Quotes about Divine
God, they will insist, is a spirit and is to be worshipped in spirit. Therefore an experience which is chemically conditioned cannot be an experience of the divine. But, in one way or another, all our experiences are chemically conditioned, and if we imagine that some of them are purely 'spiritual', purely 'intellectual', purely 'aesthetic', it is merely because we have never troubled to investigate the internal chemical environment at the moment of their occurrence.
— Aldous Huxley
O my God, how does it happen in this poor old world that Thou art so great and yet nobody finds Thee, that Thou callest so loudly and nobody hears Thee, that Thou art so near and nobody feels Thee, that Thou givest Thyself to everybody and nobody knows Thy name? Men flee from Thee and say they cannot find Thee; they turn their backs and say they cannot see Thee; they stop their ears and say they cannot hear Thee. Hans Denk
— Aldous Huxley
Love is the plummet as well as the astrolabe of God's mysteries, and the pure in heart can see far down into the depths of the divine justice, to catch a glimpse, not indeed of the details of the cosmic process, but at least of its principle and nature. These insights permit them to say [...] that all shall be well, that, in spite of time, all is well, and that the problem of evil has its solution in the eternity, which men can, if they so desire, experience, but can never describe.
— Aldous Huxley
In other words, the highest form of the love of God is an immediate spiritual intuition, by which 'knower, known and knowledge are made one.
— Aldous Huxley
The truth is, of course, that we are all organically related to God, to Nature and to our fellow-men. If every human being were constantly and consciously in a proper relationship with his divine, natural and social environments there would be only so much suffering as Creation makes inevitable.
— Aldous Huxley
Christianity has remained a religion in which the pure Perennial Philosophy has been overlaid, now more, now less, by an idolatrous preoccupation with events and things in time—events and things regarded not merely as useful means, but as ends, intrinsically sacred and indeed divine.
— Aldous Huxley
Where God leads you to pray, He means you to receive.
— Donald Whitney
The text of the Bible means what God inspired it to mean, not "what it means to
— Donald Whitney
He has revealed Himself generally to us through creation, but more specifically through the Word.
— Donald Whitney
So basically what you are doing is taking words that originated in the heart and mind of God and circulating them through your heart and mind back to God. By this means his words become the wings of your prayers.
— Donald Whitney
If you are a Christian, two people live in your body - you and the Holy Spirit...And the Holy Spirit is not passive within you.
— Donald Whitney
Many of the great movements of God can be traced to a small group of people He called together to begin praying.
— Donald Whitney