John Rogers
John Rogers was born in 1500 in Deritend, a locality within the Kingdom of England. His origins in this settlement placed him within a country that would experience considerable religious change during his lifetime, and it was within that context that he came to work as a theologian and translator.
Rogers received his education at Pembroke College, where he acquired the scholarly grounding that would shape his subsequent work. The training he gained there equipped him to engage with the biblical texts that occupied much of his professional life. He worked as both a theologian and a Bible translator, bringing his learning to bear on the task of rendering scripture into accessible form.
His career as a translator was a significant dimension of his working life. Rogers labored on the translation of the Bible, contributing to the effort to make scripture available in the English language at a time when such work carried considerable religious and political weight within the Kingdom of England. His dual roles as theologian and Bible translator placed him at the intersection of scholarly and religious concerns during the mid-sixteenth century.
Rogers died on 14 February 1555 in London. His death in that city marked the end of a life spent across the disciplines of theology and translation, carried from his birth in Deritend through the scholarly environment of Pembroke College and into the religious landscape of Tudor England.
Quotes by John Rogers

Your health is the most important commodity that you have. Without it, everything will fall apart – relationships, financial wellbeing, career, school, and so on. It is very important to take good care of yourself.

Never let others dictate the directions that you pick in your life since they are not the ones living your life.

There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year-old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged.

It is best to call it the 3 2 2 Regimen. It is a 7 step morning routine that is grouped into 3 sets: 3 – Reflect, Read, and Write 2 – Plan and Prepare 2 – Exercise and Eat.

The days of putting an ad in the paper and hope for people to flock to your department are gone.

If I have an hourly employee that punches in and out, how am I supposed to verify that they took the break? The state says you should get an extra 15-minute paid break and it's almost impossible to regulate that.

Gary's expertise in biometric technology is a driving force in continuing Pay By Touch's leadership position in biometric applications. His extensive background in biometric systems helps Pay By Touch stay ahead of the curve to provide the fastest, most convenient, most secure way to pay.

It's very exciting to see this technology evolve into commercially viable products. It brings new capabilities and form factors to existing electronic devices.

