The Angel Court Affair Quotes

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The Angel Court Affair (Charlotte & Thomas Pitt, #30) The Angel Court Affair by Anne Perry
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The Angel Court Affair Quotes Showing 1-7 of 7
“What’s always right?” “Kindness,” Pitt answered with certainty. “Keeping your promises. Not giving up just because it gets hard. Owning up to your mistakes, and not blaming other people even if you would get away with it.”
Anne Perry, The Angel Court Affair
“I am not. I am certain of the things that matter. Kindness and honor are always good. Do not build God in your own image, with your doubts and fears, your need to judge and condemn, your need for safety, and to be right whatever the cost to others, and ultimately to yourself. Let your soul be still, and know that God is never capricious, never cruel and never wrong. It is our understanding that stumbles. Even the cleverest of us are yet children, and the wisest of us know that.”
Anne Perry, The Angel Court Affair
“Perhaps it is because my conviction is anyone may believe whatever they wish. Intolerance is a greater offense against God than holding a strange or even inconsistent belief. You have the right to worship what you wish - a pile of stones in your garden - as long as you do not injure others.”
Anne Perry, The Angel Court Affair
“This time it was Daniel who interrupted. “What’s always right?” “Kindness,” Pitt answered with certainty. “Keeping your promises. Not giving up just because it gets hard. Owning up to your mistakes, and not blaming other people even if you would get away with it.”
Anne Perry, The Angel Court Affair
“Christ to Satan, we are cut from the same cloth, every one of us. And we have the choice to be in eternity anything we wish. Man or woman. Genius or idiot, and all between. Physical beauty means nothing. God sees the heart. Wealth is only a test of what we would do with it. It is a loan from God, as are our talents, a way to prove whether we will use them well or ill. The judgment is awaiting us.”
Anne Perry, The Angel Court Affair
“How have we behaved toward the poor, the lonely, the slow of word or wit?” Nazario demanded. “Have we patronized or condescended to the meek? Have we taken advantage? When you bullied your wife, when you condescended to your servant, when you insulted your employee, did you see Christ in their place? Would you have done the same to Him? Of course you wouldn’t. Neither would I! Do I always trust people as I would were I to remember that God sees what I do? Of course not! But I should!”
Anne Perry, The Angel Court Affair
“Money is largely a fiction, a piece of paper that represents real assets, or the trust that assets exist. Take away this trust and it is worth nothing.”
Anne Perry, The Angel Court Affair