β
So, how was work? You clearly missed me.β
I put my hands on my face in embarrassment and he just laughs a bit to himself.
βIt was boring.β Itβs the truth.
βNo one to antagonize, huh?β
βI tried abusing some of the gentle folk in payroll but they got all teary.β
βThe trick is to find that one person who can give it back as good as they can take it.β He takes out a pan and begins to fry the vegetables in a single, stingy drop of oil.
βSonja Rutherford, probably. That scary lady in the mailroom that looks like an albino Morticia Addams.β
βDonβt line my replacement up too quick. Youβll hurt my feelings.
β
β
Sally Thorne (The Hating Game)
β
Believe God's word and power more than you believe your own feelings and experiences. Your Rock is Christ, and it is not the Rock which ebbs and flows, but your sea.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
All science is either physics or stamp collecting.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
If your experiment needs a statistician, you need a better experiment.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
Whenever I find myself in the cellar of affliction, I always look about for the wine.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
When you have only ever experienced privilege, equality feels like oppression.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality)
β
Have no fear of your ambitions.Stare them in the face ,fulfill them.Remember nothing is impossible...
β
β
Alex Rutherford (Raiders from the North (Empire of the Moghul, #1))
β
Gentlemen, we have run out of money. It's time to start thinking.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
So this is where all the vapid talk about the 'soul' of the universe is actually headed. Once the hard-won principles of reason and science have been discredited, the world will not pass into the hands of credulous herbivores who keep crystals by their sides and swoon over the poems of Khalil Gibran. The 'vacuum' will be invaded instead by determined fundamentalists of every stripe who already know the truth by means of revelation and who actually seek real and serious power in the here and now. One thinks of the painstaking, cloud-dispelling labor of British scientists from Isaac Newton to Joseph Priestley to Charles Darwin to Ernest Rutherford to Alan Turing and Francis Crick, much of it built upon the shoulders of Galileo and Copernicus, only to see it casually slandered by a moral and intellectual weakling from the usurping House of Hanover. An awful embarrassment awaits the British if they do not declare for a republic based on verifiable laws and principles, both political and scientific.
β
β
Christopher Hitchens
β
Your heart is not the compass that God steers by.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
We haven't got the money, so we'll have to think
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
If our legal counsel, Bob Rutherford, works for Satan, Satan should buy Bob a better toupee.
β
β
Christina Dodd (Scent of Darkness (Darkness Chosen, #1))
β
Faint not; the miles to heaven are but few and short.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
[S]how yourself a Christian, by suffering without murmuring; - in patience possess your soul: they lose nothing who gain Christ.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (A Selection from His Letters)
β
The real difficulty is with the vast wealth and power in the hands of the few and the unscrupulous who represent or control capital. Hundreds of laws of Congress and the state legislatures are in the interest of these men and against the interests of workingmen. These need to be exposed and repealed. All laws on corporations, on taxation, on trusts, wills, descent, and the like, need examination and extensive change. This is a government of the people, by the people, and for the people no longer. It is a government of corporations, by corporations, and for corporations.
β
β
Rutherford B. Hayes (Diary and Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes: Nineteenth President of the United States (1922))
β
Her mother was a Rutherford. The family came over in the ark, and were connected by marriage with Henry the VIII. On her father's side they date back further than Adam. On the topmost branches of her family tree there's a superior breed of monkeys with very fine silky hair and extra long tails.
β
β
Jean Webster
β
I've just finished reading some of my early papers, and you know, when I'd finished I said to myself, 'Rutherford, my boy, you used to be a damned clever fellow.' (1911)
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
Personally I do not resort to force--not even the force of law--to advance moral reforms. I prefer education, argument, persuasion, and above all the influence of example.
β
β
Rutherford B. Hayes
β
i have to love myself more than i love him, in order to leave him.
β
β
Kay M. Rutherford (The Last Cheater's Waltz Trusting Dog Trusting Self)
β
It was quite the most incredible event that has ever happened to me in my life. It was almost as incredible as if you fired a 15-inch shell at a piece of tissue paper and it came back and hit you.
