Tracts for the New Times, Svazky 1–2J. Allen, 1847 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-5 z 12
Strana 4
... social reform , or if it does recognize them at all , it is only to stigmatize their gathering urgency with the name of " infidelity . " But if " infidelity " do the church's proper work ; if it receive the inflowing truths of heaven ...
... social reform , or if it does recognize them at all , it is only to stigmatize their gathering urgency with the name of " infidelity . " But if " infidelity " do the church's proper work ; if it receive the inflowing truths of heaven ...
Strana 5
... social ethics , whether that operation were on the whole favorable or not to the melioration of the common life of man . It was no paltry question of sectarian politics , such as your attitude represents it , but a question whether all ...
... social ethics , whether that operation were on the whole favorable or not to the melioration of the common life of man . It was no paltry question of sectarian politics , such as your attitude represents it , but a question whether all ...
Strana 7
... social order of Christendom . By the Christian Church he meant , as he him- self has explained it , " the tract of country where the word was possessed and read ; " he meant the public order of Christen- dom , based upon the principle ...
... social order of Christendom . By the Christian Church he meant , as he him- self has explained it , " the tract of country where the word was possessed and read ; " he meant the public order of Christen- dom , based upon the principle ...
Strana 8
... social life , and more or less corrupted every relation which man bore to his fellow . An infidelity of the most besotted kind had taken the place of the early faith and earnestness : the sacred truths of the Word of God , which had ...
... social life , and more or less corrupted every relation which man bore to his fellow . An infidelity of the most besotted kind had taken the place of the early faith and earnestness : the sacred truths of the Word of God , which had ...
Strana 11
... social , political , and ecclesiastical institutions . The life of man therein exhibited was debased by the gradual extinction of charity , or brotherly love , as a recognized principle of public action . Christendom was not then , any ...
... social , political , and ecclesiastical institutions . The life of man therein exhibited was debased by the gradual extinction of charity , or brotherly love , as a recognized principle of public action . Christendom was not then , any ...
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
139 NASSAU-STREET affirms allegation aristocracy assu baptism body BOOK DUE charity Christian Church Church of Christ claim clergy common consequently constitute corruptions creation Divine Humanity divine truth doctrine of series earth effect evils of Christendom existence experience facts faith GIFT OF FRIENDS HARVARD COLLEGE heart heaven heresy and schism hitherto human mind human race institution intellectual internal acknowledgment intuitions involved JOHN ALLEN justification by faith law of series learned Lord Lord Bacon Lord's manner means memory method nature NEW-YORK ordinances organ pathy physiology piety present principles of Swedenborg prove Providential public worship PUBLISHED BY JOHN question reason regard relation rience sciences scientific sectarianism sects sense sentiment separatism series and degrees social soul sphere spirit spiritual Christianity SWEDENBORGIAN theology things tical tion true unity universal vidual virtue whole wholly word
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 24 - The times have been That, when the brains were out, the man would die, And there an end ; but now they rise again, With twenty mortal murders on their crowns, And push us from our stools.
Strana 18 - The nature of the member or organ is known from the use. The use determines what the organ is in itself, or in its own form ; what it is, in series, with other organs which are contiguous to it or surround it, and which continuously precede and continuously follow it ; and what it is, in order, with those which are above and below, or prior and posterior to it. All these, and their uses, indicate the nature of the organ under investigation. The use and end are the first things that manifest themselves...
Strana 16 - When I take up a stone or clod of earth and look upon it, then I see that which is above and that which is below, yea, [I see] the whole world therein...
Strana 18 - The use or effect which produces the end must be the first object of analytical enquiry. The nature of a member or organ is known from the use. The use determines what the organ is in itself, or in its own form ; what it is in series with other organs which are contiguous to it, or surround it, and which continuously precede and continuously follow it ; and what it is in order with the organs which are above and below, or prior and posterior to it.
Strana 3 - In ascending to the great principles upon which all society rests," said Justice Joseph Story, in 1828, "it must be admitted that there are some which are of eternal obligation, and arise from our common dependence upon our Creator. Among these are the duty to do justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly before God.
Strana 15 - Dare you lay your hands on your hearts, and say that you alone of all the earth lead a good life? Thus that you alone of all the earth believe in the Lord 1 And if not, what a mere immodesty it is in you to flaunt the distinctive name of new church in our eyes, and stigmatize your rival corporations by that of old church ! Your intellectual assent to these propositions of Swedenborg, does not constitute you a good man, nor a believer in the Lord. Why...
Strana 18 - ... or tribe, but with all the families or tribes of one town ; which is the ancient civilization, or the era of Athens and Rome. And finally you see it still further modified by subjection to the national bond, which brings the individual into unity not only with all his fellow townsmen, but with all his fellow countrymen. This is our present civilization. Thus you see the individual unit expanding successively into the family and tribal unity, into the municipal unity, and finally into the national...
Strana 18 - ... not his own nation merely, but all the nations of the earth, when in a word his sympathies shall flow forth towards every brother of the race, purely according to the good that is in him. Let no good man doubt this consummation ; the divine existence is thereby doubted. All history yearns for it. The whole course of Providence ensures it. Who that traces the beautiful Providential order by which the individual rises into the brother, the neighbor, and the citizen, can doubt that the crowning.