Quotes related to Proverbs 3:5
Believe in miracles but don't depend on them.
— H Jackson Brown, Jr.
Open your arms to change, but don't let go of your values.
— H Jackson Brown, Jr.
If you want to do something and you feel in your bones that it's the right thing to do, do it. Intuition is often as important as the facts. 663
— H Jackson Brown, Jr.
Sometimes the heart sees what is invisible to the eye.
— H Jackson Brown, Jr.
Approach love and cooking with reckless abandon
— H Jackson Brown, Jr.
Whether theologians acknowledge it or not, all theologies begin with experience... We are all particular human beings, finite creatures, and we create our understanding of God out of our experience. Hopefully, our own experience points to the universal, but it is never identical with it. For when we mistake our own talk about God with ultimate reality, we turn it into ideology.
— James H. Cone
A healthy skepticism is good, even God-given. However, a need to cynically dismiss anything we cannot personally verify is arrogance.
— James Garlow
Unfortunately, many young believers - and some older ones, too - do not know that there will be times in every person's life when circumstances don't add up - when God doesn't appear to make sense. This aspect of the Christian faith is not well advertised.
— James Dobson
We looked too long for God and truth through words alone. The fruit for humanity has been rather limited, it seems to me - especially when I observe every day the extraordinary amount of unhappy and angry people in well educated and 'religious' countries.
— Fr. Richard Rohr
Christians can have doubts and they can have questions, and the unhealthy way to deal with that is to keep them inside where they fester and grow and can undermine our faith. The healthy way to deal with it is to talk about it and be honest about it.
— Lee Strobel
Love is an adventure and a conquest. It survives and develops, like the universe itself, only by perpetual discovery.
— Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
— Carl Sagan