English greeting with religious connotation

Since the English language has a number of idioms and phrases that involve references to religious figures (e.g., godspeed), I was wondering if there an English equivalent of the German greeting

Grüß Gott

which translates roughly as (see also here)

May God greet you

or any other greeting that originates from a religious context.

Edit: despite its literal meaning, the German Grüß Gott is used quite freely, even if no reference to God is intended.


Solution 1:

Good day, good morning, good afternoon, good evening, good night

Per this dictionary,

All these greetings represent an abbreviation of the now obsolete God give you a good day (afternoon, etc.) , which dates from about 1200.

Look under 'Idioms and Phrases'.

Solution 2:

Recently in America, there was a very temporary ban placed on uttering the greeting "Have a blessed day" at an Air Force base in Georgia. Several news outlets covered the story including Fox News; it seems that the phrase "Have a blessed day" was indeed used as a greeting to visitors and officers entering the base, rather than as a farewell.

Here is the initial article about the ban on the greeting in the Air Force Times. And here is the article announcing the reversal of the ban, published three hours later. In both, the phrase "Have a blessed day" is explicitly referred to as a greeting.