QuotesList.net
Famous Quotes
The Bell never rings of itself; unless some one handles or moves it it is dumb.
Topic: Bells
Author: Plautus
Stamps God's own name upon a lie just made, To turn a penny in the way of trade.
Topic: Money
Author: William Cowper
A cult is a religion with no political power.
Topic: Inspirational
Author: Tom Wolfe
Grant what thou commandest and then command what thou wilt.
Topic: Courage
Author: St Augustine
To put away aimlessness and weakness, and to begin to think with purpose, is to enter the ranks of those strong ones who only recognize failure as one of the pathways to attainment; who make all conditions serve them, and who think strongly, attempt fearlessly, and accomplish masterfully.
Topic: Inspirational
Author: James Allen
Commemoration of John Wycliffe, Reformer, 1384 Christian men and women, old and young, should study well in the New Testament, for it is of full authority, and open to understanding by simple men, as to the points that are most needful to salvation. Each part of Scripture, both open and dark, teaches meekness and charity; and therefore he that keeps meekness and charity has the true understanding and perfection of all Scripture. Therefore, no simple man of wit should be afraid to study in the text of Scripture. And no cleric should be proud of the true understanding of Scripture, because understanding of Scripture without charity that keeps God's commandments, makes a man deeper damned... and pride and covetousness of clerics is the cause of [the Church's] blindness and heresy, and deprives them of the true understanding of Scripture.
Topic: Christianity
Author: John Wycliffe
The outward freedom that we shall attain will only be in exact proportion to the inward freedom to which we may have grown at a given moment. And if this is a correct view of freedom, our chief energy must be concentrated on achieving reform from within. -Gandhi.
Topic: Self Awareness
Author: Gandhi
Honour is but an itch in youthful blood Of doing acts extravagantly good.
Topic: Honor
Author: Samuel Howard
Quotes from Mao, Castro, and Che Guevara... are as germane to our highly technological, computerized society as a stagecoach on a jet runway at Kennedy airport.
Topic: Books and Reading
Author: Saul Alinsky
All my life I believed I knew something. But then one strange day came when I realized that I knew nothing, yes, I knew nothing. And so words became void of meaning. I have arrived too late at ultimate uncertainty.
Topic: Despair
Author: Ezra Pound
Now when the primrose makes a splendid show, And lilies face the March-winds in full blow, And humbler growths as moved with one desire Put on, to welcome spring, their best attire, Poor Robin is yet flowerless; but how gay With his red stalks upon this sunny day!
Topic: Robins
Author: William Wordsworth
Some say there is no God ...that we are squatting tenants in the hostile house of an absent slumlord.
Topic: Faith
Author: Ernest Bevans
Original thoughts can be understood only in virtue of the unoriginal elements which they contain.
Topic: Thought
Author: Vittorio Alfieri
Whether you wind up with a nest egg or a goose egg depends on the kind of chick you married
Topic: Wealth
Author: Wall Street Journal
The strangest, most generous, and proudest of all virtues is true courage.
Topic: Inspirational
Author: Michel Eyquem
The multitude is always in the wrong.
Topic: Public
Author: Wentworth Dillon
I did not expect to hear that it could be, in an assembly convened for the propagation of Christian knowledge, a question whether any nation uninstructed in religion should receive instruction; or whether that, instruction should be imparted to them by a translation of the holy-books into their own language. If obedience to the will of GOD be necessary to happiness, and knowledge of his will be necessary to obedience, I know not how he that withholds this knowledge, or delays it, can be said to love his neighbour as himself. He, that voluntarily continues ignorance, is guilty of all the crimes which ignorance produces; as to him that should extinguish the tapers of a light-house, might justly be imputed the calamities of shipwrecks. (Continued tomorrow) ... a letter from Samuel Johnson to William Drummond of Edinburgh, 1766 July 13, 2002 Christianity is the highest perfection of humanity; and as no man is good but as he wishes the good of others, so no man can be good in the highest degree, who wishes not to others the largest measures of the greatest good. To omit for a year, or for a day, the most efficacious method of advancing Christianity [i.e., the Bible], in compliance with any purposes that terminate this side of the grave, is a crime [the like] of which I know not that the world has yet had an example. ... a letter from Samuel Johnson to William Drummond of Edinburgh, 1766 July 14, 2002 Feast of John Keble, Priest, Poet, Tractarian, 1866 The "good" man, the man whose god is righteousness, has as his life's ambition the keeping of rules and commandments and the keeping of himself uncontaminated by the world. This sounds admirable; but, as the truth of Christ showed, the whole of such living, the whole drive and ambition, the whole edifice, is self-centered. That entire process of effort must be abandoned if a man is to give himself in love to God and his fellows. He must lose his life if he is ever going to find it.
Topic: Christianity
Author: J B Phillips