voice in the wilderness
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From the Biblical accounts of John the Baptist, as in the early verses of the Gospel according to Mark (King James version):
- 1.2 . . . Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which shall prepare thy way before thee.
- 1.3 The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.
- 1.4 John did baptize in the wilderness.
Noun
voice in the wilderness (plural voices in the wilderness)
- (idiomatic) A person, publication, or other source of assertions that expresses an opinion, doctrine, or point of view which is ignored or rejected by almost all others; the actual utterance of an unpopular opinion, doctrine, or point of view.
- 1974, Leonard Horwitz, Clinical Prediction in Psychotherapy, →ISBN, page 1 (Google books view):
- Eysenck (1952) was just beginning to seriously question the validity of dynamically oriented therapy, but he was a lone voice in the wilderness at that time. Not until the sixties did opposing points of view . . . begin to gain prominence.
- 1994 May 9, John Elson, "Books: Following the Leaders," Time (retrieved 28 April 2015):
- A leader without committed followers is an unheard voice in the wilderness.
- 2015 January 5, Hans Sherrer, "Justice Denied Begins Its 17th Year," Justice Denied (retrieved 29 April 2015):
- When Justice Denied’s first issue was published in February 1999 it was a ‘voice in the wilderness’ alerting the world to the widespread problem of the unreliability of the legal system.
- 2015 April 16, David Rutter, "Earth Day lets us remember who owns the environment," Chicago Tribune (retrieved 29 April 2015):
- The nation was a mess environmentally, and only a few voices in the wilderness were paying heed. In 1970, environmentalists often were derided and dismissed.
- 1974, Leonard Horwitz, Clinical Prediction in Psychotherapy, →ISBN, page 1 (Google books view):
- (idiomatic, rare) An influential religious personage, especially one who makes prophetic utterances.
- 1876, Charlotte M. Yonge, The Three Brides, ch. 3:
- "I don't know," said Anne. "He gathers together a little flock of all denominations, who only care to hear the word."
- "Such a voice in the wilderness as often does good service," said Julius.
- 1920, Jerome K. Jerome, "A Charming Woman" in Sketches in Lavender, Blue and Green:
- "I, even I, may be the voice in the wilderness leading the lost sheep back to the fold."
- 1994, David E. Mungello. The Forgotten Christians of Hangzhou, →ISBN, page 153 (Google books view):
- Zhang again acted as a Confucian prophetic voice in the wilderness who called the people to truth.
- 1876, Charlotte M. Yonge, The Three Brides, ch. 3:
Translations
source; expression
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Further reading
- voice in the wilderness at Collins Dictionary
- voice in the wilderness at The Free Dictionary
- voice in the wilderness at UsingEnglish.com
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