It’s God’s will for you to live in prosperity instead of poverty. It’s God’s will for you to pay your bills and not be in debt.
by Joel Osteen
Tag Archives: prosperity
181 Quotation By Benjamin Disraeli
Youth is the trustee of prosperity.
137 – Quotation from W. C. Fields
654 – Quote By Lucius Annaeus Seneca
We become wiser by adversity; prosperity destroys our appreciation of the right.
693 – Quotation by Lucius Annaeus Seneca
The good things of prosperity are to be wished; but the good things that belong to adversity are to be admired.
730 – Quote By Lucius Annaeus Seneca
The heart is great which shows moderation in the midst of prosperity.
383 – Quote By Plutarch
Nothing is harder to direct than a man in prosperity; nothing more easily managed that one is adversity.
174 – Quotation by Eamon de Valera
170 – Quotation by Edmund Burke
27 – Quotation by Earl Nightingale
33 – Quote by Simone de Beauvoir
175 – Quotation by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Words by Wayne Dyer
Memorable Quotation Spoken by Nelson Mandela
The task at hand on will not be easy. But you have mandated us to change South Africa from a country in which the majority lived with little hope, to one in which they can live and work with dignity, with a sense of self-esteem and confidence in the future. The cornerstone of building a better life of opportunity, freedom and prosperity is the Reconstruction and Development Programme.
Memorable Quoted from Nelson Mandela
We understand their call, that we devote what remains of our lives to the use of our country’s unique and painful experience to demonstrate, in practice, that the normal condition for human existence is democracy, justice, peace, non-racism, non-sexism, prosperity for everybody, a healthy environment and equality and solidarity among the peoples.
Notable Quoted of Nelson Mandela
A Quotation ~ Angela Merkel
Quoted by Nathaniel Hawthorne
No author, without a trial, can conceive of the difficulty of writing a romance about a country where there is no shadow, no antiquity, no mystery, no picturesque and gloomy wrong, nor anything but a commonplace prosperity, in broad and simple daylight, as is happily the case with my dear native land. It will be very long, I trust, before romance writers may find congenial and easily handled themes, either in the annals of our stalwart republic, or in any characteristic and probable events of our individual lives. Romance and poetry, ivy, lichens and wallflowers need ruin to make them grow.








