Quotes about Transformation
God offers us hope when we surrender. When we give it over to him. He can take the sin, the struggles, all the pain we have and bring healing to our hearts. To your heart.
— Chris Fabry
Good things can come from pain, he said. Not all of it is good, of course, but some of it. And the places it leads are good places, not bad. Never be afraid of the places pain will take you.
— Chris Fabry
God is not interested in making me comfortable or happy. His goal is to make me holy, like His Son. And
— Chris Fabry
Lord, You know that Tony is not the man I want him to be. He's not the man You want him to be. So I'm putting him right at the top here.
— Chris Fabry
God, I want a new job and I don't want to go to jail," Tony prayed. "But I know there are consequences to my actions. I know what I did hurt people. I've hurt my family. I hurt my employer. And I thank You for forgiving me and grabbing hold of my heart and not letting me go any further toward things that would have destroyed me.
— Chris Fabry
None of us ever gets to be in relationship with a finished person. God's redemptive work of change is ongoing in all our lives.
— Timothy Lane
And each of us has tried to be the Holy Spirit in another person's life, trying to work spiritual changes that only God can accomplish.
— Timothy Lane
God will take us where we have not planned to go in order to produce in us what we could not achieve on our own.
— Timothy Lane
Say make me, remake me. You are free to do it and I am free to let you because look, look. Look where your hands are. Now.
— Toni Morrison
Mister was allowed to be and stay what he was. But I wasn't allowed to be and stay what I was [...] School teacher changed me. I was something else and that something else was less than a chicken sitting in the sun on a tub. (Paul D.)
— Toni Morrison
You have pissed your last in this house . . . and I don't make velvet roses anymore.
— Toni Morrison
It was an opportunity to intervene at the heart of the problem: to bring God and language to natives who were assumed to have neither; to alter their diets, their clothes, their minds; to help them despise everything that had once made their lives worthwhile and to offer them instead the privilege of knowing the one and only God and a chance, thereby, for redemption. (227)
— Toni Morrison