The most important part about Christmas is the first six letters.
Unless we see the cross overshadow the cradle, we will have lost the real meaning of Christ’s birth.
At Christmas consider not so much the gift of a friend but the friendship of the giver.
It is Christmas in the heart that puts Christmas in the air.
The Christmas bells some like best are on the cash registers.
Your greatest Christmas cheer comes when you dispense cheer.
Don’t be so wrapped up in God’s gifts that you forget the Giver.
Christmas is a time when everyone wants his past forgotten and the present remembered.
You will never truly enjoy Christmas until you look into the face of the Father and tell Him you have received His Christmas gift.
Take Christ out of Christmas and all you have is “mas.”
Christmas holidays—anticipation, preparation, recreation, prostration, and recuperation.
The best news that the world ever had came from a graveyard near Jerusalem—Jesus is alive!
Some folks are like Easter eggs—ornamented on the outside and hard-boiled on the inside.
Every sunrise is God’s Easter greeting.
Joseph’s tomb was not a tomb at all—it was just a stopping place for Christ on His way to heaven.
Our Lord has written the promise of the Resurrection, not in books alone, but in every leaf in springtime.
A lot of people mistake Easter Sunday for Decoration Day!
The resurrection of Christ in the past gives the believer bright hope of the future.
The risen life is the best testimony to a risen Christ.
The one word that makes a difference between Christianity and all religions is the word resurrection.
The empty cross and the empty tomb spell a full salvation.
The Victim of Calvary became the Victor of Easter.
Christ’s resurrection brightens the tomb of every believer.
The stone at Christ’s tomb was a pebble to The Rock of Ages.
The Resurrection assures what Calvary secures.
Christ’s resurrection is the “bud of promise”–our resurrection is the “flower of fulfillment.”
What the new year brings us depends a great deal on what we bring to the new year.
A New Year’s Eve party is where you meet the high and the mighty high.
New Year’s resolutions are like crying babies in the church—they need to be carried out.
The worst thing about New Year’s resolutions is that they come in one year and go out the other.
You can reuse last year’s list of resolutions—it’s probably about as good as new.
Serious trouble comes when the New Year’s resolutions collide with the old year’s habits.
If you kept every resolution you made last year, you would probably be skinny, smart, healthy, rich—and bored.
Let us not let the old year die without burying any old grudges.
Don’t face the new year or any day without facing Christ.
Summer is the season that bugs us.