Distant Harm Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Distant Harm (COIL Legacy #3) Distant Harm by D.I. Telbat
144 ratings, 4.86 average rating, 14 reviews
Distant Harm Quotes Showing 1-6 of 6
“We all know what Jesus said about counting the cost. It's time to say it aloud. Have you counted the cost? Satan and his cohorts are going to be fighting something fierce against all of you, so before anyone gets on a plane or climbs into a boat to go to North Korea, we need to hear that you've counted the cost. No one can head out on this mission and draw back at the last second. We need to know if you have any apprehension about following through. If you do, no one will look down on you.”
D.I. Telbat, Distant Harm
“The bad we're about to face in North Korea can be fought only by all the good that God is. He is love, and nothing can separate us from His love. We can't rise from here tonight until we're all reestablished in this truth.”
D.I. Telbat, Distant Harm
“I also follow Jesus who rose again, and showed Himself to be more powerful than death. Now, think of the big picture. We all die, Levi. Do you want to follow Someone who gives you the gift of life because He's conquered death, or do you want to enter eternity with a question mark over your eternal soul?”
D.I. Telbat, Distant Harm
“First, Jesus was God in human form, and that leads to the second point. He couldn't stay dead. He died a public death, sure, but He rose to live publicly, too. There were witnesses to His resurrection. The Bible records eye-witness statements that were written while many of those people could refute what was said. But no one did. Jesus had walked around after they'd killed Him. It really happened.”
D.I. Telbat, Distant Harm
“that true honor comes from being sacrificial and courageous, and doing the right thing against all odds, even when others won't. Those are things you can't learn from anyone but Jesus.”
D.I. Telbat, Distant Harm
“They called themselves a Latin term that translates as the Kindred of Nails. They were kindred of Christ's suffering for them, and they weren't ashamed to suffer for Him. Ironically, in English, we would call them the KONs.”
D.I. Telbat, Distant Harm