The Presbyterian Quarterly Review, Volume 3B. J. Wallace, Albert Barnes proprietor, 1855 - Presbyterian Church |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 8
... reading of the whole history itself . ( 2. ) That to this history it assign an adequate law of progress . ( 3. ) An ade- quate end or object . ( 4. ) An adequate author . 1. The first essential condition , we claim , of a true ...
... reading of the whole history itself . ( 2. ) That to this history it assign an adequate law of progress . ( 3. ) An ade- quate end or object . ( 4. ) An adequate author . 1. The first essential condition , we claim , of a true ...
Page 11
... reading the records of history we do indeed , to speak with Milton , feel by turns the bitter change Of fierce extremes , extremes by change more fierce ; but also the progress of a victorious Providence , out of evil still educing good ...
... reading the records of history we do indeed , to speak with Milton , feel by turns the bitter change Of fierce extremes , extremes by change more fierce ; but also the progress of a victorious Providence , out of evil still educing good ...
Page 30
... readers a great deal of what is usually brought into this controversy ; and with which they are there- fore familiar . We wholly pass by the Scripture argument . We dismiss Ignatius and all his Epistles , spurious or genuine . have no ...
... readers a great deal of what is usually brought into this controversy ; and with which they are there- fore familiar . We wholly pass by the Scripture argument . We dismiss Ignatius and all his Epistles , spurious or genuine . have no ...
Page 37
... readers of a condi- tion of things so notoriously and universally established , that the supposition of the contrary would be absurd . A citizen of New York writing to a citizen of Philadelphia , will not think it necessary to declare ...
... readers of a condi- tion of things so notoriously and universally established , that the supposition of the contrary would be absurd . A citizen of New York writing to a citizen of Philadelphia , will not think it necessary to declare ...
Page 38
... readers of Epiphanius , on this supposition , knew of no other arrangement for the churches in large cities . They would have taken for granted the prelatical constitution , as much as any well - informed man would now , in relation to ...
... readers of Epiphanius , on this supposition , knew of no other arrangement for the churches in large cities . They would have taken for granted the prelatical constitution , as much as any well - informed man would now , in relation to ...
Contents
53 | |
69 | |
89 | |
122 | |
155 | |
177 | |
218 | |
252 | |
270 | |
278 | |
329 | |
333 | |
336 | |
338 | |
339 | |
340 | |
341 | |
343 | |
345 | |
347 | |
349 | |
350 | |
509 | |
512 | |
516 | |
517 | |
518 | |
520 | |
522 | |
523 | |
524 | |
525 | |
526 | |
527 | |
529 | |
543 | |
572 | |
601 | |
616 | |
630 | |
648 | |
686 | |
697 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abrahamic covenant Adam Adam's American Presbyterian apostle appointed Aristotle Assembly Atonement baptism believe bishop body Calvin Calvinistic century Chalmers character Christ Christian Church of Scotland circumcision Committee Confession congregation Congregationalism Congregationalists connection death denomination divine doctrine ecclesiastical England Episcopacy eternal evil existence express exscinding brethren fact faith father feeling God's Gospel heart Hippolytus Holy human idea imputed imputed righteousness infant Jesus justice language limited atonement Majuma matter means ment mind ministers ministry moral nature never object original original sin party pastor peculiar penalty Philadelphia philosophy philosophy of history Plato posterity preaching Presbyterian Church presbyters present principles race readers Reformed regard religion remarkable respect Rice righteousness Roman salvation Scripture sense sinner Society soul spirit sufferings Synod tendency Testament theology theory thing tion true truth verse views whole word Wordsworth