Where Can I Find A Poetic Quote About God In Literature?

2025-08-30 20:53:20 243

5 Answers

Lila
Lila
2025-09-01 01:50:33
I love the thrill of finding a tiny, resonant line about God and then tracing its trail through other works. For quick inspiration, Gerard Manley Hopkins' line from 'God's Grandeur' always stops me: "The world is charged with the grandeur of God." For something mystical, dipping into Rumi or Hafiz translations yields little explosive metaphors about union and love.

Practical places to look: the Poetry Foundation for curated poems and essays, Project Gutenberg for older public-domain works like Milton or Dante, and my local library’s poetry shelf for bilingual or annotated editions. If you’re hunting a quote to use, check two translations or editions so you know the nuance — it saves awkwardness later and often gives you a new favorite line.
Jolene
Jolene
2025-09-04 09:31:37
I get excited about spiritual lines that are short enough to pin on a wall and deep enough to sit with for days. My go-to trick is to check poets who wrestled publicly with faith: John Donne's 'Holy Sonnets' are confrontational and intimate — "Batter my heart, three-person'd God" hits like a confession. Milton's 'Paradise Lost' is epic and complex if you want a theological wrestle, while Rabindranath Tagore's 'Gitanjali' offers luminous, devotional images — the poems there feel like prayers set to verse.

If you're browsing online, the Poetry Foundation and Bartleby are goldmines because they give both the lines and background. For older works, Project Gutenberg and your local library's digital catalog can get you full texts. Also, translations matter: compare two versions of the same line to see how different translators shape the idea of God. That nuance is often where the poetry lives.
Zane
Zane
2025-09-05 12:40:17
Whenever I'm hunting for a poetic line about God, I find myself flipping between sacred texts and surprising modern poems — the contrast gives me chills every time.

If you want something classical and immediately resonant, the King James 'Psalms' has lines like "The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want" that have been echoed in literature for centuries. For a pulsing, imagistic line about the divine I always come back to Gerard Manley Hopkins' 'God's Grandeur': "The world is charged with the grandeur of God." Dante's 'Divine Comedy' (especially 'Paradiso') offers meditative, soaring passages — remember the line often rendered as "In His will is our peace".

Practically, I use a mix of a good local library, the Poetry Foundation site when I want context and commentary, and Project Gutenberg for public-domain texts. If I'm lazy, a reputable quotes site or a bilingual edition helps when translations matter. Carrying a tiny notebook, I've scribbled lines on rainy walks that later became favorites — try that, it turns hunting into a ritual.
Quinn
Quinn
2025-09-05 19:29:22
I often turn to shorter devotional poems when I want something poetic about God — they’re immediate and easy to share. Classics like lines from 'Psalms' or Hopkins' "The world is charged with the grandeur of God" work well in moments when I need comfort or awe. If you want something less familiar, Sufi poets such as Rumi or Hafiz (in good translations) deliver ecstatic, intimate language about the divine.

A quick search on Poetry Foundation or a browse through a small anthology of world devotional poetry will usually surface a handful of memorable lines to choose from.
Ava
Ava
2025-09-05 22:22:44
When I'm digging a bit deeper, I think about the problem of translation and context before I quote anything about God. Different eras and religious traditions frame the divine in wildly different images: the Judeo-Christian psalmists use shepherd and king metaphors, Dante in 'Divine Comedy' moves toward metaphysical union, while Hindu scriptures like the 'Bhagavad Gita' present God as immanent and instructive (see verses where the speaker identifies the self with the divine). Sufi lyricists such as Rumi and Hafiz use erotic and mystical language that translators render in many flavors, so picking one translator will shape what the poem seems to say.

