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Quotes about God

Like all knowledge, knowledge of God is mediated to us through our senses, through speech and symbol, mediated to us by parents and others. If this were not the case, we would be unable to account for the great diversity of representations of God. If knowledge of God, of the moral order, of the beautiful—if these were all innate, they would be universally identical and acknowledged as such.
— Herman Bavinck
All religion is supernatural, and rests upon the presupposition that God is distinct from the world and yet works in the world.
— Herman Bavinck
When God binds Himself to being our God, then at the same time He binds Himself to be the God of our seed. With His grace He follows the line of the generations. He executes election along the route and pathway of the covenant. As Father of all mercies He walks the path that He Himself, as Father of everything, has drawn.
— Herman Bavinck
Atheism is not proper to man by nature, but develops at a later stage of life, on the ground of philosophical reflection; like scepticism, it is an intellectual and ethical abnormality, which only confirms the rule. By nature every man believes in God.
— Herman Bavinck
Theology is about God and should reflect a doxological tone that glorifies him.
— Herman Bavinck
Empirical life is rooted in an a priori datum which does not come slowly into existence by mechanical development, but is a gift of God's grace, and a fruit and result of his revelation.
— Herman Bavinck
Without faith in the existence, the revelation, and the knowability of God, no religion is possible.
— Herman Bavinck
Whoever intentionally robs himself of self-consciousness, reason, and will, extinguishes the light which God has given to man, annihilates his human freedom and independence, and degrades himself to an instrument for an alien and unknown power.
— Herman Bavinck
The whole man is taken into fellowship with that one true God; not only his feelings, but also his mind and will, his heart and all his affections, his soul and his body.
— Herman Bavinck
From the start of its labors dogmatic theology is shrouded in mystery; it stands before God the incomprehensible One.
— Herman Bavinck
Christianity is no mere revelation of God in the past, but it is, in connection with the past, a work in the midst of this and every time. All other religions try to obtain salvation by the works of men, but Christianity makes a strong protest against this; it is not autosoteric but heterosoteric; it does not preach self-redemption, but glories in redemption by Christ alone. Man does not save himself, and does not save God, but God alone saves man, the whole man, man for eternity.
— Herman Bavinck
He served his god so faithfully and well That now he sees him face to face in hell.
— Hilaire Belloc