Quotes about Relationships
A person cannot be whole in a relationship where he or she feels powerless to make healthy choices.
— Beth Moore
I know divers, and divers men know me, which love me as I do them: yet if I should pray them, when I meet them in the street openly, they would abhor me; but if I pray them where they be appointed to meet me secretly, they will hear me and accept my request.
— William Tyndale
Males raised and nurtured on mama's 'love' resent the need that they have for women.
— Jesse Lee Peterson
If you hug to yourself any resentment against anybody else, you destroy the bridge by which God would come to you.
— Peter Marshall
Occasionally I've seen children become heavy-handed and insensitive when dealing with their aging parents, and it only caused resentment and hard feelings.
— Billy Graham
Whether sexual orientation can change or not, hearts can change and turn any sexual orientation into an occasion for the glory of Christ. Those with same-sex attraction glorify Christ through sexual abstinence and through the enrichment of significant Christ-exalting relationships in other ways.
— John Piper
Silence may be golden, but can you think of a better way to entertain someone than to listen to him?
— Brigham Young
How else account this usage, that enemies of yore may, by the passage of years alone, become friends?
— Steven Pressfield
nothing can alter the fact that beneath the fascist insignia of their uniforms, these men are fathers, husbands, sons. I
— Steven Pressfield
In defeat one learns who are friends to him, and by whom he is accounted friend.
— Steven Pressfield
The moment a person learns he's got terminal cancer, a profound shift takes place in his psyche. At one stroke in the doctor's office he becomes aware of what really matters to him. Things that sixty seconds earlier had seemed all- important suddenly appear meaningless, while people and concerns that he had till then dismissed at once take on supreme importance.
— Steven Pressfield
Often couples or close friends, even entire families, will enter into tacit compacts whereby each individual pledges (unconsciously) to remain mired in the same slough in which she and all her cronies have become so comfortable.
— Steven Pressfield