Extremes meet and there is no better example than the haughtiness of humility.
– Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Extremes meet and there is no better example than the haughtiness of humility.
– Ralph Waldo Emerson
Updated May 20, 2012, 2:28 pm
On May 21, 1927, Charles A. Lindbergh landed his Spirit of St. Louis near Paris, completing the first solo airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean
On May 21, 1921, Andrei Sakharov, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Soviet scientist and dissident, was born. Following his death on Dec. 14, 1989, his obituary appeared in The Times.
Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »
On This Date
By The Associated Press
1832 The first Democratic National Convention got under way, in Baltimore. 1840 New Zealand was declared a British colony. 1881 Clara Barton founded the American Red Cross. 1892 The opera “I Pagliacci” by Ruggiero Leoncavallo was first performed, in Milan, Italy. 1924 Nathan Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, two students at the University of Chicago, killed a 14-year-old boy in a “thrill killing.” 1956 The United States exploded the first airborne hydrogen bomb, over Bikini Atoll in the Pacific. 1959 The musical “Gypsy” starring Ethel Merman opened on Broadway. 1979 Former San Francisco City Supervisor Dan White was convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the shooting deaths of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. 1980 “The Empire Strikes Back,” the second movie in the “Star Wars” series, was released. 1991 Former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated by a suicide bomber. 1999 Susan Lucci, star of the ABC soap opera “All My Children,” won her first Daytime Emmy Award for best actress in the 19th straight year she was nominated. 2008 David Cook won the seventh season of “American Idol.” Current Birthdays
By The Associated Press
Actress Lisa Edelstein (“House M.D.”) turns 46 years old today.
AP Photo/Evan Agostini
Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., turns 61 years old today.
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite
1941 Ron Isley, R&B singer (The Isley Brothers), turns 71 1948 Leo Sayer, Singer, turns 64 1952 Mr. T, Actor (“The A Team”), turns 60 1957 Judge Reinhold, Actor (“Beverly Hills cop” movies), turns 55 1959 Nick Cassavetes, Actor, director, turns 53 1977 Ricky Williams, Football player, turns 35 1981 Josh Hamilton, Baseball player, turns 31 1991 Sarah Ramos, Actress (“Parenthood”), turns 21
Historic Birthdays
Andrey Sakharov 5/21/1921 – 12/14/1989 Soviet physicist and advocate of human rights; awarded Nobel Prize for Peace in 1975.Go to obituary »
56 Alexander Pope 5/21/1688 – 5/30/1744
English poet and satirist65 Elizabeth Fry 5/21/1780 – 10/12/1845
English philanthropist and social reformer47 Edwin Christy 5/21/1815 – 5/21/1862
American minstrel show performer66 Henri Rousseau 5/21/1844 – 9/2/1910
French painter85 Gustav Lindenthal 5/21/1850 – 7/31/1935
Austrian-born American civil engineer; designed the Hell Gate Bridge74 Leon Bourgeois 5/21/1851 – 9/29/1925
French statesman and promoter of the League of Nations; awared Nobel Prize for Peace (1920)58 Grace Hoadley Dodge 5/21/1856 – 12/27/1914
American philanthropist67 Willem Einthoven 5/21/1860 – 9/29/1927
Dutch physiologist and developer of the electrocardiograph; won Nobel Prize (1924)52 Glenn Curtiss 5/21/1878 – 7/23/1930
American aviation pioneer79 Marcel Breuer 5/21/1902 – 7/1/1981
Hungarian-born American architect39 Fats Waller 5/21/1904 – 12/15/1943
American pianist and composer
MORNING
“He led them forth by the right way.”
Psalm 107:7Changeful experience often leads the anxious believer to inquire “Why is it thus with me?” I looked for light, but lo, darkness came; for peace, but behold, trouble. I said in my heart, my mountain standeth firm; I shall never be moved. Lord, thou dost hide thy face, and I am troubled. It was but yesterday that I could read my title clear; today my evidences are bedimmed, and my hopes are clouded. Yesterday, I could climb to Pisgah’s top, and view the landscape o’er, and rejoice with confidence in my future inheritance; today, my spirit has no hopes, but many fears; no joys, but much distress. Is this part of God’s plan with me? Can this be the way in which God would bring me to heaven? Yes, it is even so. The eclipse of your faith, the darkness of your mind, the fainting of your hope, all these things are but parts of God’s method of making you ripe for the great inheritance upon which you shall soon enter. These trials are for the testing and strengthening of your faith–they are waves that wash you further upon the rock–they are winds which waft your ship the more swiftly towards the desired haven. According to David’s words, so it might be said of you, “So he bringeth them to their desired haven.” By honour and dishonour, by evil report and by good report, by plenty and by poverty, by joy and by distress, by persecution and by peace, by all these things is the life of your souls maintained, and by each of these are you helped on your way. Oh, think not, believer, that your sorrows are out of God’s plan; they are necessary parts of it. “We must, through much tribulation, enter the kingdom.” Learn, then, even to “count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations.”
“O let my trembling soul be still,
And wait thy wise, thy holy will!
I cannot, Lord, thy purpose see,
Yet all is well since ruled by thee.”
EVENING
“Behold, thou art fair, my Beloved.”
Song of Solomon 1:16From every point our Well-beloved is most fair. Our various experiences are meant by our heavenly Father to furnish fresh standpoints from which we may view the loveliness of Jesus; how amiable are our trials when they carry us aloft where we may gain clearer views of Jesus than ordinary life could afford us! We have seen him from the top of Amana, from the top of Shenir and Hermon, and he has shone upon us as the sun in his strength; but we have seen him also “from the lions’ dens, from the mountains of the leopards,” and he has lost none of his loveliness. From the languishing of a sick bed, from the borders of the grave, have we turned our eyes to our soul’s spouse, and he has never been otherwise than “all fair.” Many of his saints have looked upon him from the gloom of dungeons, and from the red flames of the stake, yet have they never uttered an ill word of him, but have died extolling his surpassing charms. Oh, noble and pleasant employment to be forever gazing at our sweet Lord Jesus! Is it not unspeakably delightful to view the Saviour in all his offices, and to perceive him matchless in each?–to shift the kaleidoscope, as it were, and to find fresh combinations of peerless graces? In the manger and in eternity, on the cross and on his throne, in the garden and in his kingdom, among thieves or in the midst of cherubim, he is everywhere “altogether lovely.” Examine carefully every little act of his life, and every trait of his character, and he is as lovely in the minute as in the majestic. Judge him as you will, you cannot censure; weigh him as you please, and he will not be found wanting. Eternity shall not discover the shadow of a spot in our Beloved, but rather, as ages revolve, his hidden glories shall shine forth with yet more inconceivable splendour, and his unutterable loveliness shall more and more ravish all celestial minds.