Posted on Jul 1, 2019
The Colonel's Motivational Quotes of the Day!
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Responses: 26
Good Monday morning COL Mikel J. Burroughs It's pretty clear that your passions are helping veterans and motorcycles and you've found a great way to combine those.
Passion is something we find within ourselves. We can't buy it, or borrow it, we have to search and discover it and once found, can provide fuel for a lifetime. It doesn't matter if you come to it later in your life, it is still worth pursuing. What is your passion? Mine is helping others; I have done that in different forms over the years but it always comes back to that as a source of my energy and drive.
LTC Stephen F. SPC Douglas Bolton Sgt John H. TSgt Joe C. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL Maj Marty Hogan MSgt David Hoffman SGT (Join to see) LTC David Brown CPL Dave Hoover CMSgt (Join to see) Maj Marty Hogan CPT Jack Durish CW5 Jack Cardwell SCPO Morris Ramsey SP5 Mark Kuzinski LTC (Join to see) SPC Mark HuddlestonLt Col John (Jack) Christensen
Passion is something we find within ourselves. We can't buy it, or borrow it, we have to search and discover it and once found, can provide fuel for a lifetime. It doesn't matter if you come to it later in your life, it is still worth pursuing. What is your passion? Mine is helping others; I have done that in different forms over the years but it always comes back to that as a source of my energy and drive.
LTC Stephen F. SPC Douglas Bolton Sgt John H. TSgt Joe C. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL Maj Marty Hogan MSgt David Hoffman SGT (Join to see) LTC David Brown CPL Dave Hoover CMSgt (Join to see) Maj Marty Hogan CPT Jack Durish CW5 Jack Cardwell SCPO Morris Ramsey SP5 Mark Kuzinski LTC (Join to see) SPC Mark HuddlestonLt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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Sgt (Join to see)
Good Monday Morning Lt Col Charlie Brown!!! We all have a passion or two for something in life...and mine is somewhat diverse in that I love cars and have since I was 15 years old! I also have a passion for technology in multiple ways as I can't get enough of it! My third passion has been helping others wherever I can within the limitations of my expertise... This latter one has come on slowly over the years, but primarily after my retirement and my involvement with the DAV and VA...
I have seen so many Veterans who don't know what to do in a very stormy sea of healthcare and basic survival... that I am driven to help where I can and so I move on to bring help or aid to my fellow brothers and sisters bringing my technical and managerial skills to bear... No one person can do it all, but the collective actions by those who care enough will certainly help those less fortunate... I am honored and grateful to have met so many within RP who care about others... God Bless all!
I have seen so many Veterans who don't know what to do in a very stormy sea of healthcare and basic survival... that I am driven to help where I can and so I move on to bring help or aid to my fellow brothers and sisters bringing my technical and managerial skills to bear... No one person can do it all, but the collective actions by those who care enough will certainly help those less fortunate... I am honored and grateful to have met so many within RP who care about others... God Bless all!
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COL Mikel J. Burroughs
Lt Col Charlie Brown - I like it Charlie - great way to put in that quote today! Yes, I have combined the two, but I also have a passion for the Flowers on Every Grave (oh wait a minute I included motorcycles into that as well). You got me pegged Charlie! I hope you and Tom have a great Monday evening!
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LTC Stephen F.
I pray that you and I are passionate and zealous for what is noble, right and true and the light of Christ shines through us unhindered, my friend and sister-in-Christ Lt Col Charlie Brown.
LORD YOUR passion for restoring relationship between humanity and God has enabled us to be free in Christ. I pray that each and every one of YOUR adopted children are a blessing to be with. Help us to be motivated to do good and to treat each other person with respect always.
I pray dear God that YOU fulfill the deepest desires of our heart/soul. Birth desires in us and give us endurance to run the race YOU have prepared for each of us. Bless each with an increase in love, joy, peace, and patience and cleanse us of all that needs to be cleansed to radiate YOUR love and light.
Bless parents and children with a deep and abiding love for each other.
By the power and authority of the Name above all names, Jesus the Christ.
LORD YOUR passion for restoring relationship between humanity and God has enabled us to be free in Christ. I pray that each and every one of YOUR adopted children are a blessing to be with. Help us to be motivated to do good and to treat each other person with respect always.
I pray dear God that YOU fulfill the deepest desires of our heart/soul. Birth desires in us and give us endurance to run the race YOU have prepared for each of us. Bless each with an increase in love, joy, peace, and patience and cleanse us of all that needs to be cleansed to radiate YOUR love and light.
Bless parents and children with a deep and abiding love for each other.
By the power and authority of the Name above all names, Jesus the Christ.
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While doing a search for my response to the Colonel’s Motivational Quotes, I took a slightly different stance today and stumbled on a word study of the word “Passion”. I hope you enjoy it as much as I have.
Taken from slate.com
Why Is It Called The Passion?
How Jesus’ suffering got its name.
