Scott  Evans

Scott Evans’s Followers (25)

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Nancy M...
549 books | 65 friends

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228 books | 53 friends

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1,641 books | 130 friends

Sarah
390 books | 72 friends

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567 books | 27 friends

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201 books | 99 friends

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Scott Evans

Goodreads Author


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Genre

Influences

Member Since
August 2012

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Average rating: 4.23 · 96 ratings · 17 reviews · 3 distinct works
Closer Still

4.31 avg rating — 59 ratings — published 2012 — 2 editions
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Beautiful Attitudes: Living...

4.04 avg rating — 26 ratings — published 2013
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Failing From The Front

4.27 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2014 — 2 editions
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Church Next: Quan...
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The Church Is Fla...
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New Seeds of Cont...
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G.K. Chesterton
“Take the case of courage. No quality has ever so much addled the brains and tangled the definitions of merely rational sages. Courage is almost a contradiction in terms. It means a strong desire to live taking the form of a readiness to die. 'He that will lose his life, the same shall save it,' is not a piece of mysticism for saints and heroes. It is a piece of everyday advice for sailors or mountaineers. It might be printed in an Alpine guide or a drill book. This paradox is the whole principle of courage; even of quite earthly or brutal courage. A man cut off by the sea may save his life if we will risk it on the precipice.

He can only get away from death by continually stepping within an inch of it. A soldier surrounded by enemies, if he is to cut his way out, needs to combine a strong desire for living with a strange carelessness about dying. He must not merely cling to life, for then he will be a coward, and will not escape. He must not merely wait for death, for then he will be a suicide, and will not escape. He must seek his life in a spirit of furious indifference to it; he must desire life like water and yet drink death like wine. No philosopher, I fancy, has ever expressed this romantic riddle with adequate lucidity, and I certainly have not done so. But Christianity has done more: it has marked the limits of it in the awful graves of the suicide and the hero, showing the distance between him who dies for the sake of living and him who dies for the sake of dying.”
G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy

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