Quotes about Values
Millions of professing Christians are deceived; they are walking in ways that simply are not biblical. Their values, their responses, their relation ships, their choices, and their priorities reveal that they have bought into the lie of the Enemy and embraced the world's way of thinking.
— Nancy Leigh DeMoss
Ironically, moral relativists often even pride themselves on being morally superior to others.
— Nancy Pearcey
Morality is always derivative. It stems from one's worldview.
— Nancy Pearcey
Many of us don't even know what it means to have a Christian perspective on our work. Oh, we know that being a Christian means being ethical on the job- as Saly put it, "no lying and cheating." But the work itself is typically defined in secular terms as bringing home a paycheck, climbing the career ladder, building a professional reputation.
— Nancy Pearcey
For when moral convictions are reduced to arbitrary preferences, then they can no longer be debated rationally.
— Nancy Pearcey
The only basis for genuine human rights and dignity is a fully biblical worldview.
— Nancy Pearcey
This is the tragedy of the postmodern age. The things that matter most in life, that are necessary for a humane society—ideals like moral freedom, human dignity, even loving our own children—have been reduced to nothing but useful fictions. They are tossed into the attic, which becomes a convenient dumping ground for anything that a materialist paradigm cannot explain.
— Nancy Pearcey
The only way to drive out bad culture is with good culture.
— Nancy Pearcey
A secular approach to politics first took root in the universities, the seedbed where worldviews are planted and nurtured. As William Galston of the Brookings Institution explains, in the modern age, scholars decided that the study of politics must be "scientific"—by which they meant value free.1 As a consequence, political theory was no longer animated by a moral vision. It became purely pragmatic.
— Nancy Pearcey
Remember: What you do doesn't determine who you are; who you are determines what you do.
— Neil Anderson
the Moral Law is not always the standard by which we treat others, but it is nearly always the standard by which we expect others to treat us.
— Norman Geisler
If we teach students that there is no right and wrong, why are we surprised when a couple of students gun down their classmates or a teenage mother leaves her baby in a trash can?
— Norman Geisler