Quotes about Thoughtful
He hadn't changed since I had seen him a few years earlier. With his close-cropped black beard, angular features, and riveting gaze, Craig still looks the role of a serious scholar. He speaks in cogent sentences, never losing his train of thought, always working through an answer methodically, point by point, fact by fact.
- Lee Strobel
A thoughtless or uninformed theology grips and guides our life with just as great a force as does a thoughtful and informed one.
- Dallas Willard
He is thinking quietly: I should not have got out of the habit of prayer.
- William Faulkner
If you love a person truly, you can make an ordinary day very special for her.
- Vivek Oberoi
Of two evils, had not an author better be tedious than superficial! From an overflowing vessel you may gather more, indeed, than you want, but from an empty one you can gather nothing.
- Hannah More
Never talk about submission without talking about Jesus, and in particular of the cross. Jesus' version of submission is thoughtful, strong, purposeful, and sacrificial. It involves the full and determined embrace of his Father's will (which governs everything Jesus does)3 and the voluntary pouring out of his life to rescue a lost world.4 Submission is both. It is redemptive. It is the gospel. It is a way of showing Jesus to the world.
- Carolyn Custis James
The abyss sometimes has these thoughtful ideas; but you will do well to beware of its kindness.
- Victor Hugo
People want something that's relevant to their lives. They want something that means something to them, and they want something where it seems like people have thought about what they're saying.
- Boots Riley
Faith is a reasoning trust, a trust which reckons thoughtfully and confidently upon the trustworthiness of God.
- John Stott
His words never rushed but were selected, chewed over, released into the air as if the best choice possible had been made.
- Maya Angelou
Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart." LUKE 2:19
- Beth Moore
But I am unwilling to utter all that may occur to those who think of it, yet cannot be spoken without irreverence.
- St. Augustine