Quotes about Introspection
More than anything else, prayer enables you to see your own heart and brings you into alignment with God's heart.
— Ravi Zacharias
Sometimes religion can be the greatest roadblock to true spirituality. The
— Ravi Zacharias
Why are we so eager to prove to the world that we are the best at what we do and care not for why or who we are? How
— Ravi Zacharias
if you are reading this and you really believe that you're perfect, there's only one solution to that predicament: you need to get married. If you are married, then you need to start listening!
— Ravi Zacharias
Isn't it amazing that we can go through life holding passionately to our views, yet never pausing to ask ourselves why that view is inviolable?
— Ravi Zacharias
I wonder what kind of person would come out if I ever did erase all my inhibitions at once, what kind of being is bottled up inside me now.
— Joseph Heller
I wonder what kind of person would come out if I ever did erase all my inhibitions at once, what kind of being is bottled up inside me now.
— Joseph Heller
He could not make them shut-up; they were worse than women. They had not brains enough to be introverted and repressed.
— Joseph Heller
He could not make them understand that he was a crotchety old fogey of twenty-eight, that he belonged to another generation, another era, another world, that having a good time bored him and was not worth the effort, and that they bored him, too. He could not make them shut up; they were worse than women. They had not brains enough to be introverted and repressed.
— Joseph Heller
Actually, he was a very warm, compassionate man who never stopped feeling sorry for himself. "Why me?" was his constant lament, and the question was a good one.
— Joseph Heller
We need to ask ourselves some tough questions: Have I failed to live as Jesus taught me to? How responsible am I for the negative perceptions many have of the church?
— Josh McDowell
being a garbage dump for other people does not promote peace for me, and I want peace more than I want to know what is going on in everyone else's life.
— Joyce Meyer