Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
The greatest pleasure in life is love.
The greatest medicine is a true friend.
Learning passes for wisdom among those who want both.
Man's wisdom is his best friend; folly his worst enemy.
Science has its being in a perpetual mental restlessness.
A man's wisdom is his best friend; folly, his worst enemy.
When I pray, coincidences happen, and when I don't, they don't.
Who ever converses among old books will be hard to please among the new.
No one ever was a great poet, that applied himself much to anything else.
The most influential of all educational factors is the conversation in a child's home.
True worship is when a person, through their person, attains intimacy and friendship with God.
The only way for a rich man to be healthy is by exercise and abstinence, to live as if he were poor.
People that trust wholly to other's charity, and without industry of their own, will always be poor.
Christianity founds hospitals and atheists are cured in them, never knowing they owe their cure to Christ.
Books, like proverbs, receive their chief value from the stamp and esteem of ages through which they passed.
The first ingredient in conversation is truth, the next good sense, the third good humor, and the fourth wit.
The first glass is for myself, the second for my friends, the third for good humor, and the forth for my enemies.
You may keep your beauty and your health, unless you destroy them yourself, or discourage them to stay with you, by using them ill.
I prefer a God who once and for all impressed his will upon creation, to one who continually busied about modifying what he had already done.
I have always looked upon alchemy in natural philosophy to be like enthusiasm in divinity, and to have troubled the world much to the same purpose.
The problem of evil... Why does God permit it? Or, if God is omnipotent, in which case permission and creation are the same, why did God create it?
It is sometimes said that conduct is supremely important and worship helps it. The truth is that worship is supremely important and conduct tests it
Some of the Fathers went so far as to esteem the love of music a sign of predestination, as a thing divine, and reserved for the felicities of heaven itself.
There cannot live a more unhappy creature than an ill-natured old man, who is neither capable of receiving pleasures, nor sensible of conferring them on others.
Authority is by nothing so much strengthened and confirmed as by custom; for no man easily distrusts the things which he and all men have been always bred up to.
If your prayer is selfish, the answer will be something that will rebuke your selfishness. You may not recognize it as having come at all, but it is sure to be there.
Humility does not mean thinking less of yourself than of other people, nor does it mean having a low opinion of your own gifts. It means freedom from thinking about yourself at all.
The best rules to form a young man are: to talk little, to hear much, to reflect alone upon what has passed in company, to distrust one's own opinions, and value others that deserve it.
The best rules to form a young man, are, to talk little, to hear much, to reflect alone upon what has passed in company, to distrust one's own opinions, and value others that deserve it.
When all is done, human life is, at the greatest and the best, but like a froward child, that must be played with and humored a little to keep it quiet till it falls asleep, and then the care is over.
We shall say without hesitation that the atheist who is moved by love is moved by the Spirit of God; an atheist who lives by love is saved by his faith in the God whose existence (under that name) he denies.
To worship is to quicken the conscience by the holiness of God, to feed the mind with the truth of God, to purge the imagination by the beauty of God, to open the heart to the love of God, to devote the will to the purpose of God.
Our present time is indeed a criticizing and critical time, hovering between the wish, and the inability to believe. Our complaints are like arrows shot up into the air at no target: and with no purpose they only fall back upon our own heads and destroy ourselves.
There is no structural organization of society which can bring about the coming of the Kingdom of God on earth since all systems can be perverted by the selfishness of man. The Malvern Manifesto: Drawn up by a Conference of the Province of York, January 10, 1941; signed for the Conference by Temple, then Archbishop of York .
Worship is the submission of all our nature to God. It is the quickening of conscience by His holiness; the nourishment of mind with His truth; the purifying of imagination by His Beauty; the opening of the heart to His love; the surrender of will to His purpose - and all of this gathered up in adoration, the most selfless emotion of which our nature is capable and therefore the chief remedy for that self-centeredness which is our original sin and the source of all actual sin.