I have always believed helping your fellow man is profitable in every sense, personally and bottom line.
I always kind of thought I want to be a good person, I want to be right to my fellow men and love them like were supposed to.
Every man's occupation should be beneficial to his fellow-man as well as profitable to himself. All else is vanity and folly.
When I hit around 65, 66, I started to feel tremendous worth and incredible personal esteem. I was becoming very cognisant of my contribution to the American spirit of helping your fellow man and all of the good stuff.
It is a pleasure appropriate to man, for him to save a fellow-man, and gratitude is acquired in no better way.
People derived too much pleasure from seeing their fellow man morally humiliated to spoil that pleasure by hearing out an explanation.
He who loves best his fellow-man, is loving God the holiest way he can.
I used to read five psalms every day - that teaches me how to get along with God. Then I read a chapter of Proverbs every day and that teaches me how to get along with my fellow man.
We still have to learn how to live peacefully, not only with our fellow men but also with nature and, above all, with those Higher Powers which have made nature and have made us; for, assuredly, we have not come about by accident and certainly have not made ourselves
Others loved themselves, money, theories, power: Lenin loved his fellow men. . . . Lenin was God, as Christ was God, because God is Love and Christ and Lenin were all Love!
Write me as one who loves his fellow men.
When there’s only God to blame, we forgive him. When it’s our fellow man, we destroy him.
Refinement that carries us away from our fellow-men is not God's refinement.
No man has any natural authority over his fellow men.
The duties of men are summarily comprised in the Ten Commandments, consisting of two tables; one comprehending the duties which we owe immediately to God-the other, the duties we owe to our fellow men.
We are fools to depend upon the society of our fellow-men. Wretched as we are, powerless as we are, they will not aid us; we shall die alone.
Look to the end; and resolve to make the service of Christ the first object in what remains of life, without indifference to the opinion of your fellow men, but also without fear of it.
Man is endowed by nature with organic relations to his fellow men; and natural impulse prompts him to consider the needs of others even when they compete with his own.
The man who fights for his fellow-man is a better man than the one who fights for himself.
Those who differ most from the opinions of their fellow men are the most confident of the truth of their own.