Quotes about Balance
Only people can relate to JHWH, the animals, the stars they are with Elohim. We are with JHWH and Elohim. We are also with that God who creates the world., not just the personal God. Adonai (i.e., JHWH) is the God of the characteristic of mercy and compassion, and Elohim is the God whose characteristic is justice. And you need BOTH for the world to function.
— Dennis Prager
Many people avoid some of the very things that would bring them the deepest happiness such as marriage, children, intellectually challenging pursuits, religious commitment, and volunteer work. They fear the pain that inevitably accompanies such things and therefore devote more time to 'fun' things that bring little happiness, such as watching television.
— Dennis Prager
A life filled with tension can be a deeply happy one. A life filled with aggravation or stress cannot.
— Dennis Prager
The Dead Sea in the Middle East receives fresh water, but it has no outlet, so it doesn't pass the water out. It receives beautiful water from the rivers, and the water goes dank. I mean, it just goes bad. And that's why it is the Dead Sea. It receives and does not give. In the end generosity is the best way of becoming more, more, and more joyful.
— Desmond Tutu
Sometimes we confuse humility with timidity...humility allows us to celebrate the gifts of others but it does not mean you have to deny your own gifts or shrink from using them.
— Desmond Tutu
He made a powerful distinction between healing and curing: Curing involves the resolution of the illness but was not always possible. Healing, he said, was coming to wholeness and could happen whether or not the illness was curable.
— Desmond Tutu
The rubric of proportionality had to be observed—that the means were proportional to the objective.
— Desmond Tutu
I'm enjoying simplifying things.
— Jennifer Aniston
Suppose that we allot ourselves a generous eight hours a day for sleep (and few need more than that), three hours for meals and conversation, ten hours for work and travel. Still we have thirty-five hours each week to fill. What happens to them? How are they invested?
— J. Oswald Sanders
He moved through life with measured steps, never hurried, though always surrounded by demands and crowds.
— J. Oswald Sanders
After a half century of ministry, F. J. Hallett claimed that in the actual work of a parish, the most successful leader is the one who possesses a keen sense of humor combined with a clear sense of God's grace.
— J. Oswald Sanders
Our problem is not too little time but making better use of the time we have.
— J. Oswald Sanders