The Christian Examiner, Volume 74Crosby, Nichols, & Company, 1863 - Liberalism (Religion) |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 53
Page
... Early winning , it has always maintained , a foremost place among the class of journals to which it belongs . In the hands of its present conductors it has lost nothing of its high character for scholarship , literary ability , and ...
... Early winning , it has always maintained , a foremost place among the class of journals to which it belongs . In the hands of its present conductors it has lost nothing of its high character for scholarship , literary ability , and ...
Page 13
... early Chris- tians , who paid the heavy penalty of outlawry for the convic- tions which were dearer to them than life , stood in no need of periodical " revivals " to counteract the slumberous tendency of a belief which has outlived ...
... early Chris- tians , who paid the heavy penalty of outlawry for the convic- tions which were dearer to them than life , stood in no need of periodical " revivals " to counteract the slumberous tendency of a belief which has outlived ...
Page 16
... early as 1840 : - - " The portion of society which is predominant in America and that which is attaining predominance here the American many and our middle class agree in being commercial classes . The one country is affording a ...
... early as 1840 : - - " The portion of society which is predominant in America and that which is attaining predominance here the American many and our middle class agree in being commercial classes . The one country is affording a ...
Page 17
... early period with a particularly good set of customs , the work , in some measure , of men to whom even the most enlightened European must accord , under certain limitations , the title of sages and philosophers . They are remarkable ...
... early period with a particularly good set of customs , the work , in some measure , of men to whom even the most enlightened European must accord , under certain limitations , the title of sages and philosophers . They are remarkable ...
Page 45
... earliest time of which we have any tradition this idea appears , in one or another form , among the ancestors of the Semitic races , always a spontaneous product . But the struggle was long between the teaching of - Moses and the ...
... earliest time of which we have any tradition this idea appears , in one or another form , among the ancestors of the Semitic races , always a spontaneous product . But the struggle was long between the teaching of - Moses and the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American animals argument AUGUSTIN COCHIN Austria believe Bishop Boston brute Catholic character Christian Church civilization Constitution democracy divine doctrine Doyle Emperor England English essays existence F. W. Newman fact faith feeling force friends give Greek hand heart Henry Thomas Buckle honor hope human Hungary Iliad immortality individual infinite influence institutions intellectual interest J. S. MILL Jews JOHN STUART MILL less LIBERAL CHRISTIAN liberty living LXXIV martyrs of Japan matter ment Michael de Sanctis Mill mind moral nation nature ness never noble peace Pentateuch perhaps philosophy Plato political popular present principle prison Protestant Protestantism question Quincey race reader reform religion religious result Roman seems sense slavery society soul Spinoza spirit suffering theory things thought Ticknor and Fields tion true truth volume vote words writings