Quotes about Problem
Denying sin makes a liar out of God and denies the message of his Word. Here's the bottom line—either God, in his Word, is true when he says that you have a problem you can't solve or you're right that you're not so bad after all. It can't be both ways.
— Paul David Tripp
You see, culture isn't the problem, people are.
— Paul David Tripp
Perhaps in ways that you have never come close to considering, your dissatisfaction is an awe problem.
— Paul David Tripp
These diverse stories of the past that we find in the Bible are not a problem to be solved. They model for us the spiritual immediacy of the present.
— Peter Enns
The problem isn't the Bible. The problem is coming to the Bible with expectations it's not set up to bear.
— Peter Enns
Just fix things that seem broken, regardless of whether it seems likes the problem is important enough to build a company on.
— Paul Graham
Number 1, languages vary in power. Number 2, most managers deliberately ignore this. Between them, these two facts are literally a recipe for making money. ITA is an example of this recipe in action. If you want to win in a software business, just take on the hardest problem you can find, use the most powerful language you can get, and wait for your competitors' pointy-haired bosses to revert to the mean.
— Paul Graham
Is your problem really your problem, or is it your attitude towards the problem that's your problem?
— Joyce Meyer
the solution to America's race problem—a problem analyzed and discussed for decades by armies of sociologists, politicians and activists—is internal, not external. It is inward, not outward; personal, not social; individual, not political.
— Jesse Lee Peterson
The problem of restoring to the world original and eternal beauty is solved by redemption of the soul.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
Lack of direction, not lack of time, is the problem. We all have twenty-four hour days.
— Zig Ziglar
But their minds were made dull . . . a veil covers their hearts" (2 Cor. 3:14—15). Notice this: a veil that first covers the face eventually covers the heart. It begins as just a superficial covering, a temporary attempt to cover up a problem rather than addressing it head-on. But left unchecked, the hidden problem will become a serious spiritual condition.
— Craig Groeschel