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Quotes related to Romans 5:3-5
Life is not a matter of holding good cards, but of playing a poor hand well.
— Robert Louis Stevenson
Even when life challenges us, it's a gift beyond all measure.
— Parker Palmer
If seeds saw dirt as their enemy, they would lose out on the opportunity to grow.
— Matshona Dhliwayo
Life is full of challenges thus that you spend Get used to it
— Anonymous
God seldom calls us for an easier life, but always calls us to know more of him and drink more deeply of His sustaining grace.
— John Piper
Cancer does not win if we die. It wins if we fail to cherish Christ.
— John Piper
The coronavirus is God's thunderclap call for all of us to repent and realign our lives with the infinite worth of Christ... The reason God exposes us to such losses is to rouse us to rely on Christ. Or to put it another way, the reason he makes calamity the occasion for offering Christ to the world is that the supreme, all-satisfying greatness of Christ shines more brightly when Christ sustains joy in suffering.
— John Piper
No one ever said that they learned their deepest lessons of life, or had their sweetest encounters with God, on the sunny days. People go deep with God when the drought comes. That is the way God designed it. Christ aims to be magnified in life most clearly by the way we experience him in our losses.
— John Piper
God knows the time for joy and truly Will send it when he sees it meet When He has tried and purged thee duly And found thee free from all deceit. He comes to thee all unaware And makes thee own His loving care.3
— John Piper
Even in the greatest afflictions, we ought to testify to God, that, in receiving them from his hand, we feel pleasure in the midst of the pain, from being afflicted by Him who loves us, and whom we love.
— John Wesley
The readiest way which God takes to draw a man to himself is, to afflict him in that he loves most, and with good reason; and to cause this affliction to arise from some good action done with a single eye; because nothing can more clearly show him the emptiness of what is most lovely and desirable in all the world.
— John Wesley
The Christian who loves his heavenly Father may not discern by outward providences or visible signs any heavenly favor above that given those with little or no consecration. Often he is sorely afflicted, distressed, perplexed, and hedged in on every side. Appearances seem to be against him.
— Ellen White