Quotes about Rebellion
My music fights against the system that teaches to live and die.
— Bob Marley
'Dare to Discipline' was published in 1970 in the midst of the Vietnam War and a culture of rebellion. The book was written in that context, but the principles of child rearing have not changed.
— James Dobson
Blasphemy and sedition (meaning the truth about Church and State).
— George Bernard Shaw
If you walked around like David Bowie in 1973 in Reading, you'd get beaten up. The 1970s in a small town was more like the 1950s.. and that's the truth. The backdrop was probably Victorian.
— Ricky Gervais
It ain't no sin if you crack a few laws now and then, just so long as you don't break any.
— Mae West
When we live in rebellion, He can't bless us as He would like.
— KP Yohannan
Young Christians are sick of pablum. It doesn't work anymore. They are tired of rabbinical hair-splitting, empty liturgical apparatus, Sunday school minutiae, the ghostly voices of the old regime; they reject stuck minds and methods and by their indifference to structures and traditional authorities
— Brennan Manning
Jesus broke the law of tradition when the love of persons demanded it.
— Brennan Manning
We walk through life as if we had swallowed an Easter candle, rigid and tense, always afraid that things will get out of hand. This reaction is just as harmful as open rebellion, or even more so, because it blocks our way to religious maturation.
— Henri Nouwen
Give me a wildness whose glance no civilization can endure
— Henry David Thoreau
When the subject has refused allegiance and the officer has resigned his office, then the revolution is accomplished.
— Henry David Thoreau
The greater part of what my neighbors call good I believe in my soul to be bad, and if I repent of anything, it is very likely to be my good behavior. What demon possessed me that I behaved so well? You may say the wisest thing you can, old man—you who have lived seventy years, not without honor of a kind—I hear an irresistible voice which invites me away from all that. One generation abandons the enterprises of another like stranded vessels.
— Henry David Thoreau