Quotes about Question
Besides, who would think of marrying a mothball? A question my mother put to me often, later, in other forms.
— Margaret Atwood
Any death is stupid from the viewpoint of whoever is undergoing it, Adam One used to say, because no matter how much you've been warned, Death always comes without knocking. Why now? is the cry. Why so soon? It's the cry of a child being called home at dusk, it's the universal protest against Time. Just remember, dear Friends: What am I living for and what am I dying for are the same question. // The Year of the Flood
— Margaret Atwood
If you seek to become indispensable, a similar question is worth asking: "Where do you put the fear?" What separates a linchpin from an ordinary person is the answer to this question.
— Seth Godin
Life question reflects nation's nature & equality of humans.
— Mike Huckabee
In Eleven Minutes, I started with the question of why sexuality is considered one of the major issues in life.
— Paulo Coelho
The question comes today as it did of old, "What shall I do with Jesus which is called Christ?" for you have to do something with Him: either you despise and reject Him, or you receive Him as the Saviour of your soul and the Lord of your life.
— AW Pink
They are always wanting reasons, yet they are too ignorant to understand the merits of any question, and usually fall back on their moral sense to settle things after their own taste. Evidently
— George Eliot
The god most Americans say they believe in is just not interesting enough to deny. Thus the only kind of atheism that counts in America is to call into question the proposition that everyone has a right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
— Stanley Hauerwas
Shall the world, then, be overrun by oysters?
— Arthur Conan Doyle
Satan transforms himself into an angel of light. He sometimes offers to teach us humility; but though I wish to be humble, I desire not to learn in this school. His premises perhaps are true, that we are vile, wretched creatures—but he then draws abominable conclusions from them; and would teach us, that, therefore, we ought to question either the power, or the willingness, or the faithfulness of Christ.
— John Newton
if God is all-powerful and God is all-good, then why do terrible things happen to good people?
— Barbara Brown Taylor
When people think about race problems they are too often more concerned with men than with God. The question usually asked is: 'What will my friends think if I am too friendly to Negroes or too liberal on the race question?' Men forget to ask: 'What will God think?
— Martin Luther King, Jr.