[Recalling in 1936 the discovery of the nucleus in 1909, when some alpha particles were observed instead of travelling through a very thin gold foil were seen to rebound backward, as if striking something much more massive than the particles themselves. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for this discovery.]
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
Hiding our scars doesn't mean they're not really there. Just as beauty cannot disguise who we really are beneath the surface.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
If you don't do the best with what you have, You could never have done better with what you could have had !
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
Women revert to their maiden names in Heaven, Rutherford feels fairly certain. He can't remember where he learned this--France or the Bible.
β
β
Karen Russell (Vampires in the Lemon Grove: Stories)
β
The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the βsocial sciencesβ is: some do, some donβt.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
You must learn to make your evils your great good; and to spin comforts, peace, joy, communion with Christ, out of your troubles, which are Christ's wooers, sent to speak for you from Himself.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Letters of Samuel Rutherford)
β
When we consider the magnitude and extent of his discoveries and their influence on the progress of science and of industry, there is no honour too great to pay to the memory of Faraday, one of the greatest scientific discoverers of all time.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
If Strength comes through Suffering, why then I should be the strongest of all women, yet I am the weakest. God help me. Help me.
β
β
Lee Smith (On Agate Hill)
β
Many are friends to the success of reformation, not to reformation.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Trial and Triumph of Faith)
β
Weβre drowning in information and starving for knowledge.
β
β
Rutherford D. Rogers
β
And then there are huge chunks of DNA that are just repeated sections. And then there are huge chunks of DNA that are just repeated sections. And then there are huge chunks of DNA that are just repeated sections.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Stories in Our Genes)
β
Those who have never known pain or adversity are as shallow as the waves lapping on the shore."
"And what is wrong with being shallow?" I'd asked him.
"What lies beneath the surface of shallow waters? Nothing. It's only when you go deeper that the ocean comes alive. The deeper you go, the more mysteries and surprises await.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
Oh thrice fools are we who like new-born princes weeping in the cradle know not that there is a kingdom before them then let our Lord's sweet hand square us and hammer us and strike off the knots of pride self-love and world-worship and infidelity that He may make us stones and pillars in His Father's house.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
If ye were not Christ's wheat, appointed to be bread in His house, He would not grind you.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (Letters of Samuel Rutherford)
β
Free government cannot long endure if property is largely in a few hands, and large masses of people are unable to earn homes, education, and a support in old age.
β
β
Rutherford B. Hayes
β
No weapon is more powerful than he who aims it.
β
β
Alex Rutherford (Raiders from the North (Empire of the Moghul, #1))
β
I know I am going where Lucy is.
β
β
Rutherford B. Hayes
β
When all youβve ever known is privilege, equality feels like oppression.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality)
β
[M]ake much of the written word, and pray to God to copy his Bible in your conscience, and write a new book of his doctrine in your hearts.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (Fourteen Communion Sermons)
β
My favourite chess saying is very simple: You can play without a plan, but youβll probably lose.β
- Rutherford Gravesdown
β
β
Kristen Perrin (How to Solve Your Own Murder (Castle Knoll Files, #1))
β
Early in the twentieth century, the physicist Lord Rutherford, best known for his landmark discovery of the atomic nucleus, famously pronounced, βAll science is either physics or stamp collecting.
β
β
Lisa Randall (Dark Matter and the Dinosaurs: The Astounding Interconnectedness of the Universe)
β
Here's the thing: the act of reading changes your life, sometimes in large ways, sometimes in small ways, but every book you read asks you to move outside of yourself and your own experience to consider the lives of others. So I can't identify a particular book that altered my life, but I do know that the act of reading has pushed me to engage more deeply with the world (real and imagined), and I'm grateful for that.
β
β
Ethan Rutherford
β
A true knowledge of ourselves is knowledge of our power.
β
β
Mark Rutherford
β
Now I know what the atom looks like.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
We sometimes forget that though the data should be pure and straightforward, science is done by people, who are never either.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Human Story Retold Through Our Genes)
β
Alas, we are no more or less evolved than any creature. Uniqueness is terribly overrated.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Stories in Our Genes)
β
Nature is not cruel, it is simply indifferent,
β
β
Adam Rutherford (The Book of Humans: A Brief History of Culture, Sex, War, and the Evolution of Us: How Homo sapiens Became Natureβs Most Paradoxical CreatureβA New Evolutionary History)
β
Dreams of greatness came easily. Achieving it was harder.
