Quotes about Understanding
Knowledge strengthens faith, sometimes by allowing us to grasp an item of faith in such a way that it also becomes an item of knowledge. Knowledge also can and often has laid a foundation for faith. We do often believe things because we have come to know them, and that is an ideal condition of belief.
— Dallas Willard
Remember, to believe something is to act as if it is so. To believe that two plus two equals four is to behave accordingly when trying to find out how many dollars or apples are in the house. The advantage of believing it is not that we can pass tests in arithmetic; it is that we can deal much more successfully with reality. Just try dealing with it as if two plus two equaled six.
— Dallas Willard
We forgive someone of a wrong they have done us when we decide that we will not make them suffer for it in any way.
— Dallas Willard
To say that "the righteous (or just) shall live by faith" does not mean that they live by blind and irresponsible leaps in total absence, or even in defiance, of knowledge. It does not mean that the "just" live in a state of ignorance or stupidity. They do on occasion act in specific ways beyond what they know, but only within a framework of knowledge that makes such action reasonable.
— Dallas Willard
Develop the habit of seeing the world through God's eyes.
— Dallas Willard
An act of faith in the biblical tradition is always undertaken in an environment of knowledge and is inseparable from it.
— Dallas Willard
Jesus and his words have never belonged to the categories of dogma or law, and to read them as if they did is simply to miss them.
— Dallas Willard
Too often our "love" for family members is domination in disguise.
— Dallas Willard
The powerful though vague and unsubstantiated presumption is that something has been found out that renders a spiritual understanding of reality in the manner of Jesus simply foolish to those who are "in the know." But when it comes time to say exactly what it is that has been found out, nothing of substance is forthcoming.
— Dallas Willard
We grow in our knowledge of God in the same way. 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
We have a terrible time understanding love, because we confuse it with desire. Desire and love are two utterly different kinds of things. Not only is desire not love; it is often opposed to love. Right action is the act of love, regardless of the desires of anyone involved.
— Dallas Willard
Never ask why I love you, just accept that I do, and that I will for the rest of my life.
— Anonymous