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Quotes About Goal

The purpose of a man's act is his end; the desire to achieve this end is the man's motive for instituting the action.
~ Murray N. Rothbard
As an author, my goal is to spread and make sure that the message gets to you. Just like the person who invented the calendar, could not predict what will happen tomorrow.
~ Unknown
Let's get out of our dreaming state and turn all of our dreams into visions.
~ Unknown
Pain has become your motto in life and heaven your final goal.
~ Unknown
Right now I'm doing this and that, but I intend to secure a good career that will give me rest and peace of mind. Thus, focusing upon one target.
~ Unknown
Silence is useful if you are an initiate and know what you are doing. But useless if there is no goal behind. It's a natural thing.
~ Unknown
Success is simply the art of reaching the promised land of your mindset.
~ Unknown
The devil is more motivated because he sacrificed heaven. He only has one goal in mind.
~ Unknown
The goal of education is to be able to stand out, not to try to fit into large groups.
~ Unknown
The more you keep pushing forward, the more you will be able to see through the end.
~ Unknown
You cannot act without the presence of the will-power, every act leads to a desire and desire to achieving pleasure. Therefore, happiness seems to be the final destination of mankind.
~ Unknown
Where training and discipline are concerned, short-term pain means long-term gain. It may break our heart to inflict the pain of discipline on our children and to see their tears, but the long-term goal of preparing them to live responsibly as adults justifies the short-term pain of disciplining them while they are young.
~ Myles Munroe
The ultimate goal of all personal and national authority is freedom
~ Myles Munroe
The future goal is the thing which produces character in the present.
~ Unknown
United worship here and now, rather than disunited church life in the present and a distant "heaven" after death, was always, as far as Paul was concerned, the divinely intended goal of the Messiah's death.
~ Unknown
The old idea that the goal of Christian existence is simply "going to heaven" doesn't, in fact, do very much to stimulate the fully fledged virtue we find advocated in the New Testament.
~ Unknown
This summary may be enough to alert us to the fact that, in Paul's presentation of salvation, the goal is for humans to share the "royal" and "priestly" ministry of the Messiah himself.
~ Unknown
Second, the means by which this goal is attained is precisely the "forgiveness of sins." If, as Paul implies in 2:15, the objection of Jews (or Jewish Messiah believers) to the inclusion of Gentiles is that they are "Gentile sinners," then this objection is overturned precisely because the Messiah "gave himself for our sins.
~ Unknown
The "goal" is not "heaven," but a renewed human vocation within God's renewed creation. This is what every biblical book from Genesis on is pointing toward.
~ Unknown
Once we get the goal right (the new creation, not just "heaven") and the human problem properly diagnosed (idolatry and the corruption of vocation, not just "sin"), the larger biblical vision of Jesus's death begins to come into view.
~ Unknown
Though many Christians in the Western world have imagined that the aim or goal of being a Christian is simply "to go to heaven when you die," the New Testament holds out something much richer and more interesting.
~ Unknown
Yegane kapani can ve gönül olan av?n? daha henüz tuzaÄŸa dusurmemissin sen! Bu yolda hiç yorulmadan aramayi sürdürmen ve sürekli koÅŸturman gerekir! Av?n? gizlendiÄŸi yerden d??ar? cikarman, kovalaman, kendine doÄŸru çekmen; sonra yeniden onun peÅŸi sira koÅŸman, yuvas?ndan çekip cikarman ve onu sürekli araman gerekir!
~ Unknown
Maybe part of passing that test was a marker for where I've been, but it feels more like a pointer for something I'll never reach
~ Nancy E. Turner
It seems that Peter is saying the goal of apologetics is not just to present better arguments but to exhibit a better character, especially when suffering hostility and opposition.
~ Nancy Pearcey