Keith Miller

Keith Miller
Keith Ross Miller, AM MBEwas an Australian test cricketer and a Royal Australian Air Force pilot during World War II. Miller is widely regarded as Australia's greatest ever all-rounder. Because of his ability, irreverent manner and good looks he was a crowd favourite. English journalist Ian Wooldridge called Miller "the golden boy" of cricket, leading to his being nicknamed "Nugget". He "was more than a cricketer ... he embodied the idea that there was more to life than cricket"...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionAuthor
Date of Birth19 April 1927
CountryUnited States of America
Keith Miller quotes about
I learned that the purpose of the Twelve Steps is to do the will of God.
Pain is the doorway to wisdom and to truth.
The writing of poetry is a chancy business, it's currency solitude and loss, its tools coffee and too much wine, its hours midnight, dawn, and dusk, and unlike other trade the hours asleep are not time off.
I wrote a book called The Taste of New Wine because I couldn't find a book that talked about the reality of the situation and how we were dishonest and afraid.
I am six feet tall. I am not supposed to be afraid.
I am too old to think.
If God is in a life, it doesn't have to be big to be happy and to be important in His kingdom.
This is the year of expansion in the Kingdom of God! Tent pegs will span to the north, the south, the east, and the west in the realm of revelation in the dominion of the Kingdom, where you will walk in a greater dimension of the manifestation of the Kingdom for your life!
I am deeply a part of the problem for which Christ died.
Prayer no longer seems like an activity to me; it has become the continuing language of the relationship I believe God designed to fulfill a human life.
What happens is that people who are very religious but who are not in touch with reality, cannot be spiritual.
I've seen batting all over the world. And in other countries too
A Christian marriage is [not] one with no problems or even a marriage with fewer problems. (It may well mean more problems.) But it does mean a life in which two people are able to accept each other and love each other in the midst of problems and fears. It means a marriage in which selfish people can accept selfish people without constantly trying to change them -- and even accept themselves, because they realize personally that they have been accepted by Christ.
My only hope to receive love is to let you see who I am, then I may believe you.