| M. O. Grenby - Literary Criticism - 2001 - 289 pages
...revolution Go, Englishman, and tell your countrymen the things that thou hast witnessed. Things which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man conceived. How then shall men describe? Let example speak what precept would fail to enforce, and may the misfortunes... | |
| C. FitzSimons Allison - Apologetics - 2003 - 184 pages
...chapter of Corinthians. These are attributes into which they are to grow. As St. Paul tells us, "Eye hath not seen nor ear heard nor the heart of man conceived of the glory that God hath prepared for you." (i Cor. 2:9) Full spiritual health is not a state of... | |
| Jon Mee - History - 2005 - 342 pages
...Magazine are continually seeing things in Heaven, though the Scripture expressly says that the eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man conceived what heaven is. (H 94) He goes on to give a comically rendered account of the deathbed scene of a Miss... | |
| Robert Rix - History - 2007 - 204 pages
...anticipation of Heaven', and for 'seeing things in Heaven, though the Scripture expressly says that the eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man conceived what heaven is'.57 The review is, in fact, configured as a long discussion of the boundaries for how... | |
| William Sloane Coffin - Biography & Autobiography - 2008 - 630 pages
...strings attached. But the paralytic did respond to God's love with his own, so we needn't worry, "For eye hath not seen nor ear heard nor the heart of man conceived the good things that God hath prepared for those who love him" (1 Cor. 2:9). "The glory of God is a... | |
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