Quotes about Truth
Avoid participating in any religious community where the clear truth-claims of Scripture are ignored while contemplative and mystical practices are favored simply for their spiritual experience. Be careful of any church or ministry wherein acts of mercy and environmental stewardship are devoid of a theology of the cross and wind up being little more than the worship of created people and things. And be careful not to worship a good thing as a god thing for that is a bad thing.
— Mark Driscoll
we must refuse to speak in sanitized clinical euphemisms like calling adulteries "affairs," fornication "dating," and perverts "partners" because God uses frank words for deplorable sin so we will feel its sickness without anesthesia.
— Mark Driscoll
Politicians tell people what they want to hear, prophets tell people what they need to hear.
— Mark Driscoll
The Bible has noble poetry in it... and some good morals and a wealth of obscenity, and upwards of a thousand lies.
— Mark Twain
History, like beauty, depends largely on the beholder, so when you read that, for example, David Livingstone discovered the Victoria Falls, you might be forgiven for thinking that there was nobody around the Falls until Livingstone arrived on the scene.
— Desmond Tutu
Truth must be sought at all costs, but separate isolated truths will not do. Truth is like life; it has to be taken on its entirety or not at all. . . . We must welcome truth even if it reproaches and inconveniences us -- even if it appears in the place where we thought it could not be found.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
If one way be better than another, that you may be sure is nature's way.
— Aristotle
Piety requires us to honour truth above our friends.
— Aristotle
I have spoken, you have heard, you have the facts, judge
— Aristotle
a man investigating principles cannot argue with one who denies their existence.
— Aristotle
And if a man believes nothing, but believes it equally so and not so, how would his state be different from a vegetable's?
— Aristotle
Freedom is a property of the will which is realized through truth. Freedom is given to man as a task to be accomplished.
— Aristotle