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Quotes related to Hebrews 11:1
Living by faith includes the call to something greater than cowardly self-preservation.
— JRR Tolkien
Oft hope is born when all is forlorn.
— JRR Tolkien
Great faith, like great strength in general, is revealed by the ease of its workings. Most of what we think we see as the struggle OF faith is really the struggle to act as IF we had faith when in fact we do not.
— Dallas Willard
Faith is the foundation upon which a godlike character is built. It is a prerequisite for all other virtues.
— Ezra Taft Benson
A sacrament is a visible sign of an invisible reality.
— Mother Angelica
I know it's difficult. But, yes, God is working even in the midst of whatever problem you're going through. He's working in both seen and unseen ways. He's working to put you on a path that you'll never regret, a path of extraordinary goodness that's a reflection of his character. In the meantime, your task is to dwell in the land and cultivate faithfulness.
— Louie Giglio
Our change is more about trusting and less about trying.
— Louie Giglio
The miraculous is always happening, even though we forget it or even when our faith is too small to trust God for miracles or even when we don't see the miracles occurring. God is always still at work, and God will always provide for us.
— Louie Giglio
When we are at our absolute lowest and weakest, Jesus invites us to hand him everything we have left. He invites us to give him our little, whatever our little is. When we give away our little, we place our full confidence in him.
— Louie Giglio
The steps we take in faith activate the power of the Spirit.
— Louie Giglio
Keep in mind, just because you don't know the answer doesn't mean that one does not exist. You simply haven't discovered it yet.
— Joel Osteen
Faith is not bare knowledge or passive persuasion but the embrace of Christ by the heart, resulting in personal knowledge of God. The heart must therefore be prepared by the law awakening the sinner to his need of Christ. The law beats on the stony heart as a hammer to smooth its surface before God writes His Word upon it. Though some men called this repentance, Calvin preferred to think of it as preparation for faith, which in turn leads to true repentance.
— Joel Beeke