Quotes about Peace
If you take care of your mind, you take care of the world.
- Arianna Huffington
And this activity alone would seem to be loved for its own sake; for nothing arises from it apart from the contemplating, while from practical activities we gain more or less apart from the action. And happiness is thought to depend on leisure; for we are busy that we may have leisure, and make war that we may live in peace.
- Aristotle
I got no quarrel with them Vietcong.
- Muhammad Ali
God is much in the difficult home problems as in the times of quiet and prayer.
- Evelyn Underhill
What better way to enjoy rains than lazing around in your house and admiring nature.
- Varun Sharma
I love being in the garden, and my 'chilling-out room' is almost like being out there.
- Linford Christie
Laughter is God's blessing.
- Joseph Prince
The contradiction is resolved when you realize that for Jesus peace seems to have meant not the absence of struggle, but the presence of love.
- Frederick Buechner
Be merciful to yourself, stop fighting yourself quite so much. Maybe what you are asking of yourself, what you're driving yourself to do or to be, what you put a gun to your own back to make yourself do, is something at this point you needn't have to think about doing. So, think back at the end of the day to the wars you're involved in. How are they going?
- Frederick Buechner
Knowing that even though you see only through a glass darkly, even though lots of things happen - wars and peacemaking, hunger and homelessness - joy is knowing, even for a moment, that underneath everything are the everlasting arms.
- Frederick Buechner
When somebody you've wronged forgives you, you're spared the dull and self-diminishing throb of a guilty conscience. When you forgive somebody who has wronged you, you're spared the dismal corrosion of bitterness and wounded pride. For both parties, forgiveness means the freedom again to be at peace inside their own skins and to be glad in each other's presence.
- Frederick Buechner
We're all, by and large, comparatively speaking, rich people and have perhaps more than one home. And yet the question is, are we really at home anywhere? Are we really at home in any of our homes? Because it seems to me that to be at home somewhere means to be at peace somewhere and I have a feeling at some deep level there can really be no peace for any of us, no real home for any of us, until there is some measure of real peace for everybody until everybody has a home.
- Frederick Buechner