Quotes about Feelings
Many persons make the mistake of thinking they can measure the certainty of salvation by their feelings. It is the Word of God that is their foundation and therefore it is essential for the new convert in Christ to have a practical knowledge of the Bible. More than anyone else it is the new convert who will come under the fire of the enemy.
— Corrie Ten Boom
What the mind don't 'member, the heart still know. Love, the strongest thang of all.
— Lisa Wingate
It is only right and proper to be moved by the Bible, but present-day reality has so strong a hold over us that even when we try to imagine the past the minor events in our lives immediately wrench us out of our musings, and our own adventures throw us back irrevocably upon our personal feelings—joy, boredom, suffering, anger, or a smile.
— Vincent Van Gogh
If I were living near you, I should try to make you understand that it might perhaps be more practical for you to paint with me than to write, and that you might be able to express your feelings more easily that way. In any case I can do something personally about your painting, but I am not in the writing profession.
— Vincent Van Gogh
My feelings of God's presence — or God's absence — are not the presence or the absence.
— Philip Yancey
The reason we fear to go out after dark is not that we may be set upon by bands of evangelicals and forced to read the New Testament, but that we may be set upon by gangs of feral young people who have been taught that nothing is superior to their own needs or feelings.
— Philip Yancey
Giving the emotion a name is the way we come to understand how what happened affected us. After we've told the facts of what happened, we must face our feelings. We are each hurt in our own unique ways, and when we give voice to this pain, we begin to heal it.
— Desmond Tutu
When values, thoughts, feelings, and actions are in alignment, a person becomes focused and his character is strengthened. That allows a leader to lead himself successfully.
— John Maxwell
Other times leaders have to hold their feelings in check. When I say that leaders should delay their emotions, I'm not suggesting that they deny them or bury them. The bottom line in managing your emotions is that you should put others—not yourself—first in how you handle and process them. Whether you delay or display your emotions should not be for your own gratification.
— John Maxwell
If you are willing to change your thinking, you can change your feelings.
— John Maxwell
People will not always remember what you said. They will not always remember what you did. But, they will always remember how you made them feel.
— John Maxwell
Next to ingratitude, the most painful thing to bear is gratitude.
— Henry Ward Beecher