Quotes about Author
By accident of fortune a man may rule the world for a time, but by virtue of love he may rule the world forever
— Lao Tzu
Mary Connealy is a Carol Award winner and a RITA Award finalist. An author, journalist, and teacher, she lives on a ranch in eastern Nebraska with her husband, Ivan, and has four grown daughters—Josie, married to Matt; Wendy; Shelly, married to Aaron; and
— Mary Connealy
Granted that it is best to seek the meaning intended by the author, we should not forget that Scripture is about love. We must approach Scripture in faith, hope, and love, and not place our trust in our own interpretations, which can lead us astray. Not erudition, but faith, hope, and love lead us to our goal of the vision of God. Many will attain this goal without studying even the books of Scripture.
— Matthew Levering
I am now convinced that theoretical physics is actual philosophy.
— Max Born
Love is the most attractive quality in the world. And it lies at the heart of Christianity.
— Michael Green
He has joy in our friendship and in our partnering together in the work of the kingdom with Him.
— Mike Bickle
Family on mission is how we stop thinking of discipleship as a task that we do and start living out discipleship as a way that we are.
— Mike Breen
Well, for me the pro-life issue has been something I've been very passionate about since the '70s, and I have been very involved in the pro-life community since long before politics.
— Mike Huckabee
Life outside your ideal environment will destroy your potential because a wrong environment always means death.
— Myles Munroe
His Kingdom on this earth was to rule the visible world of man from the invisible realm of the spirit.
— Myles Munroe
The Psalms do not, that is, offer us an answer for "the problem of evil." But they are clear where the answer is not to be found. It is not to be found where the pantheist wants to find it, suggesting that "evil" is merely a matter of our perception and that the world just is the way it is and we should get used to it.
— NT Wright
This meant, inevitably, that the victory would have to be implemented in the same way, proceeding by the slow road of love rather than the quick road of sudden conquest. That is part of what the Sermon on the Mount was all about.
— NT Wright