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Quotes about Recognition

Let men see what's coming to them, and women will get what's coming to them.
— Mae West
A friend will know you better in the first minute they see you, than your acquaintance will in a thousand years.
— Anonymous
Jerome has merited hell rather than heaven for it-so little would I dare to recognize or call him a saint.
— Martin Luther
Whenever you are being praised, remember it is not you who is being praised but Christ, to whom all praise belongs.
— Martin Luther
For it is not possible to make the mercy of God large and good, unless a person first makes his miseries large and evil or recognizes them to be such. To make God's mercy great is not, as is commonly supposed, to think that God considers sins as small or that He does not punish them.
— Martin Luther
To live and let live, without clamor for distinction or recognition; to wait on divine love; to write truth first on the tablet of one's own heart - this is the sanity and perfection of living, and my human ideal.
— Mary Baker Eddy
Only the public can make a star. It's the studios who try to make a system out of it.
— Marilyn Monroe
I look at my myself; and see a stone, I look at my friends and see gold, But I look at you, and see a gem.
— Anonymous
Loud critics are silenced by loud success.
— Matshona Dhliwayo
He longs for. We are what He waits for as His inheritance. Knowing this, it is inconceivable that we would languish in the despair of insignificance. If only we could see who we are because of Him! We can confidently say, "I may never have a big ministry, I may never have a big business and I may never be well recognized in the arenas of man, but I will never be insignificant. I am the one He loves. I am the one He died for. I am the one He longs for. I am the one He waits for.
— Mike Bickle
Each one of them is Jesus in disguise.
— Mother Teresa
If Luke and John were simply constructing narratives to combat Doceticism, they surely shot themselves in the foot with both barrels when they spoke of Jesus appearing through locked doors, disappearing again, sometimes being recognized, sometimes not, and finally ascending into heaven
— NT Wright