6 Quotes & Sayings By Barbara R Duguid

Barbara R. Duguid is Professor of Management and Organizations at the MIT Sloan School of Management and a senior fellow at the Sloan Center for Translational Research. She cofounded, leads, and directs the M.S. in Data Science program at MIT, including a certificate program in Data Science for Non-STEM Fields Read more

Prior to joining the MIT faculty, she was a faculty member at Stanford University where she founded the program in Computational Science and Engineering. Duguid has held appointments as a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Policy Fellow, as a McKnight Scholar in Health Policy at the University of Minnesota, as a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, as an assistant professor at Harvard Business School, as a postdoctoral scholar at the Harvard Medical School Department of Radiation Oncology, and as a senior program officer for biomedical informatics at NIH's National Institute on Aging. She holds a Ph.D.

from the Department of Computer Science at Stanford University.

1
Transform us, by your mercy and grace, into children who are more thankful for your kindness, more humble under your correction, more watchful against temptation, more eager to serve you. Give us hearts overflowing with joy in you and lips that boast often of Jesus Christ, our only hope in life and in death. Barbara R. Duguid
2
Heavenly Father, Thank you for taking us into the wilderness time and time again, for there we see revealed the secret sins of our souls. In the desert we experience your great power to save us from our unruly and sinful hearts, and there we complain bitterly when you withhold the pleasures and delicacies of life we have come to expect. Father, forgive us. Barbara R. Duguid
3
Simply building a fence between a child and temptation is not the same things as preparing him to face life. Barbara R. Duguid
4
Jesus isn't suffering day after day for your sin. He sits triumphantly at the right hand of God and has won the final and decisive victory for you. If constant lamenting over your sin could actually help you atone for it, then it would be a noble act. However, since there is nothing to be added to your salvation and your agony contributes nothing to your salvation or sanctification, then you are free to walk through life with confidence in your forgiveness. Godly sorrow for sin does not lead to self-condemnation and attempts to atone for your sins through acts of penance. Godly sorrow leads to repentance, which leads us to the cross. There we see, once again, the beautiful sufficiency of our marvelous Savior. Godly sorrow leads us on to a big party, another glorious celebration of the truth of the gospel. Barbara R. Duguid
5
Joy blossoms in our hearts not as we try harder and harder to grow, but as we see more clearly the depth of our sin and understand more fully our helplessness. Barbara R. Duguid