens when enraged is seldom sincere; he just feels powerless over the situation.

[699] A wise man abstains until he’s married, and he finds a wise woman who does the same, and then they never stray.

[700] Bragging is a desperate and repulsive plea for praise and approval that goes unbidden except by the recipients of ignorance and foolishness.

[701] Remorse wins forgiveness.

[702] The epitome of cowardice is the man who betrays his own mate to make another betray her’s.

[703] A real man always takes responsibility for the faults of his woman; if she goes wrong, he considers it his fault for failing her.

[704] A wise man never sleeps with a woman he doesn’t first love; and if he loves her, why doesn’t he marry her first?

[705] A mistake is only a badge of shame when it fails to set a man right.

[706] Accursed is the man who is accused of something he is guilty of but he refuses to admit it.

[707] A feminine loyal wife must be wooed and won!

[708] Convincing a kind, wise and loyal woman to marry him where he offers her the same blessings in return brings out the very best in a man.

[709] An envious teacher comes to resent the pupil who later excels him.

[710] The man who makes something of himself is often hated by those who didn’t.

[711] The secret to a man’s heart is found in listening to his dreams, believing in them, and encouraging and aiding him in their realization; such a woman will not go without his love and favor.

[712] The desire for control over others decimates the foundation upon which their love would have otherwise rested.

[713] A man cannot believe in others until he first believes in himself.

[714] A man’s true allies are those who give him their ear without ignoring him, or making excuses not to hear him, and then without gaslighting him.

[715] Trying to fathom the LORD is like trying to comprehend infinity; if one hurts and baffles the brain, so must the other.

[716] It is the woman who doesn’t encourage her man to realize his dreams and help him with it, who, when he becomes a disappointment to her, is the one at fault.

[717] A great king’s power comes through the cooperative efforts of his loyal subjects; but a hellbound king is damned by forcing the same subjects allegiance through threat of punishment for their disobedience.

[718] A wise wife believes in her husband’s talents and encourages him in realizing his dreams, without doubt; through her guiding, feminine influence, the journey through adversity into final victory together is lived; these events provide her with the romance her heart has craved since she was a little girl with innocent fantasies.

[719] People just want someone to believe in them and see the good they can accomplish in the world; the loving person believes in people.

[720] Sometimes all a wayward man needs is a little sincere encouragement to put him right.

[721] The adversaries to conquering ourselves are our denials, excuses, justifications or blameshifting something outside ourselves for deflecting our own wrongdoings against others and making them victims; peace and harmony abides not under this practice!

[722] Cowardice is assailing another outside their awareness; cursed is any man who practices such shameful wretchedness!

[723] The wicked punish all protests against their injustices; but the righteous listen to complaints with open, understanding ears.

[724] Men make the world go round, but women make men go round; men rule the world and women rule men.

[725] Cowards sabotage happiness; but heroes overcome their vain afflictions.

[726] A very beautiful woman is corrupted by slaves to their lusts doing favors for her, hoping she fornicates with them; both are cursed.

[727] A man who uses women’s love and favor to validate his manhood is a fraud; a real man needs no woman’s approval to know he is such.

[728] When the fool corrects himself he becomes wise.

[729] Blessed is the wife who selects a husband whose talents she can bring out.

[730] A man best changes the world when he pursues the development of his own moral character; wise witnesses observe the rewards he earns as a result, desire them for themselves, and come to follow his example, lending to a compounded multitude of revolutionaries.

[731] A wise suitor observes how a maiden treats those who serve her; because as she does, so will she one day treat him, to his glory or chagrin.

[732] A wise suitor looks not at how a maiden treats himself, but everybody else.

[733] After we become familiar with someone’s personality and character, their appearance begins to reflect it; sometimes the beautiful become ugly, and the ugly become beautiful, in our mind’s perception at the sight of and anticipation of encountering them again.

[734] A beautiful fornicating woman is like a diamond inside a turd; what man really wants the stench?

[735] What a man thinks of us in any moment is heavily biased by his last experience with us.

[736] The man who has arrived at the firm decision that he will no longer wish illwill against anyone, for any reason whatsoever, even should he endure severe persecution and injustice and his enemies righteously deserve recompense for it, has succeeded in completely mastering himself; he is an immortal amongst mortals, or so he shall be for a thousand years!

[737] Righteous kings offer the choice of obedience, and hear petitions in opposition; but wicked kings demand it through force and threat of penalty or punishment.

[738] When a maiden tells a suitor a story from her life or makes an observation and he asks himself how it made her feel, he has had an epiphany in making his marriage a happy, successful one.

[739] A man’s humility is measured by the speed to which he can admit his faults and mistakes without defending them; his courage, by his desire to correct them; and his persistence, by his refusal to quit the task until completed.

[740] It is impossible for an immoral person to find true love.

[741] The wisest husband is the one who marries a wife who is wiser in ways he isn’t; but still, she wants to surrender to his headship.

[742] When a man most craves knowledge and wisdom and grows in it, those who love the power others’ ignorance gives them for their selfish gain persecute him for enlightening their slaves.

[743] The subjects of a nation who find true love are immune to tyrannical governing bodies enslaving them; but a hysteria of fornication and adultery make them easy prey.

[744] There is always hope for the man who regrets and feels remorse for his wrongs against his fellows; but evildoers who deny any error and persist in their wickedness are truly damned.

[745] Sheol is when truth and justice are hidden and deprived of from the masses.

[746] All traitors are eventually reduced to ridicule and hopefully remorse.

[747] Salvation belongs to the man who recognizes he has been wrong, regrets his errors, and seeks to put them right until recompense has been completed.

[748] The enemies of life are wishing for those who hurt us illwill and ill fortune; for as we wish for others, so do we bring upon ourselves.

[749] All sin impulses that enter the consciousness pull the head back and down.

[750] The man who doesn’t care where he ranks ends up at the top.

[751] A husband makes the decisions; but a wife counsels him in them.

[752] A man who truly loves a woman will want to see her live her dreams, even if it’s not with him.

[753] Listening begets understanding.

[754] Refraining from food, drink and sex as much as he can puts a prophet most closely in accord with the will of the LORD; but what does the prophet value more: his own personal dreams being realized, or him advancing the betterment of mankind, which is the will of Him who offers approval and affirmation?

[755] A man doubts he’s a man until his father first confirms it; but what if the father never had that initiation happen to himself and is ignorant to that which he is ignorant to and his duty to confer upon his own son?

[756] Righteousness wins rewards and wickedness wins penalties.

[757] The charlatan has only himself to blame when he's exposed; for truth eventually overrules lies and deception.

[758] For a man to desire to hurt his enemies and to do so are very different things; but the man who refrains in thought and act has many blessings coming for an eternity; and his enemies, many persecutions.

[759] The punctual man earns goodwill everywhere he goes; no one likes their time stolen from them.

[760] A king only becomes great when he stops demanding cooperation and starts asking for and winning it.

[761] The man who truly loves a woman will rejoice when she lives her dreams, even if he isn’t a part of them.

[762] To be a man is to perfect strength and correct weakness.

[763] Losing the true love is what makes the poet great.

[764] A wicked king who deprives his subjects of their just reward wins his peoples wrath and revolt; the recognition of unfairness is woven into man’s instincts, and he is disgusted when he witnesses it.

[765] A boy who’s father hasn’t initiated him into manhood suffers three fates: he becomes jealous, and seeks after endless sex instead of true love with his soulmate; he becomes envious, and chases after money that no amount satisfies instead of seeking to render his services and let the compensation take care of itself; he becomes intolerant, and seeks power over others when his efforts should be directed at learning to exercise complete power over himself: such as these never become men, and the women in their lives secretly resent them for it or silently pity them.

[766] The habitually disloyal man soon comes to realize he can no longer even trust himself, and what greater penalty is there than that?

[767] A man who trusts in himself wins it from others also.

[768] Losers are more interested in appearing happy and successful to the world, rather than actually being such.

[769] When a fool can’t dispute the message, he attacks the messenger; which just opens the masses ears to it, and in it they put their faith and hope.

[770] The real alpha male’s only competition is defeating today the vile monster he was yesterday; a kind and loving and loyal wife is the greatest asset to him in achieving such an aim.

[771] Celibacy makes a man a genius the masses often fail to understand, such that they ridicule him; but sex with his loyal wife makes that same man a god who wields miraculous powers of influence.

[772] Resistance and denial amidst temptation begets more trust.

[773] The hero is the one who was misguided until a wise mentor came into his life and aided him in helping him find his purpose which will be of tremendous profit to the world, such that our struggling vagabond finally realizes his personal dreams as his reward for his great altruistic efforts and contributions.

[774] A broken heart can become the most loving one because it understands pain and suffering.

[775] A man can’t forgive wrongs against him until they first enrage him, such that through the pain he comes to control the anger and transmute it into a benefit to others; even if it’s just to safeguard them from experiencing the same suffering he endured.

[776] The truth puts to shame, distress and ruin the secret iniquities of evildoers.

[777] Standing up for his rights and freedoms makes a man a man; but forgiving perpetrators who revoke or violate them make him a god.

[778] Cowardice is being friendly to someone’s face, then trying to injure or destroy them behind their back.

[779] True friendship is founded on knowing each others’ dreams and encouraging one another to realize them.

[780] The idle coward cheers and gloats over the strong man when he encounters adversity and failure, thinking it gives him evidence that he’s superior to him; but the strong man persists and finally wins, and then his adversaries hate him for triggering in them feelings of inferiority. Such is the stupidity of a man who refuses to conquer his envy.

[781] The prideful and vain man gets offended and shuns you when you confront him for his wrongs against you.

[782] Most of the world’s problems span from man’s pride and his indignation to recognize his own faults and mistakes which harm others, then having no interest in correcting them.

[783] The truth is the most powerful weapon against evil and the bringer of justice.

[784] To partake in evil is to but wish another illwill or ill fortune; righteousness comes to those who refrain from such practices of thought.

[785] The man who believes in his and others dreams cures himself of his envy.

[786] The great man imagines himself possessing his ideal personality and character and living his ideal lifestyle, and he measures himself by his progress and successes in manifesting them; but the foolish man measures himself by how successful he is in attaining all the material things he sees others wanting, hoping to win the approval, admiration and envy of those who wish they had what he has accumulated for himself; his self-worth is founded on the failures of others.

[787] A man who doesn’t tease his wife like she’s a child on a playground deprives her of much joy, love and affection.

[788] A man can tell his friends from his enemies by who believes in his dreams, and who doesn’t.

[789] The battle between good and evil is fought and won with but one weapon: the truth.

[780] It is a righteous cause to wage war to destroy tyranny and bring freedom.

[781] The beta male wants to show his superiority over other men, usually by accumulating riches, becoming a philander of beautiful women, or exercising power over others, such that he may, through his conceit, gloat over his brothers for him experiencing blessings he knows they’re missing out on; but the alpha male only wants to show his superiority over the weak man he was in his yesterdays.

[782] Blessed is the woman who looks at the hero and exclaims: “I want a man like that!” and then she immediately starts remolding herself into the woman such a man would want to marry; she is sure to win and be rewarded for her efforts when the man with an attractive personality, an unbreakable character and with ambitions to give her the world finally shows up to reward her for her loyalty.

[783] A praised and commended service causes the renderer of it to want to perform it to a greater degree.

[784] No one is never not in need of encouragement; give it, and give it in abundance, for you provide the world with its greatest service!

[785] The one who consoles a future king when he’s but a pensive peasant wins many blessings.

[786] The dungeon of remorse leads the way to a tower as ecstatically high as the pain was deep.

[787] Trying and failing reveals our ignorance to what we must learn to later succeed.

[788] Miracles transpire when the doer joins in cooperation with the thinker; wicked governments are overthrown, and reestablished with righteous ones. 

[789] A wise and righteous judge sympathizes with the penitent perpetrator; and he encounters outrage for it.

[790] Men who do evil are not always evil; just misguided or they submit to temptations they yet fail to resist.

[791] Problems only arise in the world when the people do not know right from wrong, nor wish to know.

[792] Heaven would be half way reached if all admitted their wrongs and sought to make them right.

[793] Man’s greatest desire is that he marries a woman who dotes upon him and him alone; his heart craves her honesty and loyalty as much as his lungs do air.

[794] The great man becomes so by studying under and emulating great men until finally he becomes one in his own right.

[795] The alpha male’s self-worth is founded on the successes he can make of other men; the beta male, upon how many failures make him look greater by comparison.

[796] Before he requests it, a man should know he asks for extreme pain and suffering if he asks for wisdom.

[797] Disloyalty triggers rage, which, in righteous offenders, begets remorse at being in the wrong, leading to confession, forgiveness and eventually reconciliation with a new commitment towards reform.

[798] A person who experiences the penalties of their disloyalty often forges themselves into the loyalist one of them all.

[799] A man only conquers his enemies when he overcomes his hatred for them.

[800] Loving is forgiving wrongs, and hoping it’s met with remorse.

[801] To have no ill will and wish no ill fortune to anyone is to achieve enlightenment; it is to harbor goodwill to all, desiring for them the blessings we crave for ourselves.

[802] A husband fits the role of teacher; therefore, a wise man gains the knowledge and wisdom the wife he would want is interested in being most enlightened on.

[803] The only route to true love is to be remorseful when we wrong our mates and want to make it right with them, and we forgive all of their wrongs against us, vowing each other both will seek to resist repeating their offenses until they succeed.

[804] It is better to be alone than with a woman who feels no remorse for her wrongs and has no desire to put them right.

[805] The righteous judge never condemns the remorseful who recognize their indebtedness and want to balance their debt.

[806] Personality and character in a woman are her greatest assets; from these things comes her future bliss where her soul knows no dissatisfaction.

[807] The greatest shame a man can bring upon himself and his household is to deny his wrongs against others instead of having the humility to admit them, the courage to seek to put the wrong things right, and the persistence to see the endeavor through to completion.

[808] Every man errs and wrongs others; it is only the humble, courageous and persistent who admit it and seek to put the wrong things right, regardless of if it brings them shame and embarrassment for a finite moment.

[809] Blessed is the man who listens to him whom evil governments bully and persecute; his salvation is secured forevermore.

[810] The man who refuses to admit his wrongs, feels no remorse for them and exhibits no desire to put them right, is damned!

[811] The best vengeance is forgiveness; for it puts those who wronged us in our debt and, if they have a conscience, it will secretly haunt them.

[812] To forgive the wrong of a penitent sinner produces more devotion in them; for they know they have a debt to make up for.

[813] The wise recognize and embrace the truth; the envious and doubtful dispute and seek to discredit it; and the stupid and idiotic ridicule and reject it.

[814] Stupid people are deluded into thinking they’re righteous by advocating for making wickedness something worthy of acceptance and praise.

[815] The truth doesn’t care who’s so ignorant to it that it offends them.

[816] The fool who is ignorant to the evil he commits is later offended when it is made known to him; but the wise humbly confess and correct themselves.

[817] Rebuke causes reform in the righteous; and hatred in the wicked.

[818] When a man no longer wants those who made him suffer to suffer in return, and he has no desire to be superior to those who made him feel inferior, has he claimed the approval and validation of the LORD.

[819] Equity prevails in a society when the people make themselves righteous.

[820] He is a worm who gloats over others because he has blessings they don’t.

[821] The woman always picks the man, and if she’s wise she picks the one she believes she can bring out the most potential in that it will be of most benefit the world; if she succeeds, her soul is most satisfied. This is the feminine dream.

[822] The measure of a judge is the extent of the forgiveness he can render the wrongdoer, but he is not unrighteous if he condemns those who feel no remorse for their evils, and no desire to put their wrongs right.

[823] It is remorse that determines if a man encounters heaven or hell; for all have fallen short.

[824] Knowledge and wisdom fails in comparison to the love of a loyal woman.

[825] The greatest honor is to be emulated by others who then come to benefit themselves, and all they encounter, as a result.

[826] The truly great man eliminates his desire to shame those who rejoiced in his sufferings by later using his success to gloat over them.

[827] The way of the wicked is to gaslight a man, and then punish him if he protests.

[828] The wayward woman craves opening wounds in men; but the virtuous one delights in healing them.

[829] The best revenge is forgiveness: in the remorseful, the work of their conscience over their wrongs against us will bring them shame and guilt and regret and a recognition of their indebtedness to us, and that is penance enough; but those who kill the conscience will be removed from the heavens and the earth forevermore.

[830] When the people thirst for knowledge, wisdom and understanding, a land becomes righteous and just.

[831] Selfish and greedy kings make laws to steal from the produce of the peoples’ labors; such thieves are too weak, lazy and incompetent to make their own money, by first serving others and thus entitling them to such compensation.

[832] The idiot ridicules the truth because he is too stupid to understand it; the prideful angrily opposes it because it reveals his faults and mistakes; and the wise accepts it because he knows it brings him love, peace and happiness.

[833] Only the fool devotes himself to making others unhappy, because this is exactly the thing that is preventing him from curing himself of his own misery.

[834] Happiness comes from seeking to contribute to the happiness of others through service; misery, from committing crimes that withhold or prevent them from finding it.

[835] The woman who seduces a man with no intention of being a champion for his dreams to benefit his fellow man demoralizes a civilization.

[836] Those who would find true love must first begin by mastering their sinful nature; then the mate who has also done the same will put in their appearance to form the perfect harmonic relation.

[837] The ideal husband is the one who learns how he triggers silent negative reactions in his wife’s mind and trains himself to stop the behaviors that cause them; such a man brings perfect love and harmony into his marriage.

[838] He who would become great and change the world refrains from sex with any woman he doesn’t first love, and he knows she loves him in return.

[839] Exceedingly wise and blessed is the woman who denies sex to any man who’s dreams she doesn’t first believe in and want to be his helper in manifesting; such as these are the only women who find true love and happiness in this life, and are the ones to truly change the world.

[840] Our love is real when it reforms our wicked ways because we feel ashamed they hurt the ones we love most.

[841] Reconciliation starts when we take the initiative to right the ones we’ve wronged; sometimes our remorse triggers the same in them and they confess their wrongs against us too, and then, when both have forgiven and been forgiven, what once was a string becomes a rope.

[842] Where there is love in a transgressor, their remorse over past wrongs induces them to recognize their indebtedness to their victim and causes them to want to balance it; this is evidence of being a person after the LORD’s own heart.

[843] No man has the right to rebuke in others what he hasn’t already mastered in himself.

[844] When a man doubts his manhood, he seeks to prove it to others, hoping to verify it to himself based on their acceptance and approval, and their praise and admiration.

