Top 14 Modern Prayer Quotes
#1. A Modern Prayer
Dear God, help me to slow down notrushpasteverythingthatisimportanttodayamen.
Robert Holden
Robert Holden
#2. The "question" is the smallest and greatest unit of discovery.
Ted Agon
#3. I consider prayer to be of immense psychological benefit. But we must accept that its tangible results are often hard to see. When it comes to obtaining certain, direct results, it is clear that prayer cannot match the achievements of, for instance, modern science.
Dalai Lama XIV
#4. Nietzsche said the newspaper had replaced the prayer in the life of the modern bourgeois , meaning that the busy, the cheap, the ephemeral, had usurped all that remained of the eternal in his daily life.
Allan Bloom
#5. A fox should not be of the jury at a goose's trial.
Thomas Fuller
#6. There's nothing like a headless corpse to bring a touch of excitement into one's life.
Chet Williamson
#7. An hour of study, for the modern apostle, is an hour of prayer.
Josemaria Escriva
#8. I don't think we've got the gospel right yet. What does it mean to be 'saved'? When I read the Bible, I don't see it meaning, 'I'm going to heaven after I die.' Before modern evangelicalism nobody accepted Jesus Christ as their personal Savior, or walked down an aisle, or said the sinner's prayer.
Brian D. McLaren
#9. The late Tom Wicker's biography of Nixon, called 'One of Us,' is really quite good: you see the biographer discovering dimensions of sympathy for his subject that he hadn't expected to feel.
Thomas Mallon
#10. You may not able to hear the song of your heart but the universe can.
Debasish Mridha
#11. Earth, water, fire, and wind. Where there is energy there is life.
Suzy Kassem
#12. [The passage of the Sugar Act] set people a thinking, in six months, more than they had done in their whole lives before.
James Otis
#14. We have taught our people to use prayer too much as a means of comfort - not in the original and heroic sense of uplifting, inspiring, strengthening, but in the more modern and baser sense of soothing sorrow, dulling pain, and drying tears - the comfort of the cushion, not the comfort of the Cross.
Geoffrey Studdert Kennedy