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Quotes about Nature

God is revealed in the book of nature for God is its author.
— Sadhu Sundar Singh
Admonished for his lack of familiarity with twentieth century science, Sundar Singh said, 'What is science?' 'Natural selection and survival of the fittest,' he was told. 'Ah,' Sundar Singh replied, 'but I am more interested in divine selection and the survival of the unfit.
— Sadhu Sundar Singh
The only condition necessary for us to break out of our material limitations and attain spiritual life is that we accept the life-giving warmth of God's spirit, just as the chick receives its mother's warmth. Without that warmth, we will not take on the nature of the Spirit, and we may die without ever hatching out of this material body.
— Sadhu Sundar Singh
Miracles are not contrary to nature, but only contrary to what we know about nature.
— St. Augustine
People travel to wonder at the height of the mountains, at the huge waves of the seas, at the long course of the rivers, at the vast compass of the ocean, at the circular motion of the stars, and yet they pass by themselves without wondering.
— St. Augustine
Many a man curses the rain that falls upon his head, and knows not that it brings abundance to drive away the hunger.
— St. Basil
Flowers often grow more beautifully on dung-hills than in gardens that look beautifully kept.
— Francis de Sales
Praise to thee, my Lord, for all thy creatures,Above all Brother SunWho brings us the day and lends us his light.
— St. Francis Of Assisi
He that will enjoy the brightness of sunshine, must quit the coolness of the shade.
— Samuel Johnson
I am not yet so lost in lexicography as to forget that words are the daughters of earth, and that things are the sons of heaven.
— Samuel Johnson
Nature makes us poor only when we want necessaries, but custom gives the name of poverty to the want of superfluities.
— Samuel Johnson
There is no observation more frequently made by such as employ themselves in surveying the conduct of mankind, than that marriage, though the dictate of nature, and the institution of Providence, is yet very often the cause of misery, and that those who enter into that state can seldom forbear to express their repentance, and their envy of those whom either chance or caution hath withheld from it.
— Samuel Johnson