Quotes about Perception
Wanting to look good to others is also a form of the desire of the eyes.
— Dallas Willard
Keep in mind that God did not say that Job was wrong in what he said, but that he did not understand what he was saying.
— Dallas Willard
They do not know what they are doing and do not have the ability to distance themselves from it so they can see it for what it is. That is the power of "culture.
— Dallas Willard
Genius, it is said, is the ability to scrutinize the obvious.
— Dallas Willard
There are two Gods," Tolstoy once said. "There is the God that people generally believe in—A God who has to serve them (sometimes in very refined ways, say by merely giving them peace of mind). This God does not exist. But the God whom people forget—the God whom we all have to serve—exists, and is the prime cause of our existence and of all that we perceive."
— Dallas Willard
Very few people today find Jesus interesting as a person or of vital relevance to the course of their actual lives. He is not generally regarded as a real-life personality who deals with real-life issues but is thought to be concerned with some feathery realm other than the one we must deal with, and must deal with now. And frankly, he is not taken to be a person of much ability.
— Dallas Willard
Faith is not opposed to evidence that we might gain from perception as well as from reason.
— Dallas Willard
We live from our depths—most of which we do not understand.
— Dallas Willard
Remember, to believe something is to act as if it is so. To believe that two plus two equals four is to behave accordingly when trying to find out how many dollars or apples are in the house. The advantage of believing it is not that we can pass tests in arithmetic; it is that we can deal much more successfully with reality. Just try dealing with it as if two plus two equaled six.
— Dallas Willard
The damage done to our practical faith in Christ and in his government-at-hand by confusing heaven with a place in distant or outer space, or even beyond space, is incalculable. Of course God is there too. But instead of heaven and God also being always present with us, as Jesus shows them to be, we invariably take them to be located far away and, most likely, at a much later time—not here and not now. And we should then be surprised to feel ourselves alone?
— Dallas Willard
In feelings we really know that something is "there," and solidly so. But what it is and why it is remains obscure—though hauntingly present.
— Dallas Willard
Anthropologists observe that the world occupied by a human being comprises not only the surrounding land, water, sky, plant and animal life, human beings and works of human hands, but also a "symbolic reality," which is superimposed upon material reality.
— Dallas Willard