Meaningful Quotes. Thoughtful Insights. Helpful Tools.
Advanced Search Options

Quotes about Courage

And so the great battle begins in earnest: the battle for your heart, the battle to find a life worth living, the battle not to lose heart as you find a life worth living.
— John Eldredge
Life will provide a thousand sessions for raising the warrior God calls you to be. Turn your radar on during the day, and intentionally don't take the path of least resistance.
— John Eldredge
That's the key word—engage. Choose to engage and your weary warrior wakes up.
— John Eldredge
Yet this is the world God has made—a world that requires us to live with risk. Because God wants us to live by faith.
— John Eldredge
As did Jesus, when he said to his dear ones, "I am sending you out like sheep among wolves" (Matt. 10:16). The metaphor so perfectly describes our situation we almost want to smile—like when the young bride and groom are waving good-bye and the grandfather leans over to the grandmother and whispers, "They have no idea what they've just gotten themselves into." The humor of absurd understatement.
— John Eldredge
You can find that life—if you are willing to embark on a great adventure.
— John Eldredge
So you turn from your independence and all the ways you either charge at life or shrink from it; this may be one of the most basic and the most crucial ways you repent.
— John Eldredge
we were made to be a part of a great adventure. An adventure that is shared. We do not want the adventure merely for adventure's sake but for what it requires of us for others. We don't want to be alone in it; we want to be in it with others.
— John Eldredge
Dear friend, this fear is a mighty powerful force.
— John Eldredge
Frodo could not be a hero unless he was born into a story with many chapters already played out before his own. His moment derives its weight and urgency from the moments that have come before.
— John Eldredge
The power of proclaiming.
— John Eldredge
The amount of risk you're willing to take in your life is a direct reflection of what you believe about God.
— John Eldredge