• Blaise
Pascal—"Jesus Christ is the centre of everything and the object of
everything, and he who does not know Him knows nothing of the order of
nature and nothing of himself."
• Joseph
Ernest Renan—"Jesus is the cornerstone of humanity. If He were taken
away, it would shake the world to its foundations."
• Ralph Waldo
Emerson—"The unique impression of Jesus upon mankind—whose name is not
so much written as ploughed into the history of the world—is proof of
the subtle virtue of this infusion."
•
Augustine—"Christ is not valued at all unless He be valued above all."
• Napoleon
Bonaparte—"I know men; and I tell you that Jesus Christ is no mere man.
Between Him and every other person in the world, there is no possible
term of comparison. Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, and I have founded
empires. But on what did we rest the creations of our genius? Upon
force. Jesus Christ founded His empire upon love; and at this hour
millions of men would die for Him."
• Pope John
Paul II—"Christ is absolutely original and absolutely unique."16
• Robert Louis
Stevenson—"When Christ came into my life, I came about like a
well-handled ship."
• Alfred Lord
Tennyson—"The Lord from Heaven born of a village girl, carpenter’s son,
Wonderful, Prince of Peace, the mighty God."
• Lew
Wallace—"After six years given to the impartial investigation of
Christianity, as to its truth or falsity, I have come to the deliberate
conclusion that Jesus Christ was the Messiah of the Jews, the Savior of
the world, and my personal Savior."
• H. G.
Wells—"The Galilean has been too great for our small hearts."
• Napoleon
Bonaparte—"There is not a God in heaven, if a mere man was able to
conceive and execute successfully the gigantic design of making Himself
the object of supreme worship, by usurping the name of God. Jesus alone
dared to do this."
• Malcolm
Muggeridge—"The coming of Jesus into the world is the most stupendous
event in human history…." and "What is unique about Jesus is that, on
the testimony and in the experience of innumerable people, of all sorts
and conditions, of all races and nationalities from the simplest and
most primitive to the most sophisticated and cultivated, he remains
alive…. That the Resurrection happened… seems to be indubitably true….
Either Jesus never was or he still is…. "17
• Albert
Einstein—"I am enthralled by the luminous figure of the Nazarene."
• Sir Lionell
Luckhoo—"I have spent more than forty-two years as a defense trial
lawyer appearing in many parts of the world.... I say unequivocally the
evidence for the resurrection of Jesus Christ is so overwhelming that it
compels acceptance by proof which leaves absolutely no doubt."18
• George
Barlow—"The example of Christ is supreme in its authority."
• Vance Havner—"Jesus
was the most disturbing person in history."
• J. M.
Mason—"He who thinks he hath no need of Christ hath too high thoughts of
himself. He who thinks Christ cannot help him hath too low thoughts of
Christ."
• G. Campbell
Morgan—"Everything that is really worthwhile in the morality of today
has come to the world through Christ."
• Sholam Asch—"Jesus
Christ is the outstanding personality of all time.... no other
teacher—Jewish, Christian, Buddhist, Mohammedan—is still a
teacher whose teaching is such a guidepost for the world we live in....
He became the Light of the World. Why shouldn’t I, a Jew, be proud of
that?"
• William E.
Biederwolf—"A man who can read the New Testament and not see that Christ
claims to be more than a man, can look all over the sky at high noon on
a cloudless day and not see the sun."
• William
Ellery Channing—"I know of no sincere enduring good but the moral
excellency which shines forth in Jesus Christ."
• Blaise
Pascal—"Jesus Christ is the centre of all, and the goal toward which all
tends."
• Joseph
Ernest Renan—"Jesus was the greatest religious genius that ever lived.
His beauty is eternal, and His reign shall never end. Jesus is in every
respect unique, and nothing can be compared with Him. All history is
incomprehensible without Christ."
• P. Carnegie
Simpson—"The face of Christ does not indeed show us everything, but it
shows the one thing we need to know—the character of God. God is the God
who sent Jesus."
• Joseph
Ernest Renan—"Whatever may be the surprises of the future, Jesus will
never be surpassed....all ages will proclaim that among the sons of men
there is none born greater than Jesus."
• Phillips
Brooks—"That Christ should be and should be Christ appears the one
reasonable, natural, certain thing in all the universe. In Him all
broken lines unite; in Him all scattered sounds are gathered into
harmony."
• Jean
Baptiste Lacordaire—"Whatever motives Jesus Christ might have had
against calling Himself God, He did call Himself God; such is the fact."
• William
Quayle—"This calm assumption of Jesus that He is not a sinner will take
hold of the wrists of any thoughtful mind and twist them till it must
come to its knees."
• Leonce De
Grandmaison—"Either Jesus was and knew what He was, what He proclaimed
Himself to be, or else He was a pitiable visionary."
• W. A.
Visser’t Hooft—"The Christian Church stands or falls with this simple
proposition: that Jesus is nothing less than God’s self-communication to
men, and the only certain source of our knowledge of God."
• Fulton J.
Sheen—"If we are to find the secret of His Timelessness—the simplicity
of His Wisdom, the transforming power of His Doctrine, we must go out
beyond time to the Timelessness, beyond the complex to the Perfect,
beyond Change to the Changeless, out beyond the margins of the world to
the Perfect God."
• Dorothy
Day—"Christ is God or He is the world’s greatest liar and imposter."
• Herbert E.
Cory—"The witnesses for the historical authentication and for the proofs
of the Divinity of Jesus, from the earliest days, are far more
comprehensive than the testimonies for the existence of many famous
historical characters we accept without question."
• P. T.
Forsyth—"An undogmatic Christ is the advertisement of a dying faith."
• Charles
Lamb—"If Shakespeare should come into this room, we would all rise; but
if Jesus Christ should come in, we would all kneel."
• C. F.
Andrews—"The supreme miracle of Christ’s character lies in this: that He
combines within Himself, as no other figure in human history has ever
done, the qualities of every race."
• F. R.
Barry—"The Humanist suggestion that Jesus was ‘morally right, but
religiously mistaken’ defies all psychological probabilities."19