| Church congress - 1867 - 400 pages
...one reason, I think, why a highly scientific age resents the attempt to impose upon it a fixed creed, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away. It cannot endure finality in belief. It demands progress in religious science as in all other. It will... | |
| 1866 - 410 pages
...one reason, I think, why a highly scientific age resents the attempt to impose upon it a fixed creed, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away. It cannot endure finality in belief. It demands progress in religions science as in all other. It will... | |
| Christopher Wordsworth (bp. of Lincoln) - 1867 - 890 pages
...together, as written by the same Divine Hand, and making together the perfect Written Word of God, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away. This universal external testimony is, doubtless, confirmed particularly and internally by what we ourselves... | |
| Johann Peter Lange, Philip Schaff - 1870 - 622 pages
...14) is oSip1?, "for the eternal," immovable, without flow, without progress, perfect, finished, — " to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken," — that high " ideal world," that nnmoving Olam, where " all things stand," — that spiritual supernatural... | |
| Royal Society of Literature (Great Britain) - 1870 - 534 pages
...invented for himself, as a perfect* whole, as it is indeed, and it only. — ST COLERIDGE. * That, I mean, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be removed. in the definition of body, and then proved by applying of the definition to six or seven particular... | |
| James Henley Thornwell - 1871 - 678 pages
...of asserting the simplicity and oneness of the infinite. That which never began and can never end, to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken, which knows no succession and is dependent upon nothing without, is evidently incapable of change.... | |
| Alexander Dickson - 1875 - 242 pages
...spoil the most exquisite pattern ; but there is a completeness about the Saviour's wisdom and work, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away. " The most fine gold " " cannot be rendered more pure ; and when fashioned into rings it forms the... | |
| Asa Mahan - 1875 - 448 pages
...us by motives and sanctions of infinite and eternal weight ; a system, finally, to which absolutely nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away, without visibly marring its beauty and perfection. Spiritualism comes in professedly as a higher light,... | |
| Joseph Haven - 1876 - 434 pages
...Every sensation is true, says Epicurus, for it is a motion produced in the mind by something else, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away. But what the sensible is which produces the sensation is another question ; that we do not learn in... | |
| Percy Strutt - 1877 - 480 pages
...this account that Christ's salvation, objectively considered, is to be regarded as a finished work, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away. It is with the gospel as with the creation ; both were perfect from the beginning, and contained, by a Divine... | |
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