True Relation Quotes
Collection of top 20 famous quotes about True Relation
True Relation Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational True Relation quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Obsolete misleading theologies bear the same relation to the essence of true religion that scarlet fever, mumps, and measles do to education.
— Luther Burbank
Right human relations is the only true peace.
— Alice Bailey
Each Fable is inspired by some true stories which doesn't have an happy ending, unlike the Fable.
— Neetesh Dixit
If I had not felt certain that every additional trial was ordered by infinite love and mercy, I could not have survived my accumulated suffering.
— Adoniram Judson
Grumbling and gratitude are, for the child of God, in conflict. Be grateful and you won't grumble. Grumble and you won't be grateful.
— Billy Graham
True kindness is a pure divine affinity, Not founded upon human consanguinity. It is a spirit, not a blood relation, Superior to family and station.
— Henry David Thoreau
You've got to appreciate the things that come from the art of the Negro and from the heart of the man farthest down.
— William Christopher Handy
Amity itself can only be maintained by reciprocal respect, and true friends are punctilious equals.
— Herman Melville
The gift of your time and attention is love in action.
— Michael Thomas Sunnarborg
The music business has let me touch a lot of people with my talent.
— Britney Spears
Never start a sentence with the words 'No offense.
— Gretchen Rubin
No one can know a false thing, one can only believe it with certainty until it is contradicted. (Page 7)
— Orson Scott Card
Poverty is the fundamental cause of most of the physical, moral and economic ills of humanity.
— Helen Keller
No truth can be said to be seen as it is until it is seen in its relation to all other truths. In this relation only is it true.
— Elizabeth Prentiss
Crazy and insane are words used throughout history to describe people and ideas that are simply different.
— David Icke
Absolute, true and mathematical time, of itself, and from its own nature flows equably without relation to anything external.
— Isaac Newton