How we cite our quotes: (Part.Letter.Paragraph)
Quote #4
I shall carry her off from the very God that she adores. (1.6.3)
Valmont has this rebellion-against-God thing going on. Maybe he was traumatized at church as a child. As far as we know, he's never had the slightest attachment to religion. In fact, he has total contempt for it and ridicules it at every opportunity.
Quote #5
I asked the worthy peasantry to intercede with God for the success of my plans. (1.21.6)
Valmont won't pass up the opportunity to be sacrilegious. He's asking others to pray that God blesses his villainy and sin. This amuses him. Even though he's not religious at all, he can speak the language well enough to know how to convince others of his piety. Everyone in those days received a Christian education, regardless of whether they decided to practice their faith.
Quote #6
Would God allow a virtuous family to receive help at the hands of a rascal; help for which they will return thanks to Divine Providence? (1.22.3)
Madame de Tourvel, pious as she is, is still naïve. If someone does good, that person cannot to her be "an enemy of virtue." She cannot seem to fathom the possibility of such grand deception as Valmont has done. The novel shows over and over again that God "allows" plenty of terrible things to happen to good people.