Kaya ✨ > Kaya ✨'s Quotes

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  • #1
    Billy Graham
    “Without dark clouds in our lives, we would never know the joy of sunshine.”
    Billy Graham, Hope for the Troubled Heart: Finding God in the Midst of Pain

  • #2
    Theodore Roosevelt
    “Comparison is the thief of joy.”
    Theodore Roosevelt

  • #3
    Billy Graham
    “I've read the last page of the Bible. It's all going to turn out all right.”
    Billy Graham

  • #4
    “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”
    Jesus

  • #5
    “To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover that the prisoner was you.”
    Lewis B. Smedes, Forgive and Forget: Healing the Hurts We Don't Deserve

  • #6
    Anne Graham Lotz
    “I'm part of the fellowship of the unashamed. I have Holy Spirit power. The die has been cast. I have stepped over the line. The decision has been made. I am a disciple of His. I won't look back, let up, slow down, back away, or be still. My past is redeemed, my present makes sense, my future is secure. I'm finished and done with low living, sight walking, small planning, smooth knees, colorless dreams, tamed visions, mundane talking, cheap giving, and dwarfed goals. I no longer need preeminence, prosperity, position, promotions, plaudits, or popularity. I don't have to be right, first, tops, recognized, praised, regarded, or rewarded. I now live by faith, lean on His presence, walk by patience, lift by prayer, and labor by power. My face is set, my gait is fast, my goal is heaven, my road is narrow, my way is rough, my companions are few, my Guide is reliable, my mission is clear. I cannot be bought, compromised, detoured, lured away, turned back, deluded, or delayed. I will not flinch in the face of sacrifice, hesitate in the presence of adversity, negotiate at the table of the enemy, ponder at the pool of popularity, or meander in the maze of mediocrity.
    I won't give up, shut up, let up, until I have stayed up, stored up, prayed up, paid up, preached up for the cause of Christ. I am a disciple of Jesus. I must go 'til He comes, give 'til I drop, preach 'til all know, and work 'til He stops me. And when He comes for His own, He will have no problem recognizing me - my banner of identification with Jesus will be clear.”
    Anne Graham Lotz, My Heart's Cry

  • #7
    “Tell God all that is in your heart, as one unloads one's heart, its pleasures and its pain, to a dear friend. Tell Him your troubles, that He may comfort you; tell Him your joys, that He may sober them; tell Him your longings, that He may purify them; tell Him your dislikes, that He may help you to conquer them; talk to Him of your temptations, that He may shield you from them; show Him the wounds of your heart, that He may heal them; lay bare your indifference to good, your depraved tastes for evil, your instability. Tell Him how self-love makes you unjust to others, how vanity tempts you to be insincere, how pride disguises you to yourself and others. If you thus pour out all your weaknesses, needs, troubles, there will be no lack of what to say.”
    Chuck Swindoll

