A Quote by Paul Bettany

My experience of people is that they are infinitely forgivable. — © Paul Bettany
My experience of people is that they are infinitely forgivable.
We only do harm to ourselves when we harbor resentment and vitriol toward another. I do believe that everything is forgivable; some things are inexcusable but forgivable.
My objection to Christianity is that it is infinitely cruel, infinitely selfish, and, I might add, infinitely absurd.
It is astonishing how much the word infinitely is misused: everything is infinitely more beautiful, infinitely better, etc. The concept must have something pleasing about it, or its misuse could not have become so general.
The universe shudders in horror that we have this infinitely valuable, infinitely deep, infinitely rich, infinitely wise, infinitely loving God, and instead of pursuing him with steadfast passion and enthralled fury — instead of loving him with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength; instead of attributing to him glory and honor and praise and power and wisdom and strength — we just try to take his toys and run. It is still idolatry to want God for his benefits but not for himself.
Why limit yourself to the experience of your own relatively brief time on earth, according to your biological clock, when the whole realm of the human experience reaching back infinitely far is available to you?
For even the best of peace training is more theoretical than practical experience ... indirect practical experience may be the more valuable because infinitely wider.
There is no beyond, there is only here, the infinitely small, infinitely great and utterly demanding present.
It is required to find the infinitely big inside what's infinitely small to feel the presence of God.
Chess is an infinitely complex game, which one can play in infinitely numerous and varied ways.
Man lives between the infinitely large and the infinitely small.
Many young people now end a discussion with the supposedly definitive and unanswerable statement that such is their opinion, and their opinion is just as valid as anyone else's. The fact is that our opinion on an infinitely large number of questions is not worth having, because everyone is infinitely ignorant.
The role of the infinitely small in nature is infinitely great.
Experience proves that anyone who has studied geometry is infinitely quicker to grasp difficult subjects than one who has not.
There are no identical twins, or forgivable sins.
Few books today are forgivable.
Even austere, puritanical Cambridge of the Sixties was infinitely nicer and infinitely more attractive than the world I'd known before.
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