The Christian Examiner, Volume 74Crosby, Nichols, & Company, 1863 - Liberalism (Religion) |
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Page 3
... religion , are not yet investigated with the same openness of mind , or with the same intellectual honesty , which are given to the discussion of questions in physical science . The big- otry which imprisoned Galileo for announcing a ...
... religion , are not yet investigated with the same openness of mind , or with the same intellectual honesty , which are given to the discussion of questions in physical science . The big- otry which imprisoned Galileo for announcing a ...
Page 10
... religious , to root out what they were sure was error , and to protect what they were sure was truth , are singularly felicitous , and are given with a lofti- ness of thought and language which , while it approaches more nearly to ...
... religious , to root out what they were sure was error , and to protect what they were sure was truth , are singularly felicitous , and are given with a lofti- ness of thought and language which , while it approaches more nearly to ...
Page 11
... religion openly aimed at dissolving these ties ; unless , therefore , it was his duty to adopt that religion , it seemed to be his duty to put it down . Inasmuch , then , as the theology of Chris- tianity did not appear to him true or ...
... religion openly aimed at dissolving these ties ; unless , therefore , it was his duty to adopt that religion , it seemed to be his duty to put it down . Inasmuch , then , as the theology of Chris- tianity did not appear to him true or ...
Page 12
... religious , and those who embrace it on his persua- sion , are commonly men thoroughly penetrated with a living conviction of its truth and importance , and full of the zeal which is necessary to insure its existence amid the hostility ...
... religious , and those who embrace it on his persua- sion , are commonly men thoroughly penetrated with a living conviction of its truth and importance , and full of the zeal which is necessary to insure its existence amid the hostility ...
Page 45
... religious stage than ever man before him had attained , coming to regard himself as sustaining with God the relations of ... religion of the spirit , disengaged from all sacerdotism , all cultus , all observance , accessible to all races ...
... religious stage than ever man before him had attained , coming to regard himself as sustaining with God the relations of ... religion of the spirit , disengaged from all sacerdotism , all cultus , all observance , accessible to all races ...
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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