Quotes about Unknown
Why, some have extended hospitality to angels without ever knowing it!
— Melody Carlson
Don't go near it, so that you can see the way to go, for you haven't traveled this way before. Joshua 3:4
— Beth Moore
When we walk with the Lord, the dark is actually a place we can never fully be. The unknown is not so frightening when we realize that our all-knowing God is in it. We know Him. And once we experience His light in the midst of darkness, our darkness will never be the same.
— Stormie Omartian
Besides, ghost-stories are even more blood-curdling if you are reading them on a journey, especially at night, in a town, in a house, in a room where you have never been before. How many horrific events may already have taken place on the very spot where you are lying?—that is what you cannot help wondering.
— Heinrich Heine
The voice of inner truth says, 'I embrace the unknown because it allows me to see new aspects of myself'.
— Deepak Chopra
Most fear is fear of the unknown. We do not know what lies ahead of us, so we become apprehensive. Our imaginations can magnify problems until they seem insurmountable. We need a sound mind to see things in proper perspective. That is why God gave us His Holy Spirit, to enable us to see things as God sees them.
— Henry Blackaby
Faith is stepping out into the unknown with nothing to guide us but a hand just beyond our grasp.
— Frederick Buechner
I say , this picture sometimes appalled us, and made us rather bear those ills we had. Than fly to others, that we knew not of.
— Frederick Douglass
To countless thousands, even among those professing to be Christians, the God of the Scriptures is quite unknown.
— AW Pink
I thirsted for the unknown: the thirst is gone. O God, let me stay with the known, and be weary of it: I am content.
— George Eliot
Before marriage she had completely mastered my imagination, for she was a secret to me; and I created the unknown thought before which I trembled as if it were hers.
— George Eliot
for the human mind in that grassy corner had not the proverbial tendency to admire the unknown, holding rather that it was likely to be against the poor man, and that suspicion was the only wise attitude with regard to it.
— George Eliot