A Treatise on the Nature of Man, Regarded as Triune: With an Outline of a Philosophy of Life

Framsida
Hodder and Stoughton, 1874 - 277 sidor
 

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Sida 107 - I would not, Cassius ; yet I love him well — But wherefore do you hold me here so long? What is it that you would impart to me? If it be aught toward the general good, Set honour in one eye and death i...
Sida 26 - ALMIGHTY God, with whom do live the spirits of them that depart hence in the Lord, and with whom the souls of the faithful, after they are delivered from the burden of the flesh, are in joy and felicity...
Sida 104 - ... the images of willing anguish for a great end, of beneficent love and ascending glory; see upturned living faces, and lips moving to the old prayers for help. These things have not changed. The sunlight and shadows bring their old beauty and waken the old...
Sida 104 - The sunlight and shadows bring their old beauty and waken the old heart-strains at morning, noon, and eventide; the little children are still the symbol of the eternal marriage between love and duty ; and men still yearn for the reign of peace and righteousness, — still own that life to be the highest which is a conscious voluntary sacrifice.
Sida 29 - So far as we live, the image is still there; defiled, if you will; broken, if you will ; all but effaced, if you will, by death and the shadow of it. But not changed. We are not made now in any other image than God's. There are, indeed, the two states of this...
Sida 103 - Only look at the sunlight and shadows on the grand walls that were built solidly, and have endured in their grandeur ; look at the faces of the little children, making another sunlight amid the shadows of age ; look, if you will, into the churches, and hear the same chants, see the same images as of old — the images of willing anguish for a great end, of beneficent love and ascending glory; see upturned living faces and lips moving to the old prayers for help. These things have not changed.
Sida 193 - knew one of that profession who thought that there could be only three parts in harmony — to wit, bass, tenor and treble ; because there are but three persons in the Trinity.
Sida 96 - The great rivercourses which have shajicd the lives of men have hardly changed ; and those other streams, the life-currents that ebb and flow in human hearts, pulsate to the same great needs, the same great loves and terrors.
Sida 157 - NATURAL INFERENCE. I COMMENCED my remarks upon Inference by saying that reasoning ordinarily shows as a simple act, not as a process, as if there were no medium interposed between antecedent and consequent, and the transition from one to the other were of the nature of an instinct, — that is, the process is altogether unconscious and implicit.
Sida 19 - Equal to the Father, as touching his Godhead: and inferior to the Father, as touching his Manhood.

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