Famous Quotes & Sayings

Gaz Regan Quotes & Sayings

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Top Gaz Regan Quotes

The deity of Christ is the key doctrine of the scriptures. Reject it, and the Bible becomes a jumble of words without any unifying theme. Accept it, and the Bible becomes an intelligible and ordered revelation of God in the person of Jesus Christ. — J. Oswald Sanders

She nodded, wondering why couldn't she have been named Mary. Or Sue.
But no, she had to be nine-letter Elizabeth. — J.R. Ward

In comics, the writer is also the director in a certain way. So if this were a film, you wouldn't tell the cinematographer to make a good fight scene while you go and get a cup of coffee. — Max Bemis

He who bets on governments and government money bets against 6,000 years of recorded human history. — Gary North

Poetry is a kinetic arrangement of static syllables. — Carl Sandburg

Christians need to take a stand for what is right and not let evil go unchallenged. — Billy Graham

Selfless giving does not imply giving everything up - it's simply having a good time. — Frederick Lenz

The skilled observer, not the machine, was the essence of conservation. — Robert M. Edsel

I don't think it is so much the actual bath that most cats dislike; I think it's the fact that they have to spend a good part of the day putting their hair back in place. — Debbie Peterson

Beautiful things are durable things. Beautiful things you just do not deposit at a garbage dump. — Jan Kriekels

Silence is death, and you, if you talk, you die, and if you remain silent, you die. So, speak out and die. — Tahar Djaout

Being aware of the bondage is enough to free you from its clutches. — Mata Amritanandamayi

The claims which the difficult work of love lays upon our development are more than life-sized, and as beginners we are not equal to them. But if we continue to hold out and take this love upon ourselves as a burden and apprenticeship, instead of losing ourselves in all the light and frivolous play behind which mankind have concealed themselves from the most serious gravity of their existence,-then perhaps some small progress and some alleviation will become perceptible to those who come long after us; that would be much. — Rainer Maria Rilke