For reliable finds I consult bilingual editions at a library, scholarly translations, and annotated editions (they explain variants). Online, the Poetry Foundation and university humanities pages are usually safer than random quote sites. That care makes the quotes feel truer to their original spirit.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

I Will Find You
I Will Find You
After fleeing an abusive ex, Holland Williams starts over at Smith Automotive and is warned to avoid its young owner, Remy Smith. One touch ignites impossible “sparks”; Remy, Alpha of the Sage Moon pack, recognizes her as his mate, but Holland rejects the werewolf truth—until her ex, Robbie, tracks her down and Remy is forced to shift to protect her. While Holland slowly trusts Remy and the pack (with Gamma Todd quietly building her safety net), Robbie sobers up, learns the town’s secret, and undergoes a brutal, forbidden ritual to become a “defective” wolf. Remy courts Holland carefully; she moves into the pack house just as Angel—Remy’s elegant ex—returns claiming to be his true mate. A staged misunderstanding drives Holland away, and Robbie kidnaps her. Angel manipulates Remy into thinking Holland ran; days later, shame and a witch’s locator spell (Mallory) send him on the hunt. In an abandoned house, Holland survives Robbie by stabbing him with dull silver; Remy arrives, kills Robbie, and must turn Holland to save her life. Against all expectations, she doesn’t become defective; healers can’t explain it. Remy marks her; they complete the mating ceremony and marry. Soon after, Holland is pregnant with their first pup. In the epilogue, Angel—revealed as the architect of the kidnapping—flees to raise an army of defective rogue wolves, vowing to destroy Sage Moon if she can’t claim it.
10
61 Chapters
I HATE EVERYTHING ABOUT HIM
I HATE EVERYTHING ABOUT HIM
"I despise everything about him," Ayisha Duffel always says whenever her path crosses with Kian, the Academy's heir and campus crush. They don't get along, just like cats and dogs. Their relationship is perfect when they are on campus, but when they are outside the campus, they despise each other to the moon and back. How did it all start? Why has it gotten to the point where the relationship has already been contracted? Will they be real in real life? Will they truly love one another? But what if you know that the person you're learning to love's life is in danger? Can you give up your life for him/her? Come on in and let's figure everything out together.
Not enough ratings
16 Chapters
I Can Hear You
I Can Hear You
After confirming I was pregnant, I suddenly heard my husband’s inner voice. “This idiot is still gloating over her pregnancy. She doesn’t even know we switched out her IVF embryo. She’s nothing more than a surrogate for Elle. If Elle weren’t worried about how childbirth might endanger her life, I would’ve kicked this worthless woman out already. Just looking at her makes me sick. “Once she delivers the baby, I’ll make sure she never gets up from the operating table. Then I’ll finally marry Elle, my one true love.” My entire body went rigid. I clenched the IVF test report in my hands and looked straight at my husband. He gazed back at me with gentle eyes. “I’ll take care of you and the baby for the next few months, honey.” However, right then, his inner voice struck again. “I’ll lock that woman in a cage like a dog. I’d like to see her escape!” Shock and heartbreak crashed over me all at once because the Elle he spoke of was none other than my sister.
8 Chapters
Where Snow Can't Follow
Where Snow Can't Follow
