Gerald Sittser Quotes
Collection of top 14 famous quotes about Gerald Sittser
Gerald Sittser Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Gerald Sittser quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
My life is proof that I don't need you to do what I do. If there's no one to see it, I'll watch it.
— Abel Ferrara
I see now that my faith was becoming an ally rather than an enemy because I could vent anger freely, even toward God, without fearing retribution.
— Gerald L. Sittser
It was somehow slightly frightening, like the gambolling of tiger cubs which will soon grow up into man-eaters.
— George Orwell
From my dad I learned to be good to people, to always be honest and straightforward. I learned hard work and perseverance.
— Luke Bryan
The central theme of the book is that prayer is best understood as a long, sometimes perilous, epic journey that eventually leads to triumph.
— Gerald L. Sittser
I had no way of anticipating the adjustments I would have to make and the suffering I would have to endure in the months and years ahead.
— Gerald L. Sittser
The book is intended to show how it is possible to live in and be enlarged by loss, even as we continue to experience it.
— Gerald L. Sittser
He lifted up on one elbow and looked down at her. What she wouldn't give to see what he saw, to know what made him look at her that way.
— Sarah Addison Allen
Loss provides an opportunity to take inventory of our lives, to reconsider priorities, and to determine new directions.
— Gerald Lawson Sittser
Everyone knows what it's like to feel like the underdog. Everyone wants to be accepted. Ultimately, everybody wants to be loved.
— Charlie Day
The good that may come out of the loss does not erase its badness or excuse the wrong done. Nothing can do that.
— Gerald L. Sittser
For education to happen, people must encounter worthwhile things outside their sphere of interest and brainpower.
— Mark Bauerlein
Regret is ... an unavoidable result of any loss, for in loss we lose the tomorrow that we needed to make right our yesterday or today.
— Gerald Lawson Sittser
It is how we respond to loss that matters. That response will largely determine the quality, the direction, and the impact of our lives.
— Gerald L. Sittser