Famous Quotes About Faith
8 sourced quotes about faithfrom history's great thinkers.
Quotes About Faith
“Believe you can and you're halfway there.”
— Widely attributed to Roosevelt — appears in various documented collections; exact primary source uncertain
Roosevelt preached this in dozens of speeches as part of his philosophy of the strenuous life: that mental attitude precedes physical accomplishment. He was not speaking abstractly — he had trained himself out of childhood illness through sheer conviction that he could build a different body and character. The psychological primacy of belief was, for him, a lived discovery.
“Faith is taking the first step even when you don't see the whole staircase.”
— Widely attributed to King; origin unverified in his documented writings — commonly cited in motivational contexts
This quote captures a theme central to King''s theology of courageous action: that faith is not a state of certain knowledge but a posture of trust-in-motion. Grounded in his Baptist tradition, he repeatedly preached that moral progress requires stepping forward before outcomes are guaranteed — a principle he demonstrated by leading the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Selma to Montgomery marches with no assurance of victory.
“I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.”
— "Is Theology Poetry?" address to the Oxford Socratic Club, 6 November 1944; published in The Weight of Glory and Other Addresses
Delivered at the Oxford Socratic Club, this is Lewis's most precise statement of his conversion argument: he does not believe in Christianity despite reason but because Christianity is the framework that makes all reasoning intelligible. The sun analogy — seeing the sun directly versus seeing everything else by its light — encapsulates what philosophers call presuppositional apologetics.
“Worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrow, it empties today of its strength.”
— Clippings from My Notebook (1982)
Ten Boom recorded this insight during her post-war traveling ministry across more than 60 countries. Having survived Nazi imprisonment at Ravensbrück concentration camp by anchoring her days in prayer rather than dread, she understood worry as a spiritual drain — it spends today's strength on a tomorrow that hasn't arrived. The remedy, she taught, was not positive thinking but active trust.
“Faith is the bird that feels the light when the dawn is still dark.”
— Stray Birds (1916), Aphorism 132
Stray Birds is a collection of short aphorisms Tagore wrote in English, many drawing on Bengali folk wisdom and his own spiritual observations. The bird "feeling the light when the dawn is still dark" describes faith not as certainty about outcomes but as sensitivity to a dawning that others cannot yet perceive. It is simultaneously a description of the poet''s role (to see what others cannot yet see) and a definition of spiritual attunement.
“To overcome life's anxieties, one must have faith in oneself.”
— So Long a Letter (1979)
Ramatoulaye, the narrator, confronts profound anxiety — the death of her husband, the revelation of his second marriage, the challenge of raising twelve children alone — and finds that self-trust, rather than external support, is the only reliable foundation. Bâ herself raised nine children after her divorce, worked as a teacher, and wrote this novel largely at night after her children were in bed. The faith she describes is hard-won.
“Dreams become reality when you believe in yourself.”
— Attributed to Laura Teresa Marquez; exact source in her published work unverified
Laura Teresa Marquez is a Latina motivational speaker and author who writes on self-belief, leadership, and community empowerment. This quote reflects the core of her speaking platform: that belief precedes achievement, and that the mind's acceptance of a dream as possible is the necessary first step toward realizing it. The sentiment is consistent with her published work, though the exact book or speech source has not been independently verified.
“We are what we believe we are.”
— Widely attributed; exact source unverified in Lewis's published works
While this quote circulates widely under Lewis's name, scholars have not definitively traced it to any specific book, essay, or letter. Lewis frequently wrote about belief shaping personhood — most explicitly in "Mere Christianity" (1952), where he argued that what we believe about God determines what kind of person we become. The spirit of the line is authentically Lewisian, though caution is warranted about the precise wording.