Quotes about Discovery
The unborn baby lies in a cage we call a womb. He has eyes but cannot use them, and a mouth that he has never eaten with. He has been innately equipped for a world he has not been exposed to. His innate instincts like sucking, seeing, walking, and sitting have never been utilized because no opportunity exists in his present safe and warm cocoon of development. He must be born and enter the world to discover the instincts imbued by his Creator.
— Bishop TD Jakes
You never know what you might discover by thinking outside the box that culture, conformity, and critics have tried to impose.
— Bishop TD Jakes
The very key to knowing your purpose is discovering and celebrating your personal identity.
— Bishop TD Jakes
One of his main targets is your identity.
— Bishop TD Jakes
entrée to your future. Start reading journals and blogs and books that you've
— Bishop TD Jakes
But as he'd learned through the years, sometimes the best things were found when you weren't looking for them.
— Tamera Alexander
The four rules of writing... 1. Write to discover. 2. There is no greater discovery than love. 3. All love comes from the Creator. 4. Write what you will.
— Ted Dekker
Where is God? Where can I find him?" we ask. We don't realize that's like a fish swimming frantically through the ocean in search OF the ocean
— Ted Dekker
Live to discover, as long as discovery leads to a love that comes from the Creator... writing was the mirror to life.
— Ted Dekker
One of the things you'll discover... as you listen to your own soul is that you spend a great amount of your life trying to bring meaning to your own life. And, by the way, most people are not going to church, so the place they're actually trying to find meaning in their life is at work.
— Erwin McManus
In my experience, take the Holy Spirit out of the equation of your life and it spells boring. Add it into the equation of your life and you never know where you are going to go, what you are going to do, or who you are going to meet.
— Mark Batterson
A few of the sublimest geniuses of Rome and Athens had some faint discoveries of the spiritual nature of the human soul, and formed some probable conjectures, that man was designed for a future state of existence.
— David Brainerd