Quotes about Perfection
Remember: the amateur works until he can get it right. The professional works until he cannot go wrong.
— Julie Andrews
We're never going to have a perfect candidate unless Jesus Christ is on the ballot.
— Jerry Falwell, Jr.
My message, unchanged for more than fifty years, is this: God loves you unconditionally, as you are and not as you should be, because nobody is as they should be.
— Brennan Manning
This God expects people to be perfect and to be in perpetual control of their feelings and thoughts. When broken people with this concept of God fail—as inevitably they must—they usually expect punishment. So they persevere in religious practices as they struggle to maintain a hollow image of a perfect self. The struggle itself is exhausting. The legalists can never live up to the expectations they project on God.
— Brennan Manning
This kind of attention to the eternal in our every day does not strain our hearts. It does not major on brawny striving. It has more to do with attention to God than perfection, with a desire to see God even amid our great weakness.
— Henri Nouwen
A truly good book is something as natural, and as unexpectedly and unaccountably fair and perfect, as a wild flower discovered on the prairies of the West or in the jungles of the East. Genius is a light which makes the darkness visible, like the lightning's flash, which perchance shatters the temple of knowledge itself,--and not a taper lighted at the hearth-stone of the race, which pales before the light of common day.
— Henry David Thoreau
If you can't make it good, at least make it look good.
— Bill Gates
The Bible has been trapped in modernity. Everything has to work perfectly. And if everything doesn't fit in a Lego-oriented functionality, then we don't deal with it as Christians.
— Erwin McManus
Perfection consists in doing His will, in being that which He wants us to be.
— St. Therese of Lisieux
Details matter, it's worth waiting to get it right.
— Steve Jobs
We cannot possess the truth fully until it has entered into the very substance of our life by good habits, and by a certain perfection of moral activity.
— Thomas Merton
Perfection does not consist in any singular state or condition of life, or in any particular set of duties, but in holy and religious conduct of ourselves in every state of Life.
— William Law