Importance of Keeping the Mind Well Employed
Mark 7:17-23
And when he was entered into the house from the people, his disciples asked him concerning the parable.…


Man's heart is like a millstone: pour in corn, and round it goes, bruising and grinding, and converting it into flour; whereas give it no corn, and then indeed the stone goes round, but only grinds itself away, and becomes ever thinner and smaller and narrower. Even as the heart of man requires to have always something to do; and happy is he who continually occupies it with good and holy thoughts, otherwise it may soon consume and waste itself by useless anxieties or wicked and carnal suggestions. When the millstones are not nicely adjusted, grain may indeed be poured in, but comes away only half ground or not ground at all. The same often happens with our heart when our devotion is not sufficiently earnest. On such occasions we read the finest texts without knowing what we have read, and pray without hearing our own prayers. The eye flits over the sacred page, the mouth pours forth the words, and clappers like a mill, but the heart meanwhile turns from one strange thought to another; and such reading and such prayer are more a useless form than a devotion acceptable to God.

(Scriver.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And when he was entered into the house from the people, his disciples asked him concerning the parable.

WEB: When he had entered into a house away from the multitude, his disciples asked him about the parable.




Human Depravity Seen in the Thoughts of Man
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