Quotes about Order
Indeed, no one does more injury in the church than he who acts perversely and yet has the name and order of sanctity.
— Jan Hus
The universe began in an instant, is expanding, and exhibits design, order, and complexity. Every effect must have a Cause, and design must have a Designer.
— Ray Comfort
The New Testament writings all presuppose that the fallen human race and the equally fallen created order are sick unto death beyond human resourcefulness.
— Fleming Rutledge
We do not need a new moral order; the world desperately needs the tried and tested moral order that God handed down at Sinai.
— Billy Graham
When everyone does what is right in his own eyes, there is no possibility of order and peace.
— Billy Graham
How do we prepare for that last day? Before we embark on our final trip, have we left an earthly home in a state of chaos or a condition of order?
— Billy Graham
We have a conception that God is a haphazard God with no set of rules of life and salvation. Ask the astronomer if God is a haphazard God. He will tell you that every star moves with precision in its celestial path.
— Billy Graham
History is going somewhere. And we know full well that He who does all things well will bring beauty from the ashes of world chaos. A new world is being born. A new social order will emerge when Christ comes back. A fabulous future is on the way.
— Billy Graham
Escapism seems to be the order of the day … Escape with drugs or alcohol, and the bitterness of living will be blurred … We can't escape from God.
— Billy Graham
It is better to live on the housetop than live in a house full of confusion' well, not a quote off of a book, but still my favourite.
— Bob Marley
Out of seeming chaos, God manages to bring order. Sometimes it's hard to see the plan when we are running around, responding to circumstances. But He knows. He has the bigger picture. He is in control. And as we offer up the little we have, He multiplies it into something amazing.
— Heidi Baker
God, whose knowledge is simply manifold, and uniform in its variety, comprehends all incomprehensibles with so incomprehensible a comprehension, that though He willed always to make His later works novel and unlike what went before them, He could not produce them without order and foresight, nor conceive them suddenly, but by His eternal foreknowledge.
— St. Augustine