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Daily Inspiration Quote by Albert Pike

"Faith begins where Reason sinks exhausted"

About this Quote

Pike’s line isn’t a tender hymn to belief; it’s a jurisdictional boundary dispute. “Reason” arrives like a lawyerly instrument meant to work a case until the evidence runs out, then “sinks exhausted” from sheer overuse. The phrasing makes rationality feel muscular but finite, a tool that can be pushed to its limits and still fail. That verb choice matters: reason doesn’t get refuted, it gets tired. Faith, then, isn’t positioned as anti-intellectual so much as post-intellectual, the next procedural move when cross-examination can’t reach the witness.

The subtext is an argument for surrender that keeps its dignity. By casting faith as something that “begins,” Pike implies an ordered sequence: you try reason first. That’s a savvy concession to the modern prestige of rational inquiry, especially in the 19th century, when science, industrialization, and Enlightenment aftershocks were reshaping what counted as truth. The sentence flatters skeptics while recruiting them: go ahead, reason hard; when you hit the wall, there’s an exit ramp that doesn’t require calling yourself irrational.

Context sharpens the intent. Pike wasn’t a clergyman trading in grace; he was a lawyer and a prominent Masonic thinker in an era when fraternal orders and esoteric spirituality offered educated men a way to keep mystery without abandoning respectability. The quote functions like a bridge between courtroom logic and metaphysical longing. It tells the ambitious rationalist: your methods are valid, your exhaustion is inevitable, and meaning is waiting on the other side.

Quote Details

TopicFaith
Source
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
All hypotheses scientifically probable are the last gleams of the twilight of knowledge, or its last shadows. Faith begins where Reason sinks exhausted. Beyond the human Reason is the Divine Reason, to our feebleness the great Absurdity, the Infinite Absurd, which confounds us and which we believe. (Chapter XXXII, "Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret," p. 841). The quote is verifiably in Albert Pike's own work, Morals and Dogma, in the section for Degree XXXII, "Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret." The Sacred Texts transcription identifies the work as from 1871 and places the passage on p. 841. A scanned 19th-century edition is also cataloged by Wikimedia Commons/Cornell as Morals and dogma of the ancient and accepted Scottish Rite of freemasonry, published in New York by R. Macoy in 1878, confirming the book's bibliographic existence and pagination tradition. Based on the evidence found, the earliest verified primary-source publication is the 1871 book, not a speech or interview. I did not find evidence that the line was first spoken elsewhere before publication in this book.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Pike, Albert. (2026, March 10). Faith begins where Reason sinks exhausted. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/faith-begins-where-reason-sinks-exhausted-144443/

Chicago Style
Pike, Albert. "Faith begins where Reason sinks exhausted." FixQuotes. March 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/faith-begins-where-reason-sinks-exhausted-144443/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Faith begins where Reason sinks exhausted." FixQuotes, 10 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/faith-begins-where-reason-sinks-exhausted-144443/. Accessed 25 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

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Albert Pike (December 29, 1809 - April 2, 1891) was a Lawyer from USA.

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