The Religions of the World and Their Relations to Christianity: Considered in Eight Lectures Founded by the Hon. Robert BoyleJohn W. Parker and Son, 1852 - 252 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 28
Side xxiii
... hold on the present , proves not to be true of the past . Mere observers of evil do not describe the evil accurately or vividly enough ; the points may be correct , but the impression is false ; for want of light , we do not feel the ...
... hold on the present , proves not to be true of the past . Mere observers of evil do not describe the evil accurately or vividly enough ; the points may be correct , but the impression is false ; for want of light , we do not feel the ...
Side 57
... hold of the heart of the people , for it solved no one difficulty which was perplexing them ; it affirmed a truth which staggered them , and before which they bowed ; one , however , which in this form coalesced with scarcely any ...
... hold of the heart of the people , for it solved no one difficulty which was perplexing them ; it affirmed a truth which staggered them , and before which they bowed ; one , however , which in this form coalesced with scarcely any ...
Side 75
... hold the Reality . This is surely Theism in its highest form and conception . It is something much more than we are wont to mean by that word , for by a Deist or Theist we often describe a person who does not deny the existence of God ...
... hold the Reality . This is surely Theism in its highest form and conception . It is something much more than we are wont to mean by that word , for by a Deist or Theist we often describe a person who does not deny the existence of God ...
Side 86
... holds that he may be the spring and soul of Order to the commonwealth . How he may be so he is to enquire very diligently . All the func- tionaries of government are to be chosen accord- ing to their fitness to preserve that order , ac ...
... holds that he may be the spring and soul of Order to the commonwealth . How he may be so he is to enquire very diligently . All the func- tionaries of government are to be chosen accord- ing to their fitness to preserve that order , ac ...
Side 90
... hold of popular sympathy and has retained that sympathy to the present day . It was and is despised by the great mandarins , by the functionaries of government , by the adorers of social order . But it is more than tolerated by the ...
... hold of popular sympathy and has retained that sympathy to the present day . It was and is despised by the great mandarins , by the functionaries of government , by the adorers of social order . But it is more than tolerated by the ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The Religions of the World and their Relations to Christianity Frederick Denison Maurice Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1852 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acts Ahriman assertion Atheism become believe belong Brahm Brahmin Buddha Buddhism called Cambridge century character Christ Christianity Church cloth confess Confucius connexion conviction creatures Crown 8vo darkness Deliverer divine doctrine dominion dwell earth Egyptian English evil existence fact faith Father Fcap feel felt Gospel Greek ground heart heaven Hindoo Hindooism holy homage human idea idolatry India Intelligence Jewish Jews Judaism King kingdom Lecture light living look Lord Maho Mahomet Mahometan ment merely metan mighty mind Monotheism nation nature object old Persian Old Testament opinion outward Persian person philosophical possess present priests principle proclaimed prophet PUBLISHED BY MACMILLAN question race relation religion religious Revelation reverence Roman Sacrifice Scripture Second Edition seems sense shew Siva society speak Spirit Sudra sure Testament things thoughts tion Trinity College true truth universe University of Cambridge unseen Vedas Vishnu wisdom witness words worship Zoroaster
Populære avsnitt
Side 14 - Crown 8vo. 7s. 6d. HOWARD. — The Pentateuch ; Or, the Five Books of Moses. Translated into English from the Version of the LXX. With Notes on its Omissions and Insertions, and also on the Passages in which it differs from the Authorized Version. By the Hon. HENRY HOWARD, DD Crown 8vo. GENESIS, One Volume, 8s. 6d. ; EXODUS AND LEVITICUS, One Volume, 10s. 6d. ; NUMBERS AND DEUTERONOMY, One Volume, 10s. 6d. HOZIER. — The Seven Weeks' War ; Its Antecedents and its Incidents.
Side 16 - This volume contains Discourses on Samuel I. and II. ; Kings I. and II. ; Amos, Joel, Hosea, Isaiah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel.
Side 20 - In one respect, it may be taken as a sign of the times. It is a small unpretending volume in appearance, but it is based on learning enough to have...
Side 8 - Deserve to be considered the most remarkable proofs of the Author's indomitable energy and power of concentration
Side 7 - Regius Professor of Technology in the University of Edinburgh; and Director of the Industrial Museum of Scotland.
Side 15 - No one who reads a single page of Mr. Masson will be likely to content himself with that alone. He will see at a glance that he has come across a man endowed with a real love of poetry ; a clear, fresh, happy insight into the poefs heart ; and a great knowledge of the historical connexion of its more marked epochs in England.
Side 12 - NONCONFORMIST. PHAETHON ; or, Loose Thoughts for Loose Thinkers. Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 2s. " The dialogue of ' Phaethon' has striking beauties, and its suggestions may meet half-way many a latent doubt, and, like a light breeze, lift from the soul clouds that are gathering heavily, and threatening to settle down in misty gloom on the summer of many a fair and promising young life.
Side 1 - Life of John Milton, narrated in Connexion with the Political, Ecclesiastical, and Literary History of his Time.
Side 9 - MORNING POST. BY THE RIGHT REV. JOHN WILLIAM COLENSO, DD, Lord Bishop of Natal, formerly Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. 1. The Colony of Natal. A Journal of Ten Weeks' Tour of Visitation among the Colonists and Zulu Kaffirs of Natal.
Side 1 - IT is intended that the title of this Work should indicate its character. Such an alternative title as ' The Life and Times of Milton ' might suggest more familiarly, perhaps, the precedents which the Author has had in view. While his first object has been to narrate the Life of Milton fully, deliberately, and minutely, with as much of additional fact and illustration as might be supposed to result, even at this distance of time, from new research and from a further examination of the old materials,...