| Leonhard Schmitz - 1849 - 510 str.
...him the Charities, who lend a grace and charm to every form of life. He who does not here recognize religion, genuine, true religion, for him have Moses...expressions, in which an intense feeling, or a customary form of thinking, finds utterance, as in the prayer beginning, ' O Zeus, highest and greatest in the... | |
| George Park Fisher - 1877 - 618 str.
...Charites, " who lend a grace and charm to every form of life," says: "He who does not here recognize religion, genuine, true religion, for him have Moses and the prophets written in vain." 2 2. There was a seeking after God in the heathen devotions. 3 The subjective sentiments which belong... | |
| John Mackinnon Robertson - 1900 - 518 str.
...Miiller, who is reputed to have been a religious man, protests that " He who does not here recognize religion, genuine, true religion, for him have Moses and the prophets written in vain."2 And Miiller would seem to be entitled like another to his view of religion's " true guise."... | |
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