Faith is a kind of winged intellect. The great workmen of history have been men who believed like giants.
I found a religion that blended scientific reason with spiritual reality in a unifying faith far removed from the headlines of violence, destruction and terrorism.
Basically, there are two paths you can walk: faith or fear. It's impossible to simultaneously trust God and not trust God.
There is nothing wrong with America that faith, love of freedom, intelligence, and energy of her citizens cannot cure.
Our Heavenly Father is pleased when we don't compromise our faith and principles in times of desperation.
Biblical movies need not sermonize, just be honest to the foundational story. As powerful as the message is for people of faith, it's really great storytelling.
Faith always contains an element of risk, of venture; and we are impelled to make the venture by the affinity and attraction which we feel in ourselves.
All faith consists essentially in the recognition of a world of spiritual values behind, yet not apart from, the world of natural phenomena.
Anyone who really studies Catholicism deeply is aware of the mystical nature of our faith. Even references to Christ's mystical body has connections to that principle.
I don't think you ever really know what all you're doing, so you have to act on faith.
The only thing that stands between a man and what he wants from life is often merely the will to try it and the faith to believe that it is possible.
Faith accepts the Bible as the word and will of God and rests upon its truth without question and without other evidence.
There will always be those little minds who, out of vanity or intellectual display, will attempt to destroy faith in the very foundations of life.
Where there is the necessary technical skill to move mountains, there is no need for the faith that moves mountains.
I have to believe SF writers will continue to inspire the public to have faith in - to demand! - a future that is at least as big and bold as the past.
I want the French people to respect values that allow each individual to practice his or her faith, but in the frame of our common rules of secularism.
I was raised in a nominal Roman Catholic home, but without any really strong faith there.
Someone who wanted to challenge Orthodoxy would not be able to locate a building to hold a protest march in front of. The faith is too diffused.
A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything.
If there are Muslims who believe that they've got to kill Christians to make a way for the Islamic faith in the West, not only would they be disappointed, but it will lead to conflict, there's no doubt about that.
My faith in humanity leads me to believe that people are looking for something more elevating than the sordid details of the intimate aspects of one's personal life.