Meaningful Quotes. Thoughtful Insights. Helpful Tools.
Advanced Search Options
Quotes related to Philippians 4:8
Take stock of your thoughts and behavior. Each night ask yourself, when were you negative when you could have been positive? When did you withhold love when you might have given it? When did you play a neurotic game instead of behaving in a powerful way? Use this process to self-correct.
— Marianne Williamson
Think honestly what you have thought that God would not have thought, and what you have not thought that God would have you think.
— Marianne Williamson
Worship is forgetting about what's wrong with you and remembering what's right with God.
— Mark Batterson
Faith is unlearning this senseless worries and misguided beliefs that keep us captive. It is far more complex than simply modifying behavior. Faith is rewiring the human brain. We are literally upgrading our minds by downloading the mind of Christ.
— Mark Batterson
Holy habits are that: the disciplines, the routines by which we stay alive and focused on Him. At first we choose them and carry them out; after a while they are part of who we are. And they carry us.
— Mark Buchanan
Life does not consist mainly, or even largely, of facts or happenings. It consist mainly of the storm of thoughts that is forever flowing through one's head.
— Mark Twain
The energy of the mind is the essence of life.
— Aristotle
We become just by the practice of just actions, self-controlled by exercising self-control, and courageous by performing acts of courage.
— Aristotle
The man who does not enjoy doing noble actions is not a good man at all.
— Aristotle
Man's work as Man is accomplished by virtue of Practical Wisdom and Moral Virtue, the latter giving the right aim and direction, the former the right means to its attainment;
— Aristotle
Every art or applied science and every systematic investigation, and similarly every action and choice, seem to aim at some good; the good, therefore, has been well defined as that at which all things aim.
— Aristotle
good character is the indispensable condition and chief determinant of happiness, itself the goal of all human doing.
— Aristotle