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Redemption Quotes Quotes

Quotes tagged as "redemption-quotes" Showing 1-30 of 32
Dianna Hardy
“Death is my redemption,” she whispered, her tears falling on his chest before rolling into the lapping ocean.

He stilled for a moment, and she felt something warm and wet slide down her right temple and past her ear. His tear.

His nose brushed against her forehead, before his lips pressed a kiss to it. “It seems we're at a bit of an impasse, then. Because your survival is mine.”
Dianna Hardy, Blood Shadow

“Shame and self-loathing has its upside. Without despising oneself, a person might delay ascending to a heightened degree of self-consciousness. Taking the first step towards redemption requires a tremendous commitment and much willpower.”
Kilroy J. Oldster, Dead Toad Scrolls

Udai Yadla
“Repentance is the first step towards redemption.”
Udai Yadla

Amanda McTigue
“Bernice had told her once that you could feel some patient through the walls like heat through an oven door, that the ones with troubled spirits radiated that trouble out into the nearby air.”
Amanda McTigue, Going to Solace

Dianna Hardy
“Death is my redemption,” she whispered, her tears falling on his chest before rolling into the lapping ocean. He stilled for a moment, and she felt something warm and wet slide down her right temple and past her ear. His tear. His nose brushed against her forehead, before his lips pressed a kiss to it. “It seems we're at a bit of an impasse, then. Because your survival is mine.”
Dianna Hardy, Blood Shadow

D.B. Stageman
“If we all are judged on the basis of our worst day, nobody will make it to heaven.”
D.B. Stageman, The Bug's Revenge

Mitta Xinindlu
“But my soul remains in Grace, babes. All my failures are constantly redeemed too.”
Mitta Xinindlu

“Standing beside the bed, I felt calm and relaxed. I
filled the glass and unscrewed the jar of Valium. The
tablets made a little pile in my hand. I swallowed them
with a big mouthful of water. The aspirin went the same
way. Already starting to feel drowsy, I laid down on
the bed, picked up the Bible and placed it on my chest.
Holding it with both hands, I said a short prayer: 'Jesus,
receive me into your kingdom.”
Michael Nelson

Maggie Stiefvater
“Ugly never hurt a thing.”
I scoffed. “Oh, ugly has hurt some things. It’s just that pretty hurts more.”
Maggie Stiefvater, Sinner

“I will trust, Lord, that the mending of me matters more to You than the mess I am in.”
Allene van Oirschot

Kristen Smeltzer
“Have you ever experienced something in your life you never thought would touch you or your family? Have you ever felt like, ‘God! I thought we were friends, you and me? I thought you loved me. You don’t even seem to be acting according to You Word!’ …I have.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“We may say, ‘God works all things together or good.’ But if we are not waiting with expectation for our ashes to turn to beauty, this remains head knowledge—not a reflection of our faith in a God who works the impossible on our behalf, simply because He loves us.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“Holding an expectation of God actually honors Him. A heart of faith-filled expectation says, ‘I know You are good. I know You are all-powerful. I know You are a loving Father and a faithful friend, and I anticipate You being just that.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“My focus had to be on God and who He is, not on the enemy and what he was doing. Darkness feeds on attention and fear, and I wasn't going to offer it any nourishment.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“When you are going through a dark time, one side effect can be to forget the power and the goodness of God. When God isn’t doing what you think He should, it is easy to focus on the problem, and it suddenly becomes larger than the solution—which is God Himself.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“We have often mistaken the seasons of ease in our lives for God’s blessing. God has blessed us, but what we don’t understand is that sometimes He is blessing us even more when everything appears to be falling apart at the seams.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“God pushes us to offense—without explanation—and asks us the same question Jesus asked His disciples, ‘Do you also want to go away?’ And then we have a choice. We either believe or we don’t. We either let Him be God, or we put Him in a box.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“We reduce our theology of God to match the “facts” of our circumstances, instead of the truth of who He is. In our hearts, we have tamed the Lion and cut off His mane.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer

Kristen Smeltzer
“God doesn’t see as man sees. It is a facet of His character to see people in light of who they will become, not in light of their past or even their present.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer

Kristen Smeltzer
“As we know Him (intimately), sin loses its grip on us. Our love for Him deepens, and serving Him becomes a great joy and fulfillment, not a drudgery birthed out of performance.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“Is it worth the sacrifice? Is it worth the cost? There was a time I told the Lord to “pick someone else. This is too hard!” I’m so thankful He turned a deaf ear.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“So how can God take something tragic in our lives and bring good from it? The answer isn’t found so much in the ‘how,’ but in the ‘Who.’ The answer is found in who God is. It is found in His character. It is found in the essence of His presence, in the fragrance of His being. …It is found in a love so encompassing—so extravagant—we have not the mind to comprehend it.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“It is a weapon of spiritual warfare to rejoice in the Lord, in full confidence of what God will produce from your darkness, and in the face of insurmountable evidence to the contrary.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“Any place where my heart believes I have more love, compassion or mercy than God, I have elevated myself above Him and am believing a lie. And any place where I have placed limits on His love and power, I have humanized Him and reduced Him to what my mind can comprehend.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“Ask Him for wisdom to understand what is actually the enemy at work in your life versus what is simply God allowing you to be buffeted and trained for your destiny.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“No one is meant to fight a war against the enemy in vain. God delights in granting our request for redemptive spoils of our spiritual warfare.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“We are not meant to come through our battles as merely survivors. We are meant to come off the battlefield as victors, and to lead others out to victory, as well.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

Kristen Smeltzer
“In God’s justice system, it is the battle with the lions, bears, and the giants of the land that equips us to be kings.”
Kristen M. Smeltzer, Who Do You Say I Am?: Overcoming the Spirit of Identity Theft

L. Frank Baum
“It's always best to reform when it's no longer safe to remain wicked.”
L. Frank Baum, Sky Island

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