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Quotes about Character

Lord, when we are wrong, make us willing to change, and when we are right, make us easy to live with!
— Dallas Willard
Heroism, generally, is totally out of place in the spiritual life, until we grow to the point at which it would never be thought of as heroism anyway.
— Dallas Willard
We cannot behave "on the spot" as he did and taught if in the rest of our time we live as everybody else does.
— Dallas Willard
What God gets out of our lives—and, indeed, what we get out of our lives—is simply the person we become.
— Dallas Willard
Prayer is, above all, a means of forming character. It combines freedom and power with service and love.
— Dallas Willard
God both develops and, for our good, tests our character by leaving us to decide. He calls us to responsible citizenship in his kingdom by saying—in effect or in reality—as often as possible, "My will for you in this case is that you to decide on your own".
— Dallas Willard
Now just think of what the quality of life and character must be in a person who would routinely interrupt sacred rituals to pursue reconciliation with a fellow human being. What kind of thought life, what feeling tones and moods, what habits of body and mind, what kinds of deliberations and choices would you find in such a person? When you answer these questions, you will have a vision of the true "rightness beyond" that is at home in God's kingdom of power and love.
— Dallas Willard
But this is an age for spiritual heroes—a time for men and women to be heroic in faith and in spiritual character and power.
— Dallas Willard
Such planning should include identifying the things in your life that you believe trouble Jesus—impatience, overeating, lying, or whatever it may be for you.
— Dallas Willard
He teaches us how to be in prayer what we are in life and how to be in life what we are in prayer.
— Dallas Willard
Our relationship with Jesus, which he argued ultimately allows us to establish a relationship with the kingdom of God. This relationship is one of discipleship in which we learn to live our lives as Jesus would through progressively embodying and manifesting a Christlike character, which is attained through establishing a discipling relationship to Jesus.
— Dallas Willard
The world can no longer be left to mere diplomats, politicians, and business leaders. They have done the best they could, no doubt. But this is an age for spiritual heroes—a time for men and women to be heroic in faith and in spiritual character and power. The greatest danger to the Christian church today is that of pitching its message too low.
— Dallas Willard