“The truth is not for all men but only for those who seek it.”
Variant: The secrets of this earth are not for all men to see, but only for those who will seek them (pg. 52).
Source: Anthem
A Short History of Decay (1949)
“The truth is not for all men but only for those who seek it.”
Variant: The secrets of this earth are not for all men to see, but only for those who will seek them (pg. 52).
Source: Anthem
Donald M. MacKinnon (1913–1994) British philosopher
"Our Contemporary Christ," in Borderland Theology and Other Essays (1968), p. 82
“Faith is necessary to men; woe to him who believes in nothing!”
Victor Hugo book Les Misérables
Source: Les Misérables
Frithjof Schuon (1907–1998) Swiss philosopher
[2007, Spiritual Perspectives and Human Facts, World Wisdom, 80, 978-1-933316-42-0]
Spiritual path, Esoterism
Evelyn Beatrice Hall book The Friends of Voltaire
Source: The Friends of Voltaire (1906), Ch. 1 : D'Alembert: The Thinker, p.28
Benjamin Fish Austin (1850–1933) Nineteenth-century Canadian educator/Methodist Minister/Spiritualist
Sermon (1899)
Max Müller (1823–1900) German-born philologist and orientalist
Preface (Scribner edition, 1872) <!-- New York, Scribner p xx -->
Chips from a German Workshop (1866)
Context: He must be a man of little faith, who would fear to subject his own religion to the same critical tests to which the historian subjects all other religions. We need not surely crave a tender or merciful treatment for that faith which we hold to be the only true one. We should rather challenge it for the severest tests and trials, as the sailor would for the good ship to which he trusts his own life, and the lives of those who are dear to him. In the Science of Religion, we can decline no comparisons, nor claim any immunities for Christianity, as little as the missionary can, when wrestling with the subtle Brahmin, or the fanatical Mussulman, or the plain speaking Zulu.
“Only the person who has faith in himself is able to be faithful to others.”
Erich Fromm (1900–1980) German social psychologist and psychoanalyst
Source: Man for Himself (1947), Ch. 4
W. H. Auden book Forewords and Afterwords
"The Protestant Mystics", p. 52
Forewords and Afterwords (1973)
James Russell Lowell The Present Crisis
St. 8
The Present Crisis (1844)
Context: Careless seems the great Avenger; history's pages but record
One death-grapple in the darkness 'twixt old systems and the Word;
Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne,—
Yet that scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim unknown,
Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own.