The History of Christianity from the Birth of Christ to the Abolition of Paganism in the Roman Empire, Volume 1John Murray, 1867 - Church history |
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Page v
... means in its favour ) not only with the dignity and solemnity of Pascal , but with the passionate earnest- ness of Rousseau : its " thin sentimentality " ( this is not my own expression ) reminds me more of Paul et Vir- ginie ' than , I ...
... means in its favour ) not only with the dignity and solemnity of Pascal , but with the passionate earnest- ness of Rousseau : its " thin sentimentality " ( this is not my own expression ) reminds me more of Paul et Vir- ginie ' than , I ...
Page 2
... means retarded . Diverging from Rome as a centre , magnificent . and commodious roads connected the most remote ... mean , of course , the general policy , not the local tyranny , which was often so capriciously , so blindly , so ...
... means retarded . Diverging from Rome as a centre , magnificent . and commodious roads connected the most remote ... mean , of course , the general policy , not the local tyranny , which was often so capriciously , so blindly , so ...
Page 9
... means decisive against a high state of advancement in the primal stock in the East , including Egypt . The argument from language , according to that consummate master of the science , M. Max Müller , on the whole , as must be the case ...
... means decisive against a high state of advancement in the primal stock in the East , including Egypt . The argument from language , according to that consummate master of the science , M. Max Müller , on the whole , as must be the case ...
Page 10
... means of keep- ing men in ignorance and subjection , and so degenerated into the tyrants or the human mind . At all events , sacerdotal domination ( and here M. Constant would have agreed with me ) is altogether alien to genuine ...
... means of keep- ing men in ignorance and subjection , and so degenerated into the tyrants or the human mind . At all events , sacerdotal domination ( and here M. Constant would have agreed with me ) is altogether alien to genuine ...
Page 38
... means of controlling an ignorant and barbarous populace . " Even the serious Dionysius judges of religion according to its usefulness , not according to its truth , as the wise scheme of the legislator , rather than as the revelation of ...
... means of controlling an ignorant and barbarous populace . " Even the serious Dionysius judges of religion according to its usefulness , not according to its truth , as the wise scheme of the legislator , rather than as the revelation of ...
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according Acts admitted allusion animosity Apostles appears assumed authority Baptist belief BOOK Capernaum CHAP character Christ Christianity connexion Corinth dæmons dangerous death declared Deity descent disciples distinct divine doctrines doubt Ephesus Epistle Evangelists excited faith favour feeling Galatia Galilean Galilee Gentiles Gospels Greek heathen Herod High Priest Hist Holy hostility human influence Irenæus jealousy Jerusalem Jesus Jewish Jews John Josephus Judæa Judaism Judas Judas the Galilean language least less Lightfoot Luke mankind Mark Matt ment Messiah mind moral multitude mysterious narrative nation nature Nazareth opinion Palestine Passover Paul perhaps period persecution person Peter Pharisees philosophy Pilate Polytheism popular principles probably prophet proselytes province race racter religion religious remarkable resurrection rites Roman Rome rulers sacred Sadducees Samaritans Sanhedrin sect seems spirit Strauss supposed synagogue teacher Temple Tiberias tion tradition tumult usage whole wonderful worship writers Zoroastrian καὶ