Paul J. Meyer and the Art of GivingThe Art of Giving, which Paul J. Meyer cultivates, can be summed up in the Biblical challenge: Give and it will be given to you. The person who meets the challenge, who determines to become a giver in all five resources -- finance, information, relationships, spirit, time and energy -- will enjoy the peace and the thrill and the financial security of proving God's promise. Most people think giving is a luxury they can't afford. They say they'll give when they get rich. They say giving is painful because it demands sacrifice. They say a person who gives seriously is a saint or a sucker. They're wrong. The Art of Giving is a biography of Paul J. Meyer and how he is a role model for the next millennium. He doesn't give his surplus earnings: he sets giving targets, then works to meet them. The commitment and scope of his philanthropy are without parallel in modern times, and his giving underpins his success. He wants to change the world. And he's already begun. |
Contents
3 | 25 |
Never stop at mistakes | 84 |
Impact the world for good | 101 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieve affirmation Andrew Carnegie asked Autrey Baylor Baylor University become benefit Bhide and Stevenson called Center charity Christian church creative dollars donation dream earn employees ethics everything executive feel funds gave generosity gift Girls Club giver giving Gladys Hudson goals goals program going Haggai Institute Han Kyung income investment Jane Jarrell McCracken Joe Baxter Joe Farrell keep learned life-areas live look Marshall Field III million Miranda Seymour Moody Bible Institute Motivation Mott never organizations ostrich Passport to Success Paul Meyer Paul's percent person philanthropy potential prayer private foundation problem RANK relationships Rich DeVos says Paul Scouts spend stewardship talk tell tennis Texas thank things time/energy told Tseng turned Waco wealth write young