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Quotes About Forgiveness

Mercy often inflicts death.
~ Seneca the Younger
Are you the sum total of your worst acts?
~ Bryan Stevenson
A place where something so terrible had happened shouldn't continue to exist in the world
~ Ron Rash, Serena
Fifteen years ago I killed my sister.
~ Unknown
Death is a mercy, and I have enough mercy to go around.
~ Lucian
A dead man is the worst enemy alive, I thought. You can't alter his power over you. You can't alter what you love or owe. And it's too late to ask him for his absolution. He has beaten you all ways.
~ Unknown
it, making amends to father is hard work—all that hacking through the undergrowth of stale pathology with the machete of one's guilt.
~ Philip Roth
3) Take a vacation from your grievances. (4) The regularity of it isn't totally worthless.
~ Philip Roth
It is from his mother that Mr. Sabbath inherited his own ability never to get over anything.
~ Philip Roth
The important thing was to forget about Iris's hair and let her speak, let her find her fluency and, from the soft streaming of her own words, create for him his apologia.
~ Philip Roth
women much like this prostitute fled toward Jesus, not away from him. The worse a person felt about herself, the more likely she saw Jesus as a refuge. Has the church lost that gift?
~ Philip Yancey
On a small scale, person-to-person, Jesus encountered the kinds of suffering common to all of us. And how did he respond? Avoiding philosophical theories and theological lessons, he reached out with healing and compassion. He forgave sin, healed the afflicted, cast out evil, and even overcame death.
~ Philip Yancey
Jesus never met a disease he could not cure, a birth defect he could not reverse, a demon he could not exorcise. But he did meet skeptics he could not convince and sinners he could not convert. Forgiveness of sins requires an act of will on the receiver's part, and some who heard Jesus' strongest words about grace and forgiveness turned away unrepentant.
~ Philip Yancey
We dare not invest so much in the kingdom of this world that we neglect our main task of introducing people to a different kind of kingdom, one based solely on God's grace and forgiveness. Passing laws to enforce morality serves a necessary function, to dam up evil, but it never solves human problems.
~ Philip Yancey
Imperfection is the prerequisite for grace. Light only gets in through the cracks.
~ Philip Yancey
God. Grace means there is nothing we can do to make God love us more —no amount of spiritual calisthenics and renunciations, no amount of knowledge gained from seminaries and divinity schools, no amount of crusading on behalf of righteous causes. And grace means there is nothing we can do to make God love us less —no amount of racism or pride or pornography or adultery or even murder. Grace means that God already loves us as much as an infinite God can possibly love.
~ Philip Yancey
Grace means there is nothing we can do to make God love us more... And grace means there is nothing we can do to make God love us less... Grace means that God already loves us as much as an infinite God can possibly love.
~ Philip Yancey
Whatever else we may say about it, the atonement fulfills the Jewish principle that only one who has been hurt can forgive. At Calvary, God chose to be hurt.
~ Philip Yancey
In my lifelong study of the Bible I have looked for an overarching theme, a summary statement of what the whole sprawling book is about. I have settled on this: "God gets his family back." From the first book to the last the Bible tells of wayward children and the tortuous lengths to which God will go to bring them home. Indeed, the entire biblical drama ends with a huge family reunion in the book of Revelation.
~ Philip Yancey
grace means there is nothing I can do to make God love me more, and nothing I can do to make God love me less. It means that I, even I who deserve the opposite, am invited to take my place at the table in God's family.
~ Philip Yancey
Don't judge Christ by those of us who imperfectly bear his name.
~ Philip Yancey
The only hope for any of us, regardless of our particular sins, lies in a ruthless trust in a God who inexplicably loves sinners, including those who sin differently than we do.
~ Philip Yancey
Jesus, who did not sin, also felt pain.
~ Philip Yancey
Ungrace does its work quietly and lethally, like a poisonous, undetectable gas. A father dies unforgiven. A mother who once carried a child in her own body does not speak to that child for half its life. The toxin steals on, from generation to generation.
~ Philip Yancey