Inspirational Quotes

Christian inspirational quotes.

Archive for the ‘Inspiring Bible Stories’ Category

Posted by admin on July 18, 2010

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Posted by admin on July 18, 2010

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Posted by admin on July 16, 2010

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Posted by admin on July 16, 2010

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Posted by admin on July 14, 2010

I really want to find an inspiring quote or maybe bible verse much like the footprints in sand poem… something that really makes you believe in God’s love :)
"I find in the universe so many forms of order, organization, system, law, and adjustment of means to ends, that I believe in a cosmic intelligence, and I conceive God as the life, mind, order, and law of the world.

I do not understand my God, and I find in nature and history many instances of apparent evil, disorder, cruelty, and aimlessness. But I realize that I see these with a very limited vision, and that they might appear quite otherwise from a cosmic point of view. How can an infinitesimal part of the universe understand the whole? We are drops of water trying to understand the sea.

I believe that I am the product of a natural evolution. The logic of evolution seems to compel determinism, but I cannot overcome my direct consciousness of a limited freedom of will.

I believe that if I could see any form of matter from within, as I can see myself through introspection, I should find in all forms of matter something akin to what in ourselves is mind and freedom.

I define virtue as any quality that makes for survival, but as the survival of the group is more important than the survival of the average individual, the highest virtues are those that make for group survival—love, sympathy, kindliness, cooperation. If my life lived up to my ideals I would combine the ethics of Confucius and Christ—the virtues of a developing individual with those of the member of a group.

I was a Socialist in my youth and sympathized with the Soviet regime until I visited Russia in 1932; what I saw there led me to deprecate the extension of that system to any other land. Experience and history have taught me the instinctive bases and economic necessity of competition and private property.

I am not so fanatical a worshiper of liberty as some of my radical or conservative friends. When liberty exceeds intelligence, it begets chaos, which begets dictatorship. We have too much economic liberty in the later nineteenth century, due to our free land and our relative exemption from external danger. We have too much moral liberty today, due to increasing wealth and diminishing religious belief. The age of liberty is ending, under the pressure of external dangers; the freedom of the part varies with the security of the whole.

I do not resent the conflicts and difficulties of life. In my case, they have been far outweighed by good fortune, reasonable health, loyal friends, and a happy family life. I have met so many good people that I have almost lost my faith in the wickedness of mankind.

I suspect when I die I shall be dead. I would look upon endless existence as a curse—as did the Flying Dutchman and the Wandering Jew. Death is life’s greatest invention, perpetually replacing the worn with the new. And after twenty volumes, it will be sweet to sleep."

Will Durant was a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and philosopher. He spent nearly 50 years writing his 11-volume work “The History of Civilization.” Many of his later works were written in collaboration with his wife, Ariel. Durant received the Presidential Medial of Freedom in 1977.

Posted by admin on July 8, 2010

I’m an agnostic that has never read the Bible. It is obviously a good book to have read and I would like to finally take the time to tackle it. However, it is also an extremely difficult read and my past attempts have left me bored and confused.

Most bible study guides that I have been looking for have obvious agendas. The Christian study guides focus too much on what God is "really trying to say" in a particular passage. Then there’s the atheist study guides that seem to promote how they point out all the perceived lies Christians use from the bible to promote their own religious/political agenda. What I’m looking for is something something more secular. I want to read use the study guide only to help me understand more about the bible and not feel like I’m having something crammed down my throat.

I’m hoping to get some suggestions on books that focus on the historical origins of each book of the old and new testament as well as any cultural influences that could have inspired the stories and motivations of the bible. I know it may be unlikely that there’s a book that explains everything in the bible that well in one easy-to-use study guide, so suggestions for multiple study guides would also be appreciated.

Thanks for your suggestions.

Look for something on cultural anthropology and the bible… not the archeology stuff but the cultural studies. You might find exactly what you are looking for. Sorry I have no specific suggestions. Good luck!

Posted by admin on July 8, 2010

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Posted by admin on July 8, 2010

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Posted by admin on June 30, 2010

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Posted by admin on June 30, 2010

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