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Quotes about Return

So how do we conserve the momentum of God's blessing? At the risk of sounding like a memorandum issued by the department of redundancy department, the only way to maintain momentum is to flip the blessing. If we fail to flip the blessing, we hit the point of diminishing return. Eventually, we lose all spiritual momentum and wonder why. I'll tell you exactly why: God doesn't bless selfishness.
— Mark Batterson
What you give becomes an investment that will return to you multiplied at some point in the future.
— Jim Rohn
God is a businessman. He is not going to do business with someone who shows no sign of potential return. He invests in people who demonstrate an ability to handle what He has given them.
— Bishop TD Jakes
When you love someone, and you love them with your heart, it never disappears when you are apart. And when you love someone and you've done all you can do, you set them free, and if that love was true... when you love someone it will all come back to
— Paul Tillich
When the time comes for you to leave me, just say so! I can let you go. But let me embrace you while saying, You'll go back to me, okay! When he leaves you.
— Anonymous
If you love somebody, let them go. If they return, they were always yours. If they don't, they never were
— Anonymous
If you love something, let it go. If it comes back to you, its yours forever. If it dosent, then it was never meant to be.
— Anonymous
In any investment, you expect to have fun and make money.
— Michael Jordan
More than anything else, let me be clear - we need to be willing to fight for freedom, and free markets, and traditional moral values. That's what the American people want to see this movement and this party return to.
— Mike Pence
I will give them a heart to know me, that I am the Lord. They will be my people, and I will be their God, for they will return to me with all their heart" (Jeremiah 24:7).
— Myles Munroe
Dust we are, and to dust we shall return. But God can do new things with dust.
— NT Wright
The destruction of the Temple by the Babylonians in 587 BC had been the worst possible disaster, indicating that Israel's God had abandoned his house, had left the Temple and city to their long-deserved fate. That was the verdict of Ezekiel, and it is echoed by other writers of the period. But that could not be the end of the story. God had promised to come back. He had promised one final great Passover. One day, when he returned, his people would be free forever.
— NT Wright