[845] The man who has to prove his manhood has not yet found it.

[846] If it’s hidden, it’s known to be wrong.

[847] Betrayal is the beginning of wisdom.

[848] Any ill word or deed that triggers a negative thought in a spouse is a crime against love; in that moment, they have made their minds antagonistic to one another’s.

[849] True love only results when soulmates stop speaking or acting in any way that triggers a silent hurtful or resentful response in the other’s mind; the exemplification of morality by both husband and wife makes this condition manifest.

[850] Promiscuity turns men who should have been friends into enemies; then they become competitive with each other rather than cooperative.

[851] Ignorance is not knowing and not doing that which will make a man happy and content.

[852] True love cannot exist where the desire to punish each others’ wrongs does; but instead compassion and forgiveness take its place.

[853] A king can only serve his people to the degree to which his queen serves him; the kingdom depends upon her devotion to him.

[854] He is an utter fool who lets a woman use him as a tool to punish the man she really loves for hurting her.

[855] The strength and glory of a civilization is dependent upon the loyalty of its women.

[856] The best teachers of righteousness are the ones who know the penalties of wickedness.

[857] A wicked government’s greatest fear is that the people will find true love in their marriages, for it would make them impossible to subjugate and control.

[858] It is foolish to punish those who criticize and reject us instead of doing that which would win us their praise and acceptance in the first place.

[859] True love remembers no wrongs: if a husband or wife says, “But I did this because you did that!” they are keeping a record, and true love will continue to elude them.

[860] The path to exemlparship is two-fold: it is training ourselves to refrain from even thinking about giving expression to our sins, such that we no longer wrong and hurt anyone; and learning to inhibit the instinctive negative response from being triggered in ourselves when we are the recipient of others wrongs against us, checking the urge to return evil for evil from entering the consciousness.

[861] Man’s conscience is the heart of the LORD.

[862] No man will change his ways until he first admits the shame in them.

[863] The way of the wicked is to persecute the philosopher as soon as they can find him.

[864] It is not the ones with the most wrongs which are most wretched, but the ones who have no desire to make them right.

[865] The man who fails to dominate himself seeks to dominate others.

[866] It is not until a man admits he’s wrong that he can start putting himself right.

[867] Recognizing the penalties of error brings wisdom.

[868] Using the body the way the LORD designed it saturates the consciousness with joy.

[869] Peace and harmony is only possible when we become aware of the often unconscious ways we trigger others and train ourselves to stop; and we resist the urge to trigger others to punish them when they trigger us until the reaction ceases to fire in the consciousness.

[870] Immortals have the eternal appearance of the early twenties.

[871] A great crime a man can commit is to fail to recognize his soulmate when she is well aware of it.

[872] The difference between the damned and those who receive salvation is a reflection of if they’ve safeguarded their conscience or killed it.

[873] A government that prohibits its citizens from righting their wrongs is the wickedest one of them all.

[874] Rage results from being wronged; sorrow, from suffering loss; and hell on earth is when they’re the same thing.

[875] Righteous indignation is expressed wrath against being wronged without provocation; selfish anger, rage at the penalties that always follow having wronged another.

[876] True love is only produced when a husband and wife have both come to refrain from acting and treating each other in any way that causes a hurtful or resentful response in the other, whether silently harbored or outwardly expressed; when all negative behaviors that trigger such have been overcome by both, the perfect marriage results.

[877] It is a fool’s game to divorce love and sex.

[878] A good man who can’t find a loving, loyal wife goes crazy.

[879] The man who finally conquers his desire to injure those who injure him wins the approval of the LORD.

[880] An apology followed by a justification for the transgression tends to make forgiveness resistant to it.

[881] Only the man who admits his foolishness can become wise; for to deny it is to remain a fool.

[882] The wicked king punishes all protests against his injustices instead of amending his evils; thus, he wins the contempt and opposition of those he reigns over.

[883] The conceited, power-hungry woman gloats over the men whose advances she rejects; she subscribes to a fallacious method to build her self-esteem.

[884] The greatest power of influence is a freed vocal mechanism.

[885] Chastity is a pledge that a person will later be loyal and trustworthy to their spouse when they finally marry.

[886] He who is afraid to get it wrong never gets it right; for success is founded upon the lessons of past failures.

[887] To the man who perseveres, the extent of the struggle will be commensurate with the resulting strength of character and wisdom fostered.

[888] Compassion comes with the recognition that most men lack conscious control over themselves and their sins; they think, speak and act out of seemingly irresistible blind habit, which arouses pity and sorrow in us, acknowledging it’s to their confirmed detriment.

[889] A man cannot truly understand another’s pain unless he has first suffered it himself.

[890] The beloved wife is the one who consoles a crying husband when he suffers loss and calms his rage when he is wronged.

[891] Indoctrination is amoral: it results in the masses realizing their own dreams, or working to realize their government’s.

[892] The man who is others’ champion becomes theirs.

[893] The greatest victory over self is to feel no resentment when our follies and foibles are made known to us; instead, we rejoice in their revelations, knowing we may now amend them to our profit.

[894] The king who requests the counsel of his queen puts his kingdom right; he thinks from the brain, but she feels from the heart.

[895] Blessed is the woman who cringes at the thought of murdering her own children.

[896] The great man becomes such because he craves righteousness more than he does sex.

[897] We want our transgressors to admit their offenses hurt us and witness them feel remorse for the suffering they caused us; such expressions as these are the truthful, penitent petitions worthy of forgiveness.

[898] To falter is human; but to know it’s wrong and seek to resist it is to know the LORD.

[899] The most courageous battle a man can win is to see his own faults and mistakes for what they are, instead of defending them to himself and others.

[900] It isn’t true love if it isn’t loyal; for loyalty is the foundation of the blessed relation.

[901] The man with the most resonant, projected voice will naturally emerge the leader in any interaction, and all will instinctively know it.

[902] Man’s unconscious manners in which he triggers others is the reason most of the world’s disputes start; his erroneous desire to retrigger his transgressor is the reason for most of them continuing.

[903] A traitor will present evidence for his loyalty before it’s even doubted.

[904] For a man to see and correct his foibles and follies is for him to grow in stature and wisdom; it is nothing more, and it never will be.

[905] A harmonious marriage results from a friendly competition to see who can better serve the other; not a battle for who’s rule wins.

[906] A great lover doesn’t pursue the attainment of a subject of desire, but an ever-unfolding harmonious, loving dynamic with them.

[908] A loving father makes his children’s interests his own.

[909] Fools mistake different roles for inequality.

[910] The great leader never seeks to fit in; instead, he induces others to fit in with him, because he shows them how their cooperation will profit themselves and those they love most.

[911] The woman who seeks to rule over her man sabotages the true love her heart craves; for it can only be found when she first wants to and then she does surrender to his headship.

[912] Better than being highly desired is being truly loved.

[913] Ability is but a capacity freed to function as it was designed to.

[914] A great lover makes their beloved’s needs their top priority.

[915] To try to control a woman and dictate her conduct is the epitome of objectifying her.

[916] As a man does unto others, he brings onto himself.

[917] The route to true happiness is to find true love, and then let acts of altruism blossom forth from that harmonious union.

[918] Contentment comes when a man and his wife decide the lifestyle they wish to live free from envious competition, and then they commit to rendering an equivalent service required to entitle them to it.

[919] The benefit of error is the certain knowledge of why the acts and their consequences are to be avoided, such that the resulting wisdom may be conveyed to others without them having to err themselves.

[920] A true religion is but the instructions by which a vision of how people should relate themselves to one another harmoniously may be manifested.

[921] A husband cannot provide his wife with the true love her heart craves unless he first makes himself both humble and wise.

[922] A husband must first go up and forward if he wants his wife to be free, and for their children to then follow the same direction.

[923] The art of friendship is finding out another’s state of affairs and staying current with them, and keeping them current with ours.

[924] Women who transform men into religionists’ become as goddesses in the pages of history.

[925] The desire for power over others is freedom’s greatest adversary.

[925] A new identity precedes all change.

[926] There can be no wisdom without humility.

[927] Flattery seeks selfish reciprocated desire or approval; but a sincere compliment affirms another’s value in the world: what they have or could yet contribute.

[928] There is a difference between a wife rebuking her husband for a fault that triggers hurt and pain in her, and those disguised as ploys to usurp his headship.

[929] The feminist doctrine and precepts are designed to succeed at one thing: usurping the headship away from the husband; but this is to destroy a foundation stone that would otherwise support the structure of true love in her marriage.

[930] It is only the weak man who considers it a defeat to recognize or accept his faults and errors, and then ignoring them so he might continue in his follies; but learning from such embarrassment and failure is exactly what makes a righteous man become strong, for he grows in increased blamelessness and wisdom as a result of enduring every trial and adversity.

[931] The cunning and deceitful will convince a person they’re in a prison, when their idea of salvation from it is the real prison.

[932] Love can only surface in relation to the degree to which the desire to control a beloved shrinks.

[933] For a man to know another, all he must do is figure out what they do whenever he’s not around them; to make such revelations an aim of his conversation is to start wielding influence with many.

[934] More valuable than possessing a skill is knowing the process by which it may be learned, and thus taught; with such value a man can franchise his reality into the unfolding experiences of others’ lives.

[935] The secret to a happy marriage is for both husband and wife to commit to eliciting only positive emotions in each other, and refraining from triggering the negative ones; the first comes with the unfoldment of personality, and the second with the development of character.

[936] A man travels in a direction, but a woman points him in it.

[937] A seductress’s gambit is simple: she deceives her victim into feeling like he is a great man, and then the elicitation of his vanity and self-love makes him an easy conquest.

[938] Most people want to either rule or change the world, but few will first rule or change themselves, which would then entitle them to such enduring power or honors.

[939] The man who truly changes the world is the one who first changes himself, then induces a multitude to follow his example.

[940] Referring to a past favor to get one wins cooperation, but not without some contempt.

[941] There are three great evils within a man’s heart he must do battle with and conquer: jealousy, which causes him to hate the man who wins the love and favor he wishes for himself; envy, which causes him to hate the man who earns the power and honor he wishes for himself; and intolerance, which causes him to hate the man who lives free in all the ways he’s enslaved.

[942] To conquer the urge to punish or retrigger those who trigger us is to be a Son or Daughter of God; being such is to bear others sins without retaliating against their offenses.

[943] Self-worth only comes from knowing we’ve contributed to the happiness and contentment of others.

[944] A true religion in the mind of a devout adherent ends in martyrdom in this life, and immorality in the next.

[945] A happy man is the one who spreads good will and good cheer everywhere he goes, and gives no one a reason to harbor illwill and resentment towards him; but he cannot help it if others are jealous, envious or intolerant of the blessings his positive, confident attitude bring him.

[946] What’s familiar to us seems normal, but it may really be grossly abnormal and we’d never know it because we have nothing with which to contrast and compare our reality with.

[947] A man should not ask for a critique if he’s already prepared to refute it.

[948] The woman who founds her self-worth on how many men desire her will always feel worthless in her soul; for she has yet to find her soulmate who will give her the identity she is to be in the world.

[949] The alpha male wants control, power and dominion only over himself; the beta male, over everyone and everything else.

[950] A great preacher leads his congregation to arrive at the conclusions he wants them to reach and adopt by way of their own thought.

[951] The message should always be bigger than the man who preaches it.

[952] The only women who will share a man are the broken ones, and how great do desperate women clinging to him make him?

[953] The wife who asks herself: “How is my husband best fitted to serve humanity, and how may I help him with it?” is the one who will live the romantic fantasies of her youthful innocence when she transforms him into a champion.

[954] The man who’s loved and respected by his wife will climb the highest mountains and sail the seven seas for her.

[955] The wisest woman is the one who knows how to give her husband love and respect, bound in absolute loyalty.

[956] Romance is convincing someone they’re the only desirable person in the entire world, and everyone else fails to compare with how valuable they are.

[957] Helplessness is being powerless to stop others from being wronged or persecuted.

[958] To be born is to suffer ignorance, and to live is to attempt to cure it.

[959] When neither husband nor wife use one another to validate each other’s ability to attract a good mate, true love has a better chance of flowering.

[960] The greatest compliment the world bestows on a man is that he can have the most desirable of women; but what makes him truly great is if he only wants his loyal wife.

[961] If prophecy is accurate, some have no choice but to endure hell forevermore.

[962] To be a strong man is to have righteous and just convictions, and to fight for their dominion in society.

[963] Every man is vain, except those who make themselves gods.

[964] It is perhaps only the betrayal by a lover who can shatter a man’s conceit for himself.

[965] When immorality becomes common, no one objects to it.

[966] Loving is a persistence of the heart’s desire.

[967] The wise man seeks conditions; the fool, objects.

[968] The objectification of women is trying to force them into becoming what men want them to be for their own selfish benefit.

[969] To be a rebel is to assert the boundary, but then take the stand far beyond necessary.

[970] A man can’t help but love those who anticipate and satisfy his needs.

[971] The act of shaming a woman for her sexual exploits stems from the desire to turn her into a possession.

[972] The only way to achieve greatness is to not desire it; the only man who finds it is the one who does not want it.

[973] The freedom every woman seeks can only be found in the true love relation.

[974] The only form of advice we should give another is to tell them what we would do in their position, and request their consent before we do so. 

[975] To complete the character is to reach a status where we wish no illwill or illfortune to even those who punish or persecute us, recognizing always they are but victims to their own sins which brings them suffering.

[976] Blind obedience is not loyalty.

[977] The great king gives or withholds approval; but he does not dictate.

[978] The greatest form of ignorance is to be blind to our own character.

[979] A man excuses in others the evils he’s willing to tolerate in himself.

[980] A woman only respects her man when she wins his trust and keeps it.

[981] The man with the most wisdom and its application becomes accepted as the alpha.

[982] The purpose of life is to find the one we love more than anyone else on the planet and they love us the same, when we wrong each other we’re remorseful for hurting them and they are for us, we forgive their wrongs against us and they forgive ours against them, and we commit to learning to never reoffend each other the same again; and then we channel that unconditional love for each other into serving humanity, all in exchange for our ideal lifestyle required to support our family.

[983] The extent of the service rendered is in proportion to the love for the consumer back of it.

[984] The extent of the altruism offered by the wedded is commensurate with the depth of their love for one another.

[985] The path to true love is when a man loves a woman more than his mother, she loves him more than her father, and they keep no record of wrongs but yet seek to cease from triggering one another until they have achieved mutual success.

[986] To win trust is to be respected.

[987] True morality runs deeper than rules, but into the essences of the righteous soul.

[988] Compassion results from recognizing we and everyone else are sinners, but we all are susceptible to different sins that carry different penalties; and what makes one sin or its consequences worse than the other: do not all harm the individual who indulges them, though in varying ways?

[989] The problem with this world is that it knows neither right from wrong, nor does it seem to want to do right even if it did.

[990] To suffer pain is to fathom it in others, and to do that is to understand another.

[991] To truly love another is to understand their suffering and sympathize with it without making them feel inferior for what we think are their foibles and follies that led to it.

[992] Personality wins love; character wins respect.

[993] The unschooled instinct is to believe those who point out our malefactions are our enemies and not our allies; but will not an enemy encourage us to continue in that which works against us, and an ally correct that in us which doesn’t?

[994] Love is true when the victim of an offense refrains from lording their transgressor’s crimes over their head and shaming them for their error in judgment, especially when their soul is penitent.

[995] Rehearsing authenticity is phoniness.

[996] A woman can only give a man true love when she loves him more than her father, she shows remorse when she wrongs him and wants to put the errors right, and she forgives his transgressions against her so that no bitterness remains towards him; the same goes for a man who wants to give a woman true love.

[997] Remorse makes forgiveness justified.

[998] The man who justifies his iniquities as he confesses them lacks penitence.

[999] True remorse shows no justification.

[1000] To hear another’s wound and to receive their sympathy for ours is to make a true friend.

[1001] Friendship is strengthened by knowing one another’s wounds and mutually wanting to see them healed.

[1002] The best parents do little more than set the right example.

[1003] The loving man only affirms another’s struggle instead of trying to solve it for them.

[1004] To retaliate against a transgressor is to become one.

[1005] Integrity is being who we think we are.

[1006] The beginning of influence is learning what others’ silent responses are to what we say and do.

[1007] A father who seeks out his daughter’s wisdom blesses both of them.

[1008] The truth always masters lies and deceit, eventually.

[1009] The liar and deceiver condemns in public the very things he practices in private.

[1010] A man’s objective in romance should be to marry the wisest and most loving woman he’s ever met.

[1011] Love is won, and respect is earned; neither can truly be bribed.

[1012] Wisdom in a wife is her unstoppable belief in her husband’s potential to render great service to mankind.

[1013] Most avoid and ignore advice; but few deny guidance that profits them.

[1014] An enemy known is one half conquered.

[1015] Tyrants act like the sheep they want to deceive to win them over, only to finally reveal themselves as the wolves they truly are, which is to the sheep’s slaughter.

[1016] To appreciate and love a spouse is to value their service to you and your family.

[1017] The wicked purposely and secretly introduce evil so they can publicly oppose it to look virtuous to win the support of the people.

[1018] A husband carries out in the day that which he and his wife planned the evening before.

[1019] Evil kings create the problems, so they can appear to solve them to win the support of the masses.

[1020] A man who promises something for nothing is lying, or he is ignorant to nature and is therefore lying to himself.

[1021] A loving father affirms his daughter’s worth (or how valuable she and her life is to the world): over and over again, he reiterates it.

[1022] The greatest sin is to deliberately trigger another; if no one triggered others, there would be peace on earth. But all must cooperate to manifest it.

[1023] A good father only counsels his sons and daughters in making their own decisions; he doesn’t try to impose his will and make their choices for them.

[1024] A selfish king promises to solve the peoples’ problems himself, because he craves the glory; but a selfless king guides them to solve their own, giving them the glory.

[1025] When a prudent man encounters new information, he asks himself if the source is reliable or twisted by a deceitful agenda.

[1026] Arrogance is veiled insecurity.

[1027] A truly great man sympathizes with those who wrong him; knowing he has also submitted to his own sins and wronged others himself.

[1028] Evil kings pervert the peoples’ minds by doctoring a culture that, if accepted and acted upon, thwarts them in their pursuit of happiness and contentment.

[1029] Seeking perfection by never making mistakes is the path of the delusional; seeking righteousness through necessary error, that of the sane.

[1030] A father most cherishes a daughter who shares his passion; for their connection will be unbreakable.

