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Quotes about Meaning

To be an atheist requires an indefinitely greater measure of faith than to recieve all the great truths which atheism would deny.
— Joseph Addison
Three grand essentials to happiness in this life are something to do, something to love, and something to hope for.
— Joseph Addison
I don't believe people are looking for the meaning of life as much as they are looking for the experience of being alive.
— Joseph Campbell
All religions are true but none are literal.
— Joseph Campbell
The inspired Scriptures make the clear distinction between false and true riches and make plain the reason why happiness is gained and fully enjoyed only by those who find true riches.
— Joseph Franklin Rutherford
Never confuse movement with action.
— Ernest Hemingway
Classically, there are three ways in which humans try to find transcendence--religious meaning--apart from God as revealed through the cross of Jesus: through the ecstasy of alcohol and drugs, through the ecstasy of recreational sex, through the ecstasy of crowds. Church leaders frequently warn against the drugs and the sex, but at least, in America, almost never against the crowds.
— Eugene Peterson
An interest in souls divorced from an interest in Scripture leaves us without a text that shapes these souls. In the same way, an interest in Scripture divorced from an interest in souls leaves us without any material for the text to work on.
— Eugene Peterson
Obedience is the thing, living in active response to the living God. The most important question we ask of this text is not, 'What does this mean?' but 'What can I obey?' A simple act of obedience will open up our lives to this text far more quickly than any number of Bible studies and dictionaries and concordances.
— Eugene Peterson
All serious and good writing anticipates precisely this kind of reading-ruminative and leisurely, a dalliance with words in contrast to wolfing down information.
— Eugene Peterson
Gabriel Marcel wrote that life is not so much a problem to be solved as a mystery to be explored.
— Eugene Peterson
It is wicked to tell a person a lie about God because, if we come to believe the wrong things about God, we will think the wrong things about ourselves, and we will live meanly or badly.
— Eugene Peterson