On the day of Lucas' engagement, he managed to get a few lackeys to keep me occupied, and by the time I stepped out the police station, done with questioning, it was already dark outside. Arriving home, I stood there on the doorstep and eavesdropped on Lucas and his friends talking about me. "I was afraid she'd cause trouble, so I got her to spend the whole day at the police station. I made sure that everything would be set in stone by the time she got out." Shaking my head with a bitter laugh, I blocked all of Lucas' contacts and went overseas without any hesitation. That night, Lucas lost all his composure, kicking over a table and smashing a bottle of liquor, sending glass shards flying all over the floor. "She's just throwing a tantrum because she's jealous… She'll come back once she gets over it…" What he didn't realize, then, was that this wasn't just a fit of anger or a petty tantrum. This time, I truly didn't want him anymore.
11 Chapters
Falling to where I belong
Falling to where I belong
Adam Smith, Ceo of Smith enterprises, New York's most eligible bachelor, was having trouble sleeping since a few weeks. The sole reason for it was the increasing work pressure. His parents suggested him to get another assistant to ease his workload. Rejection after Rejection, no one seemed to be perfect for the position until a certain blonde-haired, blue-eyed girl walked in for the interview. The first thing any interviewee would do when they meet their interviewer is to greet them with respect but instead of that Kathie Patterson decided to spank Mr. Smith's ass. Surely an innovative way to greet someone and say goodbye to their chance of getting selected but to her surprise, she was immediately hired as Mr. Smith's assistant. Even though Adam Smith had his worries about how she would handle all the work as she was a newbie, all his worries faded away when she started working. Always completing the work on time regardless of all the impossible deadlines. An innovative mind to come up with such great ideas. She certainly was out of this world. And the one thing Adam Smith didn't know about Kathie Patterson was that she indeed didn't belong to the earth.
Not enough ratings
10 Chapters
Find Him
Find Him
Find Him “Somebody has taken Eli.” … Olivia’s knees buckled. If not for Dean catching her, she would have hit the floor. Nothing was more torturous than the silence left behind by a missing child. Then the phone rang. Two weeks earlier… “Who is your mom?” Dean asked, wondering if he knew the woman. “Her name is Olivia Reed,” replied Eli. Dynamite just exploded in Dean’s head. The woman he once trusted, the woman who betrayed him, the woman he loved and the one he’d never been able to forget.  … Her betrayal had utterly broken him. *** Olivia - POV  She’d never believed until this moment that she could shoot and kill somebody, but she would have no hesitation if it meant saving her son’s life.  *** … he stood in her doorway, shafts of moonlight filling the room. His gaze found her sitting up in bed. “Olivia, what do you need?” he said softly. “Make love to me, just like you used to.” He’d been her only lover. She wanted to completely surrender to him and alleviate the pain and emptiness that threatened to drag her under. She needed… She wanted… Dean. She pulled her nightie over her head and tossed it across the room. In three long strides, he was next to her bed. Slipping between the sheets, leaving his boxers behind, he immediately drew her into his arms. She gasped at the fiery heat and exquisite joy of her naked skin against his. She nipped at his lips with her teeth. He groaned. Her hands explored and caressed the familiar contours of his muscled back. His sweet kisses kept coming. She murmured a low sound filled with desire, and he deepened the kiss, tasting her sweetness and passion as his tongue explored her mouth… ***
10
27 Chapters

