Quotations from the Wayside

"Pray for the dead. Fight like hell for the living." --Mother Jones

An example of the Wayside Pulpit quotes available on this page.

The Wayside Pulpit is a long tradition in which churches (of all denominations) post inspirational messages on outdoor bulletin boards or letterboard.

The series of 24 messages, below, are available in a poster format as PDF files you can print for your congregation. The quotes below are in a 40 x 28-inch format. To print the poster full size, you may need to take it to a local copy shop that can handle oversized black and white printing.

Quotations from out-of-print series (PDF) and quotations sorted by topic (PDF, 31 pages) are also available online, as are instructions for building a Wayside Pulpit (PDF).

The following documents are in PDF format:

  1. What is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?
    —Mary Oliver
  2. There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground.
    —Jelaluddin Rumi
  3. Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity.
    —Horace Mann
  4. Be not afraid of growing slowly. Be afraid only of standing still.
    —Chinese Proverb
  5. Pray for the dead. Fight like hell for the living.
    —Mother Jones
  6. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
    —Marianne Williamson
  7. Nature never did betray the heart that loved her.
    —William Wordsworth
  8. Love is a growing up.
    —James Baldwin
  9. Because I have been athirst, I will dig a well that others may drink.
    —Arabian proverb
  10. Forgiveness is the final form of love.
    —Reinhold Niebuhr
  11. Our growing thought makes growing revelation.
    —George Eliot
  12. Love is a faith, and one faith leads to another.
    —Henri Frederic Amiel
  13. The universe will reward you for taking risks on its behalf.
    —Shakti Gawain
  14. An idea is salvation by imagination.
    —Frank Lloyd Wright
  15. The only joy in the world is to begin.
    —Cesar Pavese
  16. Time does not change us. It just unfolds us.
    —Max Frisch
  17. As soon as you trust yourself, you will know how to live.
    —Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  18. We are all geniuses when we dream.
    —E. M. Cioran
  19. Live out of your imagination, not your history.
    —Stephen R. Covey
  20. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
    —Martin Luther King
  21. The greatest gift you can give another is the purity of your attention.
    —Richard Moss
  22. If I can't dance, it's not my revolution.
    —Emma Goldman
  23. It is courage the world needs, not infallibility.
    —Wilfred Grenfell
  24. Ambitious people climb, but faithful people build.
    —Julia Ward Howe

The History of Quotations from the Wayside

More than forty years ago, a despondent Korean War veteran stood on the Brooklyn Bridge ready to jump. His suicidal mood was brought up short when he remembered a message he had seen posted outside his neighborhood church. It read: “When you come to the end of your rope—tie a knot in it and hang on.”

The man decided to hang on to life because of hope offered by a bulletin board. Roadside messages like the one he remembered once dotted church grounds in 500 cities on four continents. How this tradition began can be traced to two differing tales, one starting in Massachusetts and the other in England.

The roadside bulletin board was first introduced to North American churches in 1919 by Henry Hallam Saunderson, minister of the First Parish Church (Unitarian) of Brighton, Massachusetts, and secretary of the American Unitarian Association's publicity department from 1915 to 1921. Saunderson noticed that “many bulletin boards in front of churches were ineffectual because they were either kept empty or held notices which had outlived their usefulness.” Inspired by the local wayside shrines he had seen in Europe, he decided to create “wayside sermons,” liberal messages that would make people stop, read, and search their conscience.

Saunderson started by posting brief quotations each Sunday night on the bulletin board outside his church. When hundreds of people stopped to read the messages, he decided the idea might have a wider usefulness. After Saunderson polled various clergy in the area, one hundred ministers agreed to subscribe to his wayside sermons. Subscribers would erect bulletin boards of the same size and proportion on their church grounds and share the expense of having weekly messages printed on 32 x 44 inch sheets that would be readable from across the street. At one point, twelve different denominations subscribed to the service, including Presbyterian, Baptist, United Church of Christ, and Episcopal churches.

These message boards became known as the Wayside Community Pulpit, reaching as many as three million readers, according to a 1924 poll. During the subscription's early conception, Saunderson composed each weekly message. When the American Unitarian Association picked up on Saunderson's idea, it culled quotations from the world's literature, and, in 1956, expanded their scope to include contributions from ministers and laypeople.

The wayside message was first introduced to British churches by the Reverend H. Harrold Johnson. Called in 1919 to bring new life into the declining Cross Street Chapel in Manchester, Johnson created the Wayside Pulpit “Thought for the Week,” pithy messages that would appeal to the person in the street, rather than the person in the pew. These messages were hand painted on 40 x 30 inch posters and were changed each week. The first Wayside Pulpit was posted on December 26, 1920. From that day on, a new poster appeared every Sunday morning for the next fifty years. Even when England was blitzed during World War II and the Chapel stood roofless, a weekly message appeared. The legacy of Wayside Pulpits in England is carried on by the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches.

In North America, the Wayside tradition continued under the Unitarian Universalist Association. Between 1963 and 1977, the Wayside Community Pulpit struggled to survive against changing sentiments and rising manufacturing costs. The number of Wayside subscribers had dwindled to 220 in 1968. More people viewed the Wayside Community Pulpit as an identification of a Unitarian Universalist church, rather than as a good message to be widely used. Many non-Unitarian Universalist churches agreed with the idea of the service, but didn't always agree with the liberal content of the quotations.

By 1982, the frequency of the publication decreased from one quotation per week to one quotation every ten days. In 1986, it shrank to twenty-six quotations once a year. By 1989, the service was reduced to a set of quotations every two years.

This collection contains quotations from the Wayside tradition started in North America. Research into historical Wayside correspondence reveals that there had long been demand for a print collection of the quotations. One attempt was made in 1976, but the result was only a small pamphlet of fifty or so quotes from the last quarter century.

Quotations from the Wayside differs from traditional quotation books because its contents were honed from years of liberal religion. This liberal message is reflected in many of the quotations and in the categories chosen here. Included are the few Saunderson quotes that survived in the Unitarian Universalist Association archives, and much material compiled by past Wayside Pulpit editors.

When Henry Hallam Saunderson created the first Wayside Community Pulpit in North America in 1919, he thought to spread a little liberal thinking by publishing thought-provoking messages that reflect universal truths. These messages are the essence of Saunderson's legacy, a hope to find the divine in ourselves. May we be so inspired.