Review of Theology & Philosophy, Band 10

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Allan Menzies
Otto Schulze, 1915
Contains reviews, abstracts, and bibliography of the most recent theological and philosophical literature.

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Seite 9 - A strange mystery it is that Nature, omnipotent but blind, in the revolutions of her secular hurryings through the abysses of space, has brought forth at last a child, subject still to her power, but gifted with sight, with knowledge of good and evil, with the capacity of judging all the works of his unthinking Mother.
Seite 307 - We are forced now to recognize that a society whose intellectual direction consists only of unrelated specialisms must drift, and that we dare not drift any longer. We stand, as the Greek thinkers stood, in a new world. And because that world is new, we feel that neither the sectional observations of the special student, nor the ever accumulating records of the past, nor the narrow experience of the practical man can suffice us.
Seite 472 - The Book of Common Prayer among the Nations of the World: A History of Translations of the Prayer Book of the Church of England and of the Protestant Episcopal Church of America.
Seite 453 - Then answered the Jews, and said unto him, Say we not well that thou art a Samaritan, and hast a devil ? Jesus answered, I have not a devil ; but I honour my Father, and ye do dishonour me.
Seite 441 - Jozadak, and the remnant of their brethren the priests and the Levites, and all they that were come out of the captivity unto Jerusalem; and appointed the Levites, from twenty years old and upward, to set forward the work of the house of the Lord.
Seite 509 - PB p. 90) places the coming of the Messiah before the Resurrection, as is done in the passage now before us. The world to come, however, here precedes the advent of the Messiah, but " the prevailing conception in Jewish theology is that the Messianic age is to precede the world to come...
Seite 618 - Here precisely is what distinguishes intellect from instinct and man from the beast. The inferiority of the animal lies entirely in this — that it is a specialist. It does one thing to admiration ; it can do nothing else...
Seite 126 - The longer I occupy myself with questions of ancient mythology the more diffident I become of success in dealing with them, and I am apt to think that we who spend our years in searching for solutions of these insoluble problems are like Sisyphus perpetually rolling his stone up hill only to see it revolve again into the valley...
Seite 61 - Moore justifies his procedure by saying that, ' in the presentation of the several religions, the endeavour is made (as far as the sources permit) to show their relation to race and physical environment and to national life and civilization, to trace their history, and to discover the causes of progress and decline and the influences that have affected them from without.
Seite 441 - Jerusalem, began and laid the foundation of the house of God. On the first day of the second month of the second year...

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