Quotes about Problems
MAKE FRIENDS WITH THE PROBLEMS IN YOUR LIFE. Though many things feel random and wrong, remember that I am sovereign over everything. I can fit everything into a pattern for good, but only to the extent that you trust Me. Every problem can teach you something, transforming you little by little into the masterpiece I created you to be.
— Sarah Young
Ask My Spirit to help you fix your gaze on Me. Invite Him to alert you whenever you get overly focused on problems so you can redirect your attention to Me.
— Sarah Young
Invite My Spirit to alert you when you are overly focused on your problems and to redirect your attention to Me.
— Sarah Young
When ill luck begins, it does not come in sprinkles, but in showers.
— Mark Twain
Violence brings only temporary victories; violence, by creating many more social problems than it solves, never brings permanent peace.
— Martin Luther King, Jr.
Our problems don't stem from our ignorance so much as our disobedience of that which we know to be right.
— Stephen Covey
The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them - Einstein
— Stephen Covey
Environmental problems are really social problems anyway. They begin with people as the cause and end with people as the victims
— Edmund Hillary
Be not dishearten'd -- Affection shall solve the problems of Freedom yet; Those who love each other shall become invincible.
— Walt Whitman
With mindless complaining, you are mindlessly focusing on problems; however, with justified complaining you identify a problem and the complaint moves you toward a solution. Every complaint represents an opportunity to turn a negative into a positive.
— Jon Gordon
Some problems cannot be cured through legislation. But they must be attended to nonetheless. And here's the problem: The less the culture attends to these things, the more the government will attend to them and the less freedom there will be.
— Eric Metaxas
By the time Wilberforce experienced his "Great Change," all of the social problems that would plague eighteenth-century Britain had come to full flower, having been unchecked by the social conscience of genuine Christian faith for nearly a hundred years.
— Eric Metaxas