[1031] The wicked know unhappy people are the easiest to control; thus, they create and cater to it.

[1032] Fellowship where no man envies or seeks to be greater than any other in the group, but only recognize the benefits all contribute toward a constructive common objective, is where and when miracles happen.

[1033] Blessed is the woman who abstains from a man’s flesh until she knows he loves her more than his mother, and she loves him more than her father; that is a foundation stone of true love.

[1034] Goodwill amongst others results from the practice of morality.

[1035] The right use of sex is between a man who loves the woman more than his mother, and she loves him more than her father.

[1036] The fallacy that we know all things destroys our curiosity in another’s knowledge and wisdom, and that sabotages our connection with them, for it is found in the act of sharing it.

[1037] There is advice given because the father wants to feel superior to his son, and that which is given because the father has already traveled the journey, and knows it, and wants to see it successfully completed by his son too; every father should know this difference before his sons’ come of age.

[1038] Life’s greatest battle and victory is to stop getting triggered when we’re wronged or our perception of it.

[1039] To love another is to desire for them the blessings we do for ourselves.

[1040] A bitch is so because she owns the bitterness in the minds of the men she’s conquered; but a virtuous woman eradicates it in the minds of all she’s wronged, such that all come to wish her goodwill.

[1041] Every man’s aim should be to win the goodwill of his family, his allies, and his society by contributing to them all; and wishing to do no one any wrong, yet recompensing when he does err.

[1042] A good wife breeds cleanliness in a man.

[1043] A negative emotion triggered in a spouse deprives both of peace and harmony in that moment; what a husband does to his wife, he does to himself, and vice versa.

[1044] The best education comes through entertainment; propaganda, too.

[1045] A man can only feel like a worthy man when he knows he’s contributed to the happiness and contentment of others; those who seek to kill in a man the desire to do so best ruins him.

[1046] Blessed are those who love before they consummate.

[1047] To be truly great is to acknowledge and welcome all, but to judge none.

[1048] The most foolish economist is the one who ignores the law of retribution for his own instant gratification.

[1049] The man who doubts himself will instill it in others.

[1050] Compassion is going out of our way to accommodate the shortcomings of others.

[1051] The wicked introduce evil so they can oppose it to look virtuous.

[1052] The shorter the slogan, the better it tends to be.

[1053] When a man thinks he’s always right, he will fail to see all the ways he’s not.

[1054] Most of what makes a story great is what happened before it begins.

[1055] Peace and harmony cannot abide where the desire to punish one another’s wrongs does.

[1056] The exhibition of mercy tends to turn a good heart penitent; but the evil show no remorse.

[1057] The culprit accuses his victims of lying about his transgressions against them, claiming it’s a conspiracy to ruin him, hoping to win sympathy.

[1058] Peace is the result of harmony.

[1059] The man who truly loves mankind ceases to vilify even the villains; instead, he looks at them as wayward souls struggling to find their humanity.

[1060] Gullibility is nothing but a failure to accumulate the facts, and then a naïve belief  in what runs contrary to them.

[1061] The foundation of peace is an elimination of the resentment and bitterness for the wrongs done against us.

[1062] The worst insult we can suffer a man is to frame him as our inferior; if he has dignity, his pride will not forget it.

[1063] The best way the wicked control a man is by controlling the peoples’ perception of him. 

[1064] A philosopher’s greatness is proportionate to the rulers’ hatred for him, and the peoples’ love.

[1065] Righteous kings seek to instill in the people their desire to be of service to others, knowing this is the only route to them finding the true happiness and contentment they crave most, all citizens collectively making their civilization loving, prosperous and free.

[1066] The desire to prove a hater wrong about us and later gloat over them with our success is to care about their opinion of us.

[1067] The feminine dream is to be the woman who turns her man into a champion; the masculine, to be one in her eyes.

[1068] The husband who can acknowledge and accept his faults without defending himself is highly regarded by his wife; but the one who argues and denies what is self-evident to her causes her much frustration and grief.

[1069] There’s no greater way to pay a man a compliment than to seek out and value his wisdom.

[1070] The loving soul refrains from becoming vindictive towards the one who rejects their affections or breaks their heart.

[1071] Confidence is knowing the right thing to do before the situation even demands it.

[1072] No one has more power over a man than the woman he loves.

[1073] The wickedest of men are those who punish the victim.

[1074] The epitome of evil is to experience and show no remorse when we wrong others; then the conscience has been killed off.

[1075] To love life is to utilize every adversity as a means for greater learning in wisdom and growth in character.

[1076] A man who wishes to prosper doesn’t care about doing his job to merely survive; he cares about serving others to the best of his abilities, knowing the compensation will take care of itself.

[1077] The man who hates women is the one who thinks they are incapable of equaling his achievements.

[1078] Decisive submission is but a trust that another’s leadership will be of benefit to ourselves and others.

[1079] The greater the adversity, the greater the wisdom that comes with it which can then be transmitted to others for their benefit.

[1080] The woman who overcomes her self-pity makes herself a goddess; for when she’s not complaining, she’s on her worthy purpose.

[1081] The only soul a man can change is his own, but in so doing, he often influences others to do the same.

[1082] There is no greater power under the heavens than the woman who wants to see love prevail in the world; humanity’s destiny rests in her hands.

[1083] To love all humanity is to forgive all wrongs rather than retaliate and punish them, for all of us err and some feel remorse for it.

[1084] The only men who like being preached at are the ones who choose to attend the sermon.

[1085] Respect is often won through sincere compliments; but to do that, a man must first know another’s virtues.

[1086] The prudent man only shares sex with a woman he loves.

[1087] Loving-kindness is to anticipate a need and satisfy it before it’s even recognized.

[1088] There is no greater temptation to submit to vanity than to be revered by many.

[1089] Vanity is the false belief that we are superior to any other.

[1090] A true friend overlooks faults and sees potential.

[1091] To disapprove of another’s conduct is not necessarily to hate them; sometimes it’s the greatest act of love.

[1092] Every great commandment takes an investment of time and effort to learn how to master, and then to finally succeed.

[1093] A wise wife gets what she wants from her husband by making him think it was his idea.

[1094] As it is dreamed, so is it manifested.

[1095] Poise is inhibiting a reaction until it’s absolutely required to respond and then committing to it with conviction.

[1096] As lust destroys love, so does greed, prosperity, and intolerance, liberty.

[1097] The conscience ensures a man who takes that which he has not justly earned suffers from an innate sense of loss of self-worth and manhood; and no man wants to feel like he’s not a man.

[1098] To witness the relation of a wise man and a loving and kind woman would revolutionize the world; for masculinity is wisdom and femininity is loving-kindness.

[1099] The only enemy is the retaliative instinct: the desire to return evil for evil; which only begets even more of it.

[1100] To love people is to love the LORD.

[1101] To be a great husband, a man must make himself a visionary.

[1102] To arrive at manhood is to reach the prompt decision not to kick against circumstance or whine about it.

[1103] The man who yet kicks against circumstance is still a caterpillar; but butterflies soar.

[1104] To become superior is to give up the desire for it.

[1105] Blessed is the man who makes all things right with those he has wronged, for he puts himself on good terms with his conscience, and there is great power in that.

[1106] Blessed are those who thirst after righteousness and justice.

[1107] To achieve exemplarship is to reach a status where we no longer admit any sinful thought and every wrong we endure ceases to trigger us.

[1108] Beta males fight over resources; alpha males create them.

[1109] A woman’s most diabolical villain is the one who tries to destroy her belief in finding true love; but her greatest heroine, the one who instills and safeguards the possibility of that dream deep within her heart.

[1110] To truly love a beloved is to desire no suffering comes to them, even in the moments when they are causing us to suffer.

[1111] Nature rewards best the contributors.

[1112] The purpose of being repeatedly triggered is to develop a tolerance to it, and then finally an immunity from it.

[1113] Men seldom cherish what they did not have to work to earn, and the same of the love of those who they win over.

[1114] Men want to appear great in the eyes of their beloved, but little do they seem to realize that listening and seeking to understand her is what accomplishes that aim best.

[1115] When a man seeks to understand people, they come to consider him a great personality.

[1116] Listening is identifying with the emotion the speaker is feeling and then responding to it.

[1117] The man who submits to his jealousy, envy or intolerance reduces himself to the weaker position in relation to the one who has made himself immune to such evils.

[1118] To seek to win a breakup is to ensure the relation stays broken.

[1119] True love cannot be found unless both a man and woman seek it and fulfill their duties in its manifestation.

[1120] The only real fool is the one who denies they’ve ever been one.

[1121] Chastity is strong evidence of future fidelity.

[1122] The moral man recognizes the ways others make him feel ill will towards them and he then trains himself to not treat others in the same manner.

[1123] Success only comes to a man through the cooperative efforts of those he influences, working together for the good of the people.

[1124] The greatest fool is the one who continually justifies his crimes against others to himself and all; his retribution is coming to him as surely as the sun rises, and then comes his regret and sorrow when it’s too late for his salvation!

[1125] Fornicators and adulterers singing about love are frauds and charlatans; they are hypocrites!

[1126] Jealousy often makes the man in the wrong think he’s right; it condemns him to his ignorance and the penalties that accompany it.

[1127] Ignorance is being unsure of what is right and what is wrong.

[1128] The husband and wife who want to make themselves blameless for each other find true love.

[1129] It’s an evil government when it forces its citizens to lie for them by threat of punishment.

[1130] The ignorant don’t know they are such; for if they did, they would become enlightened.

[1131] A proud man thinks he can do no wrong, but his witnesses scoff at his ignorance and folly.

[1132] Wisdom is knowing right from wrong and adhering to it.

[1133] The longer the chastity, the greater the pledge of loyalty.

[1134] Blessed is the man who admits a fault everyone else can see; but cursed is he who defends and refutes it.

[1135] A woman creates a champion, and then she receives the credit for it; the journey taken is true romance.

[1136] The wise man considers whether the evil ways people treat him is not first a response to his own evils against them and others.

[1137] Every husband’s dream is that his wife will act like a dirty whore for just him, and no one else.

[1138] To love someone is to know what they dream about, and we hope for and pray it’s manifested.

[1139] To die for love is the ultimate victory in life.

[1140] The true teacher is the one who can demonstrate what they teach.

[1141] The definitive moment between courtship and marriage is the consummation.

[1142] The wrong use of sex brings all kinds of evil ills.

[1143] Blessed is the woman who sleeps with no man but her husband.

[1144] A wife can only truly find her worth and identity through the service rendered to the public that she induces her husband to perform and deliver; every other delusion is greeted with even her own doubt.

[1145] The great woman is the one who can inspire a man to build instead of being bent on wreaking havoc.

[1146] Without the possibility of winning a woman’s love, a man has no reason to excel.

[1147] A good husband affirms his wife’s worth over and over again; he never ceases to reassure her of the value she provides her family and the world.

[1148] Our self-worth is dependent upon the extent of our contributions to the happiness and contentment of others.

[1149] To reward great service only improves it.

[1150] The musicians sing about what the poets and philosophers proclaim: love is the answer.

[1151] A man only becomes great when he starts seeing the potential for greatness in all he meets.

[1152] The man who makes his voice pleasing to the ear wins much goodwill.

[1153] The greatest gift any man can bestow upon another is to awaken him to his own mind and teach him how to use it.

[1154] A woman’s confidence in herself comes from her man’s affirmation of it.

[1155] The practice of morality results in peaceful, loving relations where no ill-will is secretly harbored, one for another, in any mind.

[1156] The perfect marriage only results when a husband and wife both seek to serve the other more than they desire to be served.

[1157] A great father recognizes and praises his children’s contributions to the community and the world; he affirms their value, repeatedly.

[1158] Our enemies are those who don’t want to see our dreams materialize and even try to thwart them.

[1159] A man only becomes one when he has overcome his every insecurity and has nothing to prove to anyone.

[1160] Women are superior to men because they sense and empathize with how others feel; whereas most men only consider peoples’ thoughts, but not their emotions.

[1161] Oftentimes the best way to become convicted in what is right is to first experience the penalties of that which must always follow what is wrong.

[1162] A great man looks at his heroes as gods and his villains as wayward souls; his thoughts of his fellow man are always hopeful.

[1163] A child is most blessed when its parents love one another.

[1164] The greatest blessing is to possess the goodwill of others, for it gives a man the power to gain their cooperation.

[1165] The woman who enlightens a man to his faults and induces him to correct them becomes the impetus for his religion.

[1166] To wish goodwill to even those who wish us ill-will is to have arrived at self-mastery.

[1167] Every transgression begins in the form of ill-will harbored for another; thus, to gain mastery over that feeling is the beginning of blamelessness.

[1168] To love and respect others is the highest form of worship to the LORD.

[1169] Envy is witnessing everything we wish we could be, do or have exhibited in another, and then hating them for having that which we do not possess.

[1170] When others wrong us, we are faced with a choice: become enraged at their wrong and retaliate, or imagine how all others must harbor ill-will towards them for treating them in the same ill way; this is the understanding that leads to love and compassion, and thus a peaceful society.

[1171] The wickedest of all people are those who accuse the father of being a deviant to justify them in ruining him and refusing to let his children see him and be loved by him.

[1172] The path is desiring to walk it.

[1173] Seduction is to find out who the victim’s ideal companion is, and then pretend to be it.

[1174] There is the one who knows the path, and then there is the one who walks it.

[1175] The root of envy lies in hating those we wish we could be but aren’t.

[1176] So-called mental illnesses are but categorized misuses of the body.

[1177] Goodwill is built on a mutual exchange of value; thus, why never seek to take the initiative to deliver it to all we encounter?

[1178] Man’s greatest errors are jealousy, envy and intolerance; they prevent him from finding love, prosperity and liberty, everything his heart craves!

[1179] To turn a man we envy into our ally and learn how he received his blessings cures of us of being denied them in ourselves, instead of being bitter he is enjoying what we’re missing out on.

[1180] The wise man simply speaks the truth and then lets the listener decide whether or not to use it to their advantage.

[1181] The greatest lesson a father can teach his child is that “But they started it” is never an excuse for their following poor conduct.

[1182] To love is to take responsibility for the faults and mistakes of our wives and children.

[1183] A man becomes patient with humanity when he realizes most wrong others out of blind habit and they retaliate on equally blind instinct.

[1184] He who starts a dispute and he who continues it are both guilty.

[1185] The more intelligent the queen, the greater the king.

[1186] Things don’t complete people; other people do when the relations are right.

[1187] A man’s greatest blessing is to have his headship trusted, based on his fair conduct toward others.

[1188] The woman whose regret becomes a burden to her is eventually redeemed and made anew, if she seeks to correct herself and her wrongs; she will then one day soar and sing as angels do.

[1189] The enlightened delight at questions, because they know the answers will benefit the life of the participant; but the ignorant love to be looked at as wise men, thinking it makes them as gods to provide instruction and guidance to those apparently beneath them.

[1190] The objective of morality is to control all conduct that triggers hurtful or resentful thoughts in the minds of others.

[1191] The one who advises, knowing the penalties of error, is one worth listening to.

[1192] Give a man a purpose and he will find his happiness.

[1193] Happiness is impossible without purpose, and where those working toward its realization consent to give their cooperation.

[1194] The wisest questions asked are those where the questioner already knows the answer but is curious if the listener does too.

[1195] Enemies turned allies often make for the closest of allegiances.

[1196] A husband who always fights for his wife’s love wins it from their children also.

[1197] Those who speak ill of you are humbled when you speak well of them.

[1198] Serving others wins their love and goodwill.

[1199] A father’s greatest blessing to his daughter is his affirmation of her worth.

[1200] The great father is the one who seeks out his children’s virtues and talents and encourages them to further develop them.

[1201] Disputes start because one man doesn’t know right from wrong, is ignorant he is guilty, or he doesn’t care.

[1202] Blessed is the man who delights at discovering his own faults and errors, for he grows rapidly in both wisdom and character.

[1203] A thief will know himself as such when he takes compensation for that which he has not first delivered an equivalent service in return for.

[1204] The greatest blessing newlyweds can give each other is to have demonstrated they abstained for one another.

[1205] The way a man misuses his body puts him in a prison of his own making.

[1206] Character growth can only begin when a man is comfortable admitting to himself that he has been and can be foolish at times and it no longer causes him any embarrassment if others know and judge him for his past foibles and follies.

[1207] Pride prohibits a man from seeing his own faults and errors, which makes it impossible for him to correct them.

[1208] The respect a man earns from others is proportionate with the development of his character.

[1209] Applied wisdom results in character growth, which produces happiness and contentment.

[1210] To desire control over another is to lose it over ourselves.

[1211] A wife loves best a husband who identifies what she’s feeling, and then affirms the positive emotions and transmutes the negatives.

[1212] Reprobates claim moral living is erroneous because they have been deceived into believing that happiness lies in endless sexual pleasure, wealth with no limit, or the exercising of power over others.

[1213] To understand our faults is to also discover how to deal with them in others.

[1214] The greatest power is the one we can exercise over ourselves.

[1215] A foolish husband gives his wife a solution to what she complains about when she has given him no such invitation; all she desires is sympathy and understanding.

[1216] The understanding of life and human nature comes from suffering much unfairness and injustice.

[1217] A husband and wife who compete over who’s better or smarter guarantee the misery of both.

[1218] The secret to being a loving father who bonds with his child is to be involved in their journey; he must: know what their passions and dreams are; participate in and encourage them to persist in those aspirations; sympathize with them through their frustrations, defeats and disappointments in pursuing the prize; and praise and celebrate with them in their eventual victories.

[1219] The truly superior man regards no one his inferior; but he notices when his own wisdom is in excess and his character stronger.

[1220] Men only see themselves as superior to others because they are enslaved to their own vanity and conceit.

[1221] A man only finds true happiness when he has mastered his destructive nature, marries a wife who has done the same, and together they devote their efforts to rendering their services to the public in exchange for the compensation required to provide for and nurture their family.

[1222] Evil is to delight in seeing or inflicting suffering upon the blameless.

[1223] The best response to witnessing immorality is pity and sorrow: for those who transgress others will come to suffer for it, and in excess of the hurt they inflicted upon their victims.

[1224] It is wise to invest in mastering the use of the body, which brings about a perfect freedom of the voice and vision, the chief tools in powerful communication.

[1225] To make ourselves blameless is to cease all conducts that trigger hurtful or resentful internal responses in others, but we are innocent if their jealousy, envy or intolerance towards us arouse it.

