Quotes about Imagination
In Revelation 10, John eats the book—not just reads it—he got it into his nerve endings, his reflexes, his imagination. The book he ate was the Holy Scripture. Assimilated into his worship and prayer, his imagining and writing, the book he ate was metabolized into the book he wrote.
— Eugene Peterson
You'll find boredom where there is the absence of a good idea.
— Earl Nightingale
The Christian faith is the most exciting drama that ever staggered the imagination of man - and the dogma is the drama.
— Dorothy Sayers
When I was little, I knew that I was not adopted, but I actually imagined and hoped that I was - and that my real parents were going to come get me.
— Gloria Steinem
Books are like friends to me. Words come alive on the page.
— Beverly Lewis
Vision is a picture of the future that produces passion.
— Bill Hybels
When we dream with God, we become the masterpieces of His imagination.
— Bill Johnson
by yielding to His will by dipping into the stream. My concern has little to do with anyone agreeing with me on the subject of sovereignty. My concern is that we will miss the heart of God for His people, for He is much more extravagant in His will for us than we have an imagination to capture. The bottom line is that many wait for Him to act. And oftentimes it is He who is waiting for us. We must learn to respond to what He's given us with acts of faith.
— Bill Johnson
I hope to build a reputation as a science-fiction writer. That's the pitch. We'll see.
— Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
A writer of fiction is really... a congenital liar who invents from his own knowledge or that of other men.
— Ernest Hemingway
its earliest form, a spontaneous and instinctive endeavor to shape the facts of the world to meet the needs of the imagination, the cravings of the heart.
— Hamilton Wright Mabie
imagination, and as the frontiers of knowledge are pushed still further away from the obvious and familiar, there will be an increasing tax on the imagination. The world of dead matter which our fathers thought they understood has become a world of subtle forces moving with inconceivable velocity; nothing is inert, all things are transformed into other and more elusive shapes precisely as the makers of the fairy tales foresaw and
— Hamilton Wright Mabie