Meaningful Quotes. Thoughtful Insights. Helpful Tools.
Advanced Search Options

Quotes about Growth

Everything that's really worthwhile in life comes to us.
— Earl Nightingale
The only person who succeeds is the person who is progressively realizing a worthy ideal. It's the person who says, "I'm going to become this and then progressively works toward that goal.
— Earl Nightingale
one extra hour of study per day and you 'll be a national expert in five years or less
— Earl Nightingale
If he wants more, he must be of more service to those from whom he receives his return.
— Earl Nightingale
The only person who succeeds is the person who is progressively realizing a worthy ideal.
— Earl Nightingale
The institutionalizing of the church is essentially its immunization to an evangelistic impulse.
— Ed Stetzer
Just as the mighty sequoia would topple without a community of supporting trees, believers who seek transformation apart from a Christian community are vulnerable to spiritually topple in the winds of adversity.
— Ed Stetzer
Community is essential when it comes to successfully living out the Christian walk in a day-to-day context. So the math is simple: More community = More disciples Understanding the nature of groups helps you.
— Ed Stetzer
This leads us to an important spiritual principle for growth: comeback leaders know that our Lord considers commitment to Him and His desires an indispensable ingredient to growing spiritually and numerically.
— Ed Stetzer
Belief followed by strategy and culture moves people to community.
— Ed Stetzer
Actually, reading the Bible was the factor that had the highest correlation with every other factor of discipleship. Now when people ask me, "How do we get people to witness?" "How do we get people to serve others?" or "How do we get people to pray?" I give them the same answer: Get people to read the Bible.
— Ed Stetzer
In his book Vision America, Aubrey Malphurs asserted that much of the perceived church growth in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s was actually due primarily to the redistribution of believers, not genuine church growth. He stated, "The problems of the church in the 1980s carry over into the 1990s. The church as a whole continues to experience decline and the unchurched increase."
— Ed Stetzer