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Quotes About Children

It is not necessary to make your children hermits; you should make them gentlemen. That would be more than enough.
~ Rajmohan Gandhi
Have I become one of those bores who talk too much about their children?
~ Ralph Ellison
Sorrow makes us all children again[,] destroys all differences of intellect[.] The wisest know nothing[.]
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
The fair Saxon man, with open front, and honest meaning, domestic, affectionate, is not the wood out of which cannibal, or inquisitor, or assassin is made. But he is moulded for law, lawful trade, civility, marriage, the nurture of children, for colleges, churches, charities, and colonies.
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
Some of the best portrayals I've seen of the eternal Heaven are in children's books. Why? Because they depict earthly scenes, with animals and people playing, and joyful activities. The books for adults, on the other hand, often try to be philosophical, profound, ethereal, and otherworldly. But that kind of Heaven is precisely what the Bible doesn't portray as the place where we'll live forever. John
~ Randy Alcorn
I have no room for a God who lets children die." "The innkeeper had no room, but it did not thwart God's plan. Who is Ben Fielding to have no room for God? Shall the dog decide whether there is room in the house for the Master? Shall the cricket decide whether there is room in the forest for the Lion?
~ Randy Alcorn
Imagine if our churches were known for being communities of Jesus-centered happiness, overflowing with the sheer gladness of what it means to live out the good news of great joy. Imagine if our children brought their friends to church and their comment was, "Those people seem so nice . . . and happy.
~ Randy Alcorn
The average American shops six hours a week while spending forty minutes playing with his children.
~ Randy Alcorn
Perhaps parents' greatest heritage to pass on to their children is the ability to perceive the multitude of God's daily blessings and to respond with continual gratitude. We should be "abounding in thanksgiving" (Colossians 2:7).
~ Randy Alcorn
We cannot expect God to bless and honor our efforts to help the needy if part of our "help" includes distributing chemicals and devices that may kill children who belong not to us, but to them, and above all to God.
~ Randy Alcorn
The Bible indicates that God will not permit anything to happen that he can't use to bring ultimate good to his people and to glorify himself. That's his promise. Therefore, even the most terrible evil his children endure would not be pointless.
~ Randy Alcorn
Our society is walking through a maze of cultural land mines and the heaviest price is exacted as we send our children on ahead.
~ Ravi Zacharias
It is good to renew one's wonder, said the philosopher. Space travel has again made children of us all.
~ Ray Bradbury
MOTHER: Why, just lying there, Jim, you run so fast. I never saw anyone move so much, just sleeping. Promise me, Jim. Wherever you go and come back, bring lots of kids. Let them run wild. Let me spoil them, some day. JIM: I'm never going to own anything that can hurt me.
~ Ray Bradbury
Women never wake then, do they? They sleep the sleep of babes and children.
~ Ray Bradbury
At the very moment Mrs. Bentley was smiling down upon them with her yellow mask face, around a corner like an elfin band came an ice-cream wagon. It jingled out icy melodies, as crisp and rimmed as crystal wine-glasses tapped by an expert, summoning all. The children sat up, turning their heads, like sunflowers after the sun. (Season of Disbelief)
~ Ray Bradbury
Midnight then and the town clocks chiming on toward one and two and then three in the deep morning and the peals of the great clocks shaking dust off old toys in high attics and shedding silver off old mirrors in yet higher attics and stirring up dreams about clocks in all the beds where children slept.
~ Ray Bradbury
I try to keep up with what's being done in every field, and most children's books are ten times more enjoyable than the average American novel right now.
~ Ray Bradbury
It was seven o'clock, supper over, and the boys gathering one by one from the sound of their house doors slammed and their parents crying to them not to slam the doors.
~ Ray Bradbury
I plunk the children in school nine days out of ten. I put up with them when they come home three days a month; it's not bad at all. You heave them into the 'parlor' and turn the switch. It's like washing clothes; stuff laundry in and slam the lid." Mrs. Bowles tittered. "They'd just as soon kick as kiss me. Thank God, I can kick back!
~ Ray Bradbury
It is good to renew one's wonder," said the philosopher. "Space travel has again made children of us all.
~ Ray Bradbury
Children are carpets, they should be stepped on occasionally.
~ Ray Bradbury
That's how I think of children, cruel as they sometimes are, mean as I know they can be, but not yet showing the meanness around their eyes or in their eyes, not yet full of tiredness. They're so eager for everything! I guess that's what I miss most in older folks, the eagerness gone nine times out of ten, the freshness gone, so much of the drive and life down the drain. I like to watch school let out each day. It's like someone threw a bunch of flowers out the school front doors.
~ Ray Bradbury
Did you hear them, did you hear these monsters talking about monsters? Oh God, the way they jabber about people and their own children and themselves and the way they talk about their husbands and the way they talk about war, dammit, I stand here and I can't believe it!
~ Ray Bradbury