70 Saints’ Quotes to Elevate Your Game!
From the moment Christ handed Peter the keys, the Roman Catholic Church has played an essential role in pulling the world up from savagery and barbarism to reach new heights as a civilization of love. Wherever the Roman Catholic Church flourishes, the culture thrives. No longer is man subject to his base wants and lusts and desires, but is released to strive for the summit of perfection.
Pope Benedict wrote:
“Thanks to Tradition, guaranteed by the ministry of the apostles and their successors, the water of life that flowed from the side of Christ and his saving blood comes to the women and men of all times. In this way, Tradition is the permanent presence of the Savior who comes to meet, redeem and sanctify us in the Spirit through the ministry of his Church for the glory of the Father.”
The saints who have gone before us are the witness, par excellence, to this tethering to Truth that enlightens and inspires and elevates mankind. These 70 quotes are but a glance at the 2,000 year history of the “Heroes in Holiness.” Let us allow their impressive lives inspire ours.
1. If you are what you should be, you will set the whole world ablaze! -St. Catherine of Sienna
2. This is the very perfection of a man, to find out his own imperfections. -St. Augustine
3. To live is to change, and to be perfect is to have changed often. -Bl. John Henry Cardinal Newman
4. He who climbs never stops going from beginning to beginning, through beginnings that have no end. He never stops desiring what he already knows. –St. Gregory of Nissa
5. Let us begin in earnest to work out our salvation, for no one will do it for us, since even He Himself, Who made us without ourselves, will not save us without ourselves. -St. Margaret Mary Alacoque
6. It was pride that changed angels into devils; it is humility that makes men as angels. -Saint Augustine
7. To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible. -St. Thomas Aquinas
8. Our hearts were made for You, O Lord, and they are restless until they rest in you. -St. Augustine of Hippo
9. Pray, Hope, and Don’t Worry -St. Pio of Pietrelcino
10. You must ask God to give you power to fight against the sin of pride which is your greatest enemy – the root of all that is evil, and the failure of all that is good. For God resists the proud. -St. Vincent de Paul
11. Pray as though everything depended on God. Work as though everything depended on you. -St. Augustine
12. Love to be real, it must cost—it must hurt—it must empty us of self. -Mother Teresa
13. To love God is something greater than to know Him. -St. Thomas Aquinas
14. We are to love God for Himself, because of a twofold reason; nothing is more reasonable, nothing more profitable. -St. Bernard of Clairvaux
15. It is not hard to obey when we love the one whom we obey. -St. Ignatius of Loyola
16. You cannot be half a saint; you must be a whole saint or no saint at all. -St. Therese of Lisieux
17. The most powerful weapon to conquer the devil is humility. For, as he does not know at all how to employ it, neither does he know how to defend himself from it. -Saint Vincent de Paul
18. Teach us to give and not count the cost. -St. Ignatius de Loyola
19. Charity is no substitute for justice withheld – St. Augustine
20. The source of justice is not vengeance but charity. -Saint Bridget of Sweden
21. Fortitude is the disposition of soul which enables us to despise all inconveniences and the loss of things not in our power. –St. Augustine
22. I know well that the greater and more beautiful the work is, the more terrible will be the storms that rage against it. -St. Faustina
23. Moreover, Christians are born for combat, whereof the greater the vehemence, the more assured, God willing, the triumph: ‘Have confidence; I have overcome the world’ (John 16:33) –Pope Leo XIII
24. Temperance is a disposition that restrains our desires for things which it is base to desire. –St. Augustine
25. Our body has this defect that, the more it is provided care and comforts, the more needs and desires it finds. –St. Teresa of Avila
26. If you would rise, shun luxury, for luxury lowers and degrades. -St John Chrysostom
27. Dost thou hold wisdom to be anything other than truth, wherein we behold and embrace the supreme good? –St. Augustine
28. Let your old age be childlike, and your childhood like old age; that is, so that neither may your wisdom be with pride, nor your humility without wisdom. -St. Augustine
29. God gives each one of us sufficient grace ever to know His holy will, and to do it fully. -St. Ignatius of Loyola
30. Understanding is the reward of faith. Therefore seek not to understand that thou mayest believe, but believe that thou mayest understand. –St. Augustine
31. Understanding is the sure and clear knowledge of some invisible thing. –St. Bernard
32. Thus understanding and love, that is, the knowledge of and delight in the truth, are, as it were, the two arms of the soul, with which it embraces and comprehends with all the saints the length and breath, the height and depth, that is the eternity, the love, the goodness, and the wisdom of God. –St. Bernard
33. Listen and attend with the ear of your heart -St. Benedict
34. We judge all things according to the divine truth. – St. Augustine
