Top 15 Quotes About Disobedient Children
#1. Only children simply accept the fact that their parents have the right to make choices for them. Even disobedient children never question the fact that their parents have that right. They may choose to flout the rules, but they don't question their parents' right to make those rules.
The Mirror Of Maybe
#3. Wayward, disobedient children cause their parents grief and anxiety.
Joseph B. Wirthlin
#4. Children are becoming disobedient ... why, because of the lack of rules boundaries and limitations.
Cesar Millan
#5. Heredity: the traits that a disobedient child gets from the other parent.
Luther Burbank
#6. Disobedient parents are a great trouble to their children.
Mason Cooley
#7. Cease to be a disobedient child in the school of experience, and begin to learn, with humility and patience, the lessons that are set for your ultimate perfection.
James Allen
#9. I believe in Christian charity, but I don't believe in Christian tolerance ... When we become so tolerate that we lead people into mental fog and spiritual darkness, we are not acting like Christians; we are acting like cowards!
Aiden Wilson Tozer
#10. Truth is found in the exaltation and protection of beauty.
Bryant McGill
#11. He stood there at the edge of the orchard looking like he would never be whole again.
Tracy Chevalier
#12. There weren't always happy endings and children would do well to know that vile things could happen to them, that witches and wolves were desperate to steal them should they be disobedient or foolish or simply unlucky.
Thomm Quackenbush
#13. George VI in the conventional parlance was a Good King who sacrificed his life to his sense of duty. If we are to have monarchs it would be hard to find a better one.
A.J.P. Taylor
#14. Turning complex, diverse places into shallow, simple ones creates a more culturally vulnerable population, an unrooted mass whose only linking thread lies in the ideology that is fed to them from above.
Alastair Bonnett
#15. Love exercised while duty is neglected will make children headstrong, willful, perverse, selfish, and disobedient. If stern duty is left to stand alone without love to soften and win, it will have a similar result. Duty and love must be blended in order that children may be properly disciplined.
Ellen G. White