We all doubt sometimes, and that's okay, but He's always there. He's always faithful even when we're not.

We all have faults.

I felt unworthy, and it's amazing how God kind of showed me that that's how we act as humans, and that's sometimes how we act in our Christian life.

Make sure you know your identity is in Christ, so that when you get laid off from your job, or when you get a raise from your job, or when things don't go right, you're not up and down, up and down.

We are God's children. We are Christians first, and then what we do flows from that.

What I do is play football. What I do doesn't change who I am and who God sees me as.

The thing that happened in Ferguson touched many of us in a specific way.

Sometimes, we feel like we don't want to offend people, but there are times that we need to express ourselves without fear that somebody is going to shut us down simply because we have differing opinions. That's how we grow.

Whatever you do, do it wholeheartedly for the Lord and not for man, because our true identity is in Him.

It's been a constant struggle with my athletic career to identify myself as a child of God and understand that His love is unconditional for us; it's not conditional like fans, or coaches, or even myself.

I would say that one of the hardest things for an athlete, and really anybody of any profession, is that we create our identity in what we do.

There's no reason ever to steal because you're upset.

There shouldn't be any looting or anything like that. But we're seeing a lot of frustration, and nobody knows the answer. All of us are saying we need an answer, and what I'm saying is we need, all of us, a heart change so, as America, we can move forward.

The only one who can change the heart of man is the Lord. And that will make us want to make things fair for other people.

What doesn't allow us to move forward because when we simply - and I've seen it on social media; it really, really upsets me - is to get in our corners and call names and turn our back to each other.

One of the biggest things we have to be able to do is to handle conflict and handle it correctly. We're able to look at our biases, look at our frustration, look at our sin in this area, our pride and our selfishness. It allows us to move forward.

We need to look at truth. We need to look at justice, and we need to look at righteousness. And let that be our guide going forward.

We need to get our hearts straight. And after we get the hearts straight, we can treat each other straight.

For everybody, I think that we all, when we look at this situation of race, we need a change of heart, and I said it before. I believe the heart change comes from repenting of your racism, repenting of your bias, repenting of your prejudice and understanding that, you know what, God sees us all the same.

I can identify many different experiences that I've had over the course of my life and things that I've witnessed where it seemed that black men, specifically me or someone else may have got the, you know, different treatment than somebody else would in that same situation.

When someone mistreats you, the correct reaction is not to go out and do something to destroy somebody else's property.

I think God does a lot of things in different ways.

We all have the same problem as human beings. And it's something that we are born with, and we just see it manifest in different ways. And in this situation, it's racial. It's brutality. It's people breaking the law. It's the smoke, but the underlying fire is something that we all have to deal with, and that's our sin.

Sin is the reason we are racist, prejudiced, and lie to cover for our own.