Hallelujah Anyway Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy by Anne Lamott
12,784 ratings, 3.71 average rating, 1,472 reviews
Open Preview
Hallelujah Anyway Quotes Showing 1-30 of 68
“Everything slows down when we listen and stop trying to fix the unfixable.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“...being sober delivered almost everything drinking promised.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“The hard silence between frustrated people always feels cluttered. But holy silence is spacious and inviting. You can drink it down. We offer it to ourselves when we work, rest, meditate, bike, read. When we hike by ourselves, we hear a silence still pristine with crunching leaves and birdsong. Silence can be a system of peace, which is mercy, easily offered to a friend needing quiet, harder when the person is one's own annoying self.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“One has to be done with the pretense of being just fine, unscarred, perfectly self-sufficient. No one is.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Pope Francis says the name of God is mercy. Our name was mercy, too, until we put it away to become more productive, more admired and less vulnerable. We tend to forget it's still there.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“The world has an awful beauty. This is a chaotic place, humanity is a chaotic place, and I am a chaotic place.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Mercy is radical kindness. Mercy means offering or being offered aid in desperate straits. Mercy is not deserved. It involves absolving the unabsolvable, forgiving the unforgivable. Mercy brings us to the miracle of apology, given and accepted, to unashamed humility when we have erred or forgotten.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Kindness toward others and radical kindness to ourselves buy us a shot at a warm and generous heart, which is the greatest prize of all. Do you want this, or do you want to be right? Well, can I get back to you on that? I”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“The ancient Chinese had a practice of embellishing the cracked parts of valued possessions with gold leaf, which says: We dishonor it if we pretend that it hadn't gotten broken. It says: We value this enough to repair it. So it is not denial or a cover-up. It is the opposite, an adornment of the break with gold leaf, which draws the cracks into greater prominence. The gold leaf becomes part of its beauty.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
tags: broken
“Mercy means that we no longer constantly judge everybody’s large and tiny failures, foolish hearts, dubious convictions, and inevitable bad behavior. We will never do this perfectly, but how do we do it better?”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Anything that leaves you more fearful, more isolated, more disconnected from other people, more full of judgment or self-hatred, is not of God, does not follow the Rule of Love—and you should stop doing it.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“My parents, teachers, and the culture I grew up in showed me a drawer in which to stuff my merciful nature, because mercy made me look vulnerable and foolish, and it made me less productive.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Hallelujah that in spite of it all, there is love, there is singing, nature, laughing, mercy.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“In many spiritual and wisdom paths, it is written that God created us to have company and to be God’s loving eyes and hands on earth. But in certain African Christian catechisms it says that God created us because He thought we would like it.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Underneath all things means that beneath the floorboards, in the depths, in the spaces between the pebbles or sandy floor that contain the pond, that hold our own inside person, is something that can't be destroyed, a foundation that keeps all the water from sinking back into the earth. Something is there, something we need, when we come to rest, when all is lost.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“They taught us that extending ourselves to others would help us stay sober and sane. But they also wanted us to extend ourselves to our own horrible selves, get ourselves a lovely cup of tea. It was and is the hardest work ever.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“I have a quote taped to my office wall from an anonymous source that says, 'Love is hard. Love is ... seeing the darkness in another person and defying the impulse to jump ship.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
tags: love
“Paul of Tarsus, for instance. Putting aside the little problem with all the people he had killed, he was annoying, sexist, stuffy, and theoretical. He was not a great storyteller like the Gospel writers. He often got preachy, and his message was frequently about trying to be more stoic, with dogmatic "Shape up" and
"Shame on you" talks.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“The ancient Chinese had a practice of embellishing the cracked parts of valued possessions with gold leaf, which says: We dishonor it if we pretend that it hadn’t gotten broken. It says: We value this enough to repair it. So it is not denial or a cover-up. It is the opposite, an adornment of the break with gold leaf, which draws the cracks into greater prominence. The gold leaf becomes part of its beauty. Somehow the aesthetic of its having been cracked but still being here, brought back not to baseline but restored, brings increase.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Sigh: who was it who said that to get into heaven, you needed a letter of recommendation from the poor?”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“do you still believe that I am the Resurrection and the Life? Even when you don’t get what you want? Even when nothing makes sense?”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Mercy means compassion, empathy, a heart for someone’s troubles. It’s not something you do – it is something in you, accessed, revealed, or cultivated through use, like a muscle. We find it in the most unlikely places, never where we first look.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Every one of us sometimes needs a tour guide to remind us how big and deep life is meant to be.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“As Father Ed Dowling said, sometimes heaven is just a new pair of glasses. When we put them on, we see the awful person, sometimes even ourselves, a bit more gently, and we are blessed in return. It seems, on the face of things, like a decent deal.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“Carl Jung said that most painful issues can’t be solved—they can only be outgrown, but that takes time and deep work.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“I'm not sure I even recognize the ever-presence of mercy anymore, the divine and the human; the messy, crippled, transforming, heartbreaking, lovely, devastating presence of mercy. But I have come to believe that I am starving to death for it, and my world is, too.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
tags: mercy
“Trauma, which is stored differently in the brain than memory, seeps out of us as warnings of worse to come.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“As well as we know our grown children and relatives, we don't know how much energy they have to put into simply keeping their lives together at all.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“God makes a way out of no way.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy
“God gives us Her own self. Left to my own devices, I would prefer answers. This is why it is good that I am in charge of so little: the pets, the shopping, the garden.”
Anne Lamott, Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy

« previous 1 3