Quotes about Integration
Every Christian must be fully Christian by bringing God into his whole life, not merely into some spiritual realm.
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer
The direction of life is from duality to unity.
— Deepak Chopra
A satisfying prayer life elevates and purifies every act of body and mind and integrates the entire personality into a single spiritual unit. In the long pull we pray only as well as we live.
— AW Tozer
After a certain high level of technical skill is achieved, science and art tend to coalesce in esthetics, plasticity, and form. The greatest scientists are artists as well. Remark
— Albert Einstein
Not so much like drops of water, though water, it is true, can wear holes in the hardest granite; rather, drops of liquid sealing-wax, drops that adhere, incrust, incorporate themselves with what they fall on, till finally the rock is all one scarlet blob.
— Aldous Huxley
Greatness is nothing more nor less than the harmonious functioning of the faculties of the head and heart; the shorter the neck, the more closely these two organs approach one another; argal…It was convincing.
— Aldous Huxley
To live fully, outwardly and inwardly, not to ignore the external reality for the sake of the inner life, or the reverse, that's quite a task
— Etty Hillesum
Think of your work life therefore, not as separate from your spiritual life but as central to your spiritual life. Whatever your business, it is your ministry.
— Marianne Williamson
If you want to have a spiritual life you must unify your life. A life is either all spiritual or not spiritual at all.
— Thomas Merton
In golf, the player, coach and official are rolled into one, and they overlap completely. Golf really is the best microcosm of life - or at least the way life should be.
— Lou Holtz
But life at its best is a creative synthesis of opposites in fruitful harmony.
— Martin Luther King, Jr.
I cannot understand the almost exclusive emphasis on racial integration, when in fact we are getting more and more segregated into tight little cliques on age grounds.
— Edith Schaeffer