3 Quotes & Sayings By James Morgan Pryse

James Morgan Pryse is an author and speaker on personal and professional development. Since 2000 he has been a popular keynote speaker at conferences and seminars throughout the world. He is the co-founder of the International Leadership Association and was inducted into its Hall of Fame. Pryse is the author of "Discipline: The Ten Commandments of Self-Control." He has been interviewed by Good Morning America, The Today Show, CNN, CSPAN, NBC Nightly News, and numerous radio programs Read more

He has also had articles published in such publications as USA Today (Quote of the Day), Reader's Digest (Life's Biggest Questions), Success (How to be Happy at Work), and Executive Excellence Magazine.

1
The generative function is strictly nothing but an animal one, and can never be anything else. True spirituality demands its utter extirpation; and while its proper exercise for the continuation of the human race, in the semi-animal stage of its evolution, may not be considered sinful, its misuse, in any way, is fraught with the most terrible consequences physically, psychically and spiritually; and the forces connected with it are used for abnormal purposes only in the foulest practices of sorcery, the inevitable result of which is moral death–the annihilation of the individuality. James Morgan Pryse
2
It is also the irrational instinct of religionism, the vague yearning for something to worship–a reflection or shadow of the true devotional principle–which prompts men to project a subjective image of the lower, personal mind, and to endow it with human attributes, and then to claim to receive "revelations" from it; and this–the image of the Beast, or unspiritual mind, –is their anthropomorphic God, a fabulous monster the worship of which has ever prompted men to fanaticism and persecution, and has inflicted untold misery and dread upon the masses of mankind, as well as physical torture and death in hideous forms upon the many martyrs who have refused to bend the knee to this Gorgonean phantom of the beast-mind of man. Truly, where the worshipers of this image of the Beast predominate, the man whose brow and hand are unbranded by this superstition, who neither thinks nor acts in accordance with it, suffers ostracism if not virulent persecution. James Morgan Pryse