The Universalist Quarterly and General Review, Volumes 44-45A. Tompkins, 1887 - Universalism |
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Page 6
... present day in the particulars which make them unlike the beliefs having the same names a generation ago ? The question admits of an answer with many heads , with many divisions . In terms strictly generic the causes of change in the ...
... present day in the particulars which make them unlike the beliefs having the same names a generation ago ? The question admits of an answer with many heads , with many divisions . In terms strictly generic the causes of change in the ...
Page 17
... present know , the earliest remains of any exist- ing species of plant . " If , then , the Miocene species were all different from those now living , it is obviously idle to base on their supposed iden- tity any argument for the ...
... present know , the earliest remains of any exist- ing species of plant . " If , then , the Miocene species were all different from those now living , it is obviously idle to base on their supposed iden- tity any argument for the ...
Page 27
... present or future order of human society and destiny , the question has sprung : " Can the old faith live with the new ? To find an answer to this question , it is not perhaps too much to say , constitutes at present the chief ...
... present or future order of human society and destiny , the question has sprung : " Can the old faith live with the new ? To find an answer to this question , it is not perhaps too much to say , constitutes at present the chief ...
Page 29
... present being wholly in the right , nor wholly in the wrong . At all events , for the present , we have here two among the greatest minds of the century , occupying the mechanical view of the universe , differing mainly ( and here ...
... present being wholly in the right , nor wholly in the wrong . At all events , for the present , we have here two among the greatest minds of the century , occupying the mechanical view of the universe , differing mainly ( and here ...
Page 30
... present general conviction among theologians , however , is , that the hypothesis of the so - called natural origin of our general ideas is fatal to faith in man and God the certain wreck of religion . -- We are not affiming that this ...
... present general conviction among theologians , however , is , that the hypothesis of the so - called natural origin of our general ideas is fatal to faith in man and God the certain wreck of religion . -- We are not affiming that this ...
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Andover apostles Article believe Bible body Boston called Catholic cause century character Christian Church condition creeds death divine doctrine dogma earth England English Epistles eral eternal evil exegesis existence fact faith Father favor force give God's gospel Greek heaven Hebrew Holy human idea immortal Indian influence inspiration interest interpretation Irenæus Israel Jahveh Jerusalem Jesus Christ Jews Keltic labor language living means measure for measure ment Messianic mind minister Miocene miracles missionary moral nation nature never Old Testament Orthodox Parousia Parsees Paul Pharisees Philip Schaff philosophy prayer preaching present probation prophets propitiation question race reader regard religion religious resurrection revelation righteousness Romans salvation Saxon says Scripture sense sinner sins soul spirit statement teaching Tertullian theology theory things thou thought tion true truth universal Universalist volume whole words writings