| Charles Frederick Childe - 1878 - 190 Seiten
...Elsewhere, he observes : — "Perhaps Divine goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare single disposition...make the good, the faithful, the honest man happy." Accordingly, he defines moral government to consist " not barely in rewarding and punishing men for... | |
| Samuel Austin Allibone - 1879 - 582 Seiten
...than is by the present. Or perhaps divine goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in lligent, but so framed as AN A LOO v, Chap. II. CONSCIENCE. There is a principle of reflection in men by which they distinguish... | |
| Samuel Austin Allibone - 1879 - 576 Seiten
...than is by the present. Or perhaps divine goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in 5 " ANALOGY, Chap. II. CON8CIENCE. There is a principle.of reflection in men by which they distinguish... | |
| Samuel Milton Vernon - 1886 - 316 Seiten
...force upon this subject : " Perhaps Divine goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare single disposition...make the good, the faithful, the honest man happy." l 1 Analogy of Religion, Part I. chap. ii. It is to be remembered that punishment is not the choice... | |
| James Fraser (Bp. of Manchester) - 1887 - 332 Seiten
...goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare, single disposition to make the good, the faithful, the honest...which He has placed them in to each other, and to that in which they stand to Himself: that relation to Himself which, during their existence, is even necessary,... | |
| Alexander Balmain Bruce - 1892 - 560 Seiten
...reproved in these terms : " Perhaps divine goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare single disposition...disposition to make the good, the faithful, the honest man happy."2 The tone of the Analogy of Rdigion is not itself, any more than that of deism, altogether... | |
| Ainsworth Rand Spofford, Charles Gibbon - 1893 - 472 Seiten
...we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare single disposition to produce hai>piness ; but a disposition to make the good, the faithful, the honest man happy. — Analoyy, Chap. IL и> ROME Ш 1621. [James Howoll, an English author, born about I.'.:-.., .ii.... | |
| Henry Donald Maurice Spence-Jones - 1897 - 456 Seiten
...right. As Bishop Butler observes, " Divine goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare single disposition...make the good, the faithful, the honest man happy " (' Anal.,' i. 2, p. 41) — a disposition, ie, to be just as well as merciful—to distribute happiness... | |
| Augustus Hopkins Strong - 1899 - 550 Seiten
...wrote long ago as follows: "Perhaps divine goodness, with which, if I mistake not, we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare single disposition to produce happiness so much as a disposition to make the good, the faithful, the honest happy." If it be replied that even... | |
| Annesley W. Streane - 1900 - 156 Seiten
...and vanity'; and he adds, 'It is hard to imagine a more execrable emotion than we make very free in our speculations, may not be a bare, single disposition...make the good, the faithful, the honest man happy.' Bp. Butler's Analogy, Part I. chap. ii. 1 Rousseau, i. 317 (chap. ix.). the complacent religiosity... | |
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