Quotes about Humanity
Nothing ever happens in the world that does not happen first inside human hearts.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons.
— Fyodor Dostoevsky
Grace is at work even in fallen man ... to bend partially back in the right direction those human powers and endowments which were man left to himself would be wholly perverted.
— GC Berkouwer
Common grace ... an imperfect solution ... does centre our attention on the gracious act of God in protecting man's corrupt and apostate nature from total demonization.
— GC Berkouwer
The highest function of humanity is belief, that activity of spirit that proceeds upon the pathway of reason, until it comes to some great promontory, and then spreads its wings, and upon the basis of its earlier journeying, takes eternity into its grasp.
— G Campbell Morgan
It was not that they hoped to escape another judgment which might be coming upon them; but they desired solidarity. Today we hear a great deal about the "solidarity of humanity"; and the endeavor to secure it by putting God out of His own world is a very old piece of history. Apart from Him, the only really cohesive force for humanity is absent, and confusion must be the result.
— G Campbell Morgan
The Bible tells us to love our neighbors, and also to love our enemies; probably because generally they are the same people.
— GK Chesterton
In a world flagrant with the failures of civilization, what is there particularly immortal about our own?
— GK Chesterton
That's what's so difficult about Jesus' call to love others. On one level, it's easy to love God, because God doesn't smell. God doesn't have bad breath. God doesn't reward kindness with evil. God doesn't make berating comments. Loving God is easy, in this sense. But Jesus really let us have it when he attached our love for God with our love for other people.
— Gary Thomas
A good man, is a good man, whether in this church, or out of it.
— Brigham Young
As long as we see any person as an enemy—whether Communist, Muslim or terrorist—then the love of God cannot flow through us to reach them.
— Brother Andrew
That as for the miseries and sins he heard of daily in the world, he was so far from wondering at them, that, on the contrary, he was surprised that there were not more, considering the malice sinners were capable of; that for his part he prayed for them; but knowing that GOD could remedy the mischiefs they did when He pleased, he gave himself no farther trouble.
— Brother Lawrence