Quotes about Opinions
Well, it all comes to this; there's no use trying to live in other people's opinions. The only thing to do is to live in your own. After all, I believe in myself. I'm not so bad and silly as they think me, and I'm not consumptive, and I can write. Now that I've written it all out I feel differently about it. The only thing that still aggravates me is that Miss Potter pitied me -- pitied by a Potter!
- LM Montgomery
there's no use trying to live in other people's opinions. The only thing to do is live in your own.
- LM Montgomery
When people ask me that absurd question Do you like children? I always feel like retorting - and sometimes do, if I think the questioner has brains enough to understand the retort - Why don't you ask me if I like grown-up people? I like some very much, detest others, and am indifferent to the vast majority.
- LM Montgomery
If you have the smile of God what does it matter if you have the frown of men?
- Leonard Ravenhill
Contrary to all my own opinions and convictions, Jesus Christ will tell me what love toward the brethren really is.
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer
All that matters is whether one opts for Christ - not Christian opinions.
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer
For one person who likes Spain there are a dozen who prefer books on her.
- Ernest Hemingway
He liked the works of his friends, which is beautiful as loyalty but can be disastrous as judgment.
- Ernest Hemingway
I have known several presidents quite well, including my husband, and I worked closely with President George W. Bush and the White House then after 9/11, and I served with President Obama. I disagree with all three of those presidents on certain things.
- Hillary Clinton
It is important to approach the Word with humility. There is danger when we go to the Word to gather information to establish our opinions or beliefs. We then read what we believe, instead of believe what we read.
- Lisa Bevere
He thinks like a Tory, and talks like a Radical, and that's so important nowadays.
- Oscar Wilde
The eyes of the social herd, who always observe little things, and generally form from them their opinions of great affairs.
- Benjamin Disraeli