| Arthur Cleveland Coxe - 1887 - 350 pages
...substance with the Father ; He is the Father, " of one substance " with Him of whom he could say, " I and my Father are one " ; "He that hath seen me hath seen the Father." Such is and ever was the catholic faith. Further, the first pages of the Common Prayer,... | |
| George Warner Nichols - 1888 - 302 pages
...Sacred Record ; see how He claims His own equality with the Father, nay His unity with the Father, "I, and My Father are one," "he that hath seen Me hath seen the Father." I have no sympathy with some of those of the present day, who would throw discredit on... | |
| Robert Marshall Offord - 1889 - 412 pages
...me." Jesus alone reveals the Father. Only through him incarnate can we conceive of God as a spirit. " I and my Father are one." " He that hath seen me hath seen the Father." If, then, Christ is in the Father, and the Father in him, and if the disciple is in Christ,... | |
| Friedrich Schleiermacher - 1890 - 482 pages
...of the Saviour Himself — words that so essentially distinguish Him from all the sons of earth : " I and my Father are one"; "He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father." Let us reflect that these words contain, at the same time, the measure of our own union... | |
| 1891 - 826 pages
...lived; he lived as no other ever did in God. Their communion was a union which authorized the sayings, "I and my Father are one;" " He that hath seen me hath seen the Father." His consciousness was full of God, was consciousness of God. Fellowship with man did not... | |
| Robert Francis Coyle - 1892 - 120 pages
...men should honor the Son, even as they honor the Father." 7. He claims to be one with the Father. " I and my Father are one." " He that hath seen me hath seen the Father." 8. He claims to be without sin. Conscious of his stainless purity he flings down the challenge:... | |
| James Hastings, Ann Wilson Hastings, Edward Hastings - 1893 - 590 pages
...eg, His acceptance of worship, the authority of His teaching ("/say unto you"), such sayings as, " I and My Father are one," " He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father," cf. St. John v. 18, "o-ov tavrov irOltav Ti3 ®ct3 — AN ACT OF GRASPING — ie He showed... | |
| Daniel Dulany Addison - 1894 - 326 pages
...for Him to say " I am God," which he never did in words affirm, Renan says, than to say, as He did, " I and my Father are one ; " " He that hath seen me hath seen the Father." He spoke as the Son of Man, referring also always to His Father, claiming to be, in the... | |
| Philip Schaff, Henry Wace - 1895 - 460 pages
...person,"4 " the image of the invisible God"?5 It is then to His living image, to Him Who has said " I and my Father are one,"' "He that hath seen me hath seen the Father," ' that God says " Let us make man in our image." Where is the unlikeness" in these Beings... | |
| Henry Woodcock - 1895 - 294 pages
...Christ could effect no change in that Divine nature which is essential and unchangeable. He said, ' I and My Father are one.' ' He that hath seen Me hath seen My Father also.' On the Mount of Transfiguration He dropped for a brief period.of time the veil by... | |
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