
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 39.
"What Think You of the Cross?", p. 276
Startling Questions (1853)
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 39.
“Welcome, welcome, cross of Christ, if Christ be with it.”
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 171.
“The cross is suffering with Christ.”
Source: Discipleship (1937), Discipleship and the Cross, p. 86.
Context: The cross is not random suffering, but necessary suffering. The cross is not suffering that stems from natural existence; it is the suffering that comes from being Christian. … A Christianity that no longer took discipleship seriously remade the gospel into only the solace of cheap grace. Moreover, it drew no line between natural and Christian existence. Such a Christianity had to understand the cross as one's daily misfortune, as the predicament and anxiety of our daily life. Here it has been forgotten that the cross also means being rejected, that the cross includes the shame of suffering. Being shunned, despised, and deserted by people, as in the psalmists unending lament, is an essential feature of the suffering of the cross, which cannot be comprehended by a Christianity that is unable to differentiate between a citizen's ordinary existence and a Christian existence. The cross is suffering with Christ.
[ "We Interviewed the Guy Behind @dril, the Undisputed King of Twitter", Caffier, Justin, August 24, 2018, Vice, August 25, 2018, http://archive.today/2018.08.26-011141/https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/3kymv8/we-interviewed-the-guy-behind-dril-the-undisputed-king-of-twitter, August 25, 2018, no https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/3kymv8/we-interviewed-the-guy-behind-dril-the-undisputed-king-of-twitter,]
dril in interviews
1960s, A Christmas Sermon (1967)
“To me, the Bible is a book. Important, no doubt, but a book.”
Interview to the newspaper "O Globo", 2009.
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 107
“Cursed be all that learning that is contrary to the cross of Christ.”
A paraphrase of a statement by John Witherspoon, who was president of Princeton when Madison attended the school, in a sermon "Glorying in the Cross"(1768):
:: Accursed be all that learning which sets itself in opposition to the cross of Christ!
::* This has appeared in the paraphrased form since at least 1845; how it came to be attributed to Madison is unknown.
Misattributed