Famous Spiritual LeaderQuotes & Wisdom
Explore 8 spiritual leaders including C.S. Lewis, Corrie ten Boom, Mother Teresa, with sourced quotes and wisdom.
Featured Spiritual Leader Quotes
“God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pain: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”
Written in 1940, this passage captures Lewis's central argument that suffering is not evidence against God's love but the very tool by which God breaks through human self-sufficiency. The "megaphone" image became one of his most quoted metaphors. He would test this theology personally two decades later when his wife Joy Davidman died of cancer, writing A Grief Observed as a raw account of his own grief.
“The safest road to hell is the gradual one — the gentle slope, soft underfoot, without sudden turnings, without milestones, without signposts.”
From letter 12, in which the demon Screwtape advises his nephew Wormwood on temptation strategy. Lewis's satirical conceit — letting the enemy speak — exposed the mechanics of moral decline with a directness that a straightforward sermon might not achieve. The "gentle slope" became one of his most enduring warnings about the complacency of incremental compromise.
“If we find ourselves with a desire that nothing in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that we were made for another world.”
Lewis built his apologetic partly on this observation: if every natural desire has a corresponding satisfaction — hunger has food, loneliness has community — then a desire for which nothing in this world provides full satisfaction is most naturally explained by the existence of another world. He called this longing Sehnsucht, a German word for a deep, bittersweet ache for something beyond reach.
“Friendship is born at that moment when one person says to another: "What! You too? I thought I was the only one."”
Lewis is describing the moment of intellectual or spiritual recognition between two people — the discovery that one is not alone in seeing what one sees. He believed this distinguished true friendship from mere companionship. It was the same experience that bound the Inklings together: Tolkien, Charles Williams, Owen Barfield, and Hugo Dyson, who each recognised in the others something the wider world had not yet acknowledged.
“We are not necessarily doubting that God will do the best for us; we are wondering how painful the best will turn out to be.”
Written about a year before Joy Davidman's death from cancer. The observation cuts through pious reassurance with surgical honesty: the fear is not that God will fail us, but that what God considers best for us will be very painful. This letter anticipates the raw grief Lewis recorded in A Grief Observed (1961).
“Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point.”
From The Screwtape Letters, written as a satirical correspondence from a senior demon to his junior. Lewis argues that courage is not one virtue among others but the form every virtue must take under pressure — drawing on Aristotle's account of practical wisdom. Without it, temperance, justice, and compassion all collapse at the moment of actual trial.
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