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Leadership Quote by Benjamin Franklin

"A good conscience is a continual Christmas"

About this Quote

Franklin turns Christmas from a date on the calendar into a psychological state: the private, steady glow of having nothing to hide. It is an almost aggressively American move, stripping the holiday of church incense and family sentimentality and cashing it out as a moral technology. If your conscience is clean, you live in a perpetual season of ease; if it is not, every day is a kind of unpaid debt coming due.

The line works because it flatters the reader while scolding them. "Good conscience" sounds like virtue, but in Franklin's world it is also practicality. The subtext is transactional: behave decently and you get a dividend - not heavenly reward later, but immediate relief now. That bargain fits Franklin's broader project, from Poor Richard's aphorisms to his civic schemes: morality as a form of self-management, reputation as social currency, restraint as freedom.

Calling it a "continual Christmas" also smuggles in something sharper. Christmas is noisy with obligation - gifts, visits, performances of cheer. Franklin implies that the best celebration is the one you don't have to stage. A clear conscience is a holiday you can't have taken away by weather, war, or politics. In an era when public life was intimate and unforgiving, when debts and scandals traveled fast in small cities, the promise of inner peace doubled as advice for survival.

As a politician and printer who understood persuasion, Franklin wraps ethical discipline in a festive metaphor. Virtue, he suggests, should feel like relief, not punishment. The sales pitch is the point.

Quote Details

TopicHonesty & Integrity
SourceAttributed to Benjamin Franklin; appears in Poor Richard's Almanack (often quoted as "A good conscience is a continual Christmas").
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A good conscience is a continual Christmas
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About the Author

Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin (January 17, 1706 - April 17, 1790) was a Politician from USA.

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