[1226] Since wisdom is required for a man to reach enlightenment and realize happiness and contentment, it is the world’s most precious commodity.

[1227] Blessed is the marriage where the wife wants her husband to impart his wisdom to her and she constantly inquires about it.

[1228] By a wife being her husband’s best student, she turns him into a great teacher; for we understand even better that which we have already taught to others.

[1229] Talent is born of love, but perfected through persistence.

[1230] The diplomat seeks to reconcile sides, rather than taking one.

[1231] It is our attitude when we approach someone which elicits either their best or worst side.

[1232] When the head, the heart, the gut and the phallus all agree on a wife, a man can never go wrong.

[1233] A man can never find happiness who pursues dominion over others.

[1234] Persistent pleasure is an obstacle to happiness.

[1235] To forgive each other all past lusts and to no longer lust after another is a foundation stone upon which true love is erected.

[1236] The desire to be served by a spouse rather than being the one to do so is a recipe for a miserable marriage.

[1237] A man’s chief occupation should be to acquire understanding and wisdom, for this is what will make him a good man, a good husband and a good father.

[1238] Every virtuous woman’s hero is the one who can show her how to find the true love her soul craves above all else; but woman’s most evil villain is the one who not only keeps her ignorant to the means by which it might be found, but goes further and leads her in a wayward direction.

[1239] The fraud is the man who frames himself as your guru when he meets you.

[1240] Character is built by repeatedly refraining from thinking ill-will towards wrongdoers and also from retaliating to their offenses until the urge, through persistence, has finally been conquered.

[1241] Skill can be learned in the mundane jobs that will later help in the important ones; diplomacy being the most valuable of them all.

[1242] Love is desiring the beloved never suffers pain or anguish.

[1243] Happiness is found in loving a spouse, and together serving family and community.

[1244] Everyone thinks they’re virtuous, even when they’re not.

[1245] Poor uses of the body facilitate negative thoughts and emotions, often leading to immoral acts.

[1246] No matter how great a leader may be, they are a fraction of what they could be with the influence of true love.

[1247] Whatever a man does, you can be sure he thinks it’s the way to win the love of woman, or else deal with the pain of not having it.

[1248] Immorality is causing another to feel that which we would not wish to feel.

[1249] Blessed is the maiden who seeks out a suitor who excels in ways she wishes to, makes him her husband and becomes his star pupil.

[1250] A relationship can only be as strong as the participant with the weaker character.

[1251] True happiness is only found in a husband and wife working together harmoniously as a team to serve their community to the farthest extent of their capabilities.

[1252] An attitude of humility attracts many blessings.

[1253] A wicked government’s greatest crime next to removing liberty is that it sabotages useful service from being rendered to the public because its politicians are consumed with envy.

[1254] Gambling money is a damaging delusion that infects its victims with false hope.

[1255] Blamelessness is to cease from triggering anyone; but those who are jealous, envious, or intolerant of us will trigger themselves by being witnesses to our words and deeds.

[1256] Generosity inspires more of it.

[1257] The greater a man serves his community, the more he wins its esteem and respect.

[1258] Ignorant are they who think a man who pursues a prize and makes many mistakes along the way is a fool, for it is that man who will eventually become wise and win the goal after he learns the lessons from his errors.

[1259] The strongest man is the one who can remain calm, poised and cheerful amidst the worst of persecution.

[1260] The envious will give a man reasons for why his plans will fail and seek to instill doubts in his mind, because they fear his success and how incompetent it would make them feel by comparison.

[1261] The most difficult task of the enlightened is to remain patient with the ignorant.

[1262] The wicked attempt to shame what is honorable, hoping it will discourage the people from pursuing it.

[1263] The greatest doctrine is the one that instills love, peace and harmony between a husband and wife.

[1264] In their own minds, villains think themselves the heroes.

[1265] The greatest shock a man can endure is to realize that his entire doctrine was evil while he thought it good.

[1266] The worst crime is to facilitate animosity between a husband and wife.

[1267] A husband brings the vision; a wife, the humanity.

[1268] Blessed is the person who realizes their entire life has been in error and corrects their course; that takes humility, courage and persistence.

[1269] Ignorant people are oblivious they are such and deny, excuse and justify it, because they are too proud or embarrassed to admit their whole life has been lived on an utter lie.

[1270] The root of feminism is to discourage and prevent another woman from finding true love because the adherent has failed to find it for themselves, and they’re jealous; that is the real motive of the movement.

[1271] Feminism is a woman’s greatest enemy in finding true love; the wise woman rejects its evil tenets.

[1272] He is noble who uses his excesses to serve and uplift others.

[1273] The remorseful sinner who has corrected their evil ways and righted their wrongs deserves unreserved love and forgiveness.

[1274] When men and women don’t embrace their roles or they violate them, degeneracy and chaos ensures.

[1275] The hardest thing is not to feel ill-will and retaliate towards those who offend wife or child, especially when our kin are blameless.

[1276] To confess to a sincere lover how they hurt us encourages them to want to remedy the behavior that caused it.

[1277] Any thought, doctrine, word or deed that seeks to thwart true love is the greatest of evils.

[1278] It is foolish to treat sex like a handshake.

[1279] To repress imagination is to turn back progress.

[1280] The one who fails to find the cravings of their soul often devotes themselves to preventing others from finding them.

[1281] Fools refuse to admit they’re wrong because they’re too embarrassed they lived their life based on a lie and squandered their time because of it; thus, they cling to and continue to preach their evil doctrines, hoping it will prevent others from succeeding where they failed.

[1282] When women fail in love, they often invent doctrines that will prevent others from finding it because they don’t want to feel jealous others found what they missed out on. These women are not friends and counselors; they are deadly poison!

[1283] An intelligent man doesn’t debate people and prove them wrong, because he knows losing will cause them embarrassment.

[1284] A wise suitor pursues wisdom, because he knows only that can make his future wife happy; and the wise maiden seeks after only such a man, refusing all others.

[1285] To gloat over peoples’ embarrassment at losing a debate is to be vindictive and unkind.

[1286] The greatest service is to inspire the desire for others to perform it.

[1287] The only man who can make a woman moral is the one she loves; that’s the reason righteous fathers are required in any great civilization, and they should receive honors for it.

[1288] The wisest of men make for the greatest of husbands and fathers.

[1289] The man who would make himself a great husband pursues wisdom more than he does his beloved, for that is what will make her love him most.

[1290] The possession of wisdom is the greatest of aphrodisiacs.

[1291] The people can only be subjugated when they refuse to think for themselves, and instead are convinced it’s wise to distract themselves with fleeting pleasures.

[1292] The greatest burden is pleasure often indulged.

[1293] The man who goes out of his way to serve is the one who ends up at the top.

[1294] The man who gets angry at injustice is righteous; but when he exemplifies compassion toward a villain’s evils, he becomes divine.

[1295] The perfect marriage is a husband and wife harmoniously devoted to serving their community to the best of their abilities and capacities; this is the only endeavor that results in true happiness for both.

[1296] True happiness is a husband and wife harmoniously working as a team to serve the community in accordance with their gifts and talents, and being rewarded to provide for themselves and  their families as a result.

[1297] A man often has to prepare himself to serve his community before he can; but there is no time better invested, for the eventual good of himself and his people.

[1298] True love is the foundation of altruism; when a husband and wife truly love one another, they want to share that blessing with the world through their services, and in direct proportion to it.

[1299] When the people are enlightened, they can all recognize a fraud and charlatan.

[1300] A man’s central purpose in life should be to spread goodwill and good cheer everywhere he goes, regardless of his circumstances.

[1301] To uncover the dark side of human nature is to gain understanding into a great many things.

[1302] When there is death in the arena, you know the wicked are in power.

[1303] To eliminate the desire to shame our enemies and wound their pride is where enlightenment is found.

[1304] The wisest man is the first to admit himself a fool.

[1305] Wisdom comes from committing or observing folly and then recognizing its consequences, and finally using the lessons to guide future endeavors to successful outcomes.

[1306] A fool seldom knows he’s one.

[1307] Wisdom is knowing the rewards of practicing morality and the penalties of failing to do so, and then abiding by it.

[1308] To master the mind is to master all things.

[1309] A man’s worth comes from his awareness of how he’s served and uplifted his fellow man.

[1310] To serve others best interests is to win their hearts.

[1311] When the people desire understanding and wisdom above all else, a perfect civilization is born.

[1312] A woman who truly loves a man will do everything in her power to make his dreams come true.

[1313] As a man serves, so is he rewarded.

[1314] The mark of an evil government is it will make it illegal for its people to cooperate with one another to be of service to the public.

[1315] A true religion is one that teaches the adherent how to conquer their sinful nature, and the best one is the one that shows them the most accurate methodology for achieving it.

[1316] Peace and harmony exists only in a society to the degree to which the people have mastered their destructive natures; a great king sees it as his duty to ensure the people receive the means-whereby that task may be completed, and then he makes those who have succeeded at it best his queen and nobles, to lead the rest to their salvation. 

[1317] It is foolish to expect goodwill and favors from those we have already disserviced, at least without first paying recompense.

[1318] The woman who seeks to reestablish goodwill with everyone she’s wronged, even if she fails in her every attempt, transforms herself into the perfect queen, ready to wield the greatest of influence, for this is the destiny of all who make themselves right with their conscience and thus the LORD.

[1319] To persecute a man most is to separate him from his true love, forbid his children from seeing him, and deprive him of the lifestyle he’s earned to provide for them in exchange for having rendered his services to mankind.

[1320] It is wise to refuse to debate anyone who doesn’t want the truth, but only wants to prove their lie is correct; they are deaf to reason and humanity.

[1321] The evil deny the truth and call it a fallacious doctrine, so they do not have to face themselves for the despicable monsters they have made of themselves.

[1322] When all men forgive those who trigger them the way they wish to be forgiven for the ways they trigger others, and both show remorse for their wrongs and exhibit a desire to correct and right them, world peace is at the threshold of history.

[1323] The philosopher’s desire for true love reveals the means by which it may be found.

[1324] The idle and envious think the brave man a braggart, but he only affirms and encourages in his own experience those who are on the same arduous path as himself, in pursuit of the same happiness and contentment he seeks after.

[1325] A man is at his greatest weakness when others see his evils and their consequences, yet he’s unwilling to admit them to himself and correct them; then, even an emperor finds himself become a worm groveling in the dirt to the applause of the angels singing hallelujah high above him.

[1326] Sometimes it is those we consider our worst enemies who are really our best friends, for they expose the false ideologies we have been deceived into adopting, which then prevent us from finding our every happiness and contentment in life; and by eliminating and removing them, we finally find our bliss.

[1327] A truthful insult never uttered increases that man’s power, for a withheld righteous judgment increases sympathy for him.

[1328] The greatest power comes to those who make themselves right with their conscience by righting all those they’ve wronged; only to them are the ways of vast influence that moves mountains and parts seas revealed.

[1329] An influential man cannot be such unless he first puts himself on good terms with his conscience, which is the moral compass for administering fairness and justice in the relations and affairs of men.

[1330] Giving orders is the sign of the impatient, controlling man.

[1331] The secret to influence is to promise others they will profit by giving us their cooperation, have them consent to doing so, and then delivering the results they expect in return.

[1331] To be right with the conscience is to be right with the LORD, and to be right with the conscience is to have sought to right everyone we’ve ever wronged so they no longer harbor ill-will towards us. 

[1332] We can’t find true love without wisdom, and we can’t have that without the truth, which is impossible before the facts are accumulated.

[1333] It’s impossible to become blameless without first becoming self-aware.

[1334] To conquer ourselves is to no longer respond to wrongs with anger and retaliation and to no longer hate those who direct their efforts toward creating unhappiness for us and those we love.

[1335] A man cannot know himself until he understands the workings of morality and the penalties of its violations.

[1336] Self-awareness is impossible without first procuring an education on morality.

[1337] When a man lies, cheats and steals and misery finds him, he is an utter fool if he does not start looking at himself as the cause of the trouble.

[1338] To be greater than evil is still to fall short of the divine; aim to be as high as that!

[1339] The fool will look at the speck in your eye and ignore the log in his own, and there is no convincing him of his greater guilt because he is an ignoramus where justice is concerned.

[1340] The fool blames others for their negative reactions to his immoral conduct toward him like he is the victim, when he only brought the consequences upon himself by wronging them.

[1341] To victimize another brings a man nothing but shame and reduces him to ruin.

[1342] The greatest obstacle to realizing our dreams is the envious and cowardly whose dream it is to sabotage them.

[1342] The hero seeks to realize his dreams and the villain seeks to thwart them; therefore, the universe revolves around the hero, and the villain is but a pawn in the story soon forgotten after his guaranteed demise.

[1343] The greatest disgrace is to be exiled from the everlasting kingdom; but the sentence will be true and just.

[1344] True romance starts the moment a maiden discovers what a suitor’s dreams are, believes in them and wants to help him realize them.

[1345] What makes a father most proud is to witness his child use their gifts to the service of many, making a positive impact and difference in the lives of others.

[1346] Citizens practicing morality produces truth and justice in a society.

[1347] Wisdom lends to the practice of righteousness.

[1348] Loyal marriages produce a strong and glorious society.

[1349] Admitting our foolishness is the surefire way to win love and earn respect, for people admire most those who have the humility to recognize their faults and errors, have the courage to correct them and the persistence to complete the task.

[1350] Morality has vanished from a society when it is made illegal to be honest and tell the truth, or a man is solely punished for doing so.

[1351] The most debauched sinner becomes the greatest of saints, when their sails are shifted toward righteousness.

[1352] Compassion comes with the recognition that most of man’s choices and reactions are unconscious habits they are in the moment powerless to control.

[1353] The means-whereby turns automations back into humans.

[1354] A purely evil husband is the one who forces his wife to slaughter their own children; he is a cold-blooded murderer who has no love in his soul and is a great failure as a man, which is to serve and protect his family, not destroy it. Women would be wise to put distance away from such a villain as this.

[1355] An immoral people are easily made into slaves.

[1356] A husband who is ignorant to his wife’s internal reactions to his words and deeds can never satisfy or please her.

[1357] Those who abuse their power guarantee its eventual loss.

[1358] A woman who kills off her maternal instinct by slaying her own children in cold blood, all for her own selfish convenience, has a rotten, ugly soul; she betrayed and utterly failed those who were depending on her love most and in the worst of ways.

[1359] The greatest assault on masculinity is the lie that what makes a man is the extent to which he fornicates with many; but this only produces weak, immoral men who’s lack of self-control contributes to demoralizing and then collapsing their own society.

[1360] The people follow a righteous king because they can see how it profits them; and they only follow a wicked king because he punishes them if they don’t.

[1361] Only a complete idiot concludes a fetus does not have a soul; they just want to deny, excuse and justify their absolute cruelty and lack of respect for human life, usually because it’s an inconvenience to their selfish practices of fornication and adultery.

[1362] The practice of abstinence is a demonstration to our future spouse that they can trust us irrevocable and that we will be completely loyal to them.

[1363] The man whose preachments contradict the ways of morality is a false teacher; he deceives the ignorant and foolish into following wrong paths that will ensure they never find their happiness, just like he failed to find it himself.

[1364] The soldier of the wicked is the one who spreads ignorance and false knowledge.

[1365] What a wicked government claims is right is usually wrong; and those who they deceive into partaking into such evil eventually become their miserable slaves.

[1366] The source of a woman’s happiness is to serve her husband and children to her very best, to nurture them and use their love for her to foster in them the desire to make great contributions to the world; this produces bliss in the feminine soul.

[1367] A woman’s worst enemy is the man who forces her to murder her own child; he has no love in his soul and thus causes her many tears; he is an evil, wicked devil.

[1368] The jealous man belittles his beloved to his competition, hoping it will dissuade them from pursuing and winning her in his stead.

[1369] A prudent woman is immune to seduction.

[1370] A failure devotes their every effort to erecting barriers in the minds of others to prevent them from finding the happiness the loser has failed to find for them self.

[1371] The most cursed thing of all and the worst evil for a society is a husband and wife who are in competition with each other and wage war against one another.

[1372] The noblest man is the one most devoted to himself, his wife, and his children, and he would never betray them, but serves them to the greatest extent even if it means sacrificing himself to a painful death.

[1375] A greedy government taxes its citizens and then disservices them using their own money against them.

[1376] It should be a government’s duty to serve the peoples best interests, rather than depending on them to serve their’s.

[1377] Taxation is theft; politicians are crooks and thieves.

[1378] Man only seeks change when he recognizes his ways have been in error; but the fool thinks he does no wrong, and thus remains static in his development or even retrogresses.

[1378] It is only ignorance or false knowledge that leads even an intelligent man into folly.

[1379] The most unfeminine woman is the one who views her child as a burden, instead of her greatest blessing next to her husband.

[1380] Those who delight in rendering useful service to others soon overcomes their disappointment with the unfairness and injustices of a flawed world; for the greatest among us will be the servant of all.

[1381] No one is beyond redemption if they feel remorse for their past wrongs and seek to right them with their victims.

[1382] It is the fool who arrives at a conclusion without first investigating and gaining the facts upon which to base it.

[1383] A person becomes exactly as strong and wise as the extent to which life persecutes them, if only they keep their eyes open and stay resilient.

[1384] A government that truly serves its people does not require them to be taxed.

[1385] Communism results in the rulers being rich and the people being poor.

[1386] A father gravitates to the child most like himself.

[1387] Blessed are those who throw off worldliness in exchange for godliness.

[1388] When we stop blaming anyone or anything for our suffering, we empower ourselves to endure it with a tranquil heart.

[1389] The people in an enlightened society all understand that money is but a reward for service rendered; thus, they don’t seek to procure it by any other means and they don’t envy those who have more of it, knowing they earned and deserve it.

[1390] Forgiveness heals wounds and brings reconciliation.

[1391] The man who makes it such that when others see him coming, know he’s going to ask for a favor, loses the goodwill and cooperation of many.

[1392] To become disgusted with ourselves for our past immoral conduct, often because we hurt the ones we love most, is our start down the path of righteousness.

[1394] Where there is goodwill, there is cooperation.

[1395] A wicked manly woman demands her government give her the right to take away her own child’s most important one, its right to life; and then she rages and acts like she’s the victim when denied permission to murder her own child.

[1396] The perfect marriage is devoid of all secrets and any lies.

[1397] Repeated frustrations strengthen our capacity to endure future hardships with a greater tolerance of the suffering they bring.

[1398] The man who seeks praise for his wisdom demonstrates he lacks it.

