
Source: Who Is Jesus? Answers to Your Questions About the Historical Jesus
Source: The God Delusion (2006), p. 275 of the Black Swan paperback edition of 2007
Source: Who Is Jesus? Answers to Your Questions About the Historical Jesus
Source: The Price of the Ticket: Collected Nonfiction, 1948-1985
2010s, 2015, Presidential Bid Announcement (June 16, 2015)
Commentary on the Song of Songs, As translated by Margaret M. Mitchell in Paul, the Corinthians and the Birth of Christian Hermeneutics (2010)
Source: Fares, Please! (1915), Everything Upside Down, p. 185
Context: There is far-reaching appropriateness in the fact that the world's immortal baby story, that of Bethlehem, should be a story of turning things upside down — for that is a baby's chief business. It is a gross slander on babies that their chief passion is food. It is rearrangement. Every orthodox baby rearranges all that he sees, from the order of importance in the family to the bric-a-brac and window curtains. The advent of every baby completely upsets his little world, both physically and spiritually. And it is not one of the smallest values of the fact that the Saviour of the world came into it as a baby, that it reminds men that every baby is born a savior, to some extent, from selfishness and greed and sin in the little circle which his advent blesses.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy – "Property and Ownership" http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/property/
“Once again, the facts have been erased.”
2000-09, Our Duty Is to Remember Sichuan, 2009