β
β
Alex Rutherford (Raiders from the North (Empire of the Moghul, #1))
β
Whenever I find myself in the cellar of affliction, I always looks around for the wine.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
Our pride must have winter weather to rot it.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Loveliness of Christ: Selections from the Letters of Samuel Rutherford)
β
I will see you again, in this life or another. Now go, meet your destiny.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
We look to statistics for reassurance in these types of situations. Here is one: 100% of mass shootings have been enabled by access to guns. I can guarantee that even if there were a genotype shared by the mass shooters, which there will not be, none of the killings would have happened if they didn't have guns.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Stories in Our Genes)
β
His work was so great that it cannot be compassed in a few words. His death is one of the greatest losses ever to occur to British science.
{Describing Ernest Rutherford upon his death at age 66. Thomson, then 80 years old, was once his teacher.}
β
β
J.J. Thomson
β
Do not focus your thoughts among the confused wheels of secondary causes, as -'O if this had been, this had not followed!' Look up to the master motion of the first wheel. In building, we see hewn stones and timbers under hammers and axes, yet the house in this beauty we do not see at the present, but it is in the mind of this builder. We also see unbroken clods, furrows, and stones, but we do not see the summer lilies, roses, and the beauty of a garden. Even so we do not presently see the outcome of God's decrees with his blessed purpose. It is hard to believe when his purpose is hidden and under the ground. Providence has a thousand keys to deliver his own even when all hope is gone. Let us be faithful and care for our own part, which is to do and suffer for him, and lay Christ's part on himself and leave it there; duties are ours, events are the Lord's.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
It's wrong to take even those occasional long sentences in the Quixote with loose structures, and subdivide, tighten and correct them because they are not instances of stylistic carelessness but examples of Cervantes's masterly creation of realistic dialogue: His amused observation of the deleterious effects of natural verbosity, or of passionate interest in the subject under discussion, on the speaker's grammar.
β
β
John Rutherford (Don Quixote)
β
The landed classes neglected technical education, taking refuge in classical studies; as late as 1930, for example, long after Ernest Rutherford at Cambridge had discovered the atomic nucleus and begun transmuting elements, the physics laboratory at Oxford had not been wired for electricity. Intellectual neglect technical education to this day.
[Describing C.P. Snow's observations on the neglect of technical education.]
β
β
Richard Rhodes (Visions of Technology: A Century of Vital Debate About Machines Systems and the Human World)
β
In the words of Dr. Seuss: Today you are you! That is truer than true!
There is no one alive who is you-er than you!
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Human Story Retold Through Our Genes)
β
One of the tests of the civilization of people is the treatment of its criminals.
β
β
Rutherford B. Hayes
β
Scientific racismβ or βrace scienceβ are both misnomers. These are pseudoscientific domains.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality)
β
Race is a social construct. This does not mean that it is invalid or unimportant.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality)
β
My people had a saying about home, as they did about so many of the important things in life: a Varenian can never be lost at sea, because he calls the entire ocean home.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
Arbitrary governing hath no alliance with God.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (Lex, Rex, or the Law and the Prince: A Dispute for the Just Prerogative of King and People)
β
I had found the place I belonged, and it wasnβt a cottage or a village or a country: it was right here, inside of me. Finally, I was home.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Kingdom of Sea and Stone (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #2))
β
I would never be that good, that pure of heart. And that was a harder sort of pain to bear.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
Christ is a well of life, but who knoweth how deep it is to the bottom? This soul of ours hath love, and cannot but love some fair one; and O, what a fair One, what an only One, what an excellent, lovely, ravishing One is Jesus.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Loveliness of Christ (Vintage Puritan))
β
It began with the twitch of her lower lip as it took on a life of its own, rippling outward to the corners of her mouth and forcing them upward into a helpless smile. She instantly clasped one hand over her mouth in a frantic attempt to silence the sound that was coming from her throat. The result was that she half-spluttered, half-coughed, her eyes painfully wide as she desperately wished a hole would emerge in the oriental carpet and mercifully swallow her up.
