Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Marvin Sapp.
Last updated on November 17, 2024.
Bishop Marvin Louis Sapp Sr. is an American Gospel music singer-songwriter who recorded with the group Commissioned during the 1990s before beginning a record-breaking solo career. Sapp is also the founder and former senior pastor of Lighthouse Full Life Center Church, located in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He recorded Perfect Peace in 1995.
My church has a health and fitness ministry to encourage our members to take care of spiritually and physically; how could I not?
I understand now that God trusts me enough to give me three kids - Marvin Jr., Mikaila and Madisson - who totally depend on me. They know I'm going to be there for them no matter what.
The Bible tells us that we're supposed to leave an inheritance for children.
Some men don't have the opportunity to be the type of father they need to be, and I hope my example teaches them to step up.
My assignment is to take my situation and to use it to help others who feel hopeless and/or helpless because of loss.
A friend of mine said something powerful at his grandfather's funeral. He said that the greatest lesson from his grandfather's life was that he died empty, because he accomplished everything he wanted, with no regrets. I think that, along with leaving a legacy, would be the greatest sign of success.
Marvin's Motivational Moments actually started as something that was actually therapeutic for me. I would sit up late at night after my wife passed trying to adjust to being alone.
I have been singing gospel music since I was four years old.
I'm just a hometown boy from Grand Rapids, Michigan - where I still live - who is trying do what he feels that he's been called to do.
Whether looking at pop music, hip-hop or R&B, it's rare to find an artist who hasn't been touched or affected by the power and soul of gospel music. In fact, many of today's popular artists such as Whitney Houston, John Legend, and Katy Perry started their careers in the church choir.
Our job in gospel is not going away. It's a sustainable genre. It sells - without question.
I think people are transient. Back in the early church, there was a 'stick and stay' mentality. In this day and time, people have a fast food mentality of ministry. If it doesn't fit them or if it doesn't fit in their schedule, they'll move on to something else. That's a norm in today's time.
I want people to understand that tragedy and trial does not necessarily mean that you are a victim.
One thing I don't personally like is not having that privacy I used to have. Being able to do whatever I wanted to do without people recognizing me. That makes me watch what I'm doing more carefully. I'm not going to be acting no fool.
My wife was a licensed psychologist by profession and a college professor of psychology.
The best way to honor someone who has passed is to live.
When my wife got sick, I didn't understand why God was doing what he was doing.
We live in a world full of people who are ready to be uplifted.
Being a pastor is pressure because we have to counsel people.
Entertainment and information work well together.
Now we have so many different genres of music, it's amazing to me. Even in the gospel music arena, you've got hip-hop, you got contemporary, urban contemporary, you got traditional, you got neo-soul gospel, you've got all of these different things.
I chose to sing in the church, and have never regretted it.
Some things you just don't get over.
I just believe that whatever I post should be my content.
I tell people all the time, 'As long as my kids are doing good, I'm gonna be alright.'
I have to prioritize: father first, and then a pastor and a recording artist and entrepreneur. I try to put everything in proper perspective, and then the proper priority.
Keep doing what you do, and people that enjoy what you do are gonna buy your music and love on you.
My father was a singer. So it just kind of happened that one Sunday while my dad was singing, I just walked out and stood next to him, and I started singing the song that he was leading, and I sang it in perfect pitch.
D.C. is one my largest audiences. They buy tons of records of mine in Washington, D.C.
Gospel music allows us to become closer to God and closer to each other.
We as preachers/teachers/pastors have to figure out things to do in order to garner the attention of individuals and also keep them at our churches by making sure that we reinvent ourselves on a consistent basis.
In the African-American community, we struggle with a lot of health problems that have a lot to do with our diet.
Sometimes I still wonder what my fans look like, but if I had to describe them, I'd say that they are everyday people with everyday needs who need a supernatural message to help them though their natural walk.
Success is difficult to define.
The worse thing in the world is for an individual to live, breath and exist and leave this earth, die, and not make impact.
Throughout my career, my family and I have fallen victim to inappropriate attempts to contact me by several unknown individuals.
Just know He has His hands on You
God didn't give you the strength to get back on your feet so that you can run back to the same things that knocked you down.
In spite of calamity, He still has a plan for me, And it's working for my good, And it's building my testimony.