If you get this word, you will get more help, but if you lose it, you will get less help.
Relatives will be there when there is no help. Help more, and the world will be at peace.
This knife cuts bread and fingers.
Drive the fish to the deep, and drive the king to the clump.
Benevolence and kindness are not applied, and the tendency to attack and defend is different.
Three generations have won the world, benevolent people have lost the world, and they are ruthless.
The benevolent is invincible.
Benevolent people have benevolence.
He who wins the hearts of the people wins the world. If you lose your heart, you lose the world.
The two work best together.
The above sentences come from different sources, but they all revolve around the same central idea: if you get the word, you will get more help, but if you lose it, you will get less help.
It is meaningful to read all the sentences together.