Lines of a Layman
By J. C. Penney
()
About this ebook
Such a man is J. C. Penney, at once the most successful of our times in business enterprise, and the most inspiring in his personal example of courage, wisdom, and service to fellow men and to God.
Faith and fellowship are no mere Sunday things in J. C. Penney’s philosophy. You find a twenty-four-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week code of Christian living in such pieces as his Six Principles for Daily Living, The Four Square Man, and The Christian and the Social Order. They are “the measure of the man.”
You will find LINES OF A LAYMAN more than a book to read, although its almost 200 thoughtful vignettes are fascinating, swift-paced and stimulating. You will find that it is a book to use, even a book to live by. Its pages are charged with meaning; one cannot read them without finding new ways to happiness and creativity.
J. C. Penney
James Cash “J. C.” Penney Jr. (1875-1971) was an American businessman and entrepreneur who founded the J. C. Penney stores in 1902. Born on September 16, 1875, on a farm outside of Hamilton, Caldwell County, Missouri, he was the seventh of twelve children, born to James Cash Penney, Sr. and Mary Frances (née Paxton) Penney. After graduation from Hamilton High School, Penney intended to attend college to study law, but his father’s untimely death forced him to take a job as a store clerk to help support the family. In 1898, James Cash Penney began working for a small chain of stores in the western United States called the Golden Rule stores. In 1902, owners Guy Johnson and Thomas Callahan, impressed by his work ethic and salesmanship, offered him one-third partnership in a new store he would open. Penney invested $2,000 and moved to Kemmerer, Wyoming, to open a store there. He participated in opening two more stores, and when Callahan and Johnson dissolved their partnership in 1907 he purchased full interest in all three stores. By 1912, there were 34 stores in the Rocky Mountain States. In 1913, he moved the company to the Kearns Building in downtown Salt Lake City, Utah. The company was incorporated under the new name, J. C. Penney Company. In 1916, he began to expand the chain east of the Mississippi and during the 1920s, the Penney stores expanded nationwide, with 1,400 stores by 1929. Penney and partner Ralph W. Gwinn had invested heavily in Florida real estate, some of which became Penney Farms, and started Foremost Dairy Products Inc. Most of this work was halted following the stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression. However, Penney continued his active involvement in managing the company and its stores, remaining as chairman of the board until 1946, and after that as honorary chairman until his death on February 12, 1971. Until the end of his life, he continued to go to his offices.
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Lines of a Layman - J. C. Penney
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Text originally published in 1961 under the same title.
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Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
LINES OF A LAYMAN
by
J. C. PENNEY
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 3
FOREWORD 4
I — LESSONS FOR EVERYDAY LIVING 6
II — IN OUR DAILY TASKS 29
III — FAITH, A PERSONAL EXPERIENCE 49
IV — FAMILY AND YOUNG PEOPLE 57
V — PERSONAL REMINISCENCES 68
VI — THE CHRISTIAN AND THE SOCIAL ORDER 77
VII — THE AMERICAN WAY 81
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 93
FOREWORD
Lines of a Layman, by Mr. J. C. Penney, has been for nearly a generation one of the most popular features of Christian Herald Magazine—and increasingly popular it is. These characteristic, scintillating and often profoundly moving lay sermonettes are now yours in a volume which, we believe, will become a bestseller in its field.
Mr. Penney is today the most distinguished merchant prince of our time. He lives and moves—and how he does move—in the tradition of John Wanamaker. And even the career of John Wanamaker was not more versatile and many-sided than is that of the author of Lines of a Layman. From his Six Principles of Daily Living
through his Four-square Men, his
Faith of Personal Experience, his chapter on family and young people, his vivid personal reminiscences, his
Christian and the Social Order, his eloquent
The American Way—these chapters, with their many facets which include religion, patriotism, human relationships, social adjustments and sound advice for getting on in business and industry, lead to such conclusions as this:
‘What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?’...That question is for nations as well as for individuals. Neither men nor nations can live by physical bread alone."
Mr. Penney’s own rich and poignant experience, which led him deep into pain, sorrow and disillusionment, but out of the darkness at last into full light of radiant Christian achievement, proves the validity of that conclusion.
Today, when practically all men of his years would be in retirement, this man is living more vigorously than in any period of his life before. He continues to travel the continent and world. As I write these lines, he is with Mrs. Penney in India, visiting a daughter. His schedule calls for an extended journey to the Far East, including Formosa where his youngest son resides. He is the active Chairman of the Board of the company he founded more than half a century ago.
Beginning in the pioneer town of Kemmer in western Wyoming, the organization which proudly bears his name has expanded into one of the few billion-dollar enterprises of America. His interests are multiple. He is the President of a distinguished enterprise of Christian laymen; President of the Friends of the Chapel of Four Chaplains, the unique Interfaith Memorial at the heart of Temple University in Philadelphia; Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Allied Youth, Inc., perhaps the most remarkable high school activity on this continent (the character of the program is distinguished by one of its slogans, Fun Without Alcohol
). But it would be quite impossible to enumerate the many fields in which this remarkable man continues to release his life.
Recently, when his family, neighbors and his friends from all over America gathered to celebrate his 80th anniversary, he was the life of the party. More than 500 were present, and that occasion was in all respects characteristic of the man. It, too, was fun without alcohol.
