Quotes related to 2 Corinthians 5:17
The greatest discovery in life is self-discovery. Until you find yourself you will always be someone else. Become yourself.
— Myles Munroe
The aim of life is self-development. To realize one's nature perfectly - that is what each of us is here for.
— Oscar Wilde
When one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language.
— John Donne
The only certain freedom's in departure.
— Robert Frost
If we repent, God always recycles our mistakes.
— Mark Batterson
Going all in and all out for the All in All is both a death sentence and a life sentence. Your sinful nature, along with its selfish desires, is nailed to the cross. Then, and only then, does your true personality, your true potential, and your true purpose come alive. After all, God cannot resurrect what has not died. And that's why so many people are half alive. They haven't died to self yet.
— Mark Batterson
We're too Christian to enjoy sin and too sinful to enjoy Christ. We've got just enough Jesus to be informed, but not enough to be transformed.
— Mark Batterson
God can deliver you in one day, but it may take years to break old habits or build new habits.
— Mark Batterson
Before you step into what if, you have to get past if only.
— Mark Batterson
The spiritual tipping point is when the pain of staying the same becomes greater than the pain of change. Sadly, too many of us get comfortable with comfort. We follow Christ to the point of inconvenience, but no further. That's when we need a prophet to walk into our lives, throw a mantle around our shoulders, and wake us up to a new possibility, a new reality. We need a prophet to boldly confront Plan B and call us back to Plan A.
— Mark Batterson
God wants to do so much more than simply forgive your sin. He wants to leverage your past regrets for His eternal purpose.
— Mark Batterson
Jesus didn't die on the cross just to keep you safe. He died to make you dangerous--a threat to the enemy. He died so that you could make a difference for all eternity.
— Mark Batterson