1. Good people bring blessings, evil people bring disaster.
From "The Romance of the Gods". Kind people will be happy. Those who do evil will bring disaster.
2. Be frightened when you see good things, and hate evil like enemies.
From Kong Rong's "Recommend Your Weighing Table". When you see good people and good deeds, your heart will be filled with joy, and when you hate bad people and bad deeds, you will be like hating your enemies. This is the spirit that an upright person should have in dealing with good and evil. The idiom "hate evil as much as hatred" is also known as "hate evil as much as hatred", and is often used to describe people's attitude towards evil without any compromise.
3. A gentleman is always kind to others.
From "Mencius Gongsun Chou". The most important virtue for a gentleman is to do good deeds with others. In social life, treating others with kindness, helping others, and forming good interpersonal relationships are conducive to the harmony of family and society. Being kind to others is a traditional virtue of the Chinese nation, an important criterion for conducting oneself in society, and a thought that people should hold in the future.
4. Good words should never leave your mouth, and good medicine should never leave your hands.
The words come from "Kunxue Jiwen". Good words should be spoken often, and good medicine should be always available.
5. A kind word makes people laugh, and a bad word makes people jump.
It comes from a folk proverb. Kind words make people happy; hurtful words make people angry.
6. The abundance of good will lead to blessings, and the abundance of evil will lead to disaster.
The words come from Feng Menglong's "Records of the States of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty" of the Ming Dynasty. If you do many good deeds, blessings will come to you; if you do too many bad deeds, there will be disaster.
7. The good and evil of human beings are not human nature, and they act after feeling things.
These two sentences come from "Shuoyuan·Tancong" by Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty. Human good and evil do not come from human nature, but are inspired by external things. Different from Mencius' "theory of good nature", Liu Xiang advocated that there is no good or evil in nature. Good and evil are not born like this, but are affected by people's environment, experience, education, etc. These two sentences contain simple materialist views, reminding people to do good and avoid evil and restrain their own behavior in daily life.
8. Human nature is evil, and the good ones are fake.
The words come from Xun Kuang's "Xunzi·Evil Nature" of the Warring States Period. Xunzi believed that human nature is inherently evil, and the kindness shown by others should not be man-made.
9. Good and evil will be rewarded in the end, it’s just a matter of speed rather than delay.
The words come from "Pipa Ji". Doing good deeds or doing bad deeds will eventually lead to corresponding rewards, it's just a matter of time. That is to say, it is often said that "good deeds will be rewarded with good deeds, and evil deeds will be rewarded with evil deeds. It's not that there is no reward, the time has not come yet."
10. However, misfortunes and blessings are controlled by God, and good and evil are controlled by humans. Those who are governed by God have no choice but to listen; those who are governed by humans must count every point they get, and count every day they last.
From "Zeng Guofan's Family Letters and Brothers". Fortune and misfortune are determined by God, and good and evil are determined by man himself. What is decided by God is impossible, you have to listen to it; and what is decided by man himself, if you can do it well, it counts as a point, and if you persist, you will count it as a day.