Quotes about Decline
Material betterment has gone hand in hand with spiritual decline.
— J. Gresham Machen
So what if people disagree about values? People also disagree about facts... In my view, the great intellectual challenge facing conservatives is to make the case for morality at a time when many in the West have ceased to believe in an external moral order. The decline of belief in such an order is the most important political development of the past two centuries. Indeed, this decline has created the crisis of the West.
— Dinesh D'Souza
The Scriptures, beginning with the Book of Judges, teach a philosophy of human government, which you will find was true of God's people and which has been true of every nation. The first step in a nation's decline is religióus apostasy, a turning from the living and true God. The second step downward for a nation is moral awfulness. The third step downward is political anarchy.
— J. Vernon McGee
One of the surest marks of spiritual decline is a decreased interest about the souls of others and the growth of Christ's kingdom.
— JC Ryle
How are the mighty fallen!
— Anonymous
Why do the health of the body and the health of the earth decline together?
— Wendell Berry
The end of the human race will be that it will eventually die of civilization.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
If you stop exercising for any period of time, you don't maintain your fitness at the same level. You begin to decline. Your body and your muscles become softer and weaker. You lose your strength, flexibility, and stamina. In order to maintain them, you must keep working at them every day, every week, and every month.
— Brian Tracy
This dual sense of individual advancement and collective decline that I thought accounted for some of the most troubling attitudes I heard in some conversations.
— Barack Obama
There is not a more unhappy being than a superannuated idol.
— Joseph Addison
If mediocrity becomes the norm, the quantity of outstanding producers will decline, as will general prosperity.
— Ben Carson
Then, as they began to decline, they all experienced some peculiar similarities: an inordinate emphasis on sports and entertainment, a fixation with lifestyles of the rich and famous, political corruption, and the loss of a moral compass.
— Ben Carson