Karen Armstrong Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Karen Armstrong's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Author Karen Armstrong's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 170 quotes on this page collected since November 14, 1944! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
  • If we want to create a viable, peaceful world, we've got to integrate compassion into the gritty realities of 21st century life.

    "Karen Armstrong argues for practical compassion". Interview with Heidi Bruce, www.csmonitor.com. April 17, 2012.
  • We talk about God as though he was like a somebody. We ask him to bless our nation, or save our Queen, or give us a fine day for the picnic. And we actually expect him to be on our side in an election or war even though our opponents are also God's children.

    "Big Think Interview With Karen Armstrong". Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 16, 2009.
  • We should probably all pause to confront our past from time to time, because it changes its meaning as our circumstances alter.

    Karen Armstrong (2010). “The Spiral Staircase”, p.20, Vintage Canada
  • Theology is-- or should be-- a species of poetry,which read quickly or encountered in a hubbub of noise makes no sense. You have to open yourself to a poem with a quiet, receptive mind, in the same way you might listen to a difficult piece of music... If you seize upon a poem and try to extort its meaning before you are ready, it remains opaque. If you bring your own personal agenda to bear upon it, the poem will close upon itself like a clam, because you have denied its unique and separate identity, its inviolate holiness.

  • Religions have found that if you behave in a certain way, if you sort of perform certain rituals that expand your mind and make you realize that will make you realize and help you to seguey into transcendence and perform certain acts, adopt a certain lifestyle, you develop new capacities of mind and heart, just like the dancer, or the athlete that make you into a whole human being and principle after one of these disciplines right across the board in all of the faiths is compassion, the ability to feel with the other person.

    Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 16, 2009.
  • It's quite common for a Sufi mystic to cry in ecstasy that he's neither a Jew, a Christian, nor a Muslim. He is at home equally in a synagogue, a mosque, a temple, or a church because when one's glimpsed the divine, one's left these man-made distinctions behind.

    "Big Think Interview With Karen Armstrong". Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 16, 2009.
  • Religion starts with the perception that something is wrong.

    Karen Armstrong (2011). “A History Of God”, p.43, Random House
  • God [is] not the exclusive property of any one tradition. The divine light [cannot] be confined to a single lamp, belonging to the East or the West, but enlightens all human beings.

  • Respect only has meaning as respect for those with whom I do not agree.

    "A History of God". Book by Karen Armstrong, 1993.
  • But human beings fall easily into despair, and from the very beginning we invented stories that enabled us to place our lives in a larger setting, that revealed an underlying pattern, and gave us a sense that, against all the depressing and chaotic evidence to the contrary, life had meaning and value.

    Karen Armstrong (2004). “A Short History Of Myth”, p.2, Canongate Books
  • Compassion is not a popular virtue

    Karen Armstrong (2011). “The Great Transformation: The World in the Time of Buddha, Socrates, Confucius and Jeremiah”, p.378, Atlantic Books Ltd
  • We are what we are because of the hard work, insights and achievements of countless others.

  • Western liberal humanism is not something that comes naturally to us: like an appreciation of art or poetry, it has to be cultivated. Humanism is itself a religion without God-not all religions, of course, are theistic. Our ethical secular ideal has it's own disciplines of mind and heart and gives people the means of finding faith in the ultimate meaning of human life that were once provided by the more conventional religions.

  • Alexander's achievement was not the conquest of India, but the feat of actually getting there and his two years in India were more of a geographical expedition than a military campaign. .... a Greek army had reached what they regarded as the end of the earth. They had pitted themselves against the ultimate as bravely as the yogins had struggled to break through the limits of the human psyche. Where mystics had conquered interior space, Alexander explored the farthest reaches of the physical world. .... like many of the axial sages, he was constantly 'straining after more'.

  • I learned a lot from both, initially Jewish and Muslim theologians that had been missing, perhaps from my rather parochial Catholic upbringing.

    Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 16, 2009.
  • I tremble for our world, where, in the smallest ways, we find it impossible, as Marshall Hodgson enjoined, to find room for the other in our minds. If we cannot accommodate a viewpoint in a friend without resorting to unkindness, how can we hope to heal the terrible problems of our planet? I no longer think that any principle or opinion is worth anything if it makes you unkind or intolerant.

    Karen Armstrong (2010). “The Spiral Staircase”, p.333, Vintage Canada
  • My study of religion, which I regard in many ways as an art form, is a search for meaning.

    "A conversation with Karen Armstrong". Interview with Maranda Pleasant, www.marandapleasantmedia.com.
  • Each of the world religions has its own particular genius, its own special insight into the nature and requirements of compassion, and has something unique to teach us.

    Karen Armstrong (2011). “Twelve Steps to a Compassionate Life”, p.56, Random House
  • We are addicted to our egotism, our likes and dislikes and prejudices, and depend upon them for our own sense of identity.

  • Here in America, religious people often prefer to be right rather than compassionate. They've lost the Axial Age vision of concern for everybody.

    People  
  • From the Rabbis of the early Talmudic age I learned that there is never a last word on God. There's, you always continue to question. Even God himself could be questioned and you can keep arguing with one another and there will be no end to this conversation about the divine because no human expression of God can be ultimate.

    Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 16, 2009.
  • There are some forms of religion that are bad, just as there's bad cooking or bad art or bad sex, you have bad religion too.

    NOW: Bill Moyers Interviews Karen Armstrong, www.pbs.org.
  • A science can diagnose a cancer and can even find a cure for it, but it can't, and a scientist will be the first to say, it's can't help you to deal with the stress and disappointment and terror that comes with a diagnosis, and nor can it help you to die well, like Socrates, kindly, not railing against faith, but in possession of your own death. For these imponderable questions people have turned to mythos.

    Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 16, 2009.
  • Let's use our stories to encourage listening to one another and to hear not just the good news, but also the pain that lies at the back of a lot of people's stories and histories.

    People  
    "Practical Compassion". Interview with Heidi Bruce, www.yesmagazine.org. April 12, 2012.
  • Religious ideas and practices take root not because they are promoted by forceful theologians, nor because they can be shown to have a sound historical or rational basis, but because they are found in practice to give the faithful a sense of sacred transcendence.

    Karen Armstrong (2002). “Islam: A Short History”, Random House Digital, Inc.
  • At the beginning of the twentieth century, every single leading Muslim intellectual was in love with the west, and wanted their countries to look just like Britain and France.

    "Now" with Bill Moyers, www.pbs.org.
  • From the Muslims I learned from the extraordinary pluralism of the Koran, the fact that the Koran endorses every single one of the major world faiths, but I was particularly enthralled by the Sufi tradition, the mystical tradition of Islam, which is so open to other religious faiths.

    Interview with Austin Allen, bigthink.com. November 16, 2009.
  • Creation stories had never been regarded as historically accurate; their purpose was therapeutic. But once you start reading Genesis as scientifically valid, you have bad science and bad religion.

    Karen Armstrong (2004). “A Short History Of Myth”, p.137, Canongate Books
  • Theologians in all the great faiths have devised all kinds of myths to show that this type of kenosis, of self-emptying, is found in the life of God itself. They do not do this because it sounds edifying, but because this is the way that human nature seems to work. We are most creative and sense other possibilities that transcend our ordinary experience when we leave ourselves behind.

    Karen Armstrong (2010). “The Spiral Staircase”, p.313, Vintage Canada
  • If we don't manage to implement the Golden Rule globally, so that we treat all peoples, wherever and whoever they may be, as though they were as important as ourselves, I doubt that we'll have a viable world to hand on to the next generation.

    "Karen Armstrong Builds A 'Case For God'". Interview with Terry Gross, www.npr.org. September 21, 2009.
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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 170 quotes from the Author Karen Armstrong, starting from November 14, 1944! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!