After the turbulence of death, moral principles and even religious proofs are called into question.
I'd like to design something like a city or a museum. I want to do something hands on rather than just play golf which is the sport of the religious right.
My children, to the extent that they have found religion, have found it from me, in that I insist on at least a modicum of religious education for them.
We are now in the Me Decade - seeing the upward roll of the third great religious wave in American history.
One of my good friends is Christian, goes to church every Sunday, very religious. I'm fine with that and I will never judge her.
Oddly enough, I'm not religious but I'm also very fond of St Peter's in Rome. When I'm there, I always know there's a good meal not far away.
So one reason the science educators panic at the first sign of public rebellion is that they fear exposure of the implicit religious content in what they are teaching.
I think church and state should remain entirely separate at all costs, and that the decision of religious marriage should be of each faith to debate and decide free of political influence.
I believe that for lots of churches and religious institutions, their main focus on the development of faith among parishioners needs to spread to the community.
I'm very keen on having true freedom of expression. True freedom of faith. And free practice of religious faith.
I mean, I talk about being Jewish a lot. It's funny because I do think of myself as Jewish ethnically, but I'm not religious at all. I have no religion.
God is the biggest storyteller, and when we create stories, we connect with him and with each other across cultural, religious and gender boundaries.
I definitely believe in a God and in a higher power, and I definitely take from many different religious cultures. I go to church.
My foster parents were very religious. They told me that they had not decided to take me in, rather that it was God that had decided it for them.
I make no apologies for the fact that I have a religious life of my own. I'm speaking as a Christian because I'm speaking as myself.
Those who are devoted to amusements; who love the society of those who love pleasure, have an aversion to religious exercises.
After coming into contact with a religious man I always feel I must wash my hands.
I was brought up as Christian, and while my ideas have changed, I have always felt myself religiously oriented.
The topic of compassion is not at all religious business; it is important to know it is human business, it is a question of human survival.
The opposite of the religious fanatic is not the fanatical atheist but the gentle cynic who cares not whether there is a god or not.
Obama's ascendancy unhinged the radical right, offering a unified target to competing camps of racial, nativist and religious animus.