Don't quarrel with your parents even if you are on the right.
Nor is mine a trumpet which summons and excites men to cut each other to pieces with mutual contradictions, or to quarrel and fight with one another; but rather to make peace between themselves, and turning with united forces against the Nature of Things
Christendom and heathendom now stand face to face. . . At bottom is a violent and irreconcilable quarrel about the nature of God and the nature of an and the ultimate nature of the universe; it is a war of dogma.
The contemporary quarrel over church and state is not really about whether a wall of separation of church and state should exist or not. . . The real question is what does 'separation' mean?
I have no quarrel with people who lack the skill or temperament to care for small children.
The great mistake about Europe is taking the countries seriously and letting them quarrel and drop bombs on one another.
Science can have no quarrel with a religion which postulates a God to whom men are His children.
I think it's odd that grown-ups quarrel so easily and so often and about such petty matters. Up to now I always thought bickering was just something children did and that they outgrew it.
So long as you do not quarrel with sin, you will never be a truly happy man.
When we quarrel, how we wish we had been blameless.
An ant has no quarrel with a boot.
Rightly to be great Is not to stir without great argument, But greatly to find quarrel in a straw When honour's at the stake.
You too shall pass away. Knowing this, how can you quarrel?
I don't like yelling and fighting, and I can't quarrel.
In real life, it takes only one to make a quarrel.
I can't imagine a human being so hard up for something to do as to quarrel with me.
We do not want churches. They will teach us to quarrel about God.
Can anything be stupider than that a man has the right to kill me because he lives on the other side of a river and his ruler has a quarrel with mine, though I have not quarrelled with him?
I won't quarrel with my bread and butter.
Unlike the rationalism of the French Revolution, true liberalism has no quarrel with religion, and I can only deplore the militant and essentially illiberal antireligionism which animated so much of nineteenth-century Continental liberalism. . . . What distinguishes the liberal from the conservative here is that, however profound his own spiritual beliefs, he will never regard himself as entitled to impose them on others and that for him the spiritual and the temporal are different sphere which ought not to be confused.