Robert A. Schuller

Robert A. Schuller
Robert Anthony Schulleris an American author, televangelist and pastor. He was formerly a minister on the Hour of Power weekly television program broadcast from the Crystal Cathedral in Orange County, California. He appeared on the program almost every week since 1976. He was installed as the senior pastor in January 2006. An ordained minister, Schuller is the only son of Crystal Cathedral founders Robert H. Schuller and Arvella Schuller. He is the best-selling author of Getting Through The Going Through...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionClergyman
Date of Birth7 October 1954
CountryUnited States of America
It takes guts to get out of the ruts.
Be the artist you were born to be.
Big egos have little ears.
Start small; Think possibilities; Reach beyond your known abilities; Invest all you have in your dream; Visualize miracles; Expect to experience success.
You can think negatively or positively. If you are a positive thinker, you will base your decisions on faith rather than fear.
If you are creative enough to imagine a problem, you're clever enough to discover a solution.
The Roman Catholic Church isn't going to change its theologies.
What we need is a theology of salvation that begins and ends with a recognition of every person's hunger for glory.
My family and I would never receive royalties on the revenue that my materials brought into the church; materials that were created on our own personal time.
Classical theology defines sin as 'rebellion against God.' The answer is not incorrect as much as it is shallow and insulting to the human being. Every person deserves to be treated with dignity even if he or she is a 'rebellious sinner'.
The subconscious is ahead of the conscious, and we never know what really drives us.
Never underestimate the value of an idea. Every positive idea has within its potential for success if it is managed properly.
Creative words generate energy; negative words drain out energy.
Doomed are the hotheads! Unhappy are they who lose their cool and are too proud to say, I'm sorry.