Related Questions

What Is A Short Quote About God For Comfort?

5 Answers2025-08-30 12:14:37
Some nights I sit by the window with a mug gone lukewarm and whisper something simple to keep the jitter of the day from taking over. My go-to is, "God is the quiet hand that steadies me when everything shakes." It’s tiny, almost like a balm, but it reminds me that calm can be ordinary and close. I say it the way I might hum a familiar song—no drama, just a steadying murmur. When a friend dropped by once and found me staring at the ceiling, I told them that line and we both laughed because it sounded so plain, but I could see the tension loosen in their shoulders. Little lines like that are portable comfort: tuck them in your pocket, repeat them under your breath when the train jolts, or pin them to a note on your fridge. For me, it’s not about proof, it’s about the small ritual that helps me breathe.

Which Movie Contains The Most Memorable Quote About God?

3 Answers2025-08-30 13:42:05
Growing up on a steady diet of VHS tapes and midnight cable, the quote from 'Pulp Fiction' punched a hole straight into my pop-culture brain and never let go. Jules Winnfield’s riff—what people call the Ezekiel speech—hits because it’s this wild hybrid of biblical cadence, movie-badass swagger, and personal reinvention. I was maybe 19 the first time I heard it blasted from a scratched speaker, and the way Samuel L. Jackson inhabits those words made the line feel bigger than the screen. It became a kind of cultural shorthand for moral thunder: half-serious, half-theatrical, always memorable. What fascinates me most is how Quentin Tarantino repurposes scripture into character language. Jules starts by quoting what sounds like a solemn, righteous proclamation: ‘The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men...’ But what he does with it—how he uses it as a showpiece before violence—turns it into a question about authenticity, power, and redemption. By the time the film flips Jules’ arc toward a moment that reads like genuine spiritual awakening, that quote has shifted from a performance of righteousness to an honest grappling with faith and choice. I love that contradiction. Beyond the immediate coolness of the delivery, the line stuck around because people began to reinterpret it, misquote it, tattoo it, and remix it into dozens of contexts. Friends and I used to parody it at parties—awful, enthusiastic reenactments with too-much-college bravado—yet even in those dumb moments I could feel the weight of the speech: it’s not just a movie line, it’s an artifact of how modern stories borrow religious language to talk about violence and conscience. If you’re looking for the most quoted, referenced, meme-ified cinematic line about godly retribution and human agency, Jules’ Ezekiel riff is hard to top. If you want a recommendation: watch the scene with the sound up, then watch it again with the subtitles on so you catch Tarantino’s playful deviations from scripture. It’s less about the literal theology and more about how language gets used to justify, intimidate, or ultimately transform a person—and that makes it, to me, the single most memorable film quote about God in mainstream cinema.

What Is A Powerful Short Quote About God For Instagram?

4 Answers2025-08-30 07:19:03
Some evenings I scroll my feed half-distracted, trying to match a mood to a photo, and I often catch myself wanting a line that feels both small and infinite. For a tiny caption that still carries weight, I like: "God is the quiet that steadies the loudness in me." It’s short, but it has room to breathe — the kind of line that pairs well with a moody sunset or a candid shot of messy hair and warm light bouncing off a kitchen counter. I say this as someone who leans into little rituals: a mug that gets warmed in both hands, a playlist that cycles like a heartbeat, a favorite bench in the park where I let thoughts rearrange themselves. That quote works because it honors both the internal chaos and the calming presence many of us seek without being prescriptive. For Instagram, it’s versatile — you can slip it under a portrait to hint at depth, or pin it to a landscape to suggest gratefulness. Add a subtle emoji or leave it plain; either way it feels honest. If you like, pair it with tags about gratitude, solitude, or personal growth, but honestly, the line stands on its own. If you want slight variations depending on vibe: make it more declarative — "God steadies my loudness" — for a bolder post. Or soften it — "In the quiet, God steadies me" — if the image is gentle. I find the best captions are the ones that leave a little space for followers to fold their own feelings into them. Try it on a photo where everything looks messy but real, or a peaceful sunrise that promises a new kind of steady. I usually keep a short list of phrases in my notes when inspiration strikes; this is one that keeps resurfacing whenever life feels a little too noisy. If you share it, tell a tiny anecdote in the comments — a moment when that calm visited you — or just let the line sit and watch the reactions. For me, captions like this spark the quiet conversations: one-liners that invite someone to breathe, think, and maybe message later with their own small story.

What Is A Secular Quote About God That Sparks Debate?

