The similar phrase 'Worldly Christianity' is one used by Bonhoeffer. It's J Gresham Machen that I want to line up most closely with. See his Christianity and culture here. Having done commentaries on Proverbs (Heavenly Wisdom) and Song of Songs (Heavenly Love), a matching title for Ecclesiastes would be Heavenly Worldliness. For my stance on worldliness, see 3 posts here.

10 Irish words we know


1. Bog (from bogach, a bog, or bog, soft) a piece of wet spongy ground
2. Brogues (from bróig, a shoe) a type of shoe (or accent)
3. Galore - (from go leor, many) plenty, a lot
4. Slab - (from slaba, mud, itself likely derived from Scandinavian, perhaps via English slab muddy place) piece or slice
5. Whiskey - (from uisce beatha, water of life) distilled alcoholic beverage
6. Leprechaun - (from leipreachán) elf, sprite
7. Slogan - (from sluagh-ghairm) troop-cry/war-cry
8. Spree - (from the Irish word spraoi, meaning fun) as in shopping spree
9. Twig - (from tuig, understand or realise) catch on, realise
10. Craic - Fun, kicks

3 comments:

Family Blogs said...

Good stuff, Gary, or should I say 'fair play te ye'?

A few expressions/idioms I've picked up as a town boy moving to the countryside in Armagh are:

1. 'Proper order': used to express approbation at an action or outcome. 'There's a no smoking ban in effect in this restaurant...' 'Proper order!'.

2. 'You didn't lick that off the grass': used to denote a behaviour inherited from parents or family members. In Belfast they say 'You didn't pick that up off the street'.

3. 'You're not as slow as you walk easy': this is one of my favourites. It means that someone may give the appearance of stupidity or ignorance, but in actual fact is quietly intelligent or shrewd. A more way out version is 'you're not as green as you're cabbage lookin'

4. 'Suckin' diesel': unfortunately this has been popularised on the mainland by one of our worst exports, DJ Colin Murray. It's a County Armagh phrase denoting pleasure that things are going as one has planned. It has fallen out of favour a little since the Radio 1 presenter made it his very own...

Anyway, enough Ulsterisms, which bear only a tentative (and problematic) relationship to your post about Irish words.

I'll plough on.
Take her handy!

Gary Brady said...

Ulster, Ireland - all the same to me. I knew you'd enjoy those Andrew (and the Keats too). My favourite Ulsterism is the way you use whenever to mean when.

Alan said...

Someone once told me that smashin' as a term of approbation comes from the Irish tongue.