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Quote by NA Leigh

“Enclosed is a picture that I drew of myself. It was from a long time ago…when there were still three of us living in that house and under that roof. This is how I saw myself, or the man that I hoped to be one day. I kept it all these years because it reminded me of the way you used to look at me. You used to believe in me so much. Please accept it as a small token of my gratitude for everything you’ve done for me. It hasn’t gone unnoticed. I am a better man today because of you.”

Quote by NA Leigh

Work

Mr. Hinkle's Verum Ink: the navy blue book

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Author

NA Leigh

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“...the tiger is a bellwether--one of thousands of similarly vulnerable species, which are, at once, casualties of our success and symbols of our failure. The current moment is proof of our struggle to evolve (perhaps "mature" is a better word) beyond outmoded fears and attitudes, to face the fact that nature is neither our enemy nor our slave.”

“Opet krenem, vođena zvukom, idem u crkvu, idem iz očajanja, idem da se vidim s Bogom i ljudima, iako mislim da su vernici nevernici, jer ne veruju u ovaj svet, takav kakav jeste, nego u neki drugi, iako mislim da su nevernici pravi vernici, jer veruju u ovaj svet, takav kakav jeste, a ne u neki drugi, ko zna koji i kakav, eto tako mislim, pa nije čudo što je moj hram daleko, daleko, dugo ima da se ide, ali krenula sam, idem polako, idem laka koraka, zvuk me vodi, tek okupana i svetlog pogleda, u kome se reflektuju očaj i radost što se vidi istina, pa šta bude - neka bude.”

“I by no means advocate a practice of Christianity in isolation; all Christianity even that of the hermit-is a "social Christianity," but that is only as context, not as end. The Church is in society because men are in society, but the end of the Church is the transformation of men, not society. It is a good thing if a society and government profess genuine Christianity, if its institutions are informed by Christianity, because an example is given thereby to the men who are a part of that society; but a Christian society is not an end in itself, but simply a result of the fact that Christian men live in society”