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Quotes about Commitment

Is Jesus truly preeminent in your life? Is He number one? If He's "a good two or three," there will be nothing victorious about your experience. In this careening culture and in these perilous days, we must say as never before: "All to Jesus I surrender, all to Him I freely give".
— David Jeremiah
Be especially true as we draw closer to the period known as the tribulation. An increasing number of cultural Christians with little or no roots in the gospel will decide the cost is too great, and they will turn their backs on Christ.
— David Jeremiah
Set your mind fully on the hope you have in Christ, and be ready to pay any price, challenge any foe, and confront any lie for the sake of the gospel.
— David Jeremiah
Music is my mistress, and she plays second fiddle to no one.
— Duke Ellington
If you are willing to obey God fully, walk in faith and never give up, you can have anything God wants you to have. And that absolutely includes revival in your local community.
— Dutch Sheets
Sometimes the only difference between those who attain and those who don't is perseverance.
— Dutch Sheets
The worst of doing one's duty was that it apparently unfitted one for doing anything else.
— Edith Wharton
But it seemed to him that the tie between husband and wife, if breakable in prosperity, should be indissoluble in misfortune.
— Edith Wharton
Once more it was borne in on him that marriage was not the safe anchorage he had been taught to think, but a voyage on uncharted seas.
— Edith Wharton
Their long years together had shown him that it did not so much matter if marriage was a dull duty, as long as it kept the dignity of duty: lapsing from that, it became a mere battle of ugly appetites.
— Edith Wharton
After all, marriage is marriage, and money's money—both useful things in their way ...
— Edith Wharton
Here were two people who had penetrated farther than she into the labyrinth of the wedded state, and struggled through some of its thorniest passages; and yet both, one consciously, the other half-unaware, testified to the mysterious fact which was already dawning on her: that the influence of a marriage begun in mutual understanding is too deep not to reassert itself even in the moment of flight and denial.
— Edith Wharton