Christian Examiner and Theological ReviewO. Everett, 1866 |
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Page 3
... mind and heart and conscience and will of God himself . God has not merely given man a mind , but he has given him Mind ; not merely a conscience , but Con- science ; not a faculty of reasoning only , but Reason . He has put himself ...
... mind and heart and conscience and will of God himself . God has not merely given man a mind , but he has given him Mind ; not merely a conscience , but Con- science ; not a faculty of reasoning only , but Reason . He has put himself ...
Page 8
... mind . All wise and sober minds were disposed to respect a decision which counterbalanced the centralizing tendencies of a war Congress , that , in its noble zeal for national ends , - seemed to have trespassed on the practical ...
... mind . All wise and sober minds were disposed to respect a decision which counterbalanced the centralizing tendencies of a war Congress , that , in its noble zeal for national ends , - seemed to have trespassed on the practical ...
Page 12
... mind , in which are deposited the moulds and the method of truth . - - Dr. Bushnell has attempted to show that the vicarious sac- rifice of Christ is the illustration of a universal law of humanity , by which we are all suffering ...
... mind , in which are deposited the moulds and the method of truth . - - Dr. Bushnell has attempted to show that the vicarious sac- rifice of Christ is the illustration of a universal law of humanity , by which we are all suffering ...
Page 15
... minds and hearts of those five million Americans ( to speak within bounds ) who have outgrown and flung away all the old and outworn creeds of the past . Without one word of unfraternal disrespect for those who are content with ...
... minds and hearts of those five million Americans ( to speak within bounds ) who have outgrown and flung away all the old and outworn creeds of the past . Without one word of unfraternal disrespect for those who are content with ...
Page 21
... minds , who wrestle with their subjects as if they would crush them to pieces , who say all which they do to us only to intimate , and cause us to feel , how much more they might say . The fundamental trait of Fichte's character is ...
... minds , who wrestle with their subjects as if they would crush them to pieces , who say all which they do to us only to intimate , and cause us to feel , how much more they might say . The fundamental trait of Fichte's character is ...
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Academy American American Unitarian Association ancient artists Austria authority beauty believe body Boston Catholic cause century character Church civilization Clarke creeds criticism death denomination divine dogma Dora D'Istria Düsselthal earnest eternal fact faith Father feeling Fichte Friedrich Rückert friends German give gospel Greek heart holy Holy Spirit honor human idea ideal influence inspiration interest Italy Jesus Christ King of Prussia labor Liberal Christianity liberty living LXXX Madame Récamier Madame Swetchine ment mind moral nation nature never noble opinion organization original Orthodoxy persecution philosophy Pierpont plebeian political popular present principles Prussia religion religious Roman Rome Rückert says seems sentiment social society soul spirit sympathy Theism Theodore Parker theology thing thought Ticknor & Fields tion Trinitarian true truth Unitarian unity universal whole wisdom words worship York