β
β
Sophie Barnes (How Miss Rutherford Got Her Groove Back)
β
Race is real because we perceive it. Racism is real because we enact it. Neither race nor racism has foundations in science. It is our duty to contest the warping of scientific research, especially if it is being used to justify prejudice. If you are a racist, then you are asking for a fight. But science is my ally, not yours, and your fight is not just with me, but with reality.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality)
β
If your Lord calls you to suffering, do not be dismayed, for He will provide a deeper portion of Christ in your suffering. The softest pillow will be placed under your head though you must set your bare feet among thorns. Do not be afraid at suffering for Christ, for He has a sweet peace for a sufferer. God has called you to Christ's side, and if the wind is now in His face, you cannot expect to rest on the sheltered side of the hill. You cannot be above your Master who received many an innocent stroke. The greatest temptation out of hell is to live without trials. A pool of standing water will turn stagnant. Faith grows more with the sharp winter storm in its face. Grace withers without adversity. You cannot sneak quietly into heaven without a cross. Crosses form us into His image. They cut away the pieces of our corruption. Lord cut, carve, wound; Lord do anything to perfect Your image in us and make us fit for glory! We need winnowing before we enter the kingdom of God. O what I owe to the file, hammer, and furnace! Why should I be surprised at the plough that makes such deep furrows in my soul? Whatever direction the wind blows, it will blow us to the Lord. His hand will direct us safely to the heavenly shore to find the weight of eternal glory. As we look back to our pains and suffering, we shall see that suffering is not worthy to be compared to our first night's welcome home in heaven. If we could smell of heaven and our country above, our crosses would not bite us. Lay all your loads by faith on Christ, ease yourself, and let Him bear all. He can, He does, and He will bear you. Whether God comes with a rod or a crown, He comes with Himself. "Have courage, I am your salvation!" Welcome, welcome Jesus!
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
The thorn is one of the most cursed, and angry, and crabbed weeds that the earth yieldeth, and yet out of it springeth the rose, one of the sweetest-smelled flowers, and most delightful to the eye, that the earth hath. Your Lord shall make joy and gladness out of your afflictions; for all His roses have a fragrant smell. Wait for the time when His own holy hand shall hold them to your nose...
β
β
Samuel Rutherford
β
And now to that Victim whose Sign rose above the world two thousand years ago, to be menaced now by that other sign now rising, I say a prayer of contrition. I, whom you have seen as irreverent and irreligious, now pray in the name of Chuckler and Hoosier and Runner, in the name of Smoothface, Gentlemen, Amish, and Oakstump, Ivy-League and Big-Picture, in the name of all those who suffered in the jungles and on the beaches, from Anzio to Normandy--and in the name of the immolated: of Texan, Rutherford, Chicken, Loudmouth, of the Artist and White-Man, Souvenirs and Racehorse, Dreadnought and Commando--of all these and the others, dear Father, forgive us for that awful cloud.
β
β
Robert Leckie (Helmet for My Pillow)
β
It would be much easier to tell who the villains were if their appearances reflected their intentions.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Luminous)
β
Evolution, blind and slow, has not inched along over billions of years with any intention that it should be decipherable to one or any of its billions of children.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Stories in Our Genes)
β
You should never bet against anything in science at odds of more than about 10^12 to 1.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
Christ and His cross together are sweet company, and a blessed couple. My prison is my palace, my losses are rich losses, my pain easy pain, my heavy days are holy and happy days.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Loveliness of Christ)
β
Mother had given us one gift, at least, that no amount of time or distance could erase: each other.
β
β
Mara Rutherford
β
Beware the lionfish, my dear, Beware the fish that's made of stone. Beware sweet nothings in your ear, And the heart as hollow as a bone.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
As Jonathan Swift said in 1721: βReasoning will never make a Man correct an ill Opinion, which by Reasoning he never acquired.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality)
β
He serves his party best who serves his country best.
