Quotes about Earth
In almost everything that touches our everyday life on earth, God is pleased when we're pleased. He wills that we be as free as birds to soar and sing our maker's praise without anxiety.
— AW Tozer
Nothing is more precious than peace, by which all war, both in Heaven and Earth, is brought to an end.
— Ignatius of Antioch
The earth's history over the past several million years is that for every 100,000 years, we go through a dramatic climatic cycle where we get 90,000 years of ice age and 10,000 years of a warm period. I think people today just have the expectation that we deserve a perfectly benign climate forever.
— Hugh Ross
This is a serious warning cry: Surrender without reservation to the Lord who has called us. This is required of us so that the face of the earth may be renewed.
— Edith Stein
I don't understand it all, but when heaven decides to invade earth, who are we to argue?
— Rachel Hauck
God may forgive sins, he said, but awkwardness has no forgiveness in heaven or earth
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
The moment we indulge our affections, the earth is metamorphosed there is no winter and no night all tragedies, all ennuis, vanish,-all duties even.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
God moves in power, in signs and wonders—healing the sick, in deliverances, multiplying food for the hungry, raising the dead—primarily for this reason: He is good! And it is His desire to reveal His goodness—His glory—in all the earth.
— Randy Clark
The Bible says that the earth is immovable . It cannot be moved . So now is your chance to prove your point. Run outside and move the earth. Perhaps you and your friends could jump on it, or find a rocky outcrop and push it together. Maybe after that little experiment you will concede that the earth is immovable.
— Ray Comfort
The Christian Church does not exist in Heaven, but on earth and in time.
— Karl Barth
What lies between these two ends, these 'last things', is the world, our world, the comprehensible world which has been given us.
— Karl Barth
If we cannot defend the things of this world and if none of the relationships in which we walk the earth can withstand the criticism which reduces the whole to relativity, we can still love them and we need take the criticism no more seriously than it deserves (pp. 29, 248).
— Karl Barth