The Bible and Men of Learning: In a Course of LecturesAnson D. F. Randolph, 1859 - 400 pages |
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Page 15
... evidence in the notes , which could not so conveniently be introduced into the text of the Lectures . Besides ; as some of the positions which I have taken may seem new , such as the indