Quotes about Justice
Oh where is the noble face of modesty, or the strength of virtue, now that blasphemy is in power and men have put justice behind them, and there is no law but lawlessness, and none join in fear of the gods?
— Euripides
Apollo, your voice hymned a justice I could not see clear, but all too clear the anguish you caused, the bloodhaunted, homeless future you've doled out.
— Euripides
We may marvel. Yet I trust, When man seeketh to be just And to pity them that wander, God will raise him from the dust.
— Euripides
If the gods do a shameful thing, they are not gods.
— Euripides
Verily we must believe the Gods are senseless, if we feel well disposed to murderers.
— Euripides
This, then, do you consider, and devise how both you yourselves may be saved and this land, and I be not brought into ill odor with the citizens; for I have not absolute sovereignty, as over barbarians; but if I do just things, I shall receive just things.
— Euripides
Until the great mobs could be educated into a moral sense, someone must cry: Thou shalt not!
— F Scott Fitzgerald
By becoming one of the poor who was deprived of his rights, by dying as one of those robbed of justice, God's Son submitted to the utmost extremity of humiliation, entering into total solidarity with those who are without help.
— Fleming Rutledge
The well-known passage in Micah 6:8 ('does the Lord require of you?') declares that justice and mercy are two foundational aspects of God's character... forgiveness is by no means as simple or expeditious as is often suggested; it is a complex and demanding matter. The question of forgiveness and compensation really should not be discussed apart from the question of justice.
— Fleming Rutledge
The word translated "justice" and "righteousness" is the same word in Hebrew and in Greek. The root of the word becomes, in both Testaments, both a noun and a verb, so that "justice" or "judgment" is the same thing as "righteousness" or "rectification" (making right).
— Fleming Rutledge
All the references to judgment in the Bible should be understood in the context of God's righteousness—not just his being righteous (noun) but his "making right" (verb) all that has been wrong.
— Fleming Rutledge
In other words, God's righteousness involves not only a great reversal ("the first will be last") but also an actual transformation and re-creation.
— Fleming Rutledge