5 Quotes & Sayings By David Brewster

David Brewster is an author, publisher, business consultant and motivational speaker. He is the founder of the David Brewster Foundation for Personal Development, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve their goals and live the lives they want to live. He has written seventeen books on topics ranging from personal development, to entrepreneurship, to self-help. His titles include The Ultimate Sales Machine, The Power of Positive Thinking, How To Win Friends and Influence People, The Way of A Champion, and The Little Red Book of Selling Read more

He has earned an international reputation as an expert in leadership development and motivational training by lecturing around the globe on behalf of organizations such as the U.S. Department of State, British Foreign Office, Canadian Trade Commissioner Service, United Nations Foundation, United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco), International Port Management Association (IPMA), International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), International Institute for Management Development (IMD), World Economic Forum (WEF)

1
Thus identified with astronomy, in proclaiming truths supposed to be hostile to Scripture, Geology has been denounced as the enemy of religion. The twin sisters of terrestrial and celestial physics have thus been joint-heirs of intolerance and persecution–unresisting victims in the crusade which ignorance and fanaticism are ever waging against science. When great truths are driven to make an appeal to reason, knowledge becomes criminal, and philosophers martyrs. Truth, however, like all moral powers, can neither be checked nor extinguished. When compressed, it but reacts the more. It crushes where it cannot expand–it burns where it is not allowed to shine. Human when originally divulged, it becomes divine when finally established. At first, the breath of a rage–at last it is the edict of a god. Endowed with such vital energy, astronomical truth has cut its way through the thick darkness of superstitious times, and, cheered by its conquests, Geology will find the same open path when it has triumphed over the less formidable obstacles of a civilized age. David Brewster
2
If it has been revealed to man that the Almighty made him out of the dust of the earth, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, it is in vain to tell a Christian that man was originally a speck of albumen, and passed through the stages of monads and monkeys, before he attained his present intellectual preeminence. If it be a received truth that the Creator has repeatedly interposed in the government of the universe and displayed his immediate agency in miraculous interpositions, it is an insult to any reader to tell him that the being slumbers on his throne and rules under a "primal arrangement in his counsels, " and "by a code of laws of unbending operation. David Brewster
3
It is a more rational belief that man may become a brute than that a brute may become a man; and it is an easier faith that plants and animals may dwindle down into an elemental atom, than that this atom should embrace in its organization, and evolve, all the noble forms of vegetable, animal, and intellectual life. David Brewster
4
Man, made after God's image, was a nobler creation than twinkling sparks in the sky, or than the larger and more useful lamp of the moon. David Brewster