The History of Christianity: From the Birth of Christ to the Abolition of Paganism in the Roman Empire, Volume 1John Murray, 1884 - Christianity |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 85
Page iv
... humanity , as it were , self superhumanised and deified ; not what St. Paul asserts , " God in Christ , reconciling the world unto himself . " At the time of the publication of the History of Christianity these views had culminated in ...
... humanity , as it were , self superhumanised and deified ; not what St. Paul asserts , " God in Christ , reconciling the world unto himself . " At the time of the publication of the History of Christianity these views had culminated in ...
Page v
... human progress , the beautiful passages on the transcendant humanity of Jesus ( un- happily , not unleavened ) may give satisfaction and delight ; to those to whom Christianity is a religion , Jesus the author and giver of eternal life ...
... human progress , the beautiful passages on the transcendant humanity of Jesus ( un- happily , not unleavened ) may give satisfaction and delight ; to those to whom Christianity is a religion , Jesus the author and giver of eternal life ...
Page 1
... human race had gradually sepa- rated , were united under a vast , uniform , and apparently permanent , social system . The older Asiatic empires had , in general , owed their rise to the ability and success of some adventurous conqueror ...
... human race had gradually sepa- rated , were united under a vast , uniform , and apparently permanent , social system . The older Asiatic empires had , in general , owed their rise to the ability and success of some adventurous conqueror ...
Page 7
... human nature which connect man with a higher order of things . Man , as history and experience teach , is essentially a religious being . There are certain faculties and modes of thinking and feeling apparently inseparable from his ...
... human nature which connect man with a higher order of things . Man , as history and experience teach , is essentially a religious being . There are certain faculties and modes of thinking and feeling apparently inseparable from his ...
Page 8
... human mind appeared vacant ; among the rival competitors for its dominion , none advanced more than claims local , or limited to a certain class . Nothing less was required than a religion coextensive at least with the empire of Rome ...
... human mind appeared vacant ; among the rival competitors for its dominion , none advanced more than claims local , or limited to a certain class . Nothing less was required than a religion coextensive at least with the empire of Rome ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
according Acts allusion ancient Apostles appears assumed authority Babylonia Baptist belief birth BOOK Cæsar Capernaum CHAP character Christ Christianity connexion Corinth dæmons death declared Deity descent disciples distinct divine doctrines doubt Epistle Essenian Evangelists excited faith favour feeling Galilean Galilee Gentiles Gospels Greek Herod Hist Holy hostility human influence Jerusalem Jesus Jewish Jews John Josephus Judæa Judaism Judas Judas the Galilean king language least less Lightfoot Luke Magian mankind Matt ment Messiah mind miracle moral multitude mysterious mythic narrative nation nature opinion original Palestine party passage Passover Paul perhaps period Pharisees philosophy Pilate Polytheism popular Priest principles probably prophetic proselytes province pure race racter reign religion religious remarkable resurrection rites Roman Rome rulers sacred Sadducees Sanhedrin sect seems spirit Strauss supposed synagogue Talmud teacher Temple Tiberias tion tradition truth whole worship writers Zoroaster Zoroastrian καὶ