
“I'm empty, here at the edge of the sky.”
"Poem on Night" (trans. Jan W. Walls), in Sunflower Splendor: Three Thousand Years of Chinese Poetry, eds. Wu-chi Liu and Irving Yucheng Lo (1975), p. 139
Variant: Prayer begins where our power ends.
“I'm empty, here at the edge of the sky.”
"Poem on Night" (trans. Jan W. Walls), in Sunflower Splendor: Three Thousand Years of Chinese Poetry, eds. Wu-chi Liu and Irving Yucheng Lo (1975), p. 139
“Prayer without study would be empty. Study without prayer would be blind.”
Source: Evangelical Theology: An Introduction
“Life, for people, begins to crumble on the edges; they don't realize it.”
This has similarly been attributed to Buchan, but is actually a misrendering of a sentence from the first paragraph of John Bunyan, Discourse on Prayer. Bunyan's original sentence reads: "It is the opener of the heart of God, and a means by which the soul, though empty, is filled."
Misattributed
Source: Children of Light and the Children of Darkness
Knowing Yourself: The True in the False (1996)
“To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world.”