β
β
Rutherford B. Hayes
β
Home was not a house, or a village, or a sea. It was family, and love, and the space where your soul could roost, like a seabird safe from a storm.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
People talk about New York and Los Angeles when they discuss terrible traffic, but those people are dilettantes. Any true connoisseur of terrible traffic knows that Seattle is something special. In fact, Rutherford suspected that a big part of the reason there were so many environmentalists in Seattle was that the city itself was designed to make you hate your car.
β
β
Scott Meyer (The Authoritiesβ’ (The Authorities, #1))
β
There was, I think, a feeling that the best science was that done in the simplest way. In experimental work, as in mathematics, there was 'style' and a result obtained with simple equipment was more elegant than one obtained with complicated apparatus, just as a mathematical proof derived neatly was better than one involving laborious calculations. Rutherford's first disintegration experiment, and Chadwick's discovery of the neutron had a 'style' that is different from that of experiments made with giant accelerators.
β
β
John Ashworth Ratcliffe
β
Everyone alive in the tenth century who left descendants is the ancestor of every living European today, including Charlemagne, and his children Drogo, Pippin and, of course, not forgetting Hugh. If
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Stories in Our Genes)
β
Oh, what love! Christ would not intrust our redemption to angels, to millions of angels; but he would come himself, and in person suffer; he would not give a low and a base price for us clay. He would buy us with a great ransom, so as he might over-buy us, and none could over-bid him in his market for souls. If there had been millions of more believers, and many heavens, without any new bargain his blood should have bought them all, and all these many heavens should have smelled one rose of life; Christ should have been one and the same tree of life in them all. Oh, we under-bid, and undervalue that Prince of love, who did overvalue us; we will not sell all we have to buy him; he sold all he had, and himself too, to buy us.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Trial and Triumph of Faith)
β
Genetics is messy and mathematical, but powerful if deployed in the right way. People are horny. Lives are complex. A secret history is truly hidden in the mosaics of our genomes, but caveat emptor. No
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Stories in Our Genes)
β
She is not sent away, but only sent before, like unto a star, which, going out of your sight, doth not die and vanish, but shineth in another hemisphere: ye see her not yet, she doth shine in another country.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Loveliness of Christ (Vintage Puritan))
β
Iβm the perfect seashell you pick up from the ocean floor, only to turn it over in your hand and see the crack. Iβm the fabric with the tear in the seam that you give back to the trader and demand first quality.
β
β
Mara Rutherford (Crown of Coral and Pearl (Crown of Coral and Pearl, #1))
β
(If God wills it)... the number of angels... may be infinite... Blessed are they that have not seen and yet have believed. Once upon a time, atoms did not exist. There was no Dalton, no Rutherford. Albert Einstein was nothing more than a theorist, but you only have to look at Hiroshima and Nagasaki to know that things invisible exist and bear great power. The power to destroy. Or the power to create... Atoms and angels, reason and faith... One without the other is less than half as strong and can be a danger to our vitality. Reason is subject to the tests of logic and observable, demonstrable phenomena. Faith is tested by our desire and will. One cannot see faith, just as one cannot pour out hope or love from a beaker. Self-sacrifice and devotion escape the strongest microscope, but such qualities of spirit can be shown and known by us all... And so with God's messengers, more believed than seen, more felt than touched, our angel's exist in open hearts, if we have but faith.
β
β
Keith Donohue
β
I am in as sweet communion with Christ as a poor sinner can be; and am only pained that He hath much beauty and fairness, and I little love; He great power and mercy, and I little faith; He much light, and I bleared eyes.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Loveliness of Christ: Selections from the Letters of Samuel Rutherford)
β
none of the ways in which we talk about race today stands up to the scrutiny that genetics has enabled. Families are too untidy, human history is too convoluted, people too motile. The deck has been shuffled and reshuffled. Genetics has shown that people are different, and these differences cluster according to geography and culture, but never in a way that aligns with the traditional concepts of human races.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Human Story Retold Through Our Genes)
β
I think a strong claim can be made that the process of scientific discovery may be regarded as a form of art. This is best seen in the theoretical aspects of Physical Science. The mathematical theorist builds up on certain assumptions and according to well understood logical rules, step by step, a stately edifice, while his imaginative power brings out clearly the hidden relations between its parts. A well constructed theory is in some respects undoubtedly an artistic production. A fine example is the famous Kinetic Theory of Maxwell. ... The theory of relativity by Einstein, quite apart from any question of its validity, cannot but be regarded as a magnificent work of art.