[1399] The false teacher doesn’t only not serve others, he disservices them; for those who accept and apply his preachments bring trouble and misery into their own lives as a result.

[1400] The ignorant reject the truth because they think the lies they’ve built their lives on bring them more happiness.

[1401] It is the fool who mistakes the pursuit of pleasure for happiness.

[1402] A true teacher’s teachings produces happiness in the adherent who applies them; but a false teacher, their misery.

[1403] The biggest fool is the one who prides himself on being an immoral man and justifies his evil course by stiffening his neck; he is storing up for himself so much future suffering and misery.

[1404] The lustful kill their capacity for love; they reduce themselves to deranged brutes.

[1405] True love trades no favors and makes no bargains; it seeks ever and always to serve the beloved rather than be served by them.

[1406] The lustful person seeks to use others only as instruments for their own selfish sexual gratification, then they discard the tool when finished; there is no love and humanity in this.

[1407] Just because a man has the power doesn’t always give him the right.

[1408] Seduction is a gross way men objectify women.

[1409] A wife is most eager to pleasure her husband when she feels loved, cherished and appreciated by him; if he is wise he gives her this and then he never goes unsatisfied, but if foolish, he demands it while providing her no fulfillment, and then becomes resentful when it is denied him.

[1410] True romance is a husband and wife dreaming the same dream, making plans for its realization and working as a team to manifest it.

[1411] A fool’s morality is no morality.

[1412] Worse than accepting compensation for delivering no service is accepting it for providing a disservice.

[1413] Fathers ignorant to masculinity raise weak, desperate sons.

[1414] The coward tells the people what he knows they want to hear to get what he wants; but the courageous tell them what he knows they do not want to hear, but is that which will get them what they want.

[1415] To be unaffected by criticism and outrage is a great blessing, except when it blinds us to others objections to our immoral conduct we would be wiser to acknowledge and correct.

[1416] Knowledge begins with the admission of our ignorance just as wisdom does at that of our folly.

[1417] The entitled woman seeks after the man at the end of his journey, for she wants to share the rewards he’s already earned; but the wise woman does so at his beginning, for she wants to make a romance out of sharing the moments earning them together.

[1418] A man is prudent if he devotes himself to the pursuit of wisdom, and a woman is so when she only courts such men as these and rejects all others; both are on the sure path that will eventually lead them to finding true love and happiness in life.

[1419] True love is an elevated state of consciousness shared between a husband and wife as a reward for them having mutually cooperated in establishing the perfect marriage, which is to have both made exemplars of themselves and play their proper role in the relation.

[1420] Peace is impossible while men desire to control one another: nation and nation; rulers and the people; capital and labor; husbands and wives; and parents and children.

[1421] Treating the ignorant like they’re stupid does not serve them; it only makes them resistant to the truth behind the message.

[1422] The philanderer only feels like a worthy man when he makes a conquest, but then he has to make another and another to relieve the feelings 0f inadequacy that resurface every time he has a dry spell.

[1423] The false teacher and fraud is appalled to discover himself so and denies and refutes it; he was under the delusion that because a multitude of the ignorant listened to him it made him a master: did he not think that when a genuine master appeared, his own deceitful, ignorant doctrines would be his own undoing?

[1424] Truth and justice should be our only politics; and love and kindness our only religion.

[1425] The wise man is the one who answers questions before you think to even ask them; such is the depth of his understanding.

[1426] The foolishly ignorant laugh at that which they are too stupid to understand.

[1427] To restore morality to a society is to establish the truth and justice upon which makes it loving, prosperous and free.

[1428] When the people practice morality, they eliminate any need for a governing body over them.

[1429] The subject who speaks with a great king feels like he’s talking to his closest friend who hears and understands him, and he is.

[1430] If a woman truly desires a man above all else, not hell or high water can stop her from eventually getting him.

[1431] The only difference between the righteous and the wicked are those who seek to conform themselves to the moral instruction, and those who think it foolishness.

[1432] It is more profitable to determine why someone holds a belief than to seek to refute and discredit it.

[1433] The most direct route to virtue is the study of sin.

[1434] When selfish, prideful people are wrong and you tell them so, they become offended and enraged, and hate you for it.

[1435] There is no punishment worse than regret.

[1436] The wise are attracted to wisdom and grow in it; but the foolish are repulsed by it and seek to invalidate it.

[1437] Regret comes from a choice we once thought wise that later led to bitter grief, for us and those we love most.

[1438] Where there is loyal love, there are no games and no feuds.

[1439] To wrong is to later regret, if the conscience has not been killed off.

[1440] When a wife recognizes her husband has more wisdom than she, it is natural for her to trust his judgment and surrender to his headship; men, seek after wisdom above all else, for it is this that will produce a happy marriage and a happy home!

[1441] There is something sinister about devoting our lives to getting everything we think everyone else wants, yet still failing to get what we do for ourselves.

[1442] To know they’re wrong but to confess we are the ones who are at fault is to bear another’s sins, and we bring reconciliation and peace for it; and this is love.

[1443] A man who covets praise engineers false doctrines to deceive the ignorant into honoring and revering him for them.

[1444] The only real savior there is is the one who teaches us how to save us from ourselves.

[1445] A man who knows his worth is the one who knows he has served humanity well.

[1446] To truly forgive is to wish no harm comes to those who hurt us; but instead, blessings. Still, karma has its way.

[1447] It is only love that reforms; all arguments of reason to the contrary fail.

[1448] Evil is to delight at being the cause others misfortune.

[1449] To keep up a lie is taxing.

[1450] A woman’s absolute power over a man is her ability to praise or discredit his sexual prowess.

[1451] True love is impossible without fidelity; betrayal, even though hidden, still severs the psychical and spiritual bond between a husband and wife’s minds, and both will be reduced to a weakened state.

[1452] Ignorance is to know neither wrong nor right, and its most evil form is to wish not to know.

[1453] A loving father desires two things from his daughter: to hear her, and to understand her; for it is this that will win her heart.

[1454] The strongest voice is the one that has suffered the greatest.

[1455] Where love diminishes, promiscuity increases.

[1456] When the people learn to govern themselves, a governing body becomes obsolete.

[1457] To cause another hurt is to eventually bring it upon ourselves.

[1458] The wise maiden rejects all suitors who have not first made the accumulation of wisdom their chief objective.

[1459] Repeated justifications for the shame and guilt we feel for our evil is what kills the conscience, making it unreliable in guiding us in right thought and action.

[1460] To seek superiority over others is the mark of the man who feels himself secretly inferior.

[1461] There are no appeals from hell; all sentences are final, and there is no end to them.

[1462] The philandering fool cheats his wife out of true love, for he is lusty, conceited and selfish; not only does he want to remain ignorant to his duty in achieving it, he deliberately rebels against his responsibility and delights in defying and failing at it.

[1463] Feminism is an evil ideology that seeks to defy nature by training a woman to behave as a man, but this only makes it impossible for her to find true love if she’s foolish enough to let herself get indoctrinated by its false doctrines and organize her life around its lies.

[1464] When morality declines in the world, the LORD sends His messengers to show the people how to restore it.

[1465] Those who fight for true love without compromise are the ones destined to win it.

[1466] The most powerful man is always he who possesses the most wisdom.

[1467] A king without a loving queen becomes a tyrant.

[1468] Frauds have fallen under the delusion they’re experts who are servicing the people, when they are really ignorant to how they are damaging them for their own selfish gain.

[1469] The man who makes himself a harsher critic against himself than his worst hater is the one who most quickly recognizes his faults and errors, so that he may correct them; such is he who blesses himself with a tornado of wisdom and reaches a high summit of character, the essences of true masculinity.

[1470] It is extraordinarily prudent to confront an issue with someone than to complain about it with everyone they know; one may not resolve it, but the other will only make it worse.

[1472] The glorification of promiscuity is the beginning of the collapse of any civilization.

[1473] An influential man is the one who responds to others silent thoughts as if they had been spoken, because he knows how they are responding internally to that which he says.

[1474] A woman’s true power lies not in her dominion over her man, but in her influence over how he directs his efforts and the boons they bring to the world.

[1475] A loving wife understands that expressing and releasing anger in non-harmful ways for suffering the wrongs against him is healing for her husband; but wicked wives punish such behavior, and shame him for it.

[1476] To train the body to respond perfectly to the will is the root of all power and influence over the great unfoldment.

[1477] The man lacking in love and understanding condemns those who have fallen prey to propaganda and have been made victims to its indoctrination, instead of sympathizing with their victimization.

[1478] The leader is the one who knows how everyone in the group is responding to everyone else and utilizes that awareness to harmonize and uplift them.

[1479] Blaming others for their past mistakes prevents us from cooperating with them in rectifying them in the present.

[1480] The wise are quick to admit they once lived in ignorance and folly; but the ignorant and foolish deny they ever have because they still do.

[1481] After being indoctrinated and victimized by an immoral culture, all a person can do is accept their past and make a fresh start.

[1482] The most evil thing a husband can do is use shame to make his wife feel unworthy; but the very best he can do is to built her worth through his vision and masculine affirmation, which will give her intrinsic evidence of her worth and value.

[1483] A good husband never uses his wife’s shame over past mistakes to punish her; for he knows that if she has a conscience, she is already punishing herself.

[1484] When a man stops blaming those responsible for his troubles, he sets his soul free.

[1485] A wicked government indoctrinates the people into mistaking weakness for strength, which is what then makes them such; and then they are easily enslaved under a tyrannical rule.

[1486] We are victims or the blessed, depending on whether the people controlling our culture are wicked or righteous.

[1487] A husband can only be as great as the extent to which he has procured wisdom and applied it.

[1488] Men instinctively perceive us as strong or weak by the strength or lack of it with which we exercise control over the resonance and projection of our voices.

[1489] On the road to happiness, there are three monsters that must be slain: the love for endless sexual pleasure, the desire to store up and horde resources in excess of what we need, and the desire to exert authority over others and have them submit to our will.

[1490] The great wife is the one who calms her husband in his rage and consoles him in his sorrows.

[1491] The intolerant, self-righteous man condemns and judges the reformed sinner for their past shame in an effort to own them and be justified in controlling their future.

[1492] The application of wisdom is the only way by which the soul cravings for love, prosperity and liberty may be satisfied with their correspondent blessings.

[1493] The feminist considers herself free because she fornicates as she pleases, but little does she know that every conquest is just adding another link in the chain enslaving her to her own lust.

[1494] The greatest way a king can serve his people is to provide them with the knowledge and wisdom they require to find their every happiness in life, inspire them to put it into application, and encourage them to persist until they succeed.

[1495] When others recognize a man possesses wisdom, they choose to relinquish themselves to his leadership, for they can see it will most profit themselves and those they love.

[1496] When the people are ignorant, they act immorally; but once enlightened, morally.

[1497] When a good wife’s husband has been wronged and he rages, she only listens and encourages him to express it all, knowing this is the first phase of him healing from the wound.

[1498] A philosopher looks at the world not as it is but as it should be.

[1499] Any doctrine that advises thought and conduct in opposition to that which produces true love is false, and they are foolish who follow the fool who parrots it.

[1500] Fools are wise in their own eyes, and they mistake wisdom for foolishness.

[1501] Wisdom is the only cure for folly, and a man always comes to suffer the consequences of his follies.

[1502] It’s not the return of the king that makes the people cheer loudest; it’s when his queen is returned to him.

[1503] A man becomes wise when he knows what he knows, accepts that his beliefs may be false, and is aware of what he is ignorant to.

[1504] A wife naturally follows a husband and surrenders to his headship when she recognizes his wisdom and understanding exceed that of her own.

[1505] The cry of every good man is that women will be loyal.

[1506] A solitary king turns those he seeks to serve into his enemies, because loneliness brings out the beast in any man; but with a loving queen at his side, they are powerless not to submit to his wisdom and authority.

[1507] It takes a moral man to recognize another one.

[1508] What attracts boys repels men.

[1509] The greatest leader is the one who has lived in sin, experienced the penalties that must always follow it, gifting her with the extraordinary blessing of understanding into the depths of the consequences of all errors, such that she may use that knowledge and wisdom to profit the people in enlightening them on how to avoid them! Meet a woman like that, and bow, because she is your true queen!

[1510] Many times better than telling a man what he should start doing is showing him what he’s already doing wrong that he should stop.

[1511] The validity of a man’s philosophy will always be dependent upon its successful demonstration.

[1512] A king and queen win the love and respect of their people when they know the lengths to which their monarchs have sacrificed for their greater gain.

[1513] The ignorant think they are learned, and that is the very obstacle to their enlightenment.

[1514] The greatest power a man can possess is his ability to inhibit his own instinctive reactions to stimuli and put them under the authority of his will; such glory is given over only unto the gods!

[1515] The wisdom the philosophers devote their entire lives to procuring may be learnt by the seeker in but a fraction of the time.

[1516] The most powerful man in the history of the world is the one who has the ability to decide the eternal fate of every other soul!

[1517] To wrong the Son is to enrage the Father; and who wants the LORD for their enemy, for His retribution is fiercer than the violence of a lion’s wrath?

[1518] A wise man listens to what women have to say; but wiser women than he ask him what he knows.

[1519] The man who comes to never violate his conscience understands truth and justice best.

[1520] The greatest crime of all is to hate love.

[1521] To be ignorant to the penalties of our sins does not prevent us from coming to suffer their consequences.

[1522] Wisdom is but the gained awareness of the penalties our foibles and follies bring us, making the right conduct and the right course of action self-evident.

[1523] Adversity leads to wisdom; wisdom leads to character growth; character growth leads to right conduct that fosters loving, harmonious relations; loving, harmonious relations lead to happiness; and a happy, cheerful citizen is their nation’s most prized asset.

[1524] The first step to healing a wound is to stop suppressing the rage it triggered and unleash it; and wise is the person who does it in such a way that it causes the least amount of harm to others.

[1525] Wiser is the man who seeks another’s wisdom than he who possesses it; for he gains in mere moments that which took the other a lifetime to obtain.

[1526] Wicked rulers indoctrinate the people into normalizing immorality, which makes them enslaved to their sinful natures, and thus easy victims to subjugate and oppress.

[1527] A king cannot be patient, compassionate, and understanding with his subjects’ temptations and to their submissions unless he has a loving queen at his side.

[1528] “I did wrong, I regret it, and I’ll go the extra mile to put it right with my victim” is the attitude of the soul that finds itself eventually in the coming kingdom with the highest of all stations and honors.

[1529] Sometimes it’s those who have been most wicked who understand best why it’s so important to be righteous, for they know the penalties of sin; and this makes them uniquely qualified to become the greatest warriors in fighting for the prevalence of moral conduct amongst their people.

[1530] The only way to produce happiness in ourselves is to first produce it in others: spouse, children, community and society.

[1531] A wicked man will never understand a righteous one, and he will never understand his enemy either.

[1532] The man who makes every man his teacher soon finds himself everyone else’s.

[1533] Poise and regality is to maintain the face being sent up and rotating the skull forward while it is sent back and up, regardless of what the rest of the body is doing, or what it’s being subjected to.

[1534] When others wrong you, do not repress the rage, feeling above and immune to hurt and suffering; instead, express it! but do so in solitude or before a confidant and in such a manner that it causes the least harm to yourself and those you love most.

[1535] The most foolish leader is the one who insults those he’s seeking to serve, and thus deafens their ears to the boons they would otherwise experience by adopting his message.

[1536] The mind and the emotions playing upon it puts the body into the configurations to which it rightly belongs.

[1537] The seducer, in his arrogance and conceit, commends himself on being the LORD’s gift to women but the only emotion he elicits in them is buyer’s remorse; he provides a disservice to them, for they realize he was nothing but a villain come to derail their efforts to find true love, all to satisfy his own selfish, lusty gratification.

[1538] The wise only consider the wisdom of the man who has suffered persecution though rejection, failure, loss, adversity, injustice and most importantly betrayal, for he understands everything there is to know under the heavens.

[1539] A saint is nothing more than a onetime sinner who has devoted the rest of their life to helping others to not make the same mistakes they once did, and thus circumventing them from suffering the same corresponding penalties.

[1540] The wisest teachers in living are those who know the penalties of error; their counsel is priceless in learning right conduct.

[1541] It is upon man to establish a moral society, but it is upon their women to erect the spiritual temple on top of that foundation.

[1542] The great mistake isn’t in making them, but in being too proud to admit and correct them.

[1543] No man shines brighter than him with humility.

[1544] Power is best fitted for those who can teach the people how to govern themselves and settle their own disputes; such is the task of a great king: to delegate his nobles to provide the people with the pragmatic knowledge and training required to meet such ends.

[1545] Society’s greatest sin is when its women steal mens' hearts yet have no intention of being champions for their dreams.

[1546] Pride is the prerequisite to ultimate failure.

[1547] The greatest among you will be the philosophers, for your visions will solidify themselves into the uplifting realities of the yet unborn future.

[1548] Loyalty is the one and only virtue that wins a real man’s love and respect.

[1549] To achieve exemplarship is to have fulfilled one’s obligation in finding true love, and it will come when the soulmate has done the same.

[1550] The man who competes with others, seeking to outdo them to prove his superiority over them, only does so because he secretly feels inadequate and inferior to them.

[1551] The wise man recognizes that perhaps the greatest individual blessing is to learn how to balance his head on top of his neck, for then he automatically puts his thoughts and feelings in their right order.

[1552] Blessed are the husband and wife who use each other’s love for one another to inspire them to become the very best versions of themselves.

[1553] More important than what a man does is that which he doesn’t.

[1554] He is a fool who gets so intoxicated that he can no longer recognize how others are reacting to him.

[1555] Every man wrongs others, but what differentiates the courageous man from the coward is he who has the humility to recognize his mistakes, feels guilt and shame and regret and remorse for them, and then seeks to put those wrongs right such that his victim forgives him and no longer harbors illwill against him, and finally that he vows never to repeat the same offense again.

[1556] True power comes from wise men sharing their wisdom with each other, thus making every individual mind in the group as wise as the entirety of its’ collective consciousness.

[1557] A society can only become truly great when all its’ people desire knowledge, wisdom and understanding above all else and then they apply it to their relations and affairs; then, the Age of Aquarius has finally arrived!

[1558] A father’s greatest duty to his children is to build in them an innate sense of their own worth and value.

[1559] A man who thinks the degradations of a woman’s sexual history is an assault on his value and worth as a man, even though she deeply regrets her past sins against him, is an insecure, proud, unforgiving little boy.