35. A scrap of knowledge about sublime things is worth more than any amount about trivialities. –St. Thomas Aquinas
36. In so far as divine love beautifies our souls. And makes us pleasing to His divine Majesty, it is called grace; in so far as it gives us strength to do good, it is called charity; but when it reaches such a degree of perfection, that it makes us not only do the good, but do so carefully, frequently and readily, then it is called devotion. –St. Francis de Sales
37. Charity and devotion differ no more, the one from the other, than the flame from the fire. –St. Francis de Sales
38. Devotion is a certain act of the will by which man gives himself promptly to divine service. –St. Thomas Aquinas
39. It is better to say one Our Father fervently and devoutly than a thousand with no devotion and full of distraction. — St. Edmund
40. For I have learnt for a fact that nothing so effectively obtains, retains and regains grace, as that we should always be found not high-minded before God, but filled with holy fear. –St. Bernard
41. We must fear God out of love, not love Him out of fear. -Saint Francis de Sales
42. Our hearts were made for You, O Lord, and they are restless until they rest in you. -St. Augustine
43. The fruits of charity are joy, peace, and mercy; charity demands beneficence and fraternal correction; it is benevolence; it fosters reciprocity and remains disinterested and generous; it is friendship and communion: Love is itself the fulfillment of all our works. There is the goal; that is why we run: we run toward it, and once we reach it, in it we shall find rest. –St. Augustine
44. Charity brings to life again those who are spiritually dead. –St. Thomas Aquinas
45. Charity is the form, mover, mother, and root of all virtues. –St. Thomas Aquinas
46. Joy is a net of love by which we catch souls. -Mother Teresa
47. Joy is very infectious; therefore, be always full of joy. –Mother Teresa
48. Let the brothers ever avoid appearing gloomy, sad, and clouded, like the hypocrites; but let one ever be found joyous in the Lord, gay, amiable, gracious, as is meet. –St. Francis
49. But above all preserve peace of heart. This is more valuable than any treasure. In order to preserve it there is nothing more useful than renouncing your own will and substituting for it the will of the divine heart. In this way his will can carry out for us whatever contributes to his glory, and we will be happy to be his subjects and to trust entirely in him. -St Margaret Mary Alacoque
50. Who except God can give you peace? Has the world ever been able to satisfy the heart? -Saint Gerard Majella
51. Patience is the companion of wisdom. –St. Augustine
52. Be kind to all and severe to thyself. –St. Teresa of Avila
53. To convert somebody go and take them by the hand and guide them. -St. Thomas Aquinas
54. Be a good child, and God will help you. -St. Joan of Arc
55. To attribute to God, and not to self, whatever good one sees in oneself; but to recognize always that the evil is one’s own doing, and to impute it on one’s self. –St. Benedict
56. This, in short, is the difference between us and others who know not God, that in misfortune they complain and murmur, while the adversity does not call us away from the truth of virtue and faith, but strengthens us by its suffering. –St. Cyprian
57. Nothing appeases an enraged elephant so much as the sight of a little lamb. –St. Francis de Sales
58. When you encounter difficulties and contradictions, do not try to break them, but bend them with gentleness and time. –St. Francis de Sales
59. He who can preserve gentleness amid pains, and peace amid worry multitude of affairs, is almost perfect. –St. Francis de Sales
60. For Faith is the beginning and the end is love, and God is the two of them brought into unity. After these comes whatever else makes up a Christian gentleman. –St. Ignatius of Antioch
61. Faith means battles; if there are no contests, it is because there are none who desire to contend. –St. Ambrose
62. Faith does not quench desire, but inflames it. –St. Thomas Aquinas
63. A faint faith is better than a strong heresy. –St. Thomas More
64. It is not the actual physical exertion that counts toward a man’s progress, nor the nature of the task, but the spirit of faith with which it is undertaken. -St. Francis Xavier
65. The dress of the body should not discredit the good of the soul. St. Cyprian
66. The purpose of clothing is to keep warm in winter and to cover your nakedness, not to serve your vanity. St. Cyril of Jerusalem
67. He who is chaste in flesh should not be proud, for he should know that he owes the gift of continence to another. –Pope St. Clement I
68. I thought that continence was a matter of our own strength, and I knew that I had not the strength: for in my utter foolishness I did not know the word of Your Scripture that none can be continent unless You give it. –St. Augustine
69. Great are those two gifts, wisdom and continence: wisdom, forsooth, whereby we are formed in the knowledge of God; continence whereby we are not conformed to this world. –St. Augustine
70. Do not say that you have chaste minds if you have unchaste eyes, because an unchaste eye is the messenger of an unchaste heart. –St. Augustine