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Quotes about Struggle

start their day on the "wrong foot." They feel all right when they wake up, but as soon as something goes wrong, they lose their footing and walk with a "loser's limp" the rest of the day. Once they are off to a bad start, it seems they never catch up.
— Joyce Meyer
God said that when a man and a woman are married, the two will become one flesh, but He never said it would be easy. Good relationships require a lot of hard work, education, and willingness to meet each other's needs.
— Joyce Meyer
Bad habits are like a comfortable bed, easy to get into, but hard to get out of." Bruce Barton said, "What a curious phenomenon it is that you can get men to die for the liberty of the world who will not make the little sacrifice that is needed to free themselves from their own individual bondage.
— Joyce Meyer
Remaining peaceful in hard times completely disarms the devil.
— Joyce Meyer
I'd say it's been my biggest problem all my life... it's money. It takes a lot of money to make these dreams come true.
— Walt Disney
Steep'd amid honey'd morphine, my windpipe throttled in fakes of death.
— Walt Whitman
Judging from the main portion of the history of the world, so far, justice is always in jeopardy.
— Walt Whitman
Pharaoh is clearly a metaphor. He embodies and represents raw, absolute, worldly power. He is, like Pilate after him, a stand-in for the whole of the empire. As the agent of the "empire of force," he reappears in many different personae.9
— Walter Brueggemann
we have believed that faith does not mean to acknowledge and embrace negativity.
— Walter Brueggemann
My judgment is that as long as the pastors of the church are embarrassed by this urgent language to God and assume in our Enlightenment model that such rhetoric has no actual force, we will not get very far in the struggle for justice.
— Walter Brueggemann
First, that wherever you live, it is probably Egypt; second, that there is a better place, a world more attractive, a promised land; and third, that "the way to the land is through the wilderness." There is no way to get from here to there except by joining together and marching.
— Walter Brueggemann
Reading Jeremiah alone leaves faith in death where God finally will not stay. And reading Second Isaiah alone leads us to imagine that we may receive comfort without tears and tearing. Clearly, only those who anguish will sing new songs. Without anguish the new song is likely to be strident and just more royal fakery.
— Walter Brueggemann