Quotes about Mutual
When management and labor (employer and employee) both understand they are all on the same side, then each will prosper more.
— Zig Ziglar
“What can I give you?” Laban asked. “You do not need to give me anything,” Jacob replied. “If you do this one thing for me, I will keep on shepherding and keeping your flocks.
— Genesis 30:31
The satanic strategy of using lies to disguise, divide, and destroy. Let's focus on the middle word of Satan's plan to defeat you. The word is divide and his strategy is to get a wedge between you and men who can support God's work in your life through loving mutual community. As always he does this through lies.
— James MacDonald
Respect is intended to operate on a two-way street.
— James Dobson
Mutual cowardice keeps us in peace.
— Samuel Johnson
The wife does not have authority over her own body, but the husband. Likewise the husband does not have authority over his own body, but the wife.
— 1 Corinthians 7:4
Marriage, in its truest sense, is a partnership of equals, with neither exercising dominion over the other, but, rather, with each encouraging and assisting the other in whatever responsibilities and aspirations he or she might have.
— Gordon Hinckley
Family life is the backbone of mankind, and that life is dependent upon mutual giving, sharing, and receiving from each other. It entails the proper use of each other's successes and failures for mutual up-building.
— Mother Angelica
Beauty is nature's coin, must not be hoarded, But must be current, and the good thereof consists in mutual and partaken bliss.
— John Milton
Love is a two way street.
— Anonymous
the divine virtue, or the virtue of the divine mind, must consist primarily in love to himself, or in the mutual love and friendship which subsists eternally and necessarily between the several persons in the Godhead, or that infinitely strong propensity there is in these divine persons one to another.
— Jonathan Edwards
That quiet mutual gaze of a trusting husband and wife is like the first moment of rest or refuge from a great weariness or a great danger.
— George Eliot