Gregory > Gregory's Quotes

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  • #1
    Gregory Soderberg
    “We learn from the past, in order to live wisely in the present.”
    Gregory Soderberg

  • #2
    J.C. Ryle
    “Another real danger to young men is thoughtlessness and lack of consideration. Lack of thought is one simple reason why thousands of souls are cast away forever. Men will not consider,-will not look forward,-will not look around them,-will not reflect on the end of their present course, and the sure consequences of their present ways,-and awake at last to find they are damned for lack of thinking.”
    J.C. Ryle

  • #3
    J.C. Ryle
    “Be very sure of this,-people never reject the Bible because they cannot understand it. They understand it only too well; they understand that it condemns their own behavior; they understand that it witnesses against their own sins, and summons them to judgment.”
    J.C. Ryle

  • #4
    Jacques Ellul
    “Christians were never meant to be normal. We’ve always been holy troublemakers, we’ve always been creators of uncertainty, agents of dimension that’s incompatible with the status quo; we do not accept the world as it is, but we insist on the world becoming the way that God wants it to be. And the Kingdom of God is different from the patterns of this world.”
    Jacques Ellul

  • #5
    David Bentley Hart
    “Christianity has from its beginning portrayed itself as a gospel of peace, a way of reconciliation (with God, with other creatures), and a new model of human community, offering the 'peace which passes understanding' to a world enmeshed in sin and violence. (1)”
    David Bentley Hart

  • #6
    David Bentley Hart
    “[O]nly if the form of Christ can be lived out in the community of the church is the confession of the church true; only if Christ can be practiced is Jesus Lord. No matter how often the subsequent history of the church belied this confession, it is this presence within time of an eschatological and dvine peace, really incarnate in the person of Jesus and forever imparted to the body of Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit, that remains the very essence of the church's evangelical appeal to the world at large, and of the salvation it proclaims. (1-2)”
    David Bentley Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth

  • #7
    Tom Wolfe
    “In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, old people in America had prayed, "Please God, don't let me look poor." In the year 2000, they prayed, "Please God, don't let me look old." Sexiness was equated with youth, and youth ruled. The most widespread age-related disease was not senility but juvenility.

    Tom Wolfe, Hooking Up

  • #8
    David Bentley Hart
    “Christ is a persuasion, a form evoking desire, and the whole force of the gospel depends upon the assumption that this persuasion is also peace: that the desire awakened by the shape of Christ and his church is one truly reborn as agape, rather than merely the way in which a lesser force succumbs to a greater, as an episode in the endless epic of power. (3)”
    David Bentley Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth

  • #9
    David Bentley Hart
    “For if indeed God became a man, then Truth condescended to became a truth, from whose historical contingency one cannot simply pass to categories of universal rationality; and this means that whatever Christians mean when they speak of truth, it cannot involve simply the dialectical wrestling of abstract principles from intractable facts. (5)”
    David Bentley Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth

  • #10
    H.L. Mencken
    “One horse-laugh is worth ten-thousand syllogisms.”
    H.L. Mencken

  • #11
    H.L. Mencken
    “Civilization, in fact, grows more maudlin and hysterical; especially under democracy it tends to degenerate into a mere combat of crazes; the whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary. Wars are no longer waged by the will of superior men, capable of judging dispassionately and intelligently the causes behind them and the effects flowing out of them. They are now begun by first throwing a mob into a panic; they are ended only when it has spent its ferine fury.”
    H.L. Mencken, In Defense of Women

  • #12
    Francis A. Schaeffer
    “We must realize that the Reformation world view leads in the direction of government freedom. But the humanist world view with inevitable certainty leads in the direction of statism. This is so because humanists, having no god, must put something at the center, and it is inevitably society, government, or the state.”
    Francis A. Schaeffer

  • #13
    Francis A. Schaeffer
    “The basic problem of the Christians in this country in the last eighty years or so, in regard to society and in regard to government, is that they have seen things in bits and pieces instead of totals.”
    Francis A. Schaeffer, A Christian Manifesto

  • #14
    David Bentley Hart
    “God's pleasure--the beauty creation possesses in his regard--underlies the distinct being of creation, and so beauty is the first and truest word concerning all that appears within being; beauty is the showing of what is; God looked upon what he had wrought and saw that it was good.”
    David Bentley Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics of Christian Truth

  • #15
    Thomas Watson
    “A weak faith can lay hold on a strong Christ.”
    Thomas Watson, The Lord's Supper

  • #16
    Thomas Watson
    “The more bitterness we taste in sin, the more sweetness we shall taste in Christ.”
    Thomas Watson, The Lord's Supper

  • #17
    J.R.R. Tolkien
    “Faërie cannot be caught in a net of words; for it is one of its qualities to be indescribable, though not imperceptible.”
    J.R.R. Tolkien, Tolkien On Fairy-stories



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