A Quote by Chip Ingram

To be smart, spend carefully. To be wise, save regularly. To be genius, give extravagantly. — © Chip Ingram
To be smart, spend carefully. To be wise, save regularly. To be genius, give extravagantly.
[On Einstein:] You cannot analyze him, otherwise you will misjudge him. Such a genius should be irreproachable in every respect. But no, nature doesn't behave like this. Where she gives extravagantly, she takes away extravagantly.
Time itself is an individual gift. It is wise to cherish it carefully and give it away generously.
Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day.
Just as it is necessary to breathe out regularly in order to receive fresh air into the lungs, so it is necessary to give regularly if we wish to receive regularly.
When you take the people who most need work and connect them with the work that most needs doing, you save. You save that young person’s life, you save a whole bunch of money, and you save the soul of this country when you invest and give people a chance, give people hope, give people opportunity.
Give the Germans five deutschmarks and they will save it. But give the British £5 and they will borrow £25 and spend it.
Be as smart as you can, but remember that it is always better to be wise than to be smart.
Choose your tools carefully, but not so carefully that you get uptight or spend more time at the stationery store than at your writing table.
Wise is what you want to be. Smart is easy compared to wise.
Investigate carefully before you invest. Spend as much time researching the investment as you spend earning the money.
Applauds of the ignorant majority are worthless; applauds of the wise minority are priceless! Look carefully, who are applauding you? Look carefully, who are blessing you? Mud in the ground or stars in the sky?
I'm very organised with my money. It can sometimes feel like a full time job to keep on top of it but my best tip is to stay organised and always save first and then spend what you have left not spend and then save what's left.
What is the best safeguard against false doctrine? The Bible regularly read, regularly prayed over, regularly studied.
We are not to judge thrift solely by the test of saving or spending. If one spends what he should prudently save, that certainly is to be deplored. But if one saves what he should prudently spend, that is not necessarily to be commended. A wise balance between the two is the desired end.
If you have time to be with a dog, and the dog is smart, you come to understand the dog, and the dog understands you. They're not hard to train. But they have to be smart, and you have to spend time with them. It's like coaching. I was a better coach when I had smart players.
Frugality, quite simply, is about choosing the things you love enough to spend extravagantly on—and then cutting costs mercilessly on the things you don’t love.
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