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  1. Jun 28, 2010 · First, we see what “city on a hill” really means: it doesn’t mean perfect, it means visible. They will be under a microscope, unable to hide their failures from all the eyes trained on them. No one wants to live in a city on a hill, because all of your faults and failings are in plain view.

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  2. John Winthrop used the phrase "City upon a Hill" to describe the new settlement, with "the eies of all people" upon them. And with those words, he laid a foundation for a new world. These new settlers certainly represented a new destiny for this land. Religion and Colonial Writing.

  3. First, we see what “city on a hill” really means: it doesn’t mean perfect, it means visible. They will be under a microscope, unable to hide their failures from all the eyes trained on them. No one wants to live in a city on a hill, because all of your faults and failings are in plain view.

  4. [1] You are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden. Jesus, Book of Matthew 5:14. Speech by John Winthrop.

  5. This quote is attributed to John Winthrop, an English Puritan immigrant to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630, and governor of that same colony.

  6. “For we shall be a city on a hill,” writes Winthrop. “The eyes of all people are upon us.” In Matthew 5:14, Jesus tells His followers, “You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden.” Indeed, the Puritans had a great vision in coming to America.

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  8. The term "city on a hill" was initially invoked by English-born Puritan leader John Winthrop. The concept became central to the United States ' conception of itself as an exceptional and exemplary nation.

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