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Reunion (Redemption, #5) Reunion by Karen Kingsbury
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Reunion Quotes Showing 1-21 of 21
“But their mother was the family’s heartbeat. Always she was at the center of their good and bad times, lending perspective or a kind word or a shoulder to cry on.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“She liked thinking that people in heaven had a window to earth, a way to see what they needed to pray about, but through the tearless veil of heaven’s understanding.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Landon . . . in the painting that is our lives, all we’ve been through together to this point is only the backdrop. Today—” she sucked in a deep breath—“this moment . . . is the first stroke, the beginning of the most beautiful picture. A picture even I can’t imagine.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“God's will, he told her, is a little like taking a Sunday drive with God behind the wheel. God's driving. He might turn or go through a valley that feels too dark, but you don't have to worry about a thing, because you're just the passenger. Whatever happens, God will get you home in the end as long as you let him drive.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Fight it with everything you have. And when you don't feel like fighting, lean on me and I'll fight for you.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“We never own the people in our lives. We love them, yes, but they are on loan from God. We have them for a moment and then they’re gone. Go ahead and grieve, because you’ll miss Elizabeth. We all will. But while you’re grieving, don’t get mad at God for the minutes you’ll miss with Elizabeth. Thank him for the minutes you had.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“All I want you to do today is run to Jesus. Being God, he alone fully understands both God and suffering.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Human suffering is too big to get our arms around.” His face had been earnest. “Don’t try to figure out what God’s teaching you by this, don’t try to understand it, and don’t try to understand God. If he could fit into your idea of him, he’d be too small for any of us.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“And though the clapping came from the family and friends that filled the church, she was sure she heard a distant clapping, too. A clapping of all the angels in heaven and earth who knew that a moment like this could only come from one source. Their loving, faithful Almighty God.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“That’s what it comes down to.” Elizabeth worked the last few buttons together. She stopped to cough, but only for a moment. “He alone knows the number of our days, and until that moment, he always has a plan for us.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“You see . . . God had a plan for you all along.” Elizabeth looked at the other girls. “He always has a plan for us; either to give us a hope and a future here in this world. Or—” she smiled and waited for her emotions to level out—“or in the next.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“God had been faithful time and time and time again. That was the type of God the Baxters served. No, they didn’t always get the answers they wanted. But they always got the right answers, even now with her cancer.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Her plan was to be so comforted by the host of blessings she’d been given that when she reached the current day she’d be able to fall asleep.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Somehow dying was like that. A sense of nervousness and finality and sorrow because for a season, they wouldn’t be together.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Every time I brought a baby home from the hospital I felt that this was the reason God had given me life. So I could raise my babies and give my family a life they would always remember, a life that would teach them to do the same thing for the people they loved one day.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“He needs the Lord, but I think right now God scares him.” Jim exhaled hard. “As if he knows God’s chasing him, and he’s determined to run until he hits a brick wall.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Ashley talked to her siblings every day, and all of them were praying, praying with a kind of fervor none of them had known before. Not because they doubted God’s faithfulness in hearing their prayers and answering. But because they appreciated her so much more now, appreciated everything she’d ever done, every perfect word or loving touch. Before they might’ve taken her for granted once in a while, the way kids sometimes do with their parents. But not anymore.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Though it was the worst season in her life, something wonderful came of it. She found a relationship with Jesus.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“All of it was proof that God would always have the last word when it came to life-and-death situations.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“Elizabeth thought about God, the Lord and Savior she’d spent a lifetime worshiping. Being a believer meant there’d be times like this; wasn’t that what she’d learned over the years? Times when nothing made sense and all she could do was dig her fingernails into her faith and hold on for dear life.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion
“But even now it wasn’t bigger than the God they’d spent a lifetime serving.”
Karen Kingsbury, Reunion