“Redemption's just a word and as I'm not a Christian it means nothing to me.”
The Wheel of Fortune (1984), Part 6: Hal
Vegn vos Firn op fun Yidishkeit, 1911. S. Liptzin. Peretz. Yivo, 1947, p. 372.
“Redemption's just a word and as I'm not a Christian it means nothing to me.”
The Wheel of Fortune (1984), Part 6: Hal
translated as The Cost of Discipleship (1959), p. 51
Discipleship (1937), Costly Grace
The Divine Commodity: Discovering A Faith Beyond Consumer Christianity (2009, Zondervan)
Source: A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life (1728), Ch. I.
translated as The Cost of Discipleship (1959), p. 51.
Discipleship (1937), Costly Grace
Context: The antithesis between the Christian life and the life of bourgeois respectability is at an end. The Christian life comes to mean nothing more than living in the world and as the world, in being no different from the world, in fact, in being prohibited from being different from the world for the sake of grace. The upshot of it all is that my only duty as a Christian is to leave the world for an hour or so on a Sunday morning and go to church to be assured that my sins are all forgiven. I need no longer try to follow Christ, for cheap grace, the bitterest foe of discipleship, which true discipleship must loathe and detest, has freed me from that.
Fighting the Lamb's War: Skirmishes with the American Empire (1996), p. 204
Maiden speech in the Senate http://www.parliament.gov.fj/hansard/viewhansard.aspx?hansardID=165&viewtype=full, 8 December 2003 (excerpts), Speech in the Senate http://www.parliament.gov.fj/hansard/viewhansard.aspx?hansardID=245&viewtype=full, 26 August 2004 (excerpts)
Source: Eclipse of God: Studies in the Relation Between Religion and Philosophy (1952), p. 34