Quotes about Rest
Knowing that the time to sleep has come, the Lord sleeps, and does well in sleeping. Often, when we have been fretting and worrying, we should have glorified God far more had we literally gone to sleep.
— Charles Spurgeon
Keeping the Sabbath day holy is much more than just physical rest. It involves spiritual renewal and worship.
— James Faust
Oh, for the time when I shall sleep Without identity.
— Emily Bronte
But see! theVirgin blessed Hath laid her Babe to rest. Time is our tedious song should here have ending.
— John Milton
For three years, ever since he had lived in Stanton, he had come here for his only relaxation, to swim, to rest, to think, to be alone and alive, whenever he could find one hour to spare, which had not been often. In his new freedom the first thing he had wanted to do was to come here, because he knew that he was coming for the last time.
— Ayn Rand
He wanted to put his head down on the desk, lie still and rest, only the form of rest he needed did not exist, greater than sleep, greater than death, the rest of having never lived.
— Ayn Rand
Unsheltered, I live in daylight. And like the wandering bird I rest in thee.
— Barbara Kingsolver
As long as we won't commit to knowing everything, the presumption is we know nothing...he did not claim that God moves in mysterious ways. Instead he seemed to believe, as she did, though they never could have discussed it, that everything else is in motion while God does not move at all. God sits still, perfectly at rest, the silver dollar at the bottom of the well, the question.
— Barbara Kingsolver
In the midst of depressing care and labor I turn constantly to divine Love for guidance, and find rest.
— Mary Baker Eddy
Love accepts the trying things of life without asking for explanations. It trusts and is at rest.
— Amy Carmichael
Sweet are the slumbers of the virtuous man.
— Joseph Addison
Authors have established it as a kind of rule, that a man ought to be dull sometimes; as the most severe reader makes allowances for many rests and nodding places in a voluminous writer.
— Joseph Addison