| Author |
Quotes |
| William Carlos Williams | What power has love but forgiveness? |
| William Congreve | Men are apt to offend where they find most goodness to forgive. |
| William Edward Hartpole Lecky | The Augustinian doctrine of the damnation of unbaptized infants and the Calvinistic doctrine of reprobation . . . surpass in atrocity any tenets that have ever been admitted into any pagan creed. |
| William Law | If our common life is not a common course of humility, self-denial, renunciation of the world, poverty of spirit, and heavenly affection, we do not live the lives of Christians. |
| William R Inge | A nation is a society united by a delusion about its ancestry and by common hatred of its neighbours. |
| William Sanday | As we groan, so also does the Holy Spirit groan with us, putting a meaning into our aspirations which they would not have of themselves. |
| William Shenstone | The proper means of increasing the love we bear our native country is to reside some time in a foreign one. |
| George MacDonald | I cannot imagine a much greater misfortune for a man than not to know, or knowing, not to minister to, any of the poor. |
| George MacDonald | As no scripture is of private interpretation, so is there no feeling in a human heart which exists in that heart alone -- which is not, in some form or degree, in every human heart. |
| William Shakespeare | O father Abram, what these Christians are, Whose own hard dealings teaches them suspect The thoughts of others! |
| William Shakespeare | The Hebrew will turn Christian, he grows kind. |
| William Shakespeare | O Lorenzo, If thou keep promise, I shall end this strife, Become a Christian and thy loving wife! |
| William Shakespeare | I never heard a passion so confused, So strange, outrageous, and so variable As the dog Jew did utter in the streets, 'My daughter! O my ducats! O my daughter! Fled with a Christian! O my Christian ducats!' |
| William Shakespeare | He tells me flatly there's no mercy for me in heaven because I am a Jew's daughter, and he says you are no good member of the commonwealth, for in converting Jews to Christians you raise the price of pork. |
| William Shakespeare | This making of Christians will raise the price of hogs, if we grow all to be pork-eaters, we shall not shortly have a rasher on the coals for money. |
| William Shakespeare | It is spoke as a Christians ought to speak. |
| William Shakespeare | A virtuous and a Christianlike conclusion-- To pray for them that have done scathe to us. |
| William Shakespeare | Methinks sometimes I have no more wit than a Christian or an ordinary man has. |
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