Quotes about Paradox
But a faith that requires us to hold on to what we "know" becomes, we eventually discover, inadequate for handling the peaks and valleys of our humanity. It's also exhausting to try to hold it all together as it once was.
— Peter Enns
Wisdom teaches us to embrace both the adequacy and the limitations of our God-talk, to keep the two in tension. Perhaps accepting that paradox is true faith.
— Peter Enns
We can't get our minds around God. I don't think the Christian faith is fundamentally rational, by which I mean it cannot be captured fully by our rational faculties—and in fact, more often than not, confounds them. A God who can be comfortably captured in our minds, with little else for us to find out apart from an occasional adjustment, is no God at all. Expecting faith in God to be rational is often more the problem than the solution.
— Peter Enns
They crush olives within their walls; they tread the winepresses, but go thirsty.
— Job 24:11
Even in laughter the heart may ache, and joy may end in sorrow.
— Proverbs 14:13
a servant who becomes king, a fool who is filled with food,
— Proverbs 30:22
God gives a man riches, wealth, and honor, so that he lacks nothing his heart desires; but God does not allow him to enjoy them. Instead, a stranger will enjoy them. This is futile and a grievous affliction.
— Ecclesiastes 6:2
In my futile life I have seen both of these: A righteous man perishing in his righteousness, and a wicked man living long in his wickedness.
— Ecclesiastes 7:15
Folly is appointed to great heights, but the rich sit in lowly positions.
— Ecclesiastes 10:6
But many who are first will be last, and the last will be first.
— Matthew 19:30
so that, ‘they may be ever seeing but never perceiving, and ever hearing but never understanding; otherwise they might turn and be forgiven.’”
— Mark 4:12
Jesus ordered them not to tell anyone. But the more He ordered them, the more widely they proclaimed it.
— Mark 7:36