The Almighty's Everlasting Circles, an Essay1856 |
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Side 5
... ideas of the soul a thousand fold , and is itself the cause and origin of millions of those very commands which itself obeys . The first part of this proposition , that the hand is exquisitely constructed to be the servant of the ...
... ideas of the soul a thousand fold , and is itself the cause and origin of millions of those very commands which itself obeys . The first part of this proposition , that the hand is exquisitely constructed to be the servant of the ...
Side 6
... ideas . But it is easy to show that , if man had been created without that beautiful instrument , the hand , he would have been utterly incapable of ever conceiving such ideas . It is not meant here to assert that a being endowed with ...
... ideas . But it is easy to show that , if man had been created without that beautiful instrument , the hand , he would have been utterly incapable of ever conceiving such ideas . It is not meant here to assert that a being endowed with ...
Side 7
... ideas ; and that all ideas are taught to the mind from some external source . The first simple ideas are impressed upon the mind by the external senses ; but the more complex ideas result- ing from the arts and sciences , are slowly ...
... ideas ; and that all ideas are taught to the mind from some external source . The first simple ideas are impressed upon the mind by the external senses ; but the more complex ideas result- ing from the arts and sciences , are slowly ...
Side 8
... ideas . But the human intellect and the human hand are both essentially necessary to this beau- tiful process . If either of them had been totally wanting in the world , the first bar- barous embryo of the rude idea would have been cut ...
... ideas . But the human intellect and the human hand are both essentially necessary to this beau- tiful process . If either of them had been totally wanting in the world , the first bar- barous embryo of the rude idea would have been cut ...
Side 9
... ideas , for instance , are suggested to the human mind , by means of the press or rather , by means of the mind and the press acting alternately upon each other in one perpetual circle ! But where would have been the printing - press ...
... ideas , for instance , are suggested to the human mind , by means of the press or rather , by means of the mind and the press acting alternately upon each other in one perpetual circle ! But where would have been the printing - press ...
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The Almighty's Everlasting Circles: An Essay (1856) Henry Jeffreys Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2008 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
actions adapted Almighty's everlasting circles appetites Archdeacon argument assert Author Barton-le-Street Bishop Bishop of Sodor blessing body cause CHARLES HODGSON CHARLES SIMEON Christ Christian Church of England cloth command conduct connexion conscience corrupt COTTAGE LIBRARY disease doctrine dozen duty earth effect EPISTLES FAIRCHILD FAMILY faith FAMILY PRAYERS Fcap Fcap.cloth feel Fifth Edition form of Lectures Fourth Edition Glasbury gospel HATCHARD Havant help his opinions HISTORY holy human hand ideas illustrate increase judgment lalethes late Rev Lord LORD'S SUPPER Magdalen College man's Memoir ment morals nature never obedience passion Peep of Day perpetual circle Philalethes piety plain Pluckley PRACTICAL EXPOSITION preached present principle produce reason Rector reform the outward religion religious RUPERT'S LAND Scripture Second Edition self-denial SERMONS Seventh Edition sewed sincerity soul Tattenhall tender Third Edition tion tongue true truth unbelief Vicar vols volume whence wrong opinions Young Persons
Populære avsnitt
Side 50 - Therefore speak I to them in parables : because they seeing, see not, and hearing, they hear not, neither do they understand. And in them is fulfilled the prophecy of Esaias, which saith, By hearing ye shall hear, and shall not understand, and seeing ye shall see, and shall not perceive.
Side 18 - Light in the Dwelling ; or, a Harmony of the Four Gospels, with very Short and Simple Remarks adapted to Reading at Family Prayers, and arranged in 365 sections, for every day of the year. By the Author of " The Peep of Day," " Line upon Line,
Side 7 - Eighth Edition. Foolscap, cloth, Si. 1. In the Object of Life. 2. In the Rule of Life. 3. In his Intercourse with the World.
Side 21 - The object of this Work is to afford consolation under the various trials of mind and body to which all are exposed, by a Selection of Texts and Passages from Holy Scripture, and Extracts from Old and Modern Authors, in Prose and Poetry, with a Selection of Prayers adapted to the same.
Side 50 - Go unto this people, and say, Hearing ye shall hear, and shall not understand; And seeing ye shall see, and not perceive; For the heart of this people is -waxed gross, And their ears are dull of hearing, And their eyes have they closed; Lest they should see 'with their eyes. And hear 'with their ears. And understand 'with their heart, and should he converted, And I should heal them.
Side 38 - Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the living God.
Side 5 - NECESSARIA; or, Elementary Latin Exercises on all the Parts of Speech, and the Substance of Syntax ; containing English Words and Sentences to be turned into Latin, Latin into English, and numerous Examination Questions to be entered on with the Accidence. With an Introduction.
Side 30 - In a theological point of view his object is very successfully accomplished by Mr. Thompson. In a literary sense the plan of the writer gives purpose, variety, and interest to his discourses. Biography and applied morality are superadded to the general matter of a Sermon. The style is agreeable— the manner rapid and impressive.
Side 35 - These works are excellent. Miss Tytler's writings are especially valuable for their religious spirit. She has taken a just position between the rationalism of the last generation and the puritanism of the present, while the perfect nature and true art with which she sketches from juvenile life, show powers which might be more ambitiously displayed, but cannot be better bestowed."— Quarterly Review.
Side 21 - A little book of probably large usefulness. It avoids disputed points, but conveys a clear and simple view of the holy rite of baptism. It is admirably suited to the cottage, as well as to all places in which ignorance reigns upon the subject.