One great lesson which the true expositor will derive from this typical history is this, the long, doubtful, painful strife which the battle of truth and justice ever involves.
It is with an expositor or preacher exactly the opposite as with the Church historian or biographer of St. Paul.
But with the preacher or expositor it is otherwise.
Thus far we are in dialectic: logical exposition proceeding by way of classifying and declassifying: in which it is assumed that the expositor will find minds unoccupied and unprejudiced, ready to welcome the truth when he lays it before them.
It is one of the first requisites for the expositor to be able to discriminate this class of topics, where error and discordance grow up naturally among those whom he addresses.
Dawson's article in The Expositor for January, 1886.
For Canon Driver, see his article, The Cosmogony of Genesis, in The Expositor for January, 1886.
A fuller account is given in the Expositor of July 1893, and contains references to the following passages:--Irenaeus iii.
Mr. Adeney has evidently grasped the whole story with clearness and force: his portraits are lifelike; he has all the instinct of the expositor in high development.
The expositor has done his work in a most masterly fashion.
From what part of the epistle could the expositor have evolved a thought so soothing to tyrants--so revolting to every man who loves his own nature?
The Catholics had said it was not safe to trust the Scriptures in the hands of the people, for an inspired Word needed an expositoralso inspired.
It was a little remarkable, that Bacon and Newton should be reprinted here, and La Place should have found his translator and expositor coming out of an insurance office in Salem!
Such a writer is not entitled to command confidence as an expositor of the faith once delivered to the saints.
He himself is the expositor of two of the most remarkable of the symbols.
See also article in Signs of the Times, and Expositor of Prophecy, Feb.
Litch, Josiah, article in Signs of the Times, and Expositor of Prophecy, Aug.
Litch, article in Signs of the Times, and Expositor of Prophecy, Aug.
Socrates was not an expositor but a questioner; he disclaimed the position of a teacher, he refused to admit that any were his pupils or disciples.
His function was primarily that of an expositor and defender of that doctrine, and his particular pre-eminence consists in the ingenuity of his dialectic resources of defence.
It is the utterance of an expositor who spoke the language in which his master wrote, and breathed the same spiritual atmosphere.
Yet the diligent reader or expositor finds it more difficult to detach any single sentence, without loss to the general meaning, than in any other writing of the New Testament.
Only a superficial expositorcan speak of a fulfillment when they returned from Babylon.
That all is an ideal description of something which the expositor himself is unable to define.
His facile pen found expression too in numberless articles in encyclopaedias and magazines, and his activity as an expositor of botanical topics of the time was unbounded.
The philosopher Seneca, with the exception of Marcus Aurelius, the most eminent expositor of the Roman Stoic school, was a voluminous author.
Every expositor has had to point out the widespread confusion between the two senses of this term.
The Suppression Of The Expositor Smith was now to encounter a kind of resistance within the church that he had never met.
The Mormons were not put under restraint that night, but the next morning they surrendered themselves to the constable on a charge of riot in connection with the destruction of the Expositor plant.
The owners of the Expositor sued out at Carthage a writ for the removal to that place of Joseph Smith and the Nauvoo counsellors on a charge of a riot in connection with the destruction of their plant.
Phelps (who was back in the fold again) held that the city charter gave them power to declare the newspaper a nuisance, and cited the spilling of the tea in Boston harbor as a precedent for an attack on the Expositor office.
Calling a meeting of the City Council, he proceeded to put the Expositor and its editors on trial, as if that body was of a judicial instead of a legislative character.
The leadingexpositor of Virginia reaction in this period was John Taylor of Caroline, the mover of the resolutions of 1798.
This Atomic theory, though originating with the Eleate Leukippus, obtained celebrity chiefly from his pupil Demokritus of Abdera, itsexpositor and improver.
Giraldus, on the contrary, observes that the expositor might have said not less truly that the malady was in consequence of the humours being enormously increased in some persons when the moon is full.
The Church needed a long education, before she was fitted to be the expositor of the true Apostolic doctrine.
But I have said that in the commencement of the three Gospels, in their incidents, in their whole framework, there is a marked and characteristic difference from the fourth, which no faithfulexpositor can overlook or try to explain away.
The question is raised, whether A, or B, or C keeps God's commandments best, and therefore which may be trusted best as anexpositor of doctrine.
But I believe I may have given my hearers and my readers some encouragement to seek a better Expositor of it than I or any much wiser teacher can be.
So great was Fichte's admiration of Kant's system, that he became at once an expositor of its principles, in the hope that he might render it intelligible and attractive to minds of ordinary culture.
Though not the originator of the "Faith Philosophy," as it was called, he became the finisher and the best known expositor of it.
Scarce an opinion but has its expositor and its place of exhibition in this peaceful old Paternoster Row, under the toll of the bells of Saint Paul.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "expositor" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.