By SAM SCHECHNER
FEB 24, 20047:23 PM
Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ—which gorily depicts the sufferings of Jesus during his last days—opens tomorrow amid great anticipation and controversy. But how did Jesus’ anguish on the cross come to be called the Passion in the first place?
The simple answer is that the English word passion referred to Jesus’ suffering long before it evolved other, more sultry meanings. Today, the word still refers to Jesus’ torments, as well as to retellings of the crucifixion in the Gospels and elsewhere, even in pieces of music. (Before Gibson’s Passion, for instance, there were Bach’s Passions.)
But the Christian meaning and its modern, carnal cousins are not entirely unrelated. In fact, the more common meanings of the word passion—strong emotion, zeal, and sexual desire—grew organically from the Christian sense over the course of several centuries.
The English word has its roots in the Latin passio, which means, simply, “suffering.” Its first recorded use is in early Latin translations of the Bible that appeared in the 2nd century A.D. and that describe the death of Jesus. The Latin word was borrowed prolifically in Old English religious texts, where its meaning remained exclusively theological. But when the Normans invaded Britain in the middle of the 11th century, their conquest infused thousands of French words—including passion, which also referred solely to the sufferings of Jesus—into the spoken language. The record is sketchy, but it seems that once passion was in use in both languages, it began to develop broader meanings. The first new senses in English referred to martyrdom and physical suffering or affliction, and by the 13th century, passion was being used to refer to any strong emotion.
The process accelerated greatly as the English vocabulary exploded in the 16th century. Many words accrued new meanings during this period; literature and vernacular poetry flourished, and a renewed interest in classical learning may have given Latin a more direct influence on the language as well. Passion, for instance, may have been shaded by an obscure definition of the Latin passio as an “affection of the mind” or “emotion.” (Etymologists believe that this more arcane meaning drew from the Greek word pathos.) Over the course of the century, the word came to signify a panoply of emotional afflictions, such as “extreme anger,” “a literary work marked by deep emotion,” and, finally, “strong sexual attraction or love.”
The first sexual usage is attributed to William Shakespeare, who wrote, in Titus Andronicus, “My sword … shall … plead my passions for Lavinia’s love.” It wasn’t a great leap from Shakespeare to the entirely modern senses of passion, which developed, with his and others’ help, over the next few decades.
Bonus Explainer: Gibson originally wanted to call his film The Passion, but he had to change the name when it turned out Miramax already had a project under development with that title. But why the “the” in “of the Christ“? The moniker is a less common alternative to just plain Christ, which is a derivation of a Latin translation of a Greek translation of the Hebrew title Messiah, which means “the Anointed.” In the Geneva and 1611 versions of the New Testament, the word “Christ” is often preceded by the word “the.”
SFC Bernard Walko SPC Robert Pulliam TSgt Carl Johnson TSgt George Rodriguez SGT Thomas Seward PO1 Richard Nyberg SFC Alvin Miller PO3 Aaron Hassay SSgt Richard Kensinger
LTC Orlando Illi MSgt James "Buck" Buchanan CPO Nate S. SGT Mike Williams PO2 Geoffrey LeNoir CPO Robert (Mac) McGovern
SrA Marianne Santangelo LTC David Brown SFC (Join to see) Maj Wayne Crist
Taken from slate.com
Why Is It Called The Passion?
How Jesus’ suffering got its name.
By SAM SCHECHNER
FEB 24, 20047:23 PM
Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ—which gorily depicts the sufferings of Jesus during his last days—opens tomorrow amid great anticipation and controversy. But how did Jesus’ anguish on the cross come to be called the Passion in the first place?
The simple answer is that the English word passion referred to Jesus’ suffering long before it evolved other, more sultry meanings. Today, the word still refers to Jesus’ torments, as well as to retellings of the crucifixion in the Gospels and elsewhere, even in pieces of music. (Before Gibson’s Passion, for instance, there were Bach’s Passions.)
But the Christian meaning and its modern, carnal cousins are not entirely unrelated. In fact, the more common meanings of the word passion—strong emotion, zeal, and sexual desire—grew organically from the Christian sense over the course of several centuries.
The English word has its roots in the Latin passio, which means, simply, “suffering.” Its first recorded use is in early Latin translations of the Bible that appeared in the 2nd century A.D. and that describe the death of Jesus. The Latin word was borrowed prolifically in Old English religious texts, where its meaning remained exclusively theological. But when the Normans invaded Britain in the middle of the 11th century, their conquest infused thousands of French words—including passion, which also referred solely to the sufferings of Jesus—into the spoken language. The record is sketchy, but it seems that once passion was in use in both languages, it began to develop broader meanings. The first new senses in English referred to martyrdom and physical suffering or affliction, and by the 13th century, passion was being used to refer to any strong emotion.
