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Quotes about Morality

Indifference to evil is more insidious than evil itself. It is a silent justification affording evil acceptability in society.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
It has not only detested beauty when produced at the price of justice; it has rejected the ritual when performed by the morally corrupted. Even religion itself, worship, was not considered to be an absolute. "Your prayers are an abomination," said Isaiah to the exploiters of the poor. Stay away from the synagogue, wrote the Gaon of Wilna to his household, if you cannot abstain from envy and gossiping about the dresses of your fellow attendants.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
Ye shall kindle no fire—not even the fire of righteous indignation.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
The laws of the Torah ask of each generation to fulfill what is within its power to fulfill. Some of its laws (for example Exodus 21:2 ff),14 do not represent ideals but compromises, realistic attempts to refine the moral condition of ancient man.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
Right living is a way to right thinking.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
Above all it never ceases to proclaim that worship of God without justice to man is an abomination; that while man's problem is God, God's problem is man.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
One should always do the good, even though it is not done for its own sake.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
To the Bible the idea of the good is penultimate; it cannot exist without the holy. The holy is the essence, the good is its expression.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
Freedom does not mean the right to live as we please. It means the power to live spiritually, to rise to a higher level of existence.
— Abraham Joshua Heschel
If there is anything that links the human to the divine, it is the courage to stand by a principle when everybody else rejects it.
— Abraham Lincoln
Stand with anyone that is right; stand with him while he is right and part with him when he goes wrong.
— Abraham Lincoln
Let us have faith that right makes might; and in that faith let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it.
— Abraham Lincoln