My association with the versatile author of these Lines
reaches back into the years for considerably more than a quarter of a century. I have watched him grow in breadth of vision and versatility of speech and writing, and I believe that on these pages, as nowhere else, you will find the measure of the man.
—DANIEL A. POLING
I — LESSONS FOR EVERYDAY LIVING
Four-square Man
THIS SUBJECT IS the one nearest my heart. It is unfortunate that so many men go through life in just the ordinary way. Many are inclined to think that only geniuses, or men with special privileges, succeed. To my way of thinking, success is but a result of which the four-square man is the cause. But in order to be a four-square man, one must possess the essential qualities, the first of which I should say is purpose.
In other words, a man must have a vision. A man of vision is a man of imagination. Imagination is the power back of initiative. The individual without the fully-developed imaginative faculty is certain to get into a rut. It is this quality in man which has lifted us from the plane of the savage to our present degree of civilization.
Contemplate the developments in science, art, literature, religion, and inventions during the last century. Think of what the railroads have done for this country. Consider what electricity has accomplished; what the developments in agriculture, mining and irrigation have achieved. These inventions and developments were not the result of chance, but the outcome of someone’s thought, the fruits of constructive imagination and purpose.
Now, think of man in his primitive state, dwelling in caves, subsisting on roots, clothing himself from the skins of animals. What a change in a few hundred years and what an incentive for us to use our powers of constructive imagination!
An objective is necessary. Yet, how many men are drifting, are human derelicts floating on the sea of life with no objective in view.
The mind, feelings and the physical body are Divine gifts, and the man who fails to make use of these gifts is the man of no purpose.
The second essential quality in the four-square man is that of integrity. The word is derived from the Latin integer, meaning whole. Hence, an honest man is a whole man, not a fraction of a man. He is not one thing above the line and something else below it; not one thing at home and something else away from home; but a whole man.
I do not mean to apply this to the handling of money alone. Some men think that so long as they can get by, or keep out of jail, they are honest. A man of integrity is a man of sterling character: one whose word is as good as his bond; who would not think of taking a minute of time that did not belong to him; a man honest with himself. Franklin and Lincoln were such men, men whose names are immortal and whose lives are an inspiration to thousands of others.
My father used to say that he never aspired to be rich, but he wished that when life was over, people in passing his grave might say: Here lies an honest man.
This statement has had tremendous influence on my life.
The moral grandeur of independent integrity is the sublimest thing in nature; so if a man is a man of integrity, and of purpose, he is well on his way to being the four-square man.
Even though the four-square man possesses purpose and integrity, these qualities are of little use if he is not a man of service.
Service is coming to be one of the biggest words in the English language. Life’s greatest pleasure and satisfaction is found in giving; and the greatest gift of all gifts is that of one’s self. You cannot render service if you are selfish or jealous, or not willing to sacrifice. How we admire the individual who is thoroughly unselfish, who thinks of the other fellow before he thinks of himself. How much more pleasure the man gets out of life who gives before he gets.
Very often someone says, What’s the use? People do not remember what you have done after one is dead and gone.
Do you think I shall ever forget my father? Didn’t your mother stint in order that you might have advantages which you could not otherwise have enjoyed? My parents did, and I shall never forget the many sacrifices they made for their children.
The fourth side of the square has to do with a man’s soul, and for that reason it is the most important of all. In reality these bodies of ours are leased to us for a term of years. We should so live that it may be said of us, The world is better for his having lived.
Such an individual is in tune with the Infinite. He is not only happy, but he makes others happy. He has faith in God and love for his fellow man. He is charitable, which enables him to see the good in folks. Just as each member of an orchestra will tune to a certain pitch before playing, so a man each day should tune to the Infinite in order that his ideals may be high and right.
A good motto to follow is found in the words of Henry Van Dyke:
"Be a breeze from the mountain height;
Be a fountain of pure delight;
Be a star serene, shining clear and keen
Through the darkness and dread of the night;
Be something Holy and helpful and bright;
Be the best that you can with all your might."
Prayer As A Way Of Life
IN DISCUSSING PRAYER, you and I need to remember that our actions should conform to the spirit of our prayers. To pray on rising and then to behave the rest of the day like a pagan is absurd.
None of us wants to be guilty of this. To avoid the possibility we need to pray all through the day. The suggestion of one is, Very brief thoughts, mental invocations can hold a man in the presence of God. All conduct is then inspired by prayer. Thus when prayer is so understood, it becomes a way of life.
This would not deny the value of a set time for prayer. Some would go so far as to urge the value of a specific place. For some time now I have found the spending of fifteen to thirty minutes each day just before retiring in reading and prayer to be exceedingly helpful—so much so that I would not let the day go by without this practice. I read from one or more of several books which I have found helpful. In this way my last thoughts before going to sleep are on God, on Christ, on my spiritual needs and those of others. Such a plan may not work for you. But human nature being what it is, I sincerely believe some plan is needed for each of us, and that as we grow, it will be adjusted to meet our spiritual needs. Every technique of prayer is good which draws man nearer to God.
The Privilege Of Loving God
THERE IS AN element in the practice of prayer which we men especially are reluctant to consider because it appears to be a feminine characteristic. That is love. Yet those who write with authority on prayer insist that if we can arouse love in the hearts of men, we will not need to spend time trying to convince them that they must pray—both for themselves and for their neighbors.
A basic law in religion is devotion to our God. Jesus