| Henry St. John Bolingbroke (Viscount) - 1841 - 552 pages
...revealed to us in the gospel, we might be obliged to renounce our natural freedom of thought in favor of this supernatural authority. But since it is notorious...concerned for the truth of his religion, and for the honor of Christianity, because the first preachers of it were not, and they who preach it still are... | |
| Henry St. John Bolingbroke (Viscount) - 1841 - 548 pages
...revealed to us in the gospel, we might be obliged to renounce our natural freedom of thought in favor of this supernatural authority. But since it is notorious...concerned for the truth of his religion, and for the honor of Christianity, because the first preachers of it were not, and they who preach it still are... | |
| 1901 - 440 pages
...the days of the Apostles, and even from these days inclusively, it is our duty to examine and analyze the whole, that we may distinguish what is divine...concerned for the truth of his religion and for the honor of Christianity, because the first preachers of it were not, and they who preach it still are... | |
| 1901 - 436 pages
...the days of the Apostles, and even from these days inclusively, it is our duty to examine and analyze the whole, that we may distinguish what is divine...concerned for the truth of his religion and for the honor of Christianity, because the first preachers of it were not, and they who preach it still are... | |
| Oliver Herbrand Gordon Leigh - 1901 - 432 pages
...the days of the Apostles, and even from these days inclusively, it is our duty to examine and analyze the whole, that we may distinguish what is divine...last no more authority than the word of man deserves. 20 Such an examination is the more necessary to be undertaken by every one who is concerned for the... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 744 pages
...the days of the apostles, and even from these days inclusively, it is our duty to examine and analyze the whole, that we may distinguish what is divine from what is human, — adhere to the first simplicity, and ascribe to the last no more authority than the word of man deserves. . . . I neither... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 754 pages
...the days of the apostles, and even from these days inclusively, it is our duty to examine and analyze the whole, that we may distinguish what is divine from what is human, — adhere to the first simplicity, and ascribe to the last no more authority than the word of man deserves. . . . I neither... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 752 pages
...the days of the apostles, and even from these days inclusively, it is our duty to examine and analyze the whole, that we may distinguish what is divine from what is human, — adhere to the first simplicity, and ascribe to the last no more authority than the word of man deserves. . . . I neither... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 744 pages
...whole, that we may distinguish what is divine from what is human, — adhere to the first simplicity, and ascribe to the last no more authority than the word of man deserves. . . . I neither expect nor desire to see any public revision made of the present system of Christianity.... | |
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