Quotes about Reputation
Normally, if someone's legacy will outlast their life, it's apparent when they die. On the day when Alexander the Great, or Caesar Augustus, or Napoleon, or Socrates, or Muhammad died, their reputations were immense. When Jesus died, his tiny, failed movement appeared clearly at an end.
- John Ortberg
Louisiana's spicy, colorful politics have saddled our state with a reputation for tolerating lax ethical standards in government.
- John Kennedy
As Tom Wright describes it, Mary's Song is the "gospel before the gospel" and it "goes with a swing and a clap and a stamp." Mary's Song is an expression of gratitude for God morphing her bad reputation into a messianic vocation. But her past is even more than this unfortunate label.
- Scot McKnight
The "pure" in heart know the temptation of externalism and the social honor that comes with being pure in hands, or in observance, or in reputation (15:1—20; 23:25—28).41 But the pure in heart see God as a person to be loved, so their first priority is God, and this love leads to loving others well.
- Scot McKnight
When in doubt tell the truth. It will confound your enemies and astound your friends.
- Mark Twain
A classic is something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read.
- Mark Twain
People don't really read your books, they only say they do, to keep you from feeling bad.
- Mark Twain
Fame is something which must be won; honor, only something which must not be lost.
- Arthur Schopenhauer
When love invades your heart, you are empowered to endure deeper pain, willingly pay a greater cost, and run risks to your reputation for the sake of another.
- Stephen Kendrick
The eyes of all people are upon us. So that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken, and so cause Him to withdraw His present help from us, we shall be made a story and a by-word through the world.
- Eric Metaxas
Honor is like a match, you can only use it once.
- Marcel Pagnol
In one great case a man [Winston Churchill] who had been considered too brilliant and too reckless ever to be trusted with major office was the leader of the country [1941]. One of Rowe's last memories was of hearing him hissed by ex-servicemen from the public gallery of a law court because he had told an abrupt unpalatable truth about an old campaign. Now he had taught the country to love his unpalatable truths.
- Graham Greene