Do not confuse McGuinty's belief system with a true faith. It is a superstition, the tenets of which are capable of being scientifically disproven.
. . . true faith never comes without anguish.
Faith never knows where it is being led, or it would not be faith. True faith is content to travel under sealed orders.
Faith must become more than a verbal proclamation or an intellectual assent. True faith must be acted out.
True faith goes into operation when there are no answers.
In all true faith there is complete committal to God.
A great safeguard is the entire faith, the true faith, in which neither anything whatever can be added by anyone nor anything taken away; for, unless faith be one, it is not the faith.
True faith manifests itself through our actions.
Faith is more than thinking something is true. Faith is thinking something is true to the extent that we act on it.
Perhaps true faith is a form of insanity.
True faith is never found alone; it is accompanied by expectation.