  • #8
    “You don’t need to unburden or collect yourself and then come to Jesus. Your very burden is what qualifies you to come. No payment is required; he says, “I will give you rest.” His rest is gift, not transaction. Whether you are actively working hard to crowbar your life into smoothness (“labor”) or passively finding yourself weighed down by something outside your control (“heavy laden”), Jesus Christ’s desire that you find rest, that you come in out of the storm, outstrips even your own.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #9
    “The cumulative testimony of the four Gospels is that when Jesus Christ sees the fallenness of the world all about him, his deepest impulse, his most natural instinct, is to move toward that sin and suffering, not away from it.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #10
    “Christ was sent not to mend wounded people or wake sleepy people or advise confused people or inspire bored people or spur on lazy people or educate ignorant people, but to raise dead people.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #11
    “the most vivid and arresting element of the portrait, is the way the Holy Son of God moves toward, touches, heals, embraces, and forgives those who least deserve it yet truly desire it.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #12
    “As long as you fix your attention on your sin, you will fail to see how you can be safe. But as long as you look to this high priest, you will fail to see how you can be in danger. Looking inside ourselves, we can anticipate only harshness from heaven. Looking out to Christ, we can anticipate only gentleness.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #13
    “Only as we drink down the kindness of the heart of Christ will we leave in our wake, everywhere we go, the aroma of heaven, and die one day having startled the world with glimpses of a divine kindness too great to be boxed in by what we deserve.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #14
    “Christ. No prerequisites. No hoops to jump through.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #15
    “When you come to Christ for mercy and love and help in your anguish and perplexity and sinfulness, you are going with the flow of his own deepest wishes, not against them.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #16
    “If we never come to him, we will experience a judgment so fierce it will be like a double-edged sword coming out of his mouth at us (Rev. 1:16; 2:12; 19:15, 21). If we do come to him, as fierce as his lion-like judgment would have been against us, so deep will be his lamb-like tenderness for us (cf. Rev. 5:5–6; Isa. 40:10–11). We will be enveloped in one or the other. To no one will Jesus be neutral.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #17
    “There are two ways to live the Christian life. You can live it either for the heart of Christ or from the heart of Christ.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #18
    “Slow to anger.” The Hebrew phrase is literally “long of nostrils.” Picture an angry bull, pawing the ground, breathing loudly, nostrils flared. That would be, so to speak, “short-nosed.” But the Lord is long-nosed. He doesn’t have his finger on the trigger. It takes much accumulated provoking to draw out his ire. Unlike us, who are often emotional dams ready to break, God can put up with a lot. This is why the Old Testament speaks of God being “provoked to anger” by his people dozens of times (especially in Deuteronomy; 1–2 Kings; and Jeremiah). But not once are we told that God is “provoked to love” or “provoked to mercy.” His anger requires provocation; his mercy is pent up, ready to gush forth. We tend to think: divine anger is pent up, spring-loaded; divine mercy is slow to build. It’s just the opposite. Divine mercy is ready to burst forth at the slightest prick.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #19
    “Thomas Goodwin said, “Christ is love covered over in flesh.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #20
    “If you are in Christ, you have a Friend who, in your sorrow, will never lob down a pep talk from heaven. He cannot bear to hold himself at a distance. Nothing can hold him back. His heart is too bound up with yours.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #21
    “It is the most counterintuitive aspect of Christianity, that we are declared right with God not once we begin to get our act together but once we collapse into honest acknowledgment that we never will.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #22
    “Our tendency is to feel intuitively that the more difficult life gets, the more alone we are. As we sink further into pain, we sink further into felt isolation. The Bible corrects us. Our pain never outstrips what he himself shares in. We are never alone. That sorrow that feels so isolating, so unique, was endured by him in the past and is now shouldered by him in the present.”
    Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

  • #23
    “When we cannot find joy in our circumstances, we can find joy in God who is unchanged and unchanging. We can rejoice, not in what is going on around or within us, but because God is our strength and He will continue to be.”
    Katie Davis Majors, Daring to Hope: Finding God's Goodness in the Broken and the Beautiful

  • #24
    “Sometimes the things we would never pick for our lives gives us opportunities to receive God's provision, to see Him working in ways we otherwise might not experience.”
    Katie Davis Majors, Daring to Hope: Finding God's Goodness in the Broken and the Beautiful

  • #25
    “And the more I knew my feebleness, my flaws, and my shortcomings, the more I knew His gentleness toward me, His tender glance, His strong and loving shoulder that was always available to lean on.”
    Katie Davis Majors, Daring to Hope: Finding God's Goodness in the Broken and the Beautiful

  • #26
    Billy Graham
    “The will of God will not take us where the grace of God cannot sustain us.”
    Billy Graham

  • #27
    Randy Alcorn
    “Real gold fears no fire.”
    Randy Alcorn, Safely Home

  • #28
    Randy Alcorn
    “When men know they cannot hope in a country, in a political belief, or in themselves, they become free to hope in God.”
    Randy Alcorn, Safely Home

  • #29
    Randy Alcorn
    “An obedient man is free when in prison,” Quan said. “A disobedient man is imprisoned when free.”
    Randy Alcorn, Safely Home

  • #30
    Randy Alcorn
    “Dr. Martin Luther King said, ‘If a man is called to be a street sweeper, he should sweep streets even as Michelangelo painted, or Beethoven composed music, or Shakespeare composed poetry. He should sweep streets so well that all the hosts of heaven and earth will pause to say, “Here lived a great street sweeper, who did his job well.”
    Randy Alcorn, Safely Home



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