Quotes about Need
It really does take grace to know how much you need grace.
— Paul David Tripp
The way to begin to celebrate the grace that God so freely gives you every day is by admitting how much you need it.
— Paul David Tripp
Face the fact today that you'll never outgrow your need for grace, no matter how much you learn and how much you mature, until you are on the other side and your struggle is over because sin is no more (see Phil. 3:12—16). The way to begin to celebrate the grace that God so freely gives you every day is by admitting how much you need it.
— Paul David Tripp
You deal with others with grace when you walk around with the humble realization of how deep your need for grace was and continues to be.
— Paul David Tripp
Every human being is in need of a king. All human beings need the rescue, forgiveness, justice, mercy, refuge, and protection that they are unable to give themselves.
— Paul David Tripp
It's a tragedy when we praise God for his grace on Sunday and deny our need for that grace the rest of the week. Face
— Paul David Tripp
No one gives grace better than a parent who humbly admits that he desperately needs it himself.
— Paul David Tripp
Many people will get up today and in some way will ask creation to be their savior, that is, to give them what only God is able to give.
— Paul David Tripp
Prayer is abandoning my righteousness, admitting my need for forgiveness, and resting in the grace of the cross of Jesus Christ.
— Paul David Tripp
If true humanity is bound up in community with God and godly community with others, I will never experience it when all my eyes ever see is my own need.
— Paul David Tripp
The physical world is full of many glories, but the pursuit of these glories must not rule my heart because they have no ability whatsoever to offer me the life that I so desperately need.
— Paul David Tripp
Placeholder theology is the very nature of theology. By it we acknowledge the human need to say something about ultimate meaning concerning the Creator and the creation while also understanding that what we say will never say it all.
— Peter Enns