The British Quarterly Review, Volume 33Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1861 - Christianity |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 91
Page 8
... persons , that physics and metaphysics do not stand in the same relation to history . Eighteen centuries ago , theoretical ethics were nearly everything they are now ; and the age which saw maturity in the principles of taste and morals ...
... persons , that physics and metaphysics do not stand in the same relation to history . Eighteen centuries ago , theoretical ethics were nearly everything they are now ; and the age which saw maturity in the principles of taste and morals ...
Page 15
... person , we presume , who had only it to guide him could form any clear conception of what these views are ; and we must in Bunsen's name protest against there being imputed to him the impiety of describing El as the name of some old ...
... person , we presume , who had only it to guide him could form any clear conception of what these views are ; and we must in Bunsen's name protest against there being imputed to him the impiety of describing El as the name of some old ...
Page 28
... persons , he has proved what no one ever denied , and what does not advance him a hair's breadth towards the disproof of the predictive character of prophecy . The predictive element is so manifestly in the Old Testament , that Bunsen ...
... persons , he has proved what no one ever denied , and what does not advance him a hair's breadth towards the disproof of the predictive character of prophecy . The predictive element is so manifestly in the Old Testament , that Bunsen ...
Page 42
... person of ordinary sagacity , we are bound to conclude that his narrative is genuine ; for otherwise he would have cleared it of a feature so repugnant to ordinary reason . But if , on the other hand , we admit that the writer was ...
... person of ordinary sagacity , we are bound to conclude that his narrative is genuine ; for otherwise he would have cleared it of a feature so repugnant to ordinary reason . But if , on the other hand , we admit that the writer was ...
Page 44
... person whose mind has been saturated with the beauty of meteorological phenomena the office assigned to the firmament by Moses will appear to be strikingly correct , and the description he gives supremely happy . But if , as is ...
... person whose mind has been saturated with the beauty of meteorological phenomena the office assigned to the firmament by Moses will appear to be strikingly correct , and the description he gives supremely happy . But if , as is ...
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