Quotes about Sacrifice
Nets are generally defined as devices for capturing something. In a more narrow but more important sense, we might define a net as anything that entices or prevents us from following the call of Jesus Christ, the Son of the living God.
— Joseph Wirthlin
Responsibility is the price of freedom.
— Elbert Hubbard
Yes, the fullness of the gospel is a pearl of great price worth any effort.
— Joseph Wirthlin
Was it not through pride that the devil became the devil? Christ wanted to serve. The devil wanted to rule.
— Ezra Taft Benson
There was never any doubt of Christ's priorities.
— Joseph Wirthlin
I can work for the Lord in or out of prison.
— Charles Colson
In China, where you can be arrested and imprisoned for your faith, getting together with other Christians is a lifeline and you'll risk anything for the privilege. No one attends church in China casually, or for a social advantage - quite the opposite.
— Philip Yancey
Being a father or a mother is not only a great challenge, it is a divine calling. It is an effort requiring consecration.
— James Faust
If there were more temple work done in the Church, there would be less of selfishness, less of contention, less of demeaning others.
— Gordon Hinckley
With shame be it spoken: by her fall, the Church's liberties have been sacrificed for the sake of temporal advantages. The road to her ruin lay through the sinuous paths of riches: she has been prostituted in the streets to princes; she has conceived iniquity and will bring forth oppression to the undeserving.
— Thomas Becket
To Jesus she already is somebody. Like the loving father of the prodigal son, Jesus is frantically scanning the horizon, watching for Madonna to return to him. He's absolutely convinced that she's so valuable that she's worth dying for. 'Greater love has no one than this,' said Jesus in John 15:13, 'that one lay down his life for his friends.' That's what He did for her on the cross!
— Lee Strobel
To use a popular illustration, all other religions are spelled "D-O." That is, they are based on people doing something, through their struggling and striving, to somehow earn the good favor of God. [...] By contrast, Christianity is spelled "D-O-N-E," because it's based on what Jesus Christ has done for us on the cross.
— Lee Strobel