Quotes about Meaning
I do not have more information after reading a poem; I have more experience.
— Eugene Peterson
We have discovered in these psalms beautiful lines, piercing insights, dazzling truths, stimulating words. We have found that the world in which these psalms are sung is a world of adventure and challenge, of ardor and meaning. We have realized that while there are certainly difficulties in the way of faith, it cannot by any stretch of the imagination be called dull.
— Eugene Peterson
The first question in the Westminster Shorter Catechism is "What is the chief end of man?" What is the final purpose? What is the main thing about us? Where are we going, and what will we do when we get there? The answer is "To glorify God and enjoy him forever".
— Eugene Peterson
The exact meaning of Jeremiah is not certain: it may mean "the LORD exalts"; it may mean "the LORD hurls." What is certain is that "the LORD," the personal name of God, is in his name.
— Eugene Peterson
Christian discipleship is a process of paying more and more attention to God's righteousness and less and less attention to our own; finding the meaning of our lives not by probing our moods and motives and morals but by believing in God's will and purposes; making a map of the faithfulness of God, not charting the rise and fall of our enthusiasms. It is out of such a reality that we acquire perseverance.
— Eugene Peterson
We believe that this human life is a great gift, that every part of it is designed by God and therefore means something, that every part of it is blessed by God and therefore to be enjoyed, that every part is accompanied by God and therefore workable.
— Eugene Peterson
Teaching resurrects dead words so they live again.
— Eugene Peterson
Good poetry survives not when it is pretty or beautiful or nice but when it is true: accurate and honest.
— Eugene Peterson
It's your heart, not the dictionary, that gives meaning to your words.
— Eugene Peterson
When we submit our lives to what we read in scripture, we find that we are not being led to see God in our stories but our stories in God's. God is the larger context and plot in which our stories find themselves.
— Eugene Peterson
The awful importance of this life is that it determines eternity.
— William Barclay
There are more important things in life than boxing.
— Carl Frampton