The British Quarterly Review, Volume 33Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1861 - Christianity |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 60
Page 4
... effect is , that its converts have been released from any sense of religious obliga- tion they may once have felt ; and their opponents have become only much more earnest in religious conviction , and much more devout , than before . It ...
... effect is , that its converts have been released from any sense of religious obliga- tion they may once have felt ; and their opponents have become only much more earnest in religious conviction , and much more devout , than before . It ...
Page 5
... effect of the absence of education is stationariness , or retrocession ; and in those parts such are the great features of history . In Southern Asia , the round of empire has always been from comparative rudeness to an Asiatic ...
... effect of the absence of education is stationariness , or retrocession ; and in those parts such are the great features of history . In Southern Asia , the round of empire has always been from comparative rudeness to an Asiatic ...
Page 28
... effect of a kind of clairvoyance on the part of the prophets . This Dr. Williams regards as a deficiency on the part of his ' Magnus Apollo , ' in which we heartily concur with him . He himself goes the full length of denying all ...
... effect of a kind of clairvoyance on the part of the prophets . This Dr. Williams regards as a deficiency on the part of his ' Magnus Apollo , ' in which we heartily concur with him . He himself goes the full length of denying all ...
Page 52
... effects , may well be supposed able to counteract them . A miracle ( as was justly re- marked by Brown ) is no contradiction of the law of cause and effect ; it is a new effect , supposed to be produced by the introduction of a new ...
... effects , may well be supposed able to counteract them . A miracle ( as was justly re- marked by Brown ) is no contradiction of the law of cause and effect ; it is a new effect , supposed to be produced by the introduction of a new ...
Page 71
... effect . Their differences offer as clear a proof of the actual independence of the Gospels as the concordances of the original connexion . ' ( Introduction to Study of Gospels , pp . 181-2 . ) And again , in a sentence , the close of ...
... effect . Their differences offer as clear a proof of the actual independence of the Gospels as the concordances of the original connexion . ' ( Introduction to Study of Gospels , pp . 181-2 . ) And again , in a sentence , the close of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
America ancient appear army Austria Bacon ballad believe bill British century character China Chinese Christian Church Codex common cotton course criticism Divine doctrine doubt England English essay Essex Europe evidence existence export fact favour feeling force France French give Government Greek hand honour House human Iceland important infusoria interest Italy Jacobite justice King labour Lady Llanover less Lilliburlero London Lord Lord Macaulay Manchoo matter means ment mind miracles moral nation nature neighbours never opinion Parliament Parma persons Philip political present principle produce Queen question readers reason regard respect Russia Sardinia Scripture seems Shepherd of Hermas Slave slavery spirit supposed Taepings Testament things thought tion Tischendorf trade Treaty Treaty of Zurich true truth Uncial volume whole Williams words writer Zeeland