Read & Study the Bible Online - Bible Portal
Charles Spurgeon
It is foolish to be lavish in words and niggardly in truth.
3 likes
Iain Murray
Thus his belief was that in a service where feeling could be restrained it ought to be restrained. The power of God was more likely to be known in a solemn stillness than amid noise and excitement. Silence and an expectant seriousness, born of a realisation of the nearness of God, were striking characteristics of the services at Sandfields.
3 likes
Frederick Buechner
[W]e are none of us very good at silence. It says too much.
topics: silence  
2 likes
Charles Spurgeon
Most of us think too much of speech, which is but the shell of thought.
1 likes
Ravi Zacharias
If you cannot understand me in my speech, how can you understand me in my silence?
1 likes
G.K. Chesterton
Eğer başka çocuklar da anlaşılmamaktan, yanlış anlaşılmaktan, benim çocukken korktuğum kadar korkuyorlarsa (ki olasıdır, çünkü çocukluğumda bir hilkat garibesi olduğumu hiç sanmıyorum) bu korku birçok suskunluk ve yalanların anahtarıdır.
0 likes
Benjamin Franklin
Silence is not always a sign of wisdom, but babbling is ever of folly
0 likes
Frederick Buechner
What deadens us most to God’s presence within us, I think, is the inner dialogue that we are continuously engaged in with ourselves, the endless chatter of human thought. I suspect that there is nothing more crucial to true spiritual comfort . . . than being able from time to time to stop that chatter including the chatter of spoken prayer.
topics: chatter , prayer , silence  
0 likes
Erwin Lutzer
Yes, we might have ‘righteous anger’ as we see our culture destroyed, but if our anger spills over into our Christian witness, it only fuels the stereotype that the world already has of us. Yes, we are called to expose the sins of the world, but to do so with redemption, in humility and compassion. And, yes, with courage. And tears. Anger and rebuke change nothing. In fact, they cause our leftist friends to entrench themselves every deeper into their hatred of Christians. Moreover, these actions don’t represent our Master who ‘when he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but continued entrusting himself to him who judges justly’ (1 peter 2:23). Anger, vengeance and a spirit of retaliation are not the ways of the Master. But as we shall see later in this book, neither is silence nor cowardice.
0 likes
A.W. Tozer
Men who cannot be silent will not say anything when they talk.
topics: silence  
0 likes
Soren Kierkegaard
A man ten times regrets having spoken, for the once he regrets his silence. And why? Because the fact of having spoken is an external fact, which may involve one in annoyances, since it is an actuality. But the fact of having kept silent! Yet this is the most dangerous thing of all. For by keeping silent one is relegated solely to oneself, no actuality comes to a man’s aid by punishing him, by bringing down upon him the consequences of his speech. No, in this respect, to be silent is the easy way. But he who knows what the dreadful is, must for this very reason be most fearful of every fault, of every sin, which takes an inward direction and leaves no outward trace.
0 likes
Elton Trueblood
He (Lincoln) was accustomed to hearing words, many of them boring, but he was not accustomed to group silence.
0 likes
C.S. Lewis
The phenomenon which is troublesome, which doesn’t fit in with the current scientific theories, is the phenomenon which compels reconsideration and thus leads to new knowledge, Science progresses because scientists, instead of running away from such troublesome phenomena or hushing them up, are constantly seeking them out.
0 likes

Grupo de marcas