Quotes from Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Hunger is not just an economic problem. It is a moral and spiritual problem.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Politics has become so all-possessive of life, that by impertinence it thinks the only philosophy a person can hold is the right or the left. This question puts out all the lights of religion so they can call all the cats gray. It assumes that man lives on a purely horizontal plane, and can move only to the right or the left. Had we eyes less material, we would see that there are two other directions where a man with a soul may look: the vertical directions of "up" or "down.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Celibacy is like poetry keeping the idea ever in mind like a dream; but marriage uses chisel and brush, concentrating more on marble and canvas. Celibacy jumps to a conclusion like an intuition; marriage, like reason, labors through ebb and flow, step by step.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Our blessed Lord was hopeful about humanity. He always saw men the way He originally designed them. He saw through the surface, grime, and dirt to the real man underneath. He never identified a person with sin. He saw sin as something alien and foreign which did not belong to man. Sin had mastered man but he could be freed from it to be his real self. Just as every mother sees her own image and likeness on her child's face, so God always saw the divine image and likeness beneath us.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
The word enough does not exist in Love's vocabulary.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
The crisis in their souls begins at the moment when they either recognize that they have tremendous potentialities not yet exercised or begin to yearn for a religious life which will make greater demands on them. Up to that moment of crisis, they have lived on the surface of their souls. The tension deepens as they realize that, like a plant, they have roots which need greater spiritual depths and branches meant for communion with the heavens above.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
A person is merciful when he feels the sorrow and misery of another as if it were his own.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
St. Augustine also states that, in a sense, shame is related to disobedience. Positively, this would mean that when there is perfect obedience to God, there is no shame. This confirms somewhat the spiritual truth that Catholic educators have observed, namely, that as obedience to the law of Christ increases, concupiscence or the passions actually diminish.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
To use a man for what he is naturally best fitted is to keep him, if one can, from apostasy and dissatisfaction. At the same time, life's temptations come most often from that for which one has the greatest aptitude.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Let no one think he can be totally indifferent to God in this life and suddenly develop a capacity for Him at the moment of death.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
Declaration of Independence: that all of our rights and liberties come to us from our Creator.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
The greatest love story of all time is contained in a tiny white Host.
- Bishop Fulton J. Sheen