The British Quarterly Review, Volume 33Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1861 - Christianity |
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Page 4
... natural history of man . " The authors of these Essays say in their preface that they are severally responsible for their respective articles only , ' and that they have written in entire independence of each other , and with- out ...
... natural history of man . " The authors of these Essays say in their preface that they are severally responsible for their respective articles only , ' and that they have written in entire independence of each other , and with- out ...
Page 5
... natural 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 ...
... natural 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 7
... natural causes which have always favoured the progress of nations ; but there are also moral causes which have come largely in the wake of such in- fluences , and which are not favourable to progress , but the con- trary . Even among us ...
... natural causes which have always favoured the progress of nations ; but there are also moral causes which have come largely in the wake of such in- fluences , and which are not favourable to progress , but the con- trary . Even among us ...
Page 8
... natural tendencies he has enumerated furnish no adequate basis for the speculations he would found upon them . The destiny of the world is not to outgrow Christianity , but to become wise enough to understand it . The second paper is ...
... natural tendencies he has enumerated furnish no adequate basis for the speculations he would found upon them . The destiny of the world is not to outgrow Christianity , but to become wise enough to understand it . The second paper is ...
Page 17
... natural impossibility in God's appointing a man to live a thousand years than in his appointing an infant to die the moment after it is born . To talk about ' laws ' in such case , as if human life and death were controlled absolutely ...
... natural impossibility in God's appointing a man to live a thousand years than in his appointing an infant to die the moment after it is born . To talk about ' laws ' in such case , as if human life and death were controlled absolutely ...
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