Quotes about Understanding
"Knowledge" in biblical language never refers to what we today call "head knowledge," but always to experiential involvement with what is known—to actual engagement with it.
— Dallas Willard
We can fail to know because we do not want to know - because what would be known would require us to believe and act in ways contrary to what we want.
— Dallas Willard
Tolerance is not indifference, but a generous regard and even provision for those who differ from us on points we deeply care about.
— Dallas Willard
Genius, it is said, is the ability to scrutinize the obvious.
— Dallas Willard
Knowledge is the basis of belief, and, when it is, it gives the belief a very different bearing upon life.
— Dallas Willard
It may seem strange but doing the will of God is a different matter than just doing what God wants us to do. The two are so far removed, in fact, that we can be solidly in the will of God, and know that we are, without knowing God's preference with regard to various details of our lives.
— Dallas Willard
We bring the reality of God into our lives by making contact with him through our minds, and our actions are based on the understanding that results from the fullness of that contact. There is nothing mysterious here. This is why the mind, and what we turn our minds to, is the key to our lives.
— Dallas Willard
This is seen in his well-known use of the parable—which, from its origin in the Greek word paraballein, literally means to throw one thing down alongside another. Parables are not just pretty stories that are easy to remember; rather, they help us understand something difficult by comparing it to, placing it beside, something with which we are very familiar, and always something concrete, specific.
— Dallas Willard
I believe one reason why so many people do in fact fail to immerse themselves in the words of the New Testament, and neglect or even avoid them, is that the life they see there is so unlike what they know from their own experience.
— Dallas Willard
Faith is not opposed to evidence that we might gain from perception as well as from reason.
— Dallas Willard
Reason functions as a basis of responsibility before God precisely because of its ability to serve in the instigation, nurture, and correction of faith. Because of this ability, we are responsible before God if we do not abide according to its results. To disparage the role of reason in the production and sustenance of faith is to contradict the plain intent of the scriptures, according to which reason provides adequate grounds to support a right worship of God.
— Dallas Willard
Professing to believe has, sadly, played a large role in the practice of religion. It has profoundly stained our understanding of what religion is. Some people seem to profess belief in God "just in case" there is a God. But they neither are committed to nor believe in the idea that God exists.
— Dallas Willard