Quotes about Atheism
If atheism is correct, his nauseating list from genocide to infanticide does not describe God's character but the people who claim to believe in God.
— Ravi Zacharias
Third, the New Atheists reserve their most venomous attacks for Christianity. While they do criticize Buddhism, Islam, Mormonism, and other religions, their target is clearly the biblical God.
— Josh McDowell
Worry is momentary atheism crying out for correction by trust in a good, sovereign God. Suffering breaks self-reliance.
— Randy Alcorn
To sustain the belief that there is no God, atheism has to demonstrate infinite knowledge, which is tantamount to saying, "I have infinite knowledge that there is no being in existence with infinite knowledge
— Ravi Zacharias
Atheists don't hate fairies, leprechauns, or unicorns because they don't exist. It is impossible to hate something that doesn't exist. Atheists — like the painting experts hated the painter — hate God because He does exist.
— Ray Comfort
The more a nation gets into darkness, the more it's going to hate the light. The more it's going to run from the light. And we have a generation of people who have given themselves to darkness, and they've embraced atheism, because it gets them away from moral responsibility to God.
— Ray Comfort
I am surprised that anyone can profess to be an atheist.
— Ray Comfort
God affords no man the comfort, the false comfort of Atheism: He will not allow a pretending Atheist the power to flatter himself, so far, as to seriously think there is no God.
— John Donne
Man is by his constitution a religious animal; atheism is against not only our reason, but our instincts.
— Edmund Burke
This atheism concerning the gods of men pertains hereafter to any possible faith
— Paul Ricoeur
If the atheist believes that suffering is bad or ought not to be, then he's making moral judgments that are possible only if God exists.
— William Lane Craig
How would you explain the fact that atheists just know that harming an innocent human being is wrong, and can live good lives, without believing that God is the ultimate source of values and duties? To repeat: Belief in God is not necessary for objective morality; God is.
— William Lane Craig