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Life & Wisdom Quote by Og Mandino

"Do all things with love"

About this Quote

A sentence this short is either a hallmark of moral clarity or a trapdoor into vagueness, and Og Mandino knew exactly what he was doing. "Do all things with love" is built like a commandment, not a suggestion: four blunt words, no caveats, no room to negotiate. Its power comes from how it smuggles discipline into the language of feeling. Love here isn’t the swoony, decorative kind; it’s a performance standard. Treat love as the motive force and you can shame yourself into consistency: the hard phone call, the boring chore, the patient re-try. If you fail, you didn’t just mess up - you violated the ethic.

That’s the subtext Mandino’s self-help readership was primed for. Rising in the postwar American boom of motivational literature, Mandino wrote for people who wanted transformation without theology, virtue without denomination. Love becomes a secular sacrament: emotionally legible, culturally agreeable, commercially portable. It works because it’s both inspiring and unfalsifiable. Whatever your job or your mess, you can retrofit it into the phrase.

The intent isn’t to describe reality; it’s to set a private rule that reorganizes behavior. The ambiguity is the feature: love can mean kindness, attention, craftsmanship, restraint, forgiveness, even ambition rebranded as service. The risk is that it can also function as a moral mask - a way to sanctify overwork, people-pleasing, or staying too long in bad situations. Mandino offers a clean north star. You still have to decide what love demands when it stops being comforting.

Quote Details

TopicKindness
Source
Verified source: The Greatest Miracle in the World (Og Mandino, 1975)ISBN: 9780811902557
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Do all things with love . . . love for yourself, love for all others, and love for me. (Page 104 (later Bantam mass-market reprint pagination varies by edition)). The short standalone quote "Do all things with love" is commonly attributed to Og Mandino online without a primary citation. However, the phrase appears as a sentence within the 'Memorandum from God' section of Mandino's book The Greatest Miracle in the World. Multiple secondary pages reproduce the passage and specifically cite p. 104 (e.g., blog excerpts), and A-Z Quotes also points to this book and page. Open Library’s bibliographic record notes the work was first published in 1975 by F. Fell (New York). Note that later reprints (e.g., Bantam/Random House listings) show later publication dates for those editions (e.g., 1983 mass-market reissue), so you should verify page 104 against the specific edition in hand; the wording itself should match the line above even if pagination changes.
Other candidates (1)
Because You Can! (Edition 2) (ULRIKE, 2012)95.0%
... Do all things with love . " Og Mandino In the process of finding the value within yourself , you are only filling...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Mandino, Og. (2026, February 9). Do all things with love. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/do-all-things-with-love-1084/

Chicago Style
Mandino, Og. "Do all things with love." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/do-all-things-with-love-1084/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Do all things with love." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/do-all-things-with-love-1084/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Do All Things with Love by Og Mandino
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About the Author

Og Mandino

Og Mandino (December 12, 1923 - September 3, 1996) was a Author from USA.

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