[1560] No matter how direct, honest, and transparent a man makes himself, there are still always going to be those who misunderstand him.

[1561] When a philosophy acknowledges it came from the LORD, it becomes a religion.

[1562] A woman who can cause a man to feel bliss can convince him to do anything she wants; and what if her aim was world peace and prosperity?

[1563] When a highly sexed individual guided by love starts abstaining from sex expression, their genius starts building up and its power eventually explodes like a volcano that shocks the world with the impact it has upon it.

[1564] A man is judged by his treatment of those others’ love.

[1565] A man fails women every time he makes or allows them to feel physically unsafe or emotionally threatened in his presence.

[1565] Men and women must make themselves loyal to deserve one another.

[1566] A queen is only ready to be such when she has put herself on good terms with her conscience, and she does that by seeking to make things right with everyone she has injured and hurt in the past.

[1567] It is not until our heart is broken that we understand why we should never have broken anyone else’s.

[1568] When the neck is free, a man’s body language will automatically and honestly reflect his inner thoughts and feelings through his positions and movements, and in the way in which he speaks.

[1569] Everyone wants a perfect world but are hesitant to do what’s required to make it so.

[1570] The most difficult task is to see ourselves not as we think we are but as we truly are.

[1571] Men recognize and listen to the voice of experience.

[1572] A man cannot express the full potential of his personality unless he first learns to free his neck.

[1573] The greatest act of love is to attend to another’s feet.

[1574] There is no shame in being wrong; only in refusing to acknowledge it.

[1575] Masculinity is wisdom; femininity, loving-kindness.

[1576] The biggest threat to an evil man is a good one.

[1577] He is a fool who envies and hates others for their blessings when he would be wiser to learn from them, that he may receive the same for himself.

[1578] The process of learning to free the neck automatically releases the damages of past trauma and abuse, finally allowing for the wound to scar and heal.

[1579] A husband who shares his knowledge and wisdom with his wife without her first recognizing it in him is despised by her.

[1580] Both parties have to understand justice to fairly resolve their disputes.

[1581] A husband awakens his wife’s mind to his wisdom, but a wife awakens his heart to her loving-kindness.

[1582] To be wronged is to rage, and to suffer loss is to cry; the wife who understands this in her husband has already made herself a great one.

[1583] If a man grows in wisdom and stature, eventually women are going to recognize he possesses these blessings and want to marry and commit to him; for these are to women as pollen is to the bee.

[1584] To understand and know we do is to be a master.

[1585] When every citizen achieves Christ consciousness, the eternal kingdom is ready to arrive.

[1586] Those who rage when they can no longer use you and take advantage of you will show themselves the door, and then try to make it look like you’re losing something valuable, when the truth is they’re just removing unnecessary grief from your life.

[1587] Suffering is to live with unresolved trauma.

[1588] True power is to withhold and maybe change an intention before the decision is made to carry it out.

[1588] When a man’s face is sent up and his skull rotates forward on the spine while it is sent back and up, it brings to his consciousness the complete awareness of his body and puts it and his voice under his obedient command.

[1589] The greatest teacher is the one who best exemplifies his preachments and demonstrates why they’re beneficial to adopt and practice.

[1590] When wisdom is merged with loving-kindness, miracles ensue.

[1591] Men envy or admire others their money, women, position or physique, but even more so if they possess wisdom.

[1592] The evidence of successful forgiveness is to feel no illwill towards those who have wronged us when they’re recalled to mind; instead, we pity them for we know the karma they’re going to yet have to suffer for it.

[1593] The master’s philosophy is the seed by which the tree of his initiate’s own is later grown.

[1594] A great kingdom teaches its children how to use their bodies the way the LORD designed them to be used; for then they don't fall into misuse as adults.

[1595] The way a man carries himself, moves and speaks is his personality; and to unlock its full potential, he must learn to first send his face up and rotate his skull forward while sending it back and up and be constant in maintaining those directions.

[1596] Our sense of connection with the moment is commensurate with how well we exercise command over our body and the reception of its senses.

[1597] A loyal husband never compliments or touches another woman in any way that draws attention to her sexuality; that’s reserved for his wife, and her alone.

[1598] A man can evade the laws of man for a time, but he cannot evade coming to suffer the penalties of violating the laws of the LORD through the law of retribution.

[1599] To increase in wisdom and stature is to set the example for others; for the more who do so, the more there will be!

[1600] To be understanding is to judge and condemn no man for feeling the emotions he does, for before a man can learn to control them, he must first admit and express them.

[1601] Morality is the foundation of spirituality. 

[1602] There is no shame in being wrong; only in ignoring or defending it.

[1603] When cocky meets sassy, magic ensues!

[1604] Poise is a prerequisite to cheerfulness.

[1605] A man who preaches living in the moment while he stiffens his neck is ignorant to what he’s talking about.

[1606] A man who lets himself become jealous or envious makes himself a burdensome nuisance to others.

[1607] Any sinful impulse admitted into the consciousness pulls the head back and down.

[1608] Men are the foundation; women, the temple.

[1609] An exemplar devotes the first half of his life to inhibiting his own sinful nature, and the second half to inhibiting his reactions to everyone else’s.

[1610] To persist in the development of moral character and to seek to right all our past wrongs is what it truly means to follow Christ and earn a place in his kingdom, not a mere decision to invite him into your heart.

[1611] To accept personal responsibility is to learn to inhibit our transgressions, and to hold ourselves morally accountable is to put things right with all those our transgressions caused us to injure in the past.

[1612] It is only the most primitive of minds that will partake in orgies.

[1613] The proper relation between husband and wife is that of teacher and pupil; that is why a man must devote himself to the accumulation of wisdom such that he then already knows what his wife is most eager to learn.

[1614] To be mortal is to know limitations; but to become immortal is to remove them.

[1615] To be self-aware is to know when we are in the wrong.

[1616] The man who gains the highest status is the one who has the least desire for it.

[1617] Devoting our efforts to impressing others is the greatest act of betrayal against ourselves.

[1618] To not know what we’re going to do before we do it, but be prepared for it and then execute it with perfect  precision is impossible if ever the neck contracts during the entire unfoldment of the complete act.

[1619] To achieve nirvana is to become aware of and then learn to inhibit all the thoughts and the corresponding ways in which we tense the neck, which prevents the face from going up and the head from rotating forward while it’s sent back and up.

[1620] The mark of an evil religion is one that teaches its adherents to kill their conscience.

[1621] Rebuke arouses hatred in the prideful and indignant.

[1622] A weak man thinks it demonstrates his power to withdraw his cooperation.

[1623] Jealousy, envy and intolerance make men resentful and uncooperative.

[1624] A wretched father gets jealous and envious of his son’s success; but a good one rejoices in his victories.

[1625] The man who thinks he’s always right cannot see when and where he’s wrong, and thus he can never grow and evolve.

[1626] Pride blinds a man to his faults, making him a reproach to many.

[1627] A harmonious relation is impossible unless both parties can see and confess their wrongs to one another in their aim to fully eradicate them; for these conditions are required to justly resolve disputes.

[1628] To sin is not the problem; to be stubborn and defend it instead of remedying it, is.

[1629] Weak men think controlling others make them great and powerful; but strong men realize true greatness and power only comes when they exercise complete control themselves.

[1630] Just because a man rebukes sin and calls them the abominations they are does not mean he hates those who yet partake in them.

[1631] To become self-aware is to manifest the capacity to see ourselves as we truly are.

[1632] To love the LORD is to make ourselves obedient to His will, even if it means sacrifice and death. 

[1633] The measure of a man’s masculinity is the extent to which he can remain untriggered by offenses, or the perception of them.

[1634] The man who seeks to hear and understand others inherits the greatest of blessings in the kingdom.

[1635] The entitled man remembers his small acts of charity towards you, but forgets your big ones.

[1636] He who is hurt by rejection resorts to belligerency, and often violence.

[1637] If a man tries to exercise power over you, realize it is because he lacks it over himself.

[1638] To love someone is to care about what is most important to them, and to seek to understand how they feel about it and their reasons why.

[1639] The moral responsibility of capital is to ensure labor is fairly and justly compensated, directly proportionate to its cooperation and contribution in fulfilling the aim of the establishment.

[1640] When a man recognizes his gift, it comes with an awareness of what role and function he is to play in society.

[1641] Fairness and equity are services rendered to others being compensated to the extent to which it incurred benefits upon the reciptients.

[1643] A jealous man will thwart another’s search for love, just as an envious one will sabotage another’s efforts to prosper, just as an intolerant one will limit or revoke another’s liberties; and these transgressions are the epitome of all cowardice and everything deplorable on the planet!

[1644] When a man is angry, he tends to demand obedience and threaten consequences if it's denied him.

[1645] A man who abuses his power guarantees his eventual loss of it.

[1646] The most ignorant man is always the one who can't acknowledge when he's wronged another and he indignantly refuses to hold himself accountable for it by correcting the offense and putting it right with his victim; he wins much contempt and reproach.

[1647] The wicked man is he who takes revenge and punishes those he's wronged when they get angry at his injustices against them.

[1648] Righteous indignation is anger expressed at those who've wronged us; selfish anger, that expressed at those who rage against us because we've wronged them.

[1649] Those paid well serve best.

[1650] A grateful man shows gratitude to those who serve him.

[1651] A man who thinks ill of those because of their differing musical tastes is a prejudiced blockhead.

[1652] An alpha male seeks to control only himself; a beta male, everyone else.

[1653] A man who fails to win the respect of those he serves is a failure as a man.

[1654] A man learns even better that which he teaches.

[1655] Under the moral order, every service is compensated and every crime is retributed.

[1656] When a humble man is rebuked, he admits his error and corrects it, and thus grows in wisdom and character; but a proud man perceives it as an attack and retaliates, condemning himself to statis or even retrogression.

[1657] An evil government prohibits its citizens from serving the public and receiving their fair compensation.

[1658] A prophet proclaims that which is wrong, but condemns not those who were ignorant to it, so long as they are set upon correcting themselves.

[1659] What's sexiest in a person is when they don't even know what makes them so.

[1660] A man who fakes the promise of love to procure sexual gratification from a woman is a deceitful coward; he is less than a man.

[1661] When a husband and wife have both made themselves exemplars, there is no conflict or friction between them.

[1662] The biggest of all fools is the man who won't even do what's in his own best interests.

[1663] A wicked government legalizes theft; they're too incompetent to make their own money (by rendering an equivalent service for it), so they erect and enforce laws that justify them in stealing it from their citizens.

[1664] Capital and labor best serve the public, and thus themselves, when they are in harmony with each other, and are both fairly and equitably compensated.

[1665] A tyrant prohibits the people from criticizing him under threat of torture or death because he's insecure and has a fragile little ego that's easily wounded.

[1666] Humility is the capacity to recognize, admit, and accept our faults and errors; but pride is to deny, excuse, justify, blameshift them, or rebukeback.

[1667] A man's humility is measured by the speed to which he can recognize his faults and errors; and his courage by how quickly he can remedy them.

[1668] The most courageous act is to see ourselves as we truly are; for it is man's instinctive desire to ignore his faults and thus the illwill they trigger in others.

[1669] The greedy, conceited capitalist is deluded into believing what will win him respect is the height to which he can pile up riches (even if it means exploiting his labor); he is ignorant that winning it is only found in inspiring his labor to best serve the public, and then fairly compensating them for it.

[1670] It is a capitalist's moral obligation to be caretaker to the widow, orphan, elderly, and infirm.

[1671] A jealous, envious man makes for the poorest of friends; for he will secretly seek to thwart love and sabotage prosperity, and then gloat like a coward when he succeeds.

[1672] A man who follows a great leader well soon becomes one himself.

[1673] An intolerant government does everything in its power to keep the people ignorant or deluded, such that they may be easily subjegated and controlled.

[1674] In communication, a man's greatest asset is his capacity to listen with the intent of understanding those who share themselves with him.

[1675] The greedy capitalist exploits his labor for selfish gain and praise, of which he deserves neither.

[1676] The man who learns to love criticism and can accurately use it to evaluate himself, puts himself in the way of great character growth.

[1677] Meditating upon experience, and especially our trials, reveals hidden truths, resulting in an increase of wisdom.

[1678] An accurate judgment cannot be made until the facts have first been procured; therefore, it is foolish to reach a conclusion before such is so, and even more foolish to act upon it.

[1679] Respect is earned when the desire to serve exceeds the craving for the resulting rewards.

[1680] A man who recognizes that opposition and adversity are the greatest opportunities to increase in wisdom and rise in stature, rejoices when he encounters them.

[1681] An altruistic government enlightens its citizens on how to establish harmonious relations with their kinship and how to conduct their affairs such that they render an equivalent service required to support their ideal lifestyle.

[1682] Any sexual relation but one adult man and one adult woman in marriage is an abominable act; that is, to touch the others sexual parts.

[1683] An affectionate touch causes the recipient to feel valued and appreciated.

[1684] A good leader never improves upon his followers work before them; for he knows it will only cause that man to feel inadequate and incompetent.

[1685] The weak, cowardly man will seek to discourage, discredit, and instill doubt in the strong man, hoping it prevents that man from manifesting that which the coward doesn't have the courage to pursue and realize for himself.

[1686] Only the envious man seeks to prevent others from attaining what he wishes for himself, instead of devoting that same time and effort to realizing it for himself.

[1687] Strong men love and respect women; but weak ones use and abuse them.

[1688] A man enslaved to his jealousy will look upon women as objects, and he will express it through his lust.

[1689] The worth of a book is measured by the good that comes to the reader who applies its knowledge, and those who benefit from that which is produced as a result.

[1690] Those who teach others how to practice immorality are themselves responsible for leading others astray, and they will be held to account.

[1691] The man who demands love and seeks to coerce others into giving it to him make himself the loneliest one of them all.

[1692] The initial step to being unphased by criticism is to first become enraged by it; that response cannot be mastered if it not expressed and experienced.

[1693] A strong man asks for consent; a weak one, for permission.

[1694] A woman must surrender her will to a wise and strong man's headship to find love and happiness.

[1695] A man is as strong as his character or stature is upright.

[1696] An ignoramus combats symptoms; but an enlightened man cures them at their root.

[1697] Labor serves the public in proportion to the extent to which capital serves them.

[1698] The man who makes a habit of taking without first giving curses himself, his life and his household.

[1699] A service is any act that benefits another; while a crime is any that harms them.

[1700] When a man stops doing the wrong things, he does the right things automatically.

[1701] When a humble man is criticized, he listens, and if he discovers his critic is right, he agrees with them; but if he finds their analysis wrong, me simply smiles, knowing they lack sound judgment.

[1702] A husband who orders his wife around wins her resentment and contempt, no matter how silent it may be.

[1703] A loving, compassionate man looks upon his enemies not with anger and vengeance, but with pity and sorrow; for he knows karma will yet punish them for their wrongs against him.

[1704] He who is humble takes no offense at insults; but the prideful rages.

[1705] A man who feels no embarrassment at others laughing at his follies laughs too.

[1706] The epitome of cowardice is doing evil against another outside their awareness and then gloating over them for their ignorance of it.

[1707] A teacher can only be as good as they exemplify that which they teach; and if they are poor, they reduce themselves to hypocrisy. 

[1708] Peace cannot abide in a mind harboring any grudge.

[1709] The truth is often offensive to those who are ignorant to their own characters and are shocked to discover they unknowingly wrong others; for we all think ourselves good, righteous people.

[1710] The capacityfor forgiveness is begotten when a man feels pity and sorrow for those who wrong him (instead of becoming enraged and retaliating), because he knows they will yet face judgment and suffer in even greater proportions than the original offense against them.

[1711] To suffer without complaint or outrage the harm done against him of which he has no power over is to be a man.

[1712] Understanding and wisdom is begotten from three sources: personal experience, observation of others, and the study of the philosophers.

[1713] The penalty of producing excellent work is mediocre minds who lack initiative to invest in developing their own talents will envy and hate us for receiving the praise and applause they covet for themselves.

[1714] The ignorant and foolish politician gives women compensation for which they have not first rendered an equivalent service, because he's jealous and want to by their love with bribes; but under the moral order, the day will come when such women will be forced to repay their debt, and then they will suffer, and suffer greatly! Then they will hate and curse the politician for preying on their greed, thereby bringing them much trouble and woe!

[1715] Better is a peasant with love than a king without it.

[1716] A man who has overcome his every insecurity cannot be insulted and be offended by it.

[1717] To longsuffer the deprivation of our soul cravings is to develop patience, the cornerstone of all virtues.

[1718] The people recognize and identify with the man who teaches from personal experience, such that they accept and apply his preachments.

[1719] The purpose of suffering and frustration is to cultivate fortitude and patience within ourselves.

[1720] The conceited, vain and selfish man seeks to acquire beautiful women regardless of their character, riches regardless of if he violates others rights and freedoms, and knowledge regardless of it'a led him into folly, because he thinks they will arouse jealousy and envy in other men who are missing out on what he perceives to be his blessings.

[1721] Celibacy mixed with sex transmutation is the secret to unleashing a man's genius; but consummation with a loyal wife he loves and who loves him back, and where the relation is harmonious, unlocks his god-power.

[1722] The degree to which the senses exercise the capacity to fully perceive the great unfoldment is in direct relation to how well the body is balanced.

[1723] A wicked man hates a righteous man rebuking and chastening him; for that man is an obstacle to him continuing in his evil.

[1724] All men wrong others; but only the hunble and courageous seek to make their offenses right with their victims.

[1725] A man cannot right his wrongs if he doesn't first accept them as such, and that he is yet in others debts.

[1726] It is only pride that makes a man blind to his faults and the offenses they cause against others.

[1727] The best use of capital is that which most serves the people: its labor and their patrons.

[1728] A man who cheats others out of their fair compensation eventually goes bankrupt.

[1729] A just capitalist rewards his labor relative to the extent of their cooperation and contribution in serving their patrons.

[1730] A jealous, self-rigtheous man will shame and humiliate women for being promiscious.

[1731] An evil government prohibits and sabotages valuable services from being delivered to the people; they are a selfish and insecure people.

[1732] The biggest devil is the one who can least confess or desire to correct his evil ways.

[1733] A maiden giving her attention to a suitor she does not want will make him one who gets in the way her getting the one she does; she impales her own heart.

[1734] A man can only express himself as genuinely as his use is good.

[1735] A woman cannot spite a man unless she first loathes herself; why else would she think it acceptable to damage herself to do so to him?

[1736] It's not the longevity of a vow that is of much importance; it's the commitment to it.

