Maladies of the Soul
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- Chapter 4—Innocent Pleasures for the Youth
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- Chapter 6—Firmness in Resisting Temptation
- Chapter 7—How to Spend Holidays
- Chapter 8—Symmetrical Education
- Chapter 9—Christian Recreation
- Chapter 10—The Dignity of Labor
- Chapter 11—Manual Training
- Chapter 12—Manual Labor
- Chapter 13—Duties and Dangers of the Youth
- Chapter 14—Joy in Christianity
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- Chapter 18—Employment for Patients
- Chapter 19—Physical Exercise as a Remedial Agency
- Chapter 20—Physical Labor an Aid to Recovery
- Chapter 21—Substitutes for Amusements
- Chapter 22—Separate from the World
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Maladies of the Soul
The managers of the sanitarium may as well conclude at once that they will never be able to satisfy that class of minds that can find happiness only in something new and exciting. To many persons this has been the intellectual diet during their lifetime. There are mental as well as physical dyspeptics. Many are suffering from maladies of the soul far more than from diseases of the body, and they will find no relief until they shall come to Christ, the well-spring of life. Complaints of weariness, loneliness, and dissatisfaction will then cease, satisfying joys will give vigor to the mind, and health and vital energy to the body.PH145 35.4
If physicians and workers flatter themselves that they are to find a panacea for the varied ills of their patients by supplying them with a round of amusements similar to those which have been the curse of their lives, they will be disappointed. Let not these entertainments be placed in the position which the living Fountain should occupy. The hungry, thirsty soul will continue to hunger and thirst as long as it partakes of these unsatisfying pleasures. But those who drink of the living water will thirst no more for frivolous, sensual, exciting amusements. The ennobling principles of religion will strengthen the mental powers, and will destroy a taste for the gratifications.—Testimonies for the Church 4:577-579.PH145 36.1