Scott > Scott's Quotes

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  • #1
    Frederick Buechner
    “When you remember me, it means you have carried something of who I am with you, that I have left some mark of who I am on who you are. It means that you can summon me back to your mind even though countless years and miles may stand between us. It means that if we meet again, you will know me. It means that even after I die, you can still see my face and hear my voice and speak to me in your heart.”
    Frederick Buechner

  • #2
    Frederick Buechner
    “The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”
    Frederick Buechner, Wishful Thinking: A Seeker's ABC

  • #3
    Frederick Buechner
    “If we are to love our neighbors, before doing anything else we must see our neighbors. With our imagination as well as our eyes, that is to say like artists, we must see not just their faces but the life behind and within their faces. Here it is love that is the frame we see them in.”
    Frederick Buechner, Whistling in the Dark: A Doubter's Dictionary

  • #4
    Thomas Jefferson
    “I never considered a difference of opinion in politics, in religion, in philosophy, as cause for withdrawing from a friend.”
    Thomas Jefferson

  • #5
    Kathleen Norris
    “This is another day, O Lord...
    If I am to stand up, help me to stand bravely.
    If I am to sit still, help me to sit quietly.
    If I am to lie low, help me to do it patiently.
    And if I am to do nothing, let me do it gallantly.”
    Kathleen Norris

  • #6
    Parker J. Palmer
    “If we want to grow as teachers -- we must do something alien to academic culture: we must talk to each other about our inner lives -- risky stuff in a profession that fears the personal and seeks safety in the technical, the distant, the abstract.”
    Parker J. Palmer, The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher's Life

  • #7
    Robert Frost
    “In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: it goes on.”
    Robert Frost

  • #8
    Markus Zusak
    “Like most misery, it started with apparent happiness.”
    Markus Zusak, The Book Thief

  • #9
    Frederick Buechner
    “Like Adam, we have all lost Paradise; and yet we carry Paradise around inside of us in the form of a longing for, almost a memory of, a blessedness that is no more, or the dream of a blessedness that may someday be again.”
    Frederick Buechner, The Magnificent Defeat

  • #10
    J.R.R. Tolkien
    “Home is behind, the world ahead,
    And there are many paths to tread
    Through shadows to the edge of night,
    Until the stars are all alight.
    Then world behind and home ahead,
    We'll wander back and home to bed.
    Mist and twilight, cloud and shade,
    Away shall fade! Away shall fade!”
    J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring

  • #11
    Karen Armstrong
    “In the West the idea that religion is inherently violent is now taken for granted and seems self-evident. As one who speaks on religion, I constantly hear how cruel and aggressive it has been, a view that, eerily, is expressed in the same way almost every time: “Religion has been the cause of all the major wars in history.” I have heard this sentence recited like a mantra by American commentators and psychiatrists, London taxi drivers and Oxford academics. It is an odd remark. Obviously the two world wars were not fought on account of religion. When they discuss the reasons people go to war, military historians acknowledge that many interrelated social, material, and ideological factors are involved, one of the chief being competition for scarce resources. Experts on political violence or terrorism also insist that people commit atrocities for a complex range of reasons.3 Yet so indelible is the aggressive image of religious faith in our secular consciousness that we routinely load the violent sins of the twentieth century onto the back of “religion” and drive it out into the political wilderness.”
    Karen Armstrong, Fields of Blood: Religion and the History of Violence

  • #12
    Jasper Fforde
    “If the real world were a book, it would never find a publisher. Overlong, detailed to the point of distraction-and ultimately, without a major resolution.”
    Jasper Fforde, Something Rotten



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