That dread that maketh us hastily to flee from all that is not good and fall into our Lord’s breast, as the Child into the Mother’s bosom, with all our intent and with all our mind, knowing our feebleness and our great need, knowing His everlasting goodness and His blissful love, only seeking to Him for salvation, cleaving to with sure trust: that dread that bringeth us into this working, it is natural, gracious, good and true. And all that is contrary to this, either it is wrong, or it is mingled with wrong. Then is this the remedy, to know them both and refuse the wrong.
The Sixteenth Revelation, Chapter 74
“Though this reverent-dread and love be not parted asunder, yet they are not both one, but they are two in property and in working, and neither of them may be had without other. Therefore I am sure, he that loveth, he dreadeth, though that he feel it but a little.”
The Sixteenth Revelation, Chapter 74
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Julian of Norwich 372
English theologian and anchoress 1342–1416Related quotes
“Without friends no one would choose to live, though he had all other goods.”
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Nicomachean Ethics
Source: The Nicomachean Ethics
Source: 1950s, The painter and the audience' (1954), p. 107
“Though a superior is rather to be loved, yet by the insolent he ought to be feared.”
The Virtues of a Religious Superior
Herbert N. Casson cited in: Forbes magazine (1950) The Forbes scrapbook of Thoughts on the business of life. p. 158
1950s and later