Quotes about Identity
I have the words 'love' and 'life' on my knuckles, and I would half like those removed.
— James Arthur
I don't really remember much about Kosovo. I only remember growing up in London, where my parents had to basically start from scratch.
— Rita Ora
Christianity is a lifestyle. And being a Christian is more than a label.
— Joyce Meyer
Faith is never identical with "piety" even if it were the purest and finest.
— Karl Barth
It would be all right if I could pray in this way, or in that other way, if I were just able to give You the only thing You want: not my thoughts and feelings and resolutions, but myself. But that is just what I am unable to do, because in the superficiality of the ordinary routine into which my life is cast, I am a stranger to myself. And how can I seek You, being so distant, how can I give myself up to You, when I haven't been able as yet to find myself?
— Karl Rahner
it may feel as if they just want you to stop being you.
— Gary Thomas
A mask partially conceals, but it also tells us that something is behind the mask.
— Gary Thomas
I no longer call you servants,…I have called you friends."14 Servants is a "doing" word; friends is a "being" word. What do servants do? They cook, clean, et cetera. A friend, however, is something you are, not something you do. A servant is Martha, a friend is Mary.
— Gary Thomas
The marriage relationship allows us to experientially identify with God and his relationship with Israel.
— Gary Thomas
If someone is getting in the way of you becoming the person God created you to be or frustrating the work God has called you to do, for you that person is toxic. It's not selfish for you to want to be who God created you to be, and it's not selfish for you to do what God created you to do.
— Gary Thomas
It wasn't easy. In junior high, I was voted "most polite," and it took some time for me to realize that being perceived as a "nice guy" and being a faithful Christian don't always go hand in hand.
— Gary Thomas
The Bible views us as recipients of God's perfect love, already charged with an important life mission (seeking first the kingdom of God), and thus the decision to marry, though crucial, won't define us. Nor will who we marry define us.
— Gary Thomas