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“Within your heart keep one still secret spot where dreams may go.”
Louise Driscoll“Within your heart keep one still secret spot where dreams may go.”
Louise Driscoll“Religious people are not fun... So, Jesus shows up and kids run around Him, want to be with Him. You know why? He's fun... God's a Father who likes His kids to have fun, so when Jesus shows up, the religious people get jealous because Jesus gets invited to parties and the religious people don't.”
Mark Driscoll“We will take a few moments and make fun of religious people, and we do this in love. No, we do, because we love to make fun of religious people.”
Mark Driscoll“An animal will conquer others. A Spirit-filled man conquers himself – self-discipline, self-control.”
Mark Driscoll“The big idea here is not, have you sinned, but are you changing?”
Mark Driscoll“if you can't take a nap, if you can't take a day off, heaven's going to drive you nuts.”
Mark Driscoll“There is a world of difference between being clever and being right.”
Ian Driscoll“The eleventh commandment of art: thou shalt not be boring.”
W.M. Driscoll“Eena turned aside, breathing shallowly as her mind raced with questions. She was glad he couldn’t read the confusion that swooped her up like a passing tornado. Was it even possible to genuinely love more than one man? Yes. Oh, yes.She knew it because her heart irrefutably felt it. She loved Derian; it was true. She wasn’t trying to convince herself of it, no matter what Edgar said. She yearned deeply for her captain. But she loved Ian too. She always had. Only she purposefully, appropriately, had set those feelings aside when he made the decision to pursue Angelle. But Angelle was gone now. No, Eena thought to herself, this changes nothing. She scolded her heart for longing for something spent and ended, for even considering the possibility. Her with Ian? No, no, it had to remain in the past.”
Richelle E. Goodrich, Eena, The Two Sisters“Ian closed his eyes. Beth watched emotions flicker across his face, the uncertainty, the stubbornness, the raw pain he’d lived with for so long. He didn’t always know how to express his emotions, but that didn’t mean he didn’t feel them deeply.”
Jennifer Ashley, The Madness of Lord Ian Mackenzie