Quotes about Mystery
People are not problems to be solved. They are mysteries to be explored.
— Eugene Peterson
Insufficient respect for mystery leads to intellectual suicide; insufficient penetration of mystery leads to shallowness and despair.
— Mortimer Adler
The fact that there are some things (many things!) that God knows that we don't is what makes Him God and us human.
— Nancy Leigh DeMoss
It doesn't cause me to doubt God's existence, but it does force me to admit there's a lot about God I don't understand.
— Carolyn Custis James
The Christian liturgy draws us deeper and deeper into the innermost recesses of mystery, but then lands us back out on the street. We are not allowed to stay at the altar. We have to go back out to committee meetings, traffic jams, laundry, dirty diapers—where we will be enacting what we have encountered in the liturgy.
— Thomas Howard
The liturgy is at one and the same time a daily discipline as "do-able" as walking to the corner or eating our lunch, and the entry into the highest mysteries of heaven.
— Thomas Howard
God, Who is everywhere, never leaves us. Yet He seems sometimes to be present, sometimes to be absent. If we do not know Him well, we do not realize that He may be more present to us when He is absent than when He is present.
— Thomas Merton
The only thing to seek in contemplative prayer is God; and we seek Him successfully when we realize that we cannot find Him unless He shows Himself to us, and yet at the same time that He would not have inspired us to seek Him unless we had already found Him.
— Thomas Merton
This act of total surrender is not merely a fantastic intellectual and mystical gamble; it is something much more serious. It is an act of love for this unseen person, who, in the very gift of love by which we surrender ourselves to his reality also makes his presence known to us.
— Thomas Merton
To be unknown to God is entirely too much privacy.
— Thomas Merton
If you find God with great ease, perhaps it is not God you have found.
— Thomas Merton
I seek to speak to you, in some way, as your own self. Who can tell what this may mean? I myself do not know, but if you listen, things will be said that are perhaps not written in this book. And this will be due not to me but to the One who lives and speaks in both.
— Thomas Merton