[1737] A king terrified of losing his power is yet sure to.

[1738] Bondage is doing a thing we wish not to do but can't seem to stop ourselves from doing; the means-whereby shatters such chains, freeing us from them.

[1739] The application of wisdom produces character, and it then exemplies wise conduct, and so attracts rich and glorious blessings.

[1740] The wisest choice a man can make is to master the use of his body; for how he does that will determine how he does everything else.

[1741] Tolerlance to injustice just begets more of it.

[1742] It is not so much that a good wife listens to her husband; it is that he induces her to want to.

[1743] The greatest skill is the one that empowers us to learn all the rest: freedom enough for the capacity for conscious choice when we need it most.

[1744] A wise woman seeks affirmation from one man; but a foolish one, from a multitude.

[1745] It is only our habitual blind movements that serve the obstacle to learning.

[1746] Flaunting is only an expression of conceit when the motive is to trigger the envy of others.

[1747] Cursed are those who seek to punish those who react negatively to the former's wrongs against the latter's.

[1748] An envious man punishes those who excel him; he is insecure in his manhood.

[1749] A man cannot be known or trusted until you witness how gives or receives love, and by gauging how he reacts to losing it or what he does with it when gained.

[1750] Enduring results justify reasons.

[1751] The wisest and noblest of men is the ones who can quickliest admit mistakes without protest or defense, correct them while learning their lessons, then channeling that into uplifting humanity.

[1752] The wicked confuse vengance for justice; they are a perverted, corrupt people.

[1753] Relationships don't transform until the people in them first do.

[1754] Whena wife disagrees with her husband, a good one does not try to prove himself right; instead, he inquires into her reasoning to determine if he is wrong.

[1755] A wretched husband forces or coerces his wife into having sexual relations with him; but a good one arouses her so she comes onto him.

[1756] To demand a thing only generates resistence and resentment in the recipient.

[1757] A wife who is loved, cherished and appreciated will want to copulate more than her husband does.

[1758] A jealous suitor will devalue his competition by exposing their faults he does not possess to seek to appear more desirable by comparison; but his insecurity only repels the maiden.

[1759] A loving and strong king requests his noblewomen's thoughts on his own; for he knows the value of feminine insight and counsel in making a society upright and strong, and then sustaining it.

[1760] The man who covets praise seeks to discredit the one who receives more of it than he.

[1761] A two-faced person is terrified of criticism; but through their deceitful ways garners it.

[1762] A person is unfit to be a king or queen if they have not first mastered their retaliative response.

[1763] Ridiculing our exes is not loving and forgiving them; for then, do we not still harbor bitterness toward them for how they betrayed or wounded us?

[1764] A foolish person rages at others reactions to their own wrongs against that person.

[1765] A man cannot become a philosopher until his message serves others rather than his own vanity.

[1766] A brilliant man's greatest adversary is his love for his own intelligence; but once he conquers it, his influence is far-reaching.

[1767] A coward flatters with the lips and does favors with the hands, hoping it will remove any doubt he's an enemy.

[1768] To rejoice another has received a blessing we didn't is to have conquered our envy.

[1769] A coward doesn't want you to know he's your enemy; in his great love for himself, he gloats over your ignorance of it.

[1770] A jealous maiden undermines the suitor she desires from being with the woman he wants by putting stumbling blocks in their path, which only repels and wins his contempt and hatred for her; but if she's wise, she encourages the courtship, knowing her only chance is that that woman flubs it up and he then resorts to her.

[1771] Alpha males are immune to seduction, but beta males submit to women, become their slaves, and obey them by carrying out her orders.

[1772] A man is indifferent to women approval; but a coward is addicted to it and lives to receive it.

[1773] A beta male takes the side of his woman, even when she is in the wrong; because he is a needy weakling, he perverts justice in exchange for her approval.

[1774] There is nothing the intellectually vain man hates more than to witness another praised for his wisdom; for the secret craving of his heart it to be revered for his.

[1775] Those who set out to destroy others only succeed in destroying themselves.

[1776] The king who lacks a keen sense of justice forfeits the trust and confidence of his subjects; this makes them resistent and uncooperative with him.

[1777] When corporations have a monopoly on all the jobs, they can wagesteal from the people and they have no choice but to get coinraped; but the LORD intervenes to restore fairness and justice.

[1778] A proverb is ony fully understood when a man experiences it or witnesses its truthfulness in his own life.

[1779] The greatest fool is the one who devotes their efforts to trying to destroy others happiness, when they could use the same effort to find their own.

[1780] The greater the mistake, the more valuable the lesson; if it's sought afterwards, it results in commensurate wisdom.

[1781] A wretched wife takes no interest in the process and produce of her husband's talents; but blessed is the one who is eager to hear about and witness the fruits of them.

[1782] It is not until after we experience that which we do not want that we realize that which we do; such also prepares us to recognize it when it presents itself.

[1783] A man who lets jealousy and envy consume him reduces himself to a cowardly dog; he repels love and prosperity by turning those who have the power to give them against him.

[1784] True love is the recipricated, loyal affections of a mate and true prosperity is an equivalent reward for services rendered; but cowards rape and steal in their vain attempt to possess that which they have neither earned nor deserve.

[1785] Greatly cursed are those who return evil for good; they create a soul debt demanding compound interest.

[1786] A righteous, humble man rejoices to discover his faults, and he corrects them; but a wicked, arrogant man rages and retaliates when they're made known.

[1787] Those who resolve to share a mate have absolute lack of respect for themselves; self-respect is to remove themselves as a participant.

[1788] Call a coward a coward, and he will rage and defend himself by refuting it; but a man will calmly ask upon what evidence the conclusion was founded.

[1789] The man who wavers in his decisions instead of firmly reaching them and remaining steadfast, fosters others' doubt in him; this makes them unwilling to continue to cooperate with him.

[1790] Mindfulness is commensurate with the degree to which the neck is free; a man who claims to live in the moment yet has a stiff neck is deluded at best or a liar and fraud at worst.

[1791] A righteous king request his subjects surrender to his headship and cooperate with him in his plans and purposes; but a wicked one demands submission and obedience under threat of punishment.

[1772] When a man surrenders to his anger, he tends to demand obedience and threaten consequences if it is denied him.

[1773] A tyrant censors dissenters; least their arguments make converts and their numbers increase.

[1774] The great shame is not found in being a coward; only in remaining one!

[1775] Anger makes a man demanding.

[1776] A man cares not what others opinions of him are; for he knows himself, and that psychoanalysists lack sound judgment in addressing character.

[1777] A righteous, humble man agrees with his critics when they judge him accurately; he cares not if it reflects poorly on him.

[1778] Repentence is to confess our wrongs against another and do everything in our power to reverse the damage we caused them.

[1779] It is prudent for a man to forgive all who have wronged him; but also to remove from his life those who refuse to make their wrongs right with him.

[1780] To truly regret wronging another is to make the strong resolve to never transgress them in the same manner again.

[1781] A hypocrite condemns lesser crimes in another while he is guilty of greater ones.

[1782] It matters not who started it; but who stops it from continuing.

[1783] Chastity till marriage is presenting strong evidence to our spouse that we will be trustworthy and faithful afterwards.

[1784] Great woe to those who shame and humiliate women for profit; they will be shunned.

[1785] Blessed is the man who discovers and masters his gift (which is what he loves to do and excels best at), and then seeks to use it to benefit as many as will receive his services; he finds happiness and contentment in life.

[1786] Prioritize love over sex, and you'll have no shortage of both.

[1787] A saint is one who can quickest admit their sins and relentlessly hold themselves accountable for correcting the damage they caused.

[1788] A philosopher king's doctrine induces the people to change; but a philosopher tyrant imposes it by force. 

[1789] A penitent sinner expresses remorse, and therefore deserves forgiveness; for they demonstrate they regret causing us injury.

[1790] If you have no remorse for how you've wronged others, by what right do you have to ask for forgiveness of your wrongs?

[1791] Love produces the desire to trigger no resentment or illwill in another; but it is inevitable that he will for a short time when he righteously discipline his children.

[1792] A self-centered ignoramus wrongs their victim, then self-pitiously casts the blame on them for their instinctive reaction to it; they think nothing is ever their fault nor do they hold themselves accountable for their mistakes because they think they are perfect.

[1793] Position is irrelevant; as long as the body is grounded, the neck can be free.

[1794] An envious layman will hate and despise a prophet; he dearly wishes he too could know future events before they come to pass.

[1795] Woe to those who demand or accept compensation worth more than the value of their goods or services.

[1796] A tyrant shames and humiliates his men into submission and obedience.

[1797] The people willingly carry our a king's instructions when they can recognize how it will benefit themselves, their families, their communities, and their nations.

[1798] The operation of greed is simple: it is the desire to receive more compensation than for that which we've rendered an equivalent service.

[1799] A husband who recognizes his wife probably understands human relations better than himself requests her counsel concerning his affairs; he cannot go without love and favor.

[1800] A wife counsels her husband; but he makes the decisions.

[1801] A coward will injure you in secret and then gloat over you for thinking him your ally; he is headed for perdition.

[1802] A wicked government prohibits its citizens from providing services to the public that the people demand; being envious, it delights in sabotaging the people from increasing in happiness and contentment.

[1803] A man who deliberately sabotages others out of their happiness cheats himself out of his own; he a reproach to all.

[1804] He who knowingly contributes to answering a prayer still answers it; for ALLAH works through the decisions and efforts of men, along with the natural laws.

[1805] A deceitful person will condemn the very thing they secretly partake in to second-guess suspicion and build trust they don't deserve.

[1806] The recipe for cowardice is envious, spiteful conceit and deceit; a mixture of these sins compels a coward to persecute a man he wishes he could be outside his awareness, then gloats over him for his ignorance of the offense.

[1807] The envious despises the man who receives the recognition he craves for himself; thus, he will seek to discourage and discredit that man to stop his efforts and convince others to stop giving it.

[1808] A good man assumes others are as himself; he is in for the shock of his life.

[1809] Filthy money is that obtained in exchange for a role in wronging or condemning the innocent; those who cause them to suffer will suffer themselves tenfold.

[1810] A two-faced coward is friendly to the face; but then speaks with illwill and contempt when not present.

[1811] Cursed is the greedy politician who erects laws that violate the LORD's laws; retribution will find him in as great a torrent as the extent of his violations of them!

[1812] A man's sense of self-worth results and is relative to his services to humanity; and his happiness is founded on those acts performed in rendering them, and is directly proportionate to the benefits incurred on other.

[1813] Thieves squander the money they steal; because they put little effort into generating it themselves, they are too ignorant to recognize and appreciate its value or put it to good, constructive use.

[1814] Unjust lawmakers cause the people to violently revolt against their injustices.

[1815] The people harken their ears to a man's wisdom when they can recognize he speaks from actual experience; they can see he knows the part of the road they're on because he's at the end of it.

[1816] An insanely jealous man gives women money they have not first rendered an equivalent service for, to try to buy and bribe their love, and if they let him manipulate their greed and accept it, they will yet be forced to repay the debt with interest; it is only then that the women realize how that man has done them untold damage because of his insecurity, desperation and neediness for women's collective approval and validation.

[1817] A foolish, ignorant and evil man does not know he is such; he is blinded by his pride and egotism, and so denies, excuses, and justifies his stance.

[1818] To forgive in the midst of persecution is the most difficult of all tasks; inhibiting anger while being struck in the face is complete self-mastery.

[1819] When a wicked man is the recipient of the rage of one he's wronged, he retaliates; but a righteous one remains silent, for he knows he has been the wrongdoer and deserves the contempt he is receiving.

[1820] A hypocrite will condemn a man for the speck in his eye and ignore the log in his own; he blames others for smaller faults and mistakes yet is ignorant to his own massive ones.

[1821] When a man ignorant to discerning right from wrong, and is pridefully oblivous to his own character, is rebuked for his evil, instead of admitting his error and the transgression it produced against another, then remedying the malefaction, he will either: deny it, excuse it, justify it, blameshift or rebukeback; and this is the way of all foolishness and folly!

[1822] The LORD greatly blesses those who humble themselves to recognize, admit and correct their faults and mistakes; such as these belong to the kingdom and are welcomed into its eternal glory.

[1823] He is uncompassionate to judge and condemn another for being guilty of a sin he is innocent of, while he commits one they are innocent of; for each has a variant pair of dominant sins they must do battle with, individual to themselves and their destiny.

[1824] Just because we were ignorant to the penalties of our errors does not dissolve us of being held accountable for them.

[1825] Too much enthusiasm without self-control can be a dangerous force.

[1826] Unrestrained enthusiasm brings a man trouble.

[1827] The perfect spouse is the one who desires to stop triggering their mate and works at stopping the habitual ways they do so, seeks forgiveness when they do trigger, and forgives when they are triggered; these are the conditions upon which the true love relation is established, when both possess these traits.

[1828] The path to peace and harmony is to forgive when we get triggered and ask for it when we trigger; while seeking to succeed at inhibiting all the thoughts, speech and conducts that do so.

[1829] To violate the moral instructions is to trigger the recipient or witness of it.

[1830] A man who knows he is a hero of the youth should consider it his moral obligation to exemplify an example worthy of emulation; for he knows he will be mimicked in speech and deeds.

[1830] Every blessing has its curse; and every curse, its blessing.

[1831] To love our neighbor is to induce them to feel accepted and as to belong in the community as one of its valued members.

[1832] The truth always come out, to a man's penalty or reward.

[1833] When the neck is free, a man's body automatically and truthfully reflect his inner thoughts and emotions without conscious or purposeful intervention aforethought.

[1834] A seducer gives women buyer's remorse; she regrets being scammed out of sex by a conman parading himself as a man.

[1835] A seducer is nothing but a conman of the flesh and a victimizer of women; he articially mimicks acts of love such that women get tricked into granting him sex, all to satisfy his selfish lusts and vain conceits.

[1836] The curse of the gorgeous woman is she is endlessly and relentlessly pursued by suitors she has no interest in; but her blessing is she gets the man she really wants.

[1837] Give a man a worthy purpose, and he will find his happiness.

[1838] When the wicked are in power the people reflect their evil by becoming criminals; but when the righteous are, they become saints.

[1839] A wise man never criticizes another for the produce of what they think are their talents, knowing it will only wound their pride; he simply withholds approval and praise.

[1840] It is imprudent to praise a man for talent he does not possess; for it will only delude him and bloat his ego.

[1841] A man who wounds another's pride can expect retaliation and retribution.

[1842] A revelation always demands a decision must be made.

[1843] A selfish man lacks sound judgment; for he arrives at his conclusions based on his own self-interest, when accurate ones often fall on those of others.

[1844] A charismatic personality wins the love of many; but the contempt of the envious few.

[1845] Virtue is the result of subtraction more than addition.

[1846] The two phantasms a male must conquer on the path to manhood are: the mothers wound, and the father's dominion; when both conquests are rendered victorious, the boy has died and has been reborn a man.

[1847] A man cannot be a great husband if he still carries his mother's wound, and he cannot be a good father if he still submits to his father's dominion.

[1848] All evil acts are retributed and the debts repaid, if the perpetrator doesn't take the initiative to balance them.

[1849] A great philosopher guides a man to arrive at the right conclusion for himself, for then he understands it instead of relying on the trust he may have in the thinker.

[1850] A revolutionary adopts the doctrine and precepts of his people such that they trust him; so that when he changes them and presents his rationale for it, they follow suit.

[1851] Those who worry about getting sick are those who do.

[1852] The man who can induce others to understand themselves such that they may resolve their inner struggles, and so revolutionize their outer world, is a savior.

[1853] When a man can witness his brother receive greater prosperity and recognition than him and not get triggered by his envy, he is ready to be a king; just as when a woman can witness her beloved love another and not get triggered by her jealousy, she is ready to be a queen.

[1854] Same sex attraction isn't an abomination; only consummating it is.

[1855] "Often" or "Rarely" may be truthful judgments concerning peoples' behavior; but "always" or "never" never are.

[1856] It is impossible for a humble, modest man to have his pride wounded; but a proud, conceited man rages.

[1857] A deceitful person will volunteer unecessary information in an attempt to circumvent suspicion, which only arouses it and reveals the nature of what they're trying to conceal.

[1858] To gloat over a scorned love for losing their chance with us is a product of vanity and conceit; but to feel pity and sorrow, knowing they suffer regret and remorse for the error that led to it, is an outgrown of humility and modesty.

[1859] To rage at wounded pride later leads to humility and modesty if it is healed.

[1860] A wise man remains ever open to changing his doctrines or precepts should new or rearranged contradict conclusions.

[1861] A man's wound must be known to truly understand him.

[1862] All sin has an immediate benefit; but a long-term consequence much more harmful than it.

[1863] Mistakes increase sound judgment, should the lesson be learnt.

[1864] To flatly agree with an insult renders it harmless and embarrasses the culprit.

[1865] The man who thirsts for knowledge utilizes his meeting with everyone he meets as a vehicle to increase it; for he knows all possess what he does not know yet.

[1866] Any man who promises you can commit evil and get away from it is a liar or an ignoramous; for the truth always prevails, along with its corresponding penalties.

[1867] The successful way to get an artist to agree to a production technique he is opposed to is to reveal his hero used the same one.

[1868] To retaliate against evil is to do evil.

[1868] To inhibit the instinctive retaliative respond to being the recipient of a wrong, or witnessing a love fall victim to one, or the perception of them, is to achieve self-mastery.

[1869] A coward consumed with jealousy and envy, which prompts him to thwart others in love and sabotage them in prosperity; to be a man is to train ourselves to refrain fomr all conducts that produce such conditions in others lives.

[1870] To suffer grief and sorrow is to later understand those who suffer the same.

[1871] A good father reprimands his sons harshly in the beginning to raise their tolerance for rebuke; then they will be reproved lightly, listen and abide.

[1872] A wise man corrects another only by asking questions which force them to reach contrary, truthful conclusions for themselves.

[1873] The progression of the dangerous dynamic is this: a man admits a sinful impulse into his consciousness which leads to its outward expressions; that expression transgresses the recipient of it; that transgression triggers resentment and illwill in the recipient; that illwill in them leads to retaliation against the transgressor; and so the cycle repeats, until one forgives the other and refrains from returning evil for evil to end the feud.

[1874] A wretched father causes his children to feel unworthy, ashamed and rejected.

[1875] The man who continually asks himself how he would feel being the recipient of his own conduct soon puts them all right.

[1876] Remorse and regret are the conscience' petitions to the man to reform himself and correct his evil ways.

