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| |
| A poisoned body, especially when chronic, deadens the nerves and clogs |
| the intellect, darkens the mind, smokes and blackens the soul to such |
| an extent he can neither teach or understand as a man ought to do by |
| nature. |
| |
| What think you of a preacher of Christ with a cud in his mouth |
| squirting poison at the souls he is trying to save? Is the thing |
| possible? Talk of distilling the essence of Christianity through a |
| poison worm of tobacco! O, thou tobacco-eating hypocrite! Can a body |
| that is defiled with poison and polluted with the sin of self-abuse be |
| a fit dwelling place for the Holy Ghost? How can a man who stinks like |
| a rank tobacco-pipe, call himself a fit vessel to stand before the |
| Lord to represent God and the Souls of men, to proclaim the word of |
| God while his tongue is reeking in deadly poison and his brain |
| befuddled with its influence? O, thou worse than Baalam! Would that |
| every ass might rebuke thee. |
| |
| It is a common thing for temperance lecturers to denounce alcohol on |
| the strength of tobacco, that is, lecture with a cud in their mouths.
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