Quotes about Wisdom
Trust in the Lord with all your heart and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make your paths straight.
— Robin Jones Gunn
Sometimes the best answers to prayer are the ones God doesn't answer.
— Robin Jones Gunn
I've learned that everything happens for a reason," the yogi Krishnan told him. "Every event has a why and all adversity teaches us a lesson... Never regret your past. Accept it as the teacher that it is.
— Robin Sharma
Satan's strategy is effective because he sprinkles his poisonous brew with just enough veracity that we'll swallow it.
— Lisa Harper
I've been praying for that same kind of discernment lately. I want to recognize the dangerous, potentially biting characters in my story: the people who create constant emotional debris with their destructive personalities or who refuse to shed the skin of deception, the ones who threaten the God-with-me peace in my life. I'm learning to keep my distance and to pray for snakes, but not make a habit of getting down in the dirt to play with them.
— Lisa Harper
History provides a great example but a terrible excuse.
— Liz Curtis Higgs
God particularly favors older women as channels of divine grace.
— Liz Curtis Higgs
God, and she was changed. As commentator Matthew Henry eloquently described this scene, "Those who, through grace, are brought to experience the delights of communion with God will say that the one-half was not told them of the pleasures of Wisdom's ways."26
— Liz Curtis Higgs
Grievous words stir up anger.
— Liz Curtis Higgs
The best minds are not in government.
— Ronald Reagan
It is up to us in our time to choose, and choose wisely, between the hard but necessary task of preserving peace and freedom, and the temptation to ignore our duty and blindly hope for the best while the enemies of freedom grow stronger day by day.
— Ronald Reagan
One of the greatest of liberals, Thomas Jefferson, the founder of the Democratic Party, once remarked: "A wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned—this is the sum of good government.
— Ronald Reagan