Quotes about Inquiry
The name 'Seventh-day Adventist' carries the true features of our faith in front and will convict the inquiring mind. Like an arrow from the Lord's quiver, it will wound the transgressors of God's law, and will lead to repentance toward God, and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.
— Ellen White
Trust means we always have questions that we don't have the answers to.
— Joyce Meyer
Difference of opinion leads to inquiry, and inquiry to the truth.
— Thomas Jefferson
I believe in everything until it's disproved.
— John Lennon
e-mail SpecialMarkets@ThomasNelson.com.
— Max Lucado
For years, I had known that there is nothing idle about curiosity, despite the fact that the two words are often used in tandem. Curiosity fidgets, is hard to satisfy, looks for answers even before forming questions.
— Maya Angelou
Why are you troubled?" He asked them. "And why do doubts arise in your hearts? Look at My hands and My feet." Luke 24:38—39
— Beth Moore
Why do you take Him to court for not answering anything a person asks? Job 33:13
— Beth Moore
Curiosity is the far nobler sister of novelty. Curiosity invokes study. By definition, it is "interest leading to inquiry."[1] It does not look for diamonds on blades of grass; it looks for dew. If it's looking for diamonds, it mines. Curiosity isn't satisfied to climb a hill and then move on. To borrow words from Deuteronomy, it digs copper from them (Deuteronomy 8:9).
— Beth Moore
I've read a dozen different versions of Stanislavski's famous Three Questions, i.e. the queries an actor must ask him- or herself before playing any scene. Here's my version: Who am I? Why am I here? What do I want? The second two are pretty easy. It's the first that's the killer.
— Steven Pressfield
He fashioned hell for the inquisitive.
— St. Augustine
The more man learns, the less he knows.
— Billy Graham