[1877] Man is most creative when he has love in his heart; then what's produced is most beautiful.

[1878] It is the grossest vanity to commend ourselves for committing crimes.

[1879] Blessed is he who produces harmony between rivals such that reconciliation and peace inevitably follow.

[1880] A prophet who writes a proverb under the influence of anger later regrets its composition.

[1881] Every day is an opportunity to grow in love, compassion and understanding, making the capacity for forgiveness a natural outgrown.

[1882] It takes a genius to explain the means by which a genius may be unfolded.

[1883] There's a vast difference between condemnation and the admininstration of justice.

[1884] When a command must be issued, let it be preceded or followed by: please.

[1885] To know a man is to know why he does what he does and how he came to know how to do it.

[1886] The greatest power is to inhibit a reaction; no word has more authority than the word: no.

[1887] Blessed is the man who throughout his day, notices peoples needs and seeks to satisfy them.

[1888] There is no blameless party in any conflict; for if there was, one would bear the other's sins with longsuffering.

[1889] The meaning of life is threefold: achieve exemplarship to form the harmonious relation with the soulmate; work together to serve others in exchange for the compensation required to support the ideal lifestyle; and finally devote the excesses of time and resources into acts of altruism.

[1900] To retaliate against an offense rather than bear the sin is to forfeit an eternal reward.

[1901] Forgiveness is true and complete when no ill emotion enters the consciousness at the thought of the transgressor.

[1902] To forgive a great wrong makes it easy to later do so of a small one.

[1903] Peace is impossible unless the capacity for forgiveness is present; for all men fall short and wrong others.

[1904] A wife who inquires into how her husband responded to his emotions which were aroused in response to others reactions to his imprudent conduct, and what decisions it prompted him to arrive at, comes to understand the depths of his heart.

[1905] Righteousness wins praise; wickedness, contempt.

[1906] Grudges produce bitterness resulting in an aura that repels people and causes them to become resistent and uncooperative; but forgiveness unfolds amazing and incredible powers of influence that may be wielded with a staggering revolutionary impact.

[1907] The ultimate religion is the absense of it.

[1908] The secret to giving a genuine compliment and having it received as being sincere is to demonstrate we possess the indisputable facts upon which makes it true, and if asked many others will agree with it.

[1909] Cursed is he who doesn't care if he wrongs others, and damned is he who does it with purpose aforethought.

[1910] Only philosophers make for great kings which the people love and revere.

[1911] A punctual man puts himself in the way of opportunity; but truancy condemns him to remain at the bottom.

[1912] The height of the reward is proportionate to the extent of the persecution.

[1913] Cursed is the man who knowingly lets another suffer the penalty for his crime!

[1914] Expose one coward in a horde of them and he will snitch on all the rest.

[1915] The entitled man is the perpetrator, but thinks himself the victim.

[1916] A maiden who is schooled  on fairness and justice makes for a great wife and a great mother.

[1917] A man excels because he studies the masterpieces of the geniuses and makes them his teachers, rather than submitting to the inferior teachings of those who only resort to teaching others because they are incapable of producing such themselves.

[1918] The greatest blessing is to have the capacity for recognizing the penalties of error and then teaching and demonstrating that knowledge to prevent the people from suffering in them.

[1919] The man who is liberal in his sex habits amounts to nothing; he who is conservative, often contributes greatly to his community; and he who limits it to true love and the perfect marriage alone changes the world.

[1920] The only man who can change the world is the one who first changes himself; if it brings him happiness and contentment and others recognize his accomplishment, they will emulate his example and redeem for themselves the same blessings.

[1921] To bear another’s sin is to refrain from letting their wrong trigger us, checking our desire to retaliate, and in it, debasing ourselves to the great error of returning evil for evil; and this is to demonstrate love for them.

[1922] To know ourselves is the greatest journey; to master ourselves, the greatest victory; and to share that story with a mate, the greatest love.

[1923] To grow in knowledge of ourselves is to become aware of what was before the revelation an unconscious blind response to a common trigger; and wisdom is changing that habitual reaction to better serve ourselves and others.

[1924] The greatest story is the one where the hero transmutes ignorance into enlightenment, and tyranny into freedom.

[1925] To differentiate instigator from retaliator is to learn the ways of justice.

[1926] A good philosopher supplies remedies for coping with our dreams being denied us; but a great one, by supplying the prescriptions for realizing them.

[1927] The indifference to wronging a stranger instead of treating their interests like we do our own is the cause of so much trouble for both the perpetrator and their victim and the community in which they live.

[1928] To witness injustice revolts the honest man as if he had eaten rotten food and vomited it out.

[1929] Integrity is to harmonize our intentions with our conscience.

[1930] To connect with another is to find out where they’re coming from and where they’re going, and share the same information with them, first monetarily and then in life.

[1931] The heaviest cross to bear is to be an example to a multitude.

[1932] A man is wisest to choose for his wife the woman who cheers loudest for his mission.

[1933] A woman gets and keeps a husband in the same way: she finds out how he dreams of contributing to the world, believes in his mission, helps him in achieving it in every way within her power, sympathizes with him in the struggles to realize it, encourages him to remain resilient and persevere, to finally celebrate with him when he succeeds and gives her the full credit for the achievement.

[1934] The depths of degradation of a sinner is the summit they can surmount as a saint.

[1935] The greatest philosophers are the ones who reveal the means whereby our soul cravings may be satisfied.

[1936] To not be triggered and to not trigger is the ultimate aim; success is to achieve blamelessness and attain the status of master and saint.

[1937] No man can truly change the world; he can only inspire it to change itself.

[1938] Sincere remorse causes the transgressor not only to desire to want to correct in themselves what caused the mistake and right their wrong with their victim, but they persist in it until reform and recompense have been completed.

[1939] The function of the genius is to help usher in the Age of Aquarius.

[1940] To cease to wrong is to be absolved of suffering the penalties.

[1941] Persecution produces patience in the victim, the virtue the philosophers revere as the most enviable one of them all.

[1942] To be great is to come to wrong no one, harbor bitterness toward no transgressor, and always seek to be of service to the glory of the kingdom.

[1943] A man’s status in the world is proportionate with the service he renders it.

[1944] Status is no more than a favorable perception of us in the minds of others, and to the height of its extent.

[1945] The man who is eager to impose his wisdom on us lacks it.

[1946] To hurt a beloved in return for them hurting us demonstrates we do not truly love them.

[1947] The hardest but most rewarding admonition to gain success at is to love our enemies, or to wish for them the blessings we do for ourselves, even though they seek to deprives us of ours; to succeed in this endeavor is to become the greatest force for good.

[1948] To truly love another is to have no desire to make them suffer, even in return for them making us suffer.

[1949] The strongest evidence of love is that it seeks above all else to remove inconvenience and suffering from a beloved’s experience.

[1950] The longer a lie endures, the more expensive it becomes.

[1951] The man who makes himself invincible to evil is the one who desires pleasure with no one but his soulmate, accepts no resource for which she hasn’t first rendered an equivalent service for, and desires to control no one but himself; such is the evidence of the man who has successfully mastered his sinful nature and become the LORD’s vision for him.

[1952] Liberty is in jeopardy every time one man desires to control another’s circumstances and limit his opportunities.

[1953] A philosopher’s life is cursed, but his legacy is honored to the extent of his sorrows.

[1954] How strong a man becomes depends on the extent of his adversities and his will to overcome them; the greater the obstacles and the greater the effort to hurdle them, the stronger he becomes if he but persists.

[1955] Love’s greatest fear is that the beloved will suffer.

[1956] Democracy divides the people, but a monarchy under a righteous king unifies them.

[1958] Man’s greatest evil is that he sees it in everyone else but ignores it in himself.

[1959] True liberty only results from conquering our destructive nature, for genuine freedom is impossible while we remain enslaved to it.

[1960] A man is foolish when he deludes himself into thinking he’s a superior man because a desirable woman chose him over others, he accumulated more wealth than most others, or he exercises power and control over others who do as he wishes.

[1961] Strength of character is relative to the possession and application of wisdom.

[1962] The man who makes sex his god becomes a devil.

[1963] The perfect marriage only results when both husband and wife have made themselves exemplars of the moral instruction; then perfect peace, love and harmony abides in their union.

[1964] The most deplorable of cowards are those who devote their efforts to sabotaging the happiness of those who have the courage to pursue it.

[1965] The wicked persecute a man hoping he succumbs to his hatred for them; but he who resists and refuses is canonized.

[1966] To cheat a man out of his happiness is to bring misery upon ourselves.

[1967] The only man who becomes happy is the one who devotes himself to be of outstanding service to others, and he only finds true happiness when he finds a loyal wife who wants to partner with him in delivering it.

[1968] The greatest desire to inspire in a man is his passion for rendering useful service to others to the greatest of his abilities; for this will, by and by, bring him true love with a loyal wife, loving bonds with his children, prosperity and comfort in their lifestyle, respect from his partners and clients, and the honors for the difference they make in the world.

[1969] The entitled man rages when he stops receiving services, for which he’s already used, is still in debt for, but yet still doesn’t pay; he thinks what is fair treatment is an injustice against him.

[1970] He who forgives a wrongdoer elevates himself to a much higher spiritual status, while they have already lowered their’s by way of their transgression.

[1971] The best way to shame an enemy is to forgive them their wrong against us, for they have no such power over us; their debt has been cancelled, and they know they didn’t deserve it.

[1972] To be entitled is to expect and even demand more compensation than that for which we have rendered an equivalent service.

[1563] It is only a man’s insecurity in himself and his deep-seated feelings of inadequacy that prompt him to attempt to appear superior to others.

[1974] To cross a woman’s boundary, realize she found it unwanted, vow to her to never repeat the offense, and then never do, demonstrates to her you’re a man she can trust and depend upon.

[1975] The pursuit of perfection is to suppress and bury the emotions and transform ourselves into automations lacking humanity.

[1976] The occupation of the philosopher is concerned with transmuting experience into wisdom, which, if applied circumvents penalties and incurs benefits to the individual who adheres to it.

[1977] It is not the pursuit of perfection that is of any importance, but the aim of reaching a stage in our development whereby we may honestly express our thoughts and feelings with the world and bless it with our light.

[1978] A man’s confidence is always relative to the degree to which he exercises command over his body and voice.

[1979] Nothing outrages the envious man more than to see another receive more praise for their wisdom than he does for his; thus, he attacks that man’s character and seeks to discredit his message.

[1980] The way by which taxation may be eliminated is by a governing body rendering a service to the people, whereby the profits are sufficient to pay for its expenses.

[1981] The biggest mistake we make is not making them, so long as we have in mind the accumulation of wisdom and the development of character.

[1982] Call an idiot an idiot and he will become enraged and belligerent; but say so of a wise man and he will simply smile.

[1983] Only miserable, unhappy people wish calamity will come upon those they abhor.

[1984] A woman needs to feel physically and emotionally safe and feel her loving efforts are recognized and appreciated; listen men! Provide her that, and she will shower you with their respect, love and affection.

[1985] Rebuke a proud man for his true faults and he will respond by accusing you of imaginary ones.

[1986] Those who mistake a good man for a bad one lack sound judgment, and therefore they cannot be trusted and depended upon for reaching accurate conclusions about anything.

[1987] A man wins respect when he is courageous and comfortable enough to see and admit all the ways he’s been a complete idiot in his life, and he has no problem confessing his foolishness to others.

[1988] Blessed is he who delights at being called a fool, for it gives him the opportunity to investigate why his accuser thinks so, which might put him in the way of an increase in self-awareness and opportunity, and thus growth and evolution.

[1989] A man removes another from his kinship if that man offends any member of the group and he demonstrates no desire or awareness to put it right when confronted for his wrong.

[1990] An insult only offends if the recipient and witnesses accept it as true.

[1991] The real sin isn’t in wronging others (for all men do); it is in failing to put those transgressions right with our victims.

[1992] The first step to greatness is to acknowledge we aren’t, which only then puts us in a position to become so.

[1993] To win the trust of others, a man must first make himself both honest and loyal.

[1994] Excellence always breeds two responses in men: admiration and praise, and envy and criticism.

[1995] The effeminate man always looks down on and mocks the masculine man, the first foolishly thinking this raises him up to the other’s status.

[1996] A suitor who truly loves and respects his maiden will refrain from touching her in a sexual way until their vows have been made before the eyes of the LORD.

[1997] The greatest philosopher is the one who inspires others to become one too.

[1998] When a man feels powerless, he will seek to exercise control over others.

[1999] When a righteous man rebukes the evil ways of the wicked, they demonstrate their utter helpless enslavement to their sin of intolerance by attempting to shame, mock, condemn and vilify him, and wish all kinds of misfortune and calamity come upon him.

[2000] When accused of or rebuked for sin, neither deny, excuse, justify, blameshift, nor rebuke back; for partaking in such defensive, proud ways is exactly the obstacle to overcoming the desire to recommit the transgression, and thus condemning ourselves to reproducing the same negative reaction from others.

[2001] The essence of wisdom is that which instills and guides the path of right conduct. 

[2002] The way into a man’s heart is to comfort, console and encourage him in the midst of his troubles; he will never forget such loyal love and dedicated devotion.

[2003] To agree with an insult is to render it powerless.

[2004] A wise man understands that when another curses, insults, reviles or threatens him, it is because that man feels he's been unfairly or unjustly treated; therefore, he asks himself if he's wronged that man and is accountable for putting it right.

[2005] The great man is he who desires others receive the same blessings he has for himself.

[2006] If a man violates a moral instruction and the recipient gets enraged, it is righteous anger; but if the perpetrator then rages at the victim's wrath, it is wicked anger.

[2007] The cornerstone of exemplarship is to cease even from righteous anger when wronged.

[2008] True happiness only results from husband and wife serving humanity as a team in accordance with their gifts.

[2009] It is more blessed to serve than to receive the credit for it.

[2010] Social fluency results in personality; moral living, in character.

[2011] Every man thinks he's right, even when he's not.

[2012] When the people know right from wrong, they are empowered to justly settle their own disputes, no longer requiring soldiers, lawyers and judges.

[2013] Meltdowns and temper tantrums are spectables to behold; but only when they are the result of injustice.

[2014] Capital and labor are both employed by the public they serve.

[2015] Prayer takes six forms; they are: protection, provision, guidance, fortitude, healing and gratitude.

[2016] Being wrong is not the problem; it is failing to put ourselves right when we discover it.

[2017] People feel shame when they disappoint a man whom they respect.

[2018] The man who nightly or weekly reviews the moral instuctions and ask himself if he's been guilty of any expression of the sins during the interim most quickly increase in self-awareness, empowering him to better inhibit them on his path to exemplarship.

[2019] What a cunning soul cannot take by persuastion he will later take by force.

[2020] To love is to serve and protect a beloved's best interests.

[2021] A woman never falls in love with the seducer; only the illusion he paints for her of himself.

[2022] A husband who responds to his wife's exclamations of curiosity with answers and explanations instead of returned wonder arouses her resentment.

[2023] The man who is enslaved to his jealousy and envy is insecure and doubtful; but when conquered, he is secure and confident.

[2024] 








A man is as strong as the speed to which he can forgive wrongs against him; but a weak one harbors grudges, and his frailty is proportionate to its degree and longevity.

Wicked and ignorant men deny they do any evil and blame or vilify their victim to justify themselves in continuing in their wickedness; they are a perverse, corrupt people.

A secure, confident man welcomes criticism because he wants to see if it increases his self-awareness and reveals blindspots in his character; but an insecure one gets triggered, rages and criticizes back.

Cursed is the man who is rebuked for his errors, enlightened on their penalties and given prescriptions for their correction, but is still too stubborn and rebellious to comply; he brings misery on all affected by his decisions, and thus wins their hatred and contempt.

Cursed is the man who is rebuked for his errors, enlightened on their penalties and given prescriptions for their correction, but is still too stubborn and rebellious to comply; he brings misery on all affected by his decisions, and thus wins their hatred and contempt.

The wicked seek to keep the people ignorant so they can be controlled; but the righteous seek to enlighten them so they may be free.

Greatly blessed is the man who, when he is criticized or rebuked for an error in his doctrine or a fault in his conduct, has the humility to perceive it; for only then can he remedy it and change, evolve and grow.

The greatest and most difficult accomplishment is to not get triggered but instead forgives wrongs past and persecutions as they're happening; but those who succeed in this win the greatest favor from the LORD.

When the righteous rule, the wicked do their evil in secret; but when the wicked rule, they do it openly.

It is a shame for an able-bodied, sound-minded man to accept charity; he makes himself dishonest.

An insecure individual is always comparing themselves to others to determine their worth: if another's superior, they feel inferior, and if another's inferior, they feel themselves superior; the measure of their value is founded on others' opinions about themselves in relation to how they compare with that of others.

The good student is the humble one: they ask what they're doing wrong, and they don't resist, refute and argue with the answer they get, but instead immediatley use it to correct the wrong and put themslves right; this is how righteous kings and queens are made.

A self-absorbed, vain man fornicates with the woman another man wants, and he deludes himself this furnishes him the evidence that he is the superior man; he is enslaved to women's approval and his sense of worth is dependent on it.

A ungodly individual is right in their own mind; but a righteous one questions if they are wrong and requires correction.

The humbler the individual, the faster they learn from their errors; but the prouder, the further they persist in repeating them.

A man enslaves another each time he violates one of their rights and monetarily profits from it; he is consumed with selfishness and greed.

When a coward wrongs another and they confront him, instead of having the courage to admit it, he becomes enraged, lies and gaslights, and blames his victim for his own crimes against them; he is full of deceitful wickedness.

True personal development starts when we seek to stop the ways we wrong others; and it finishes when we even stop wronging back those who wrong us and using their wrong as our justification for it.

The greatest suffering is remorse and regret; knowing our past decision cannot be changed, and now we must accept the circumstances it led to.

The wise man, instead of getting envious and hateful toward someone who got what he wanted for himself, goes and asks them how they did it, that he may then go and do likewise, and then accrue even greater experiences or things.

A slut who regrets her past exploits, repents, and dedicates herself to serving the LORD becomes as divine as she once was depraved, and then the contempt for her turns to praise and reverence; for a woman is remembered not by who she once was, but by who she became.

A man should never marry a maiden where he wasn't her top choice (except in premature death or widowhood); he stores up so much trouble for himself.

The seducer discovers what a maiden values in a man, and then pretends to be him to procure selfish, sexual gratification for himself; he is a deceitful scoundrel and villain.


Comments