The Presbyterian Quarterly Review, Volume 3B. J. Wallace, Albert Barnes proprietor, 1855 - Presbyterian Church |
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Page 11
... thing . The modern historian is indebted to the natural philosopher for the introduction of this idea into the sciences . It has made a revolution in the science of nature , and also in that of history . While in its perversions we may ...
... thing . The modern historian is indebted to the natural philosopher for the introduction of this idea into the sciences . It has made a revolution in the science of nature , and also in that of history . While in its perversions we may ...
Page 16
... thing that animates the human heart are buried in the ashes of his- tory . As in the calmness of a serene night we gaze into the firmament and see worlds on worlds unnumbered rise , and look upon them all as if here and present , and ...
... thing that animates the human heart are buried in the ashes of his- tory . As in the calmness of a serene night we gaze into the firmament and see worlds on worlds unnumbered rise , and look upon them all as if here and present , and ...
Page 18
... thing itself Aristotle was wiser than his objectors . Expressed in our phraseology , he may be interpreted as meaning , that in order to know any thing philosophically , scientifically , we must know these four points : first , its ...
... thing itself Aristotle was wiser than his objectors . Expressed in our phraseology , he may be interpreted as meaning , that in order to know any thing philosophically , scientifically , we must know these four points : first , its ...
Page 30
... thing else . If Episcopacy was established by Christ and his Apostles , and was universal two hundred years after Christ , then at the beginning of the third century we should have this condition of things all Christendom divided into ...
... thing else . If Episcopacy was established by Christ and his Apostles , and was universal two hundred years after Christ , then at the beginning of the third century we should have this condition of things all Christendom divided into ...
Page 35
... thing of some other large cities . We distinctly admit and affirm , therefore , the existence of diocesan Episcopacy in some of the larger cities of the Roman empire by the middle of the third century . That it did not exist at that ...
... thing of some other large cities . We distinctly admit and affirm , therefore , the existence of diocesan Episcopacy in some of the larger cities of the Roman empire by the middle of the third century . That it did not exist at that ...
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