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Quotes About Toleration

Every church, yea, every truth and every good cause, has its martyrs, who stood the fiery trial and sacrificed comfort and life itself to their sacred convictions. The blood of martyrs is the seed of toleration; toleration is the seed of liberty; and liberty is the most precious gift of God to every man who has been made in his image and redeemed by Christ.
~ Philip Schaff
No evil can result from its inhibition more pernicious than its toleration.
~ Martin Van Buren
Intolerance respecting other people's religion is toleration itself in comparison with intolerance respecting other people's art.
~ Wallace Stevens
After a few generations of warfare, though, the fanatics were either killed along with their backups, or were persuaded to modify their positions.  Most of the religious pockets had evolved into low-density lands devoted to agriculture, abundance, popular piety, and toleration. 
~ Walter Jon Williams
Thus the essence of freedom of opinion is not in mere toleration as such, but in the debate which toleration provides: it is not in the venting of opinion, but in the confrontation of opinion.
~ Walter Lippmann
What a most unreasonably stubborn man," he said. "One must be more open to opposing views in this world." "You don't say." "Oh, indeed! As our late father often said, 'Toleration is good for all or it is good for none.
~ Daniel Stashower
Toleration is good for all or it is good for none.
~ Daniel Stashower
A government had better go to the very extreme of toleration, than to do aught that could be construed into an interference with, or to jeopardize in any degree, the common rights of its citizens.
~ Doris Kearns Goodwin
He then took his listeners back to their common beginnings, to the founding of the nation, unraveling a narrative to demonstrate that when the Constitution was adopted, "the plain, unmistakable spirit of that age, towards slavery, was hostility to the principle, and toleration, only by necessity
~ Doris Kearns Goodwin
The conviction that the world and man is something that had better not have been, is of a kind to fill us with indulgence towards one another.
~ Arthur Schopenhauer
All the great religions of the world inculcate equality and brotherhood of mankind and the virtue of toleration.
~ Mahatma Gandhi
Toleration is the greatest gift of the mind; it requires the same effort of the brain that it takes to balance oneself on a bicycle.
~ Helen Keller
What is toleration? It is the prerogative of humanity. We are all steeped in weaknesses and errors: Let us forgive one another's follies, it is the first law of nature.
~ Voltaire
Sufferance is the badge of all our tribe.
~ William Shakespeare
Patience means self-suffering.
~ Mahatma Gandhi
If there was no other proof of the infinite patience of God, a very good one could be found in His toleration of the pictures that are painted of Him.
~ Thomas Merton
The various modes of worship which prevailed in the Roman world were all considered by the people as equally true; by the philosopher as equally false; and by the magistrate as equally useful. And thus toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but even religious concord.
~ Edward Gibbon
According to the maxims of universal toleration, the Romans protected a superstition which they despised.
~ Edward Gibbon
The various modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman world, were all considered by the people, as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as equally useful. And thus toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but even religious concord. The
~ Edward Gibbon
The ideal of toleration sounds like a formal condition allowing all flowers to bloom, but it turns out on examination to adumbrate a determinate form of life no less intrusive than the Sharia or "fundamentalist" Christianity.
~ Kenneth Minogue
In our country we ask no toleration for religion and its free exercise, but we claim it as an inalienable right.
~ Philip Schaff
Toleration in religion was one of the great rights of man, and a man ought never to be deprived of what was his natural right.
~ Charles James Fox
I take toleration to be a part of religion. I do not know which I would sacrifice; I would keep them both: it is not necessary that I should sacrifice either.
~ Edmund Burke
I have learned silence from the talkative, toleration from the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet, strange, I am ungrateful to those teachers.
~ Khalil Gibran