The process accelerated greatly as the English vocabulary exploded in the 16th century. Many words accrued new meanings during this period; literature and vernacular poetry flourished, and a renewed interest in classical learning may have given Latin a more direct influence on the language as well. Passion, for instance, may have been shaded by an obscure definition of the Latin passio as an “affection of the mind” or “emotion.” (Etymologists believe that this more arcane meaning drew from the Greek word pathos.) Over the course of the century, the word came to signify a panoply of emotional afflictions, such as “extreme anger,” “a literary work marked by deep emotion,” and, finally, “strong sexual attraction or love.”
The first sexual usage is attributed to William Shakespeare, who wrote, in Titus Andronicus, “My sword … shall … plead my passions for Lavinia’s love.” It wasn’t a great leap from Shakespeare to the entirely modern senses of passion, which developed, with his and others’ help, over the next few decades.
Bonus Explainer: Gibson originally wanted to call his film The Passion, but he had to change the name when it turned out Miramax already had a project under development with that title. But why the “the” in “of the Christ“? The moniker is a less common alternative to just plain Christ, which is a derivation of a Latin translation of a Greek translation of the Hebrew title Messiah, which means “the Anointed.” In the Geneva and 1611 versions of the New Testament, the word “Christ” is often preceded by the word “the.”
SFC Bernard Walko SPC Robert Pulliam TSgt Carl Johnson TSgt George Rodriguez SGT Thomas Seward PO1 Richard Nyberg SFC Alvin Miller PO3 Aaron Hassay SSgt Richard Kensinger
LTC Orlando Illi MSgt James "Buck" Buchanan CPO Nate S. SGT Mike Williams PO2 Geoffrey LeNoir CPO Robert (Mac) McGovern
SrA Marianne Santangelo LTC David Brown SFC (Join to see) Maj Wayne Crist
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PO3 Rod Arnold
Thanks for the information. I have to admit when I first heard the name of the movie I didn't understand the usage.
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LTC Stephen F.
I pray that you and I are passionate and zealous for what is noble, right and true and the light of Christ shines through us unhindered, my friend and brother-in-Christ PO1 H Gene Lawrence.
LORD YOUR passion for restoring relationship between humanity and God has enabled us to be free in Christ. I pray that each and every one of YOUR adopted children are a blessing to be with. Help us to be motivated to do good and to treat each other person with respect always.
I pray dear God that YOU fulfill the deepest desires of our heart/soul. Birth desires in us and give us endurance to run the race YOU have prepared for each of us. Bless each with an increase in love, joy, peace, and patience and cleanse us of all that needs to be cleansed to radiate YOUR love and light.
Bless parents and children with a deep and abiding love for each other.
By the power and authority of the Name above all names, Jesus the Christ.
LORD YOUR passion for restoring relationship between humanity and God has enabled us to be free in Christ. I pray that each and every one of YOUR adopted children are a blessing to be with. Help us to be motivated to do good and to treat each other person with respect always.
I pray dear God that YOU fulfill the deepest desires of our heart/soul. Birth desires in us and give us endurance to run the race YOU have prepared for each of us. Bless each with an increase in love, joy, peace, and patience and cleanse us of all that needs to be cleansed to radiate YOUR love and light.
Bless parents and children with a deep and abiding love for each other.
By the power and authority of the Name above all names, Jesus the Christ.
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Good Monday RP Friends...
“There is no passion to be found playing small - in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living.” -- Nelson Mandela
“There is no passion to be found playing small - in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living.” -- Nelson Mandela
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COL Mikel J. Burroughs
Sgt Deborah Cornatzer - Excellent quotes today Deborah as you head toward 1,000,000 in influence points to become our next 1,000,000 RP Member. Way to go Deborah! Have a great evening!
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LTC Stephen F.
I pray that you and I are passionate and zealous for what is noble, right and true and the light of Christ shines through us unhindered, my friend and sister-in-Christ Sgt Deborah Cornatzer.
LORD YOUR passion for restoring relationship between humanity and God has enabled us to be free in Christ. I pray that each and every one of YOUR adopted children are a blessing to be with. Help us to be motivated to do good and to treat each other person with respect always.
I pray dear God that YOU fulfill the deepest desires of our heart/soul. Birth desires in us and give us endurance to run the race YOU have prepared for each of us. Bless each with an increase in love, joy, peace, and patience and cleanse us of all that needs to be cleansed to radiate YOUR love and light.
Bless parents and children with a deep and abiding love for each other.
By the power and authority of the Name above all names, Jesus the Christ.
LORD YOUR passion for restoring relationship between humanity and God has enabled us to be free in Christ. I pray that each and every one of YOUR adopted children are a blessing to be with. Help us to be motivated to do good and to treat each other person with respect always.
I pray dear God that YOU fulfill the deepest desires of our heart/soul. Birth desires in us and give us endurance to run the race YOU have prepared for each of us. Bless each with an increase in love, joy, peace, and patience and cleanse us of all that needs to be cleansed to radiate YOUR love and light.
Bless parents and children with a deep and abiding love for each other.
By the power and authority of the Name above all names, Jesus the Christ.
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