Quotes about Seriousness
Those theologians who are beginning to take the doctrine of creation very seriously should pay some attention to science's story.
— John Polkinghorne
Absolute seriousness is never without a dash of humor.
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer
In total reality, he comes in the form of the beggar, of the dissolute human child in ragged clothes, asking for help. He confronts you in every person that you meet. As long as there are people, Christ will walk the earth as your neighbor, as the one through whom God calls you, speaks to you, makes demands on you. That is the great seriousness and great blessedness of the Advent message. Christ is standing at the door; he lives in the form of a human being among us.
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer
God does not require a perfect, sinless life to have fellowship with Him, but He does require that we be serious about holiness, that we grieve over sin in our lives instead of justifying it, and that we earnestly pursue holiness as a way of life.
— Jerry Bridges
I was pretty well through with the subject. At one time or another I had probably considered it from most of its various angles, including the one that certain injuries or imperfections are a subject of merriment while remaining quite serious for the person possessing them.
— Ernest Hemingway
Outsiders aren't about to take our faith seriously as long as they wonder if we do.
— Andy Stanley
Never think that Jesus commanded a trifle, nor dare to trifle with anything He has commanded.
— DL Moody
First, Resolve upon, and daily endeavour to practise, a life of seriousness and strict sobriety.
— David Brainerd
That God lets himself be born and becomes a human being, is no idle whim, something that occurs to him so as to have something to do, perhaps to put a stop to the boredom that has brashly been said to be bound up with being God-it is not to have an adventure. No, the fact that God does this is the seriousness of existence. And the seriousness in this seriousness is, in turn, that each shall have an opinion about it.
— Soren Kierkegaard
They make Christ a speculative unity of God and man; or they throw Christ away altogether and take His teaching; or for sheer seriousness they make Christ a false god. Spirit is the negation of direct immediacy. If Christ is very God, He must also be unrecognizable, He must assume recognizableness, which is the negation of all directness. Direct recognizableness is precisely the characteristic of the pagan god.
— Soren Kierkegaard
The Attack is a funny book which the reader has the option of taking seriously. For when the laughter subsides we realize that SK has set before us a stark either-or proposition: either follow the gospel according to Christ and the apostles, or follow the gospel according to the clergy. There can be no dialectical synthesis between these contraries.
— Soren Kierkegaard
I've now realised for the first time in my life the vital Importance of Being Earnest.
— Oscar Wilde