Quotes related to 2 Corinthians 5:7
If we were going to die would you tell me? I dont know. We're not going to die.
— Cormac McCarthy
A man has to fend and fettle for the best, and then trust in something beyond himself. You can't insure against the future, except by really believing in the best of you and in the power beyond it.
— DH Lawrence
Faith is like a muscle, and it needs to be exercised in order to become strong.
— Wanda Brunstetter
The life of faith can be called the life of the will since faith is impervious to how one feels but chooses through volition to obey God's mind.
— Watchman Nee
The life of faith can be called the life of the will since faith is impervious to how one feels but chooses through volition to obey God's mind. Though the Christian may not feel like obeying God
— Watchman Nee
Sometimes I knew in all my mind and heart why I had done what I had done, and I welcomed the sacrifice. But there were times too when I lived in a desert and felt no joy and saw no hope and could not remember my old feelings. Then I lived by faith alone, faith without hope. What good did I get from it? I got to have love in my heart.
— Wendell Berry
But faith is not necessarily, or not soon, a resting place. Faith puts you out on a wide river in a boat, in the fog, in the dark. Even a man of faith knows that (as Burley Coulter used to say) we've all got to go through enough to kill us.
— Wendell Berry
The ultimate ground of faith and knowledge is confidence in God.
— Charles Hodge
Faith in the widest sense of the word, is assent to the truth, or the persuasion of the mind that a thing is true.
— Charles Hodge
You believe in things you cannot see and speak a language that only hearts know.
— Charles Martin
I know I'm not alone and I don't walk alone. That I won't. When the thin whisper of a veil between what I can't see and what I can is pulled back and for one brief second I get a glimpse of what will be. Where the words 'might' and 'hope' intersect.
— Charles Martin
Faith is like radar which sees through the fog — the reality of things at a distance that the human eye cannot see.
— Corrie Ten Boom