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Quotes about Journey

Andrew Perriman at "P.OST" (postnost.net).
— Peter Enns
The way forward is to let go of that need to find the answers we crave and decide to continue along a path of faith anyway (as Qohelet would say). That kind of faith is not a crutch, but radical trust.
— Peter Enns
no one lives in the scripted places of the Bible all the time, where God shows up as planned, tells us exactly what we need to do, and things work out
— Peter Enns
The story of Adam and Eve is a preview of Israel's long journey in the Old Testament as a whole.
— Peter Enns
Rulebook Bible reading" shortchanges the depth and raw reality of Israel's own journey of faith in God.
— Peter Enns
I'VE BEEN ON A JOURNEY of rediscovering the Bible and the God behind it for over thirty years and I don't see that journey ending any time soon.
— Peter Enns
I have come to think, as have so many others in the course of history, that the goal of Christian faith is the experience of God, not the comprehension of God.
— Peter Enns
This is how they connected with God—in their time, in their way.
— Peter Enns
That kind of Bible works, because that is our story, too. The Bible "partners" with us (so to speak), modeling for us our walk with God in discovering greater depth and maturity on our journey of faith, not by telling us what to do at each step, but by showing us a journey of hills and valleys, straight lanes and difficult curves, of new discoveries and insights, of movement and change—with God by our side every step of the way.
— Peter Enns
The exodus, in fact, is really all about getting to Mount Sinai, and how the events there prepare the Israelites for their ultimate destiny—a kingdom in a land of their own.
— Peter Enns
Rather than providing us with information to be downloaded, the Bible holds out for us an invitation to join an ancient, well-traveled, and sacred quest to know God, the world we live in, and our place in it. Not abstractly, but intimately and experientially.
— Peter Enns
But in resisting, we may actually be missing an invitation to take a sacred journey, where we let go of needing to be right and trust God regardless of what we feel we know or don't know.
— Peter Enns