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Quotes about Conviction

If we aren't willing to pay a price for our values, if we aren't willing to make some sacrifices in order to realize them, then we should ask ourselves whether we truly believe in them at all.
— Barack Obama
I've learned to place my faith in my fellow citizens, especially those of the next generation, whose conviction in the equal worth of all people seems to come as second nature, and who insist on making real those principles that their parents and teachers told them were true but perhaps never fully believed themselves.
— Barack Obama
Scientists are not like other people, sir. We cannot slam our portals. We have to follow evidence where it leads, even if no one likes that place. Even if it suggests that all we have ever believed might be mistaken.
— Barbara Kingsolver
I am losing faith in such a simple thing as despising an enemy with unequivocal righteousness.
— Barbara Kingsolver
The single most significant factor, he realized, was a sense of future vision—the impelling conviction of those who were to survive that they had a mission to perform, some important work left to do.1 Survivors of POW camps in Vietnam and elsewhere have reported similar experiences: a compelling, future-oriented vision is the primary force that kept many of them alive.
— Stephen Covey
The Psalmist expressed our conviction well: "Search your own heart with all diligence for out of it flow the issues of life.
— Stephen Covey
In the end, we love people into belief. We do not argue them into belief.
— Timothy Keller
In a post-Christian, skeptical age, love on display is the most convincing apologetic.
— JD Greear
Bad evangelism says: I'm right, you're wrong, and I would love to tell you about it
— Timothy Keller
To love God passionately is to love truth passionately.
— John Piper
Nothing during the year is so impressively convincing as the vision Christmas brings of what this world would be if love became the daily practice of human beings.
— Norman Vincent Peale
The unsound convert is willingly ignorant, loves not to come to the light. He is willing to keep such or such a sin, and therefore is loathed to know it to be a sin, and will not let in the light at that window. Now, the gracious heart is willing to know the whole latitude and compass of his Maker's law. He receives with all acceptation the Word which convinceth him of any duty that he knew not, or minded not before, or which discovereth any sin that lay hid before.
— Joseph Alleine