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On This Day: June 20

Updated June 19, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On June 20, 1967, boxer Muhammad Ali was convicted in Houston of violating Selective Service laws by refusing to be drafted. The conviction was later overturned by the Supreme Court.

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On June 20, 1905, Lillian Hellman, the American playwright and screenwriter, was born. Following her death on June 30, 1984, her obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1863 West Virginia became the 35th state.
1893 A jury in New Bedford, Mass., found Lizzie Borden innocent of the ax murders of her father and stepmother.
1943 Race-related rioting erupted in Detroit.
1948 The TV variety series “Toast of the Town” hosted by Ed Sullivan debuted on CBS.
1963 The United States and Soviet Union signed an agreement to set up a hot line communication link between the two superpowers.
1967 Boxer Muhammad Ali was convicted in Houston of violating Selective Service laws by refusing to be drafted. (The conviction was later overturned by the Supreme Court.)
1975 The movie “Jaws” was released.
1994 O.J. Simpson pleaded innocent in Los Angeles to the killings of his ex-wife, Nicole, and her friend Ronald Goldman.
1999 As the last of 40,000 Yugoslav troops left Kosovo, NATO declared a formal end to its bombing campaign against Yugoslavia.
2001 Andrea Yates drowned her five children, who ranged in age from 6 months to 7 years, in the bathtub in her family’s home in Houston.
2002 The U.S. Supreme Court declared that executing mentally retarded murderers was unconstitutionally cruel.
2007 Sammy Sosa of the Texas Rangers became the fifth major leaguer to hit 600 career home runs.
2009 Neda Agha Soltan, 27, was gunned down during election protests in Tehran.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Nicole Kidman, Actress

Actress Nicole Kidman turns 45 years old today.

AP Photo/Isaac Brekken

Lionel Richie, Singer

Singer Lionel Richie turns 63 years old today.

AP Photo/Isaac Brekken

1931 Olympia Dukakis, Actress, turns 81
1931 Martin Landau, Actor, turns 81
1933 Danny Aiello, Actor, turns 79
1940 John Mahoney, Actor (“Frasier”), turns 72
1941 Stephen Frears, Director, turns 71
1942 Brian Wilson, Rock singer, songwriter (The Beach Boys), turns 70
1945 Anne Murray, Singer, turns 67
1946 Bob Vila, TV host (“This Old House”), turns 66
1948 Tina Sinatra, Producer, turns 64
1952 John Goodman, Actor, turns 60
1954 Michael Anthony, Rock musician (Van Halen), turns 58
1960 John Taylor, Rock musician (Duran Duran), turns 52
1971 Josh Lucas, Actor, turns 41
1986 Dreama Walker, Actress (“Don’t Trust the B—– in Apartment 23”), turns 26
1989 Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Actor (“Superbad”), turns 23

 

Historic Birthdays

Lillian Hellman 6/20/1905 – 6/30/1984 American playwright and screenwriter.Go to obituary »
57 Salvator Rosa 6/20/1615 – 3/15/1673
Italian Baroque painter and etcher
92 Adam Ferguson 6/20/1723 – 2/22/1816
Scottish historian and philosopher
32 Thomas Edward Bowdich 6/20/1791 – 1/10/1824
English traveler and scientific writer
61 Jacques Offenbach 6/20/1819 – 10/5/1880
French composer
72 Alexander Winton 6/20/1860 – 6/21/1932
Scottish-born American automobile manufacturer
85 Sir Frederick Hopkins 6/20/1861 – 5/16/1947
English Nobel Prize-winning biochemist (1929)
44 Jean Moulin 6/20/1899 – 7/8/1943
French World War II Resistance hero
50 Errol Flynn 6/20/1909 – 10/14/1959
American motion-picture actor
65 Chester Arthur Burnett 6/20/1910 – 1/10/1976
American blues singer and composer

 

 

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June 20

MORNING

“Thou art fairer than the children of men.”
Psalm 45:2

The entire person of Jesus is but as one gem, and his life is all along but one impression of the seal. He is altogether complete; not only in his several parts, but as a gracious all-glorious whole. His character is not a mass of fair colours mixed confusedly, nor a heap of precious stones laid carelessly one upon another; he is a picture of beauty and a breastplate of glory. In him, all the “things of good repute” are in their proper places, and assist in adorning each other. Not one feature in his glorious person attracts attention at the expense of others; but he is perfectly and altogether lovely.

Oh, Jesus! thy power, thy grace, thy justice, thy tenderness, thy truth, thy majesty, and thine immutability make up such a man, or rather such a God-man, as neither heaven nor earth hath seen elsewhere. Thy infancy, thy eternity, thy sufferings, thy triumphs, thy death, and thine immortality, are all woven in one gorgeous tapestry, without seam or rent. Thou art music without discord; thou art many, and yet not divided; thou art all things, and yet not diverse. As all the colours blend into one resplendent rainbow, so all the glories of heaven and earth meet in thee, and unite so wondrously, that there is none like thee in all things; nay, if all the virtues of the most excellent were bound in one bundle, they could not rival thee, thou mirror of all perfection. Thou hast been anointed with the holy oil of myrrh and cassia, which thy God hath reserved for thee alone; and as for thy fragrance, it is as the holy perfume, the like of which none other can ever mingle, even with the art of the apothecary; each spice is fragrant, but the compound is divine.

“Oh, sacred symmetry! oh, rare connection

Of many perfects, to make one perfection!

Oh, heavenly music, where all parts do meet

In one sweet strain, to make one perfect sweet!”

EVENING

“The foundation of God standeth sure.”
2 Timothy 2:19

The foundation upon which our faith rests is this, that “God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them.” The great fact on which genuine faith relies is, that “the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us,” and that “Christ also hath suffered for sin, the just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God”; “Who himself bare our sins in his own body on the tree”; “For the chastisement of our peace was upon him, and by his stripes we are healed.” In one word, the great pillar of the Christian’s hope is substitution. The vicarious sacrifice of Christ for the guilty, Christ being made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him, Christ offering up a true and proper expiatory and substitutionary sacrifice in the room, place, and stead of as many as the Father gave him, who are known to God by name, and are recognized in their own hearts by their trusting in Jesus–this is the cardinal fact of the gospel. If this foundation were removed, what could we do? But it standeth firm as the throne of God. We know it; we rest on it; we rejoice in it; and our delight is to hold it, to meditate upon it, and to proclaim it, while we desire to be actuated and moved by gratitude for it in every part of our life and conversation. In these days a direct attack is made upon the doctrine of the atonement. Men cannot bear substitution. They gnash their teeth at the thought of the Lamb of God bearing the sin of man. But we, who know by experience the preciousness of this truth, will proclaim it in defiance of them confidently and unceasingly. We will neither dilute it nor change it, nor fritter it away in any shape or fashion. It shall still be Christ, a positive substitute, bearing human guilt and suffering in the stead of men. We cannot, dare not, give it up, for it is our life, and despite every controversy we feel that “Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure.”