Raganellis Quotes & Sayings
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Top Raganellis Quotes
I think the one group I am trying to appeal to is the world. That would be big enough. — Estelle
Aeronautics was neither an industry nor a science. It was a miracle. — Igor Sikorsky
From the catbird seat, I've found poetry to be the necessary utterance it has always been in America. — Natasha Trethewey
Just once I want someone to be afraid of losing me," Phoebe said. "But the only thing Luke's afraid of losing is power. — Robyn Schneider
Great changes are easier than small ones. — Francis Bacon
I know how easy it is to be swept away by stories, by things you wish were real. — Derek Landy
Jesus Christ spoke frankly to His disciples concerning the future ... In unmistakable language He told them that discipleship means a life of self-denial, and the bearing of a cross. — Billy Graham
It turns out Dungeons & Dragons is much better on paper than it is in reality. — Robin Sloan
I'd never get the sound of her screams out of my head, or my heart.
Is this what it meant to be the hero? — April Genevieve Tucholke
If there are young ladies in the world at her time of life more dull of fancy and more careless of pleasing, I know them not and never wish to know them. — Jane Austen
Pain can drive you to a sense of hopelessness and despair, or it can drive you to God. It's your choice. — Jan Northington
People do dismiss ambient music, don't they? They call it 'easy listening,' as if to suggest that it should be hard to listen to. — Brian Eno
Marry me."
Hiding his immense relief, Lock replied, "Shouldn't we get to know each other better?"
"What else is there to know?" she asked, her eyes gazing hungrily on his mouth, — Shelly Laurenston
God cautions us in Isaiah 55:9 that his ways are not ours and his thoughts are higher than our thoughts (undoubtedly one of the grander understatements).
God is warning us that he is not logical and that believing him to be logical will lead to all kinds of disappointment.
Logic has been defined as 'the science or history of the human mind, as it traces the progress of our knowledge from our first conceptions through their different combinations, and the numerous deductions that result from comparing them with one another.'
Doesn't sound much like God. Yet, we so often strain our relatively minuscule brains to conceive, combine, compare, and deduce. Then we fault God when his conclusions disagree.
The repetition of this useless exercise leads to a form of insanity which ultimately manifests in denial of the existence of such an illogical God. — Ron Brackin