The mysteries of war are best understood by the strong; the mysteries of race are best understood by the swift; the mysteries of life are best understood by the wise; but the mysteries of the foolishness of faith are best understood by the humble.

Submitted by: Olukayode Akintola-Peters
X

Leave a Reply

More Quotes

  • The swift do not win every race, nor the strong win every struggle – but...
  • Silence is foolish if we are wise, but wise if we are foolish. – Charles...
  • The wise respond. The foolish react. The wise think and then act. The foolish act...
  • It is wise to be humble. It is wise to avoid being complacent. It is...
  • A wise man never speaks of how wise he is but shows it. A fool...
  • The wise man says knowledge, wisdom is for all but the foolish says these all...
  • A truly wise man will learn more from a foolish question, than a true fool...
  • Foolish people call wise people wise, but wise people don’t call foolish people fools.
  • A wise man learns more from a foolish question, than a fool learns from a...
  • The beauty of a strong, lasting commitment is often best understood by a man incapable...
  • I believe we all have our wise and foolish moments. Sometimes we actually have something...
  • What sounds foolish to the wise, sounds wise to the foolish.
  • It is always wise to look ahead but foolish to try to look farther than...
  • It is a profitable thing, if one is wise, to seem foolish. – Aeschylus
  • A wise man admits the wrong but a foolish man tries to justify himself…

Copyright © 2006-2024 - Browse Quotes By Subject | Browse Quotes By Author | About Us | Blog | FAQ | Privacy Policy