Quotes about Divine
When God wants to send you a gift, he wraps it up in a problem. The bigger the gift that God wants to send you, the bigger the problem he wraps it up in.
— Brian Tracy
No, there's one thing the Bible makes clear: The biblical God is a sloppy manufacturer. He's not good at design, he's not good at execution. He'd be out of business.
— Carl Sagan
Geometry existed before the Creation. It is co-eternal with the mind of God ââ'¬Ã‚¦ Geometry provided God with a model for the Creation ââ'¬Ã‚¦ Geometry is God Himself." In
— Carl Sagan
Hallucinations may be a neglected low door in the wall to a scientific understanding of the sacred.
— Carl Sagan
It does not become us to be so curious and inquisitive in these Things which the Supreme Creator seems to have kept for his own Knowledge: For since he has not been pleased to make any farther Discovery or Revelation of them, it seems little better than presumption to make any inquiry into that which he has thought fit to hide. But these Gentlemen must be told
— Carl Sagan
If the structure of the world with all its order and beauty is only an effect of matter left to its own universal laws of motion, and if the blind mechanics of the natural forces can evolve so glorious a product out of chaos, and can attain to such perfection of themselves, then the proof of the Divine Author which is drawn from the spectacle of the beauty of the universe wholly loses its force. Nature is thus sufficient for itself; the Divine government is unnecessary.…
— Carl Sagan
God will help you," Maggie said. "He's just waiting to be asked.
— Terri Blackstock
Nourish yourself every day with the wonderful things that life has to offer you. Nourish yourself in the present moment. Walk in the kingdom of God.
— Thich Nhat Hanh
Joy is the serious business of Heaven.
— CS Lewis
At the day of judgment we shall all meet again.
— George Whitefield
A teardrop on earth summons the King of heaven.
— Charles Swindoll
The saving of anyone is something which is not in the power of man, but only of God. No one can be saved in virtue of what he can do. Everyone can be saved in virtue of what God can do. The divine claim takes the form that it puts both the obedient and the disobedient together and compels them to realise this, to recognise their common status in face of the commanding God.
— Karl Barth