Quotes about Destiny
Everything comes at its appointed moment. —Joseph R. Sizoo
— Melody Beattie
Where we are today is where we're meant to be. It's where we need to be to get where we're going tomorrow. And that place we're going tomorrow will be better than any we've been before
— Melody Beattie
Maybe we don't need to go deeper into our codependency. We can, instead, march forward into our destinies. We can remember and practice all we've learned about addictions, codependency, and abuse. With compassion and boundaries, we need to commit fully to loving God, ourselves, and others. We need to commit fully to trusting God, ourselves, and our process.
— Melody Beattie
The bottom line was that we have only ourselves to blame. We create our own destiny by the way we do things. We have to take advantage of opportunities
— Ben Carson
It's all in God's hands. That's where it's always been.
— Ben Carson
Ben Carson: I guess God had something to do with this. Craig: I guess God had everything to do with it.
— Ben Carson
God chose David. On the surface, the choice made no sense. But God doesn't work on sense; He works on grace. God called you, and God called me. He knew what He was doing.
— Beth Moore
Your Promised Land is the place where God's personalized promises over your life become a living reality rather than a theological theory.
— Beth Moore
victory is not determined as much by what we've been delivered from as by what we've been delivered to.
— Beth Moore
God does not save us to make us forget our heritage, but to complete it.
— Beth Moore
The devil wants to stop any believer from fulfilling his or her God-given destiny. He also knows that most believers feel almost invulnerable after a mountaintop experience with God. Actually, that's when we are most vulnerable because falling into sin is the last thing we're expecting. We're wise to expect times of testing after times of blessing.
— Beth Moore
We're getting by but getting by, was never our destiny. We were meant to be profoundly effective. Why have we accepted average? Are the few effects most of us see and experience all Christianity has to offer? Is this it? All we can expect? If so, someone out there needs to feel sorry for us.
— Beth Moore