β
β
Ernest Rutherford
β
Nevertheless, every Nazi has Jewish ancestors. Every white supremacist has Middle Eastern ancestors. Every racist has African, Indian, Chinese, Native American, aboriginal Australian ancestors, as well as everyone else, and not just in the sense that humankind is an African species in deep prehistory, but at a minimum from classical times, and probably much more recently. Racial purity is a pure fantasy. For humans, there are no purebloods, only mongrels enriched by the blood of multitudes.
β
β
Adam Rutherford (How to Argue With a Racist: History, Science, Race and Reality)
β
In the leadup to the election of 1876, swing votes were tied to the issue of Chinese immigration in the same way that immigration was a hot topic during this election cycle. Rutherford Hayes endorsed Chinese exclusion and won the election. In the following election, James Garfield also carried the torch of anti-Chinese immigration into office. (From those days to now, every presidential election has fanned the flames of anti-immigration. This, Henry, shows that hate and fear are reliable, predictable, and effective political tools.) All of this led eventually to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which barred the entry of all Chinese immigrants to the United States except for those who were teachers, students, diplomats, ministers, or merchants. It also declared all Chinese totally ineligible for naturalized citizenship. This clause alone allowed the United States to join Nazi Germany and South Africa as the only nations every to withhold naturalization purely on racial grounds.
β
β
Lisa See (Radical Hope: Letters of Love and Dissent in Dangerous Times)
β
When we shall come home and enter to the possession of our Brotherβs fair kingdom, and when our heads shall find the weight of the eternal crown of glory, and when we shall look back to pains and sufferings; then shall we see life and sorrow to be less than one step or stride from a prison to glory; and that our little inch of time-suffering is not worthy of our first nightβs welcome home to heaven.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (The Loveliness of Christ (Vintage Puritan))
β
We would either have a silent, a soft, a perfumed cross, sugared and honeyed with the consolations of Christ, or we faint; and providence must either brew a cup of gall and wormwood, mastered in the mixing with joy and songs, else we cannot be disciples. But Christβs cross did not smile on him, his cross was a cross, and his ship sailed in blood, and his blessed soul was sea-sick, and heavy even to death.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (Christ dying and drawing sinners to himself, or, A survey of our Saviour in his soule-suffering, his lovelynesse in his death, and the efficacie ... in weeke beleevers are opened (1647))
β
Meanwhile, the government of the United States was behaving almost exactly as Karl Marx described a capitalist state: pretending neutrality to maintain order, but serving the interests of the rich. Not that the rich agreed among themselves; they had disputes over policies. But the purpose of the state was to settle upper-class disputes peacefully, control lower-class rebellion, and adopt policies that would further the long-range stability of the system. The arrangement between Democrats and Republicans to elect Rutherford Hayes in 1877 set the tone. Whether Democrats or Republicans won, national policy would not change in any important way.
β
β
Howard Zinn (A Peopleβs History of the United States: 1492 - Present)
β
Madam, when you are come to the other side of the water, and set down your foot on the shore of glorious eternity, and look back to the water and to your wearisome journey, and shall see in that clear glass of endless glory nearer to the bottom of God's wisdom, you shall then be forced to say, "If God had done otherwise with me than He hath done, I had never come to the enjoying of this crown of glory.
β
β
Samuel Rutherford (Letters of Samuel Rutherford)
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Some of the city legislators, whose concern for appropriate names and the maintenance of the city's landmarks was the principal part of their political life, saw to it that "Doctor Street" was never used in any official capacity. And since they knew that only Southside residents kept it up, they had notices posted in the stores, barbershops, and restaurants in that part of the city saying that the avenue running northerly and southerly from Shore Road fronting the lake to the junction of routes 6 and 2 leading to Pennsylvania, and also running parallel to and between Rutherford Avenue and Broadway, had always been and would always be known as Mains Avenue and not Doctor Street.
