Desmond Tutu (1931) South African churchman, politician, archbishop, Nobel Prize winner
Sermon in Tromsö, Norway (5 December 1991)
Rainbow Lights at the Ark https://answersingenesis.org/blogs/ken-ham/2016/12/20/rainbow-lights-at-ark/, Around the World with Ken Ham (December 20, 2016) <br class="br">Around the World with Ken Ham (May 2005 - Ongoing)
Desmond Tutu (1931) South African churchman, politician, archbishop, Nobel Prize winner
Sermon in Tromsö, Norway (5 December 1991)
“The sky itself is the eighth color of the rainbow, spread over the whole sky for us, all the time.”
Kim Stanley Robinson book Galileo's Dream
Source: Galileo's Dream (2009), Ch. 15, p. 354
Ken Ham (1951) Australian young Earth creationist
Rainbow Lights at the Ark https://answersingenesis.org/blogs/ken-ham/2016/12/20/rainbow-lights-at-ark/, Around the World with Ken Ham (December 20, 2016) <br class="br">Around the World with Ken Ham (May 2005 - Ongoing)
“And God smiled again,
And the rainbow appeared,
And curled itself around his shoulder.”
James Weldon Johnson (1871–1938) writer and activist
The Creation, st. 7.
God's Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse (1927)
Ken Wilber (1949) American writer and public speaker
The Spectrum of Consciousness (1993), Prologue, p. 6
Context: An argument can be legitimately sustained only if the participants are speaking about the same level. Argumentation would — for the most part — be replaced with something akin to Niels Bohr's principle of complementarity. Information from and about the different vibratory levels of bands of consciousness — although superficially as different as X-Rays and radio waves — would be integrated and synthesized into one spectrum, one rainbow. … Each band or level, being a particular manifestation of the spectrum, is what it is only by virtue of the other bands. The color blue is no less beautiful because it exists along side the other colors of a rainbow, and "blueness" itself depends upon the existence of the other colors, for if there were no color but blue, we would never be able to see it. In this type of synthesis, no approach, be it Eastern or Western, has anything to lose — rather, they all gain a universal context.
“God loves an idle rainbow, Not less than labouring seas.”
Ralph Hodgson (1871–1962) British writer
"A Wood Song"
Poems (1917)
Harry Chapin (1942–1981) American musician
Live version
Flowers are Red
Song lyrics, Living Room Suite (1978)