| Samuel Worcester - Congregational churches - 1815 - 172 pages
...of the Divine and human natures in the person of Christ, as mere "phrases which cannot be defined, which convey to common minds no more meaning than words of an unknown tongue, and present to the learned only flitting shadows of thought, instead of clear and steady conceptions."... | |
| Unitarian Universalist churches - 1815 - 882 pages
...of the Divine and human natures in the person of Christ, as mere "phrases which cannot be defined, which convey to common minds no more meaning than words of an urdcnown tongue, and present to the learned only flitting shadows of thought, instead of clear and... | |
| Thomas Belsham - Unitarian churches - 1816 - 764 pages
...of the Divjne and human natures in the person of Christ, as mere "phrases which cannot be defined, which convey to common minds no more meaning than words of an unknown tongue, and present to the learned only flitting shadows of thought, instead of clear and steady conceptions."... | |
| History - 1871 - 432 pages
...phraseology in which the theological distinctions in the controversy •were expressed, he asks : " And ought phrases " like these — of which we find...to common " minds no more meaning than words of an un" known tongue, and which present to the learn"ed only flitting shadows of thought, instead " of... | |
| William Ellery Channing, William Henry Channing - Biography & Autobiography - 1880 - 742 pages
...these 1 "Wardlaw." • " Tliis word has been used by Trinitarians in writing and conversation." — of which we find not a trace in the Bible, which cannot...flitting shadows of thought, instead of clear and stead\- conceptions — to separate those who are united in the great principles which I have stated?... | |
| William Ellery Channing - 1880 - 750 pages
...conreraation." 1803-18U.J CHRISTIAN UNION. 215 — of which we find not a trace in the Bible, which cnnnot be defined by those who employ them, which convey...flitting shadows of thought, instead of clear and stead}' conceptions — to separate those who are united in the great principles which I have stated?... | |
| William Ellery Channing, American Unitarian Association - 1880 - 748 pages
...like these 1 " Wanllaw." - " This word has been used by Trinitarians in writing and conversation." — of which we find not a trace in the Bible, which cannot...them, which convey to common minds no more meaning thau words of an unknown tongue, and which present to the learned only flitting shadows of thought,... | |
| John White Chadwick - Biography & Autobiography - 1903 - 502 pages
...asked] phrases like these — of which we find not a trace in the Bible, which cannot he defined hy those who employ them, which convey to common minds no more meaning than the words of an unknown tongue, and which present to the learned only flitting shadows of thought instead... | |
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