1 Answers2025-08-30 23:06:54
There’s a tiny, incendiary line that always gets my group chats and late-night forum threads buzzing: “God is dead.” It’s Nietzsche’s famous bite from 'The Gay Science' (and echoed in 'Thus Spoke Zarathustra'), and it’s one of those secular quotations that sparks debate because it’s compact, provocative, and wildly open to interpretation. On the surface it sounds like an atheistic mic drop, but spending a few hours poking around the original passages and watching people argue about it on Discord makes me appreciate how many different ways folks read it—historical diagnosis, cultural lament, philosophical challenge, or just a rhetorical stunt to wake people up. I’ve thrown the quote into conversations over ramen and comic conventions just to see who takes it as a philosophical tool and who sees it as a direct provocation, and the reactions are deliciously varied. Reading the context shifts everything. Nietzsche wasn’t celebrating the physical death of a deity; he was pointing at the collapse of a shared Christian metaphysical framework that once grounded meaning and morals in Europe. He predicted that if that framework disappears, nihilism becomes a real danger unless we step in to create new values. That makes the quote less about insult and more about warning. It’s fascinating to contrast that with Marx’s line from 'Contribution to the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right'—“Religion is the opium of the people”—which is another secular zinger but with a different aim: Marx was critiquing religion’s social function, not forecasting a cultural void. The debates spin around whether Nietzsche was imploring humanity to reinvent meaning or simply declaring a bankrupt worldview; whether the phrase is a liberating call to self-authorship or a cold, unsettling diagnosis. Fan communities, book clubs, and philosophers each tilt their heads differently, and even characters in fiction—think the moral vacuums explored in 'The Brothers Karamazov'—offer literary counterpoints that make the discussion more textured. As someone who loves sinking into novels, binging anime, and arguing plot points in late-night threads, I get a kick out of watching how this quote migrates across media and conversations. In some games and comics you see the same theme: gods or old orders fall, and the real story becomes how people rebuild. That resonates with Nietzsche’s idea—except in fiction you get to watch the messy, human aftermath in high definition. When I drop “God is dead” into a debate, I try to nudge people to read the surrounding text and think about consequences instead of treating it like a slogan. It’s illuminating to hear someone react emotionally and someone else dissect it historically; those contrasts are where the richest conversations live. If you want to stir a thoughtful (or heated) chat, bring the quote up, but be ready to follow the trail into history, literature, and personal belief—confrontations that always reveal more about the debaters than the phrase itself.

How Do I Credit An Author When Using A Quote About God?

1 Answers2025-08-30 13:46:50
Quoting something about god often feels heavier than a random line from a novel, so I tend to be a little extra careful about giving the author or source its proper credit. I’ve pinged friends in forums and even embarrassed myself once by misattributing a line to the wrong translation, so I now treat attribution like part of the ritual: it shows respect to the original speaker or writer, gives readers a path to verify context, and keeps you on the right side of copyright when the text is modern. A good habit is to answer three quick questions before you paste anything: who actually wrote or translated this, what exact version or edition am I using, and where did I get it from? Those three things usually cover the bases whether I’m posting on a blog, slipping a quote into a personal essay, or tagging a line in a tweet. When I’m dealing with sacred texts, I follow a simple and consistent format: cite the book or scripture, the chapter and verse, and the translation or edition. For example, I’d write Genesis 1:1 (King James Version) or Qur'an 2:255 (Saheeh International) because many readers will want to know which translation shaped the wording. For modern books or essays where someone writes about god rather than a religious scripture speaking directly, I include the author, the title, the publisher or platform, the year, and a page number if available — like James Smith, 'Faith and Doubt', University Press, 2018, p. 73. If the quote comes from a website or social post, I add a permalink and the date I accessed it; online content moves around, and giving the URL plus an access date is the polite thing to do. I also watch out for translations: if I’m quoting a line that’s translated from another language, I note the translator so credit goes where it’s due. Copyright and permissions can feel like a maze, but I keep it practical. Short quotes for critique, commentary, or education are often fine under fair use, but that depends on context and how much you’re quoting. Sacred scriptures like the King James Version are public domain, while many modern translations of the Bible, Qur'an commentaries, or contemporary books are copyrighted. If I plan to reproduce a longer excerpt in a published piece or a monetized video, I usually ask for permission or use a short excerpt plus a link. In casual settings — a forum post or a social card on Instagram — I still credit plainly: the quote, then a dash and the author or source, plus a link when relevant. For instance: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." — Genesis 1:1 (KJV). Or for a modern writer: "We make the sacred in small acts of care." — Maya Author, 'Small Devotions', 2020, p. 12. Tone and context matter as much as format. When the quote touches on someone’s faith, I try to add a sentence of context or a trigger note if it could be sensitive. If the piece is academic, I follow MLA, APA, or Chicago styles for bibliographic detail; if it’s casual, I keep it clear and link back to the source so people can read more. My little rule of thumb: give enough information that someone else could find the exact passage without guessing. It keeps conversations honest and often sparks richer discussion — and honestly, that’s half the fun when you stumble across a line that makes you pause and think.

