Quotes about Personal
I recognised uneasily the hand of what I sometimes thought to be my personal nemesis, the spirit of farce.
— William Golding
I myself believe that the evidence for God lies primarily in inner personal experiences.
— William James
Many people have grown up attending church and hearing about God all their lives, but they do not have a personal, dynamic, growing relationship with God.
— Henry Blackaby
Things may happen around you, and things may happen to you, but the only things that really count are the things that happen in you."
— Les Brown
So after the Lewinsky scandal, everything changed, and we moved from using the Bible to address the moral issues of our time, which were social, to moral issues of our time that were very personal. I have continued that relationship up until the present.
— Tony Campolo
We live in an age that stresses personal goals, careers, happiness, work and religion. The emphasis is on the individual and how best that individual can satisfy himself.
— Mother Angelica
You might well remember that nothing can bring you success but yourself.
— Napoleon Hill
Faith is the door to the full inner life of the Church, a life which includes not only access to an authoritative teaching but above all to a deep personal experience which is at once unique and yet shared by the whole Body of Christ, in the Spirit of Christ.
— Thomas Merton
In all the situations of life the "will of God" comes to us not merely as an external dictate of impersonal law but above all as an interior invitation of personal love. Too often the conventional conception of "God's will" as a sphinx-like and arbitrary force bearing down upon us with implacable hostility, leads men to lose faith in a God they cannot find it possible to love.
— Thomas Merton
Contemplation does not arrive at reality after a process of deduction, but by an intuitive awakening in which our free and personal reality becomes fully alive to its own existential depths, which open out into the mystery of God. For
— Thomas Merton
Contemplation, on the contrary, is the experiential grasp of reality as subjective, not so much "mine" (which would signify "belonging to the external self") but "myself" in existential mystery. Contemplation does not arrive at reality after a process of deduction, but by an intuitive awakening in which our free and personal reality becomes fully alive to its own existential depths, which open out into the mystery of God.
— Thomas Merton
There is "no such thing" as God because God is neither a "what" nor a "thing" but a pure "Who."* He is the "Thou" before whom our inmost "I" springs into awareness. He is the I Am before whom with our own most personal and inalienable voice we echo "I am.
— Thomas Merton