"It's not your blue blood, your pedigree or your college degree. It's what you do with your life that counts."
"We have the know-how in the world to house everyone. We have the resources in the world to house everyone. All that's missing is the WILL to do it."
Source: Millard Fuller (1995). “Simple Decent Place to Live: The Building Realization of Habitat for Humanity”, p.164, Thomas Nelson Inc
About the author
Millard Fuller
Businessman, Philanthropist
Millard Fuller was a social entrepreneur and founder of Habitat for Humanity, known for his dedication to affordable housing and community service.
All quotes by Millard Fuller →Same author
More quotes by Millard Fuller
"Nobody loves a good worship service more than I do, but we are called to make religion real, to make our faith come alive. Helping others have a decent place to live is one way to do that and it doesn't take too long for others to recognize it, too."
"For a community to be whole and healthy, it must be based on people's love and concern for each other."
"What Habitat does is much more than just sheltering people. It’s what it does for people on the inside. It’s that intangible quality of hope. Many people without decent housing consider themselves life’s losers. This is the first victory they may have ever had. And it changes them. We see Habitat homeowners go back to school and get their GEDs, enter college, do all kinds of things they never believed they could do before they moved into their house. By their own initiative, through their own pride and hope, they change."
"Everyone—all of us, every last person on God’s earth—deserves decent shelter. It speaks to the most basic of human needs—our home—the soil from which all of us, every last person, either blossom or wither. We each have need of food, clothing, education, medical care, and companionship; but first, we must have a place to live and grow."
"Churches are the primary partners that work with Habitat in an almost infinite variety of creative overlapping circles. We cherish these partnerships with churches…I have always seen Habitat for Humanity as a servant of the church and as a vehicle through which the church and its people can express their love, faith, and servanthood to people in need in a very tangible and concrete (literally!) way."