It was a genuinely clarifying public notice because it gave Southside residents a way to keep their memories alive and please the city legislators as well. They called it Not Doctor Street, and were inclined to call the charity hospital at its northern end No Mercy Hospital since it was 1931, on the day following Mr. Smith's leap from its cupola, before the first colored expectant mother was allowed to give birth inside its wards and not on its steps.
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Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)
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No one is born with prejudicial feelings, they are developed and nurtured within us by our experiences and upbringing. Consider the many factors involved: Babies are born into rich families and poor families alike - each capable of developing resentment toward the other. Children will often adopt prejudicial attitudes from their parents' racist remarks and actions. There are always two sides of the train tracks, with people on each side often unwilling to cross. One negative experience with a person may lead to false stereotyping for an entire people group.
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Dudley C. Rutherford (God Has an App for That!: Discover God's Solution for the Major Issues of Life)
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There is much in our Lord's pantry that will satisfy his children, and much wine in his cellar that will quench all their thirst. Hunger for him until he fills you. He is pleased with the importunity of hungry souls. If he delays, do not go away, but fall a-swoon at his feet. Every day we may see some new thing in Christ. His love has neither brim nor bottom. How blessed are we to enjoy this invaluable treasure, the love of Christ; or rather allow ourselves to be mastered and subdued in his love, so that Christ is our all, and all other things are nothing. O that we might be ready for the time our Lord's wind and tide call for us! There are infinite plies in his love that the saint will never be able to unfold. I urge upon you a nearer and growing communion with Christ. There are curtains to be drawn back in Christ that we have never seen. There are new foldings of love in him. Dig deep, sweat, labour, and take pains for him, and set by as much time in the day for him as you can; he will be won with labour. Live on Christ's love. Christ's love is so kingly, that it will not wait until tomorrow, it must have a throne all alone in your soul. It is our folly to divide our narrow and little love. It is best to give it all to Christ. Lay no more on the earthly, than it can carry. Lay your soul and your weights upon God; make him your only and best-beloved. Your errand in this life is to make sure an eternity of glory for your soul, and to match your soul with Christ. Your love, if it could be more than all the love of angels in one, would be Christ's due. Look up to him and love him. O, love and live! My counsel is, that you come out and leave the multitude, and let Christ have your company. Let those who love this present world have it, but Christ is a more worthy and noble portion; blessed are those who have him.
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Samuel Rutherford
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This soul of ours hath love, and cannot but love some fair one. And oh what a fair One, what an only One, what an excellent, lovely ravishing One is Jesus! Put the beauty of ten thousand thousand worlds of paradises, like the garden of Eden in one, put all trees, all flowers, all smells, all colours, all tastes, all joys, all sweetness, all loveliness, in one: oh, what a fair and excellent thing would that be! And yet it would be less to that fair and dearest Well-beloved Christ, than one drop of rain to the whole seas, rivers, lakes, and fountains of ten thousand earths. Oh, but Christ is heaven's wonder and earth's wonder!
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Samuel Rutherford
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The saints are little pieces of mystical Christ, sick of love for union. The wife of youth, that wants her husband some years, and expects he shall return to her from oversea lands, is often on the shore; every ship coming near shore is her new joy; her heart loves the wind that shall bring him home. She asks at every passenger news: "Oh! saw ye my husband? What is he doing? When shall he come? Is he shipped for a return?" Every ship that carrieth not her husband, is the breaking of her heart. What desires hath the Spirit and Bride to hear, when the husband Christ shall say to the mighty angels, "Make you ready for the journey; let us go down and divide the skies, and bow the heaven: I will gather my prisoners of hope unto me; I can want my Rachel and her weeping children no longer. Behold, I come quickly to judge the nations." The bride, the Lamb's wife, blesseth the feet of the messengers that preach such tidings, "Rejoice, O Zion, put on thy beautiful garments; thy King is coming." Yea, she loveth that quarter of the sky, that being rent asunder and cloven, shall yield to her Husband, when he shall put through his glorious hand, and shall come riding on the rainbow and clouds to receive her to himself.
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Samuel Rutherford (The Trial and Triumph of Faith)