Quotes about Perseverance
God chargeth me to believe His daylight at midnight.
— Samuel Rutherford
I see not the time of the fulfilling the promise; yet "Though the vision tarry, wait for it, because it will surely come and not tarry." (Hab. 2:3) We are to remember, God can trail his promise, in our seeming, through hell, and the devil's black hands, (as he led Christ through death, the curse, and hell,) and yet fulfill it. When Christ is under a stone, and buried, the gospel seems to be buried.
— Samuel Rutherford
T]hose who can take that crabbed tree handsomely upon their back, and fasten it on cannily, shall find it such a burden as wings unto a bird, or sails to a ship.
— Samuel Rutherford
Go on, and faint not, something of yours is in heaven, beside the flesh of your exalted Saviour, and ye go on after your own.
— Samuel Rutherford
urge upon you . . . a nearer communion with Christ and a growing communion. There are curtains to be drawn by in Christ that we never saw, and new foldings of love in Him. I despair that ever I shall win to the far end of that love, there are so many plies in it; therefore dig deep, and sweat, and labour, and take pains for Him, and set by so much time in the day for Him as you can: He will be won with labour.
— Samuel Rutherford
Dry wells send us to the fountain.
— Samuel Rutherford
As our dear Husband, in wooing his [church], received many a black stroke, so his bride, in wooing him, gets many blows, and in this wooing there are strokes upon both sides
— Samuel Rutherford
Perseverance is a choice. It's not a simple, one-time choice, it's a daily one. There's never a final decision.
— Margaret J. Wheatley
In the Jewish religion it says - in the time of deepest darkest night act as if the morning has already come
— Marianne Williamson
I found fear stimulating. Particularly after you've done something that you'd been frightened of at the time, but you carried through and did the job.
— Edmund Hillary
Sometimes we have to wait a long time to see conversions.
— Mark Dever
By affliction prayer is quickened, for our prayers are very apt to grow languid and formal in a time of ease.
— John Newton