The sum total of religion is to feel that, in its highest unity, all that moves us in feeling is one; to feel that aught single and particular is only possible by means of this unity; to feel, that is to say, that our being and living is a being and living... Religious Experience - Page 15by Wayne Proudfoot - 1987 - 290 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Friedrich Schleiermacher - 1893 - 287 pages
...vain mythology, and, in respect of science, ruinous mysticism. The sum total of religion is to feel A that, in its highest unity, all that moves us in feeling...and living is a being and living in and through God. But it is not necessary that the Deity should be presented as also one distinct object. To many this... | |
| Paul Carus - 1900 - 740 pages
...Religion is to feel that, in its highest unity, everything that stirs our emotions is one in feeling ; to feel that aught single and particular is only possible...living is a being and living in and through God." He adds, "but it is not necessary that the Deity should be presented as also one distinct object."... | |
| Alfred Caldecott, Hugh Ross Mackintosh - 1904 - 506 pages
...the perfect, they were, in themselves, vain mythology, and, in respect of science, ruinous mysticism. The sum total of religion is to feel that, in its...and living is a being and living in and through God. But it is not necessary that the Deity should be presented as also one distinct object. To many this... | |
| William Ralph Inge - 1906 - 258 pages
...says, " is to feel that in its highest unity SCHLEIERMACHER 27 all that moves us in feeling is one — to feel, that is to say, that our being and living is a being and living in and through God." And again he says that, in the religious experience, " You become sense, and the whole becomes object.... | |
| William Ralph Inge - 1907 - 256 pages
...faith, and making faith to consist entirely of devout feeling. " The sum total of religion," he says, "is to feel that in its highest unity all that moves us in feeling is one — to feel, that is to say, that our being and living is a being and living in and through God." And again he says that,... | |
| James Henry Leuba - 1912 - 410 pages
...Religion is to feel that, in its highest unity, everything that stirs our emotions is one in feeling ; to feel that aught single and particular is only possible...living is a being and living in and through God." He adds, "But it is not necessary that the Deity should be presented as also one distinct object."... | |
| James H. Leuba - 1912 - 402 pages
...Further on, he triesagain to describe the kind of apprehension which determines the religious feeling : " The sum total of Religion is to feel that, in its highest unity, everything that stirs our emotions is one in feeling ; to feel that aught single and particular is... | |
| James Henry Leuba - 1912 - 414 pages
...on, he tries again to describe the kind of apprehension which determines the religious feeling : " The sum total of Religion is to feel that, in its highest unity, everything that stirs our emotions is one in feeling ; to feel that aught single and particular is... | |
| William Boothby Selbie - 1913 - 292 pages
...the mysticism which has been described as " rationalism applied to a sphere above reason." To him 1 " the sum total of religion is to feel that, in its...living is a being and living in and through God." But it does not necessarily belong to the sphere of religion to make this God an object of perception.... | |
| Robert B. Crotty - 1987 - 242 pages
...Schleiermacher had returned to individual feeling as the sole arbiter of universal religious truth. "The sum total of religion is to feel that, in its...that moves us in feeling is one; to feel that aught singular and particular is only possible by means of this unity; to feel . . . that our being and living... | |
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