What Is A Humorous Quote About God For Lighthearted Posts?

5 Answers2025-08-30 16:28:45
I love dropping this silly one into captions when I want people to smile: 'I asked for patience from above — God put me in line at the coffee shop.' I use it because it’s gentle and universal; everyone’s been stuck in a queue and can relate. I’d pair it with a photo of a sleepy morning or a ridiculous latte art fail. It keeps things playful without poking too hard at anyone’s beliefs, and it often sparks little stories in the comments about the worst waits people have endured. Sometimes a tiny, self-deprecating joke like that makes a post feel human, like I’m sitting across from you trading silly life moments over a lukewarm cappuccino.

Which Bible Verse Is The Top Quote About God For Sermons?

3 Answers2025-08-30 15:12:49
Every time I’m prepping a talk or helping a friend pick a verse for a difficult day, one passage keeps leaping to mind: 'John 3:16'. There’s something about its crisp, headline-friendly promise that makes it a go-to when people in the pews or online want a single line that points straight to who God is and what God does. It’s not the only verse worth preaching from, but if a sermon needs a clear, simple springboard into love, sacrifice, and the heart of the Gospel, this one often takes the stage. I like to think of 'John 3:16' as the kind of verse that works at multiple sermon levels. For newcomers, it’s an invitation—God loved the world; here’s the rescue. For people who’ve been around faith a long time, it’s a reminder of the scandal of grace: that love isn’t deserved, it’s given. When I’m crafting a message, I’ll sometimes pair it with a practical story (a neighbor shoveling a widow’s driveway, a friend staying up through a long night) because the verse begs for real-life echoes. You can unpack theology—incarnation, substitution, belief—without losing the emotional core that makes a congregation sit up. If what a pastor wants is a verse that points not just to doctrine but to a posture toward God, 'Psalm 23:1' is another heavyweight: “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.” That line is quieter than 'John 3:16' but it’s huge for sermons about trust, providence, and rest. It’s the kind of passage I reach for when people seem exhausted or anxious—because pastoral sermons often need to be balm more than argument. And if you’re aiming for comfort in crisis, 'Psalm 46:1' (“God is our refuge and strength”) can be a pulpit mic drop in a different register. What I really enjoy is mixing these verses into a mosaic: open with 'John 3:16' to hook the heart, bring in 'Psalm 23' to settle the soul, and use 'Romans 8:28' to point toward meaning in suffering. Each one brings a different light to who God is—savior, shepherd, sustainer. And depending on the congregation’s mood, any of these can be the “top quote,” so it’s less about a universal chart-topper and more about the sermon’s aim. For a concise, unforgettable line about God’s love, though, I’ll still bet on 'John 3:16'.

Which Famous Author Wrote The Quote About God And Faith?

5 Answers2025-08-30 18:32:28
I've tripped over this exact question in online debates a few times, and honestly the tricky part is that 'the quote about god and faith' could point to several very famous lines depending on what you heard. If you mean the stark line 'God is dead', that one’s from Friedrich Nietzsche — show up in 'The Gay Science' and echoed in 'Thus Spoke Zarathustra'. If you heard something like 'Faith is taking the first step even when you don't see the whole staircase,' that’s Martin Luther King Jr. And if the phrase was more sardonic, like 'Faith is believing what you know ain't so,' people often attribute that to Mark Twain. So without the exact wording it’s safer to offer likely candidates: Nietzsche, Martin Luther King Jr., Mark Twain, or C.S. Lewis (he has that luminous line about believing in Christianity the way you believe the sun has risen). If you can paste the quote, I’ll pin the origin down like a nerdy detective.
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status