Quotes about Understanding
Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. —PROVERBS 3:5
— Sarah Young
Talk with Me about what you are experiencing, and ask Me to show you the way forward.
— Sarah Young
Rejoice in the relief of being fully understood. Talk with Me about your struggles and feelings of inadequacy. Little by little, I will transform your weaknesses into strengths.
— Sarah Young
IF IT IS POSSIBLE, AS FAR AS IT DEPENDS ON YOU, LIVE AT PEACE WITH EVERYONE. Most people prefer to live peacefully with others, but when there are conflicts, many wait for the other person to make the first move. Problems inevitably arise when both parties wait for the other to take the first step.
— Sarah Young
Though the world applauds quick-witted retorts, My instructions about communication are quite different: Be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become angry. Ask My Spirit to help you whenever you speak.
— Sarah Young
Rejoice in what I am doing in your life, even though it is beyond your understanding.
— Sarah Young
Human beings have a voracious appetite for trying to figure things out in order to gain a sense of mastery over their lives.
— Sarah Young
Worshiping Me well transforms you— changing you more and more into the one I designed you to be. Genuine worship requires that you know Me as I truly am. You cannot comprehend Me perfectly or completely, but you can strive to know Me accurately, as I am revealed in the Bible. By deepening your understanding of Me, you are transformed and I am glorified—in beautiful worship.
— Sarah Young
Talk with Me, and listen while I talk you through each challenging situation. I am not a careless God.
— Sarah Young
The first forty years of our life give the text, the next thirty furnish the commentary upon it, which enables us rightly to understand the true meaning and connection of the text with its moral and its beauties.
— Arthur Schopenhauer
The assumption that the gospel can be reduced to a note card is already off on the wrong track.
— Scot McKnight
The longer you look at the idea that we read the Bible to find new meanings, the sillier it becomes. We read and return to the Bible not (just) to find something new but to hear something old, not to discover something fresh but to be reminded of something ancient.
— Scot McKnight