Quotes about Relationships
We are commanded to love our neighbors as ourselves, and I believe that to love ourselves means to extend to those various selves that we have been along the way the same degree of compassion and concern that we would extend to anyone else.
— Frederick Buechner
We've all had saints in our lives, by which I mean not plaster saints, not moral exemplars, not people setting for us a kind of suffocating good example, but I mean saints in the sense of life givers. People through knowing whom we become more alive.
— Frederick Buechner
For no man who lives at all lives unto himself. He either helps or hinders all who are in anywise connected to him.
— Frederick Douglass
The higher the love, the more demands will be made on us to conform to that ideal.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
How can one love self without being selfish? How can one love others without losing self? The answer is: By loving both self and neighbor in God. It is His Love that makes us love both self and neighbor rightly.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Those who do not yet love one another deeply have need of words; those who deeply love thrive on silences.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
They excuse themselves, saying they are bored because they are not loved: No! They are bored because they do not love; because they have denied love.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
These four effects of love are: unity, mutual indwelling, ecstasy, and zeal.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
In sex the male adores the female. In love the man and woman together adore God.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
The loves of all hearts are so many mirrors revealing their characters.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
The very fact that a man or woman seeks a new partner is a proof that there never was any love at all. For though sex is replaceable, love is not. Sex is for pleasure; love is for a person. Cows can graze on other pastures, but a person admits of no substitution.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
We hate others, and call it "zeal"; we flatter others because of what they can do for us, and call it "love"; we lie to them, and call it "tact.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen