| William Ellery Channing - Unitarianism - 1832 - 306 pages
...revelation necessarily involved in the same condemnation ? The truth is, and it ought not to be disguised, that our ultimate reliance is and must be on our own reason. Faith in this power lies at the foundation of all other faith. No trust can be placed in God, if we... | |
| William Ellery Channing - Antislavery movements - 1841 - 418 pages
...revelation necessarily involved in the same condemnation ? The truth is, and it ought not to be disguised, that our ultimate reliance is, and must be, on our own reason. Faith in this power lies at the foundation of all other faith. No trust can be placed in God, if we... | |
| William Ellery Channing - Theology - 1843 - 424 pages
...revelation necessarily involved in the same condemnation ? The truth is, and it ought not to be disguised, that our ultimate reliance is, and must be, on our own reason. Faith in this power lies at the foundation of all other faith. No trust can be placed in God, if we... | |
| William Ellery Channing - 1849 - 422 pages
...revelation necessarily involved in the same condemnation ? The truth is, and it ought not to be disguised, that our ultimate reliance is, and must be, on our own reason. Faith in this power lies at the foundation of all other faith. No trust can be placed in God, if we... | |
| William Ellery Channing - Theology - 1854 - 822 pages
...revelation necessarily involved in the same condemnation ? The truth is, and it ought not to be disguised, that our ultimate reliance is, and must be, on our own reason. Faith in this power lies at the foundation of all other faith. No trust can be placed in God, if we... | |
| William Ellery Channing - 1880 - 862 pages
...great principles which we cannot question, we ought not to hesitate to withhold from it our belief. I am surer that my rational nature is from God than that any book is an expression of his wilL This light in my own breast is his primary revelation, and all subsequent ones must accord with it,... | |
| 1880 - 264 pages
...all that follows. " It is growing light and must be expounded by every age for itself." He says, " I am surer that my rational nature is from God than that any book is the expression of His will." It is of the very highest importance that in honouring the memory of this... | |
| Russell Nevins Bellows - 1881 - 548 pages
...all that follows. " It is growing light, and must be expounded by every age for itself." He says, " I am surer that my rational nature is from God than that any book is the expression of his will." It is of the very highest importance that in honoring the memory of this... | |
| Charles Lowe, Henry Wilder Foote, John Hopkins Morison, Henry H. Barber, James De Normandie - Unitarianism - 1886 - 592 pages
...succeed. Let them take counsel, if they would win the admiration of manly men, of Channing, saying, " The truth is, and it ought not to be denied, that...rational nature is from God than that any book is the expression of his will." The history of American Unitarianism cannot safely be disregarded by the... | |
| John White Chadwick - Sermons, American - 1889 - 240 pages
...when reason and Scripture were at variance, they must follow the written word. But Channing said, " I am surer that my rational nature is from God than that any book is the expression of his will"; and Channing's thought has more and more prevailed. Meantime, the Unitarian... | |
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