Quotes from Richard Wurmbrand
Bible verses remain true, even if the devil quotes them.
- Richard Wurmbrand
How many Christians of the free world visit communist countries and other nations where Christians are persecuted but never ask permission to visit a jail and encourage their brothers and sisters in pain?
- Richard Wurmbrand
Credo quia impossibile
- Richard Wurmbrand
It is a miracle, with no logical explanation, that even amid the fierce anti-Semitism of Hitler's oppression, there were Germans who believed with all their hearts in the crucified Jew as their Savior.
- Richard Wurmbrand
Faith in God is the sole answer to the mystery of evil.
- Richard Wurmbrand
Hammer away, ye hostile bands. Your hammers break; God's anvil stands.
- Richard Wurmbrand
Where do you flee when facing darkness and shadows in life? Find a favorite photo of a mountain or hill. It could be a photograph from a vacation, nearby sites, or even a postcard, magazine cut-out or greeting card. Put it in a place where you will see it whenever you face difficulties. Then envision Jesus carrying you up the mountain of myrrh where He will bring you refreshment and healing so that you can return to bring His fragrance to others.
- Richard Wurmbrand
The value of the Bibles smuggled in by these means cannot be understood by an American or an English Christian who "swims" in Bibles.
- Richard Wurmbrand
The cruelty of atheism is hard to believe. When a man has no faith in the reward of good or the punishment of evil, there is no reason to be human. There is no restraint from the depths of evil that is in man.
- Richard Wurmbrand
They say the tongues of dying men enforce attention like deep harmony. Their words are scarce, they're seldom spent in vain For they breathe truth that breathe their words in pain. How well he could have applied this passage to the last words of Jesus on the cross.
- Richard Wurmbrand
People are so inoculated in childhood with small doses of Christianity that they seldom catch the real thing.
- Richard Wurmbrand
The tyrant of Syracuse once went to the slavephilosopher Epictetus and told him, "I'll pay the ransom for you and you will be liberated " Epictetus replied, "Why do you care about me? Free yourself." "But I am a king," said the amazed tyrant. "This I contest," was the answer of the philosopher. "He who masters his passions is a king even while in chains. He who is ruled by his passions is a slave even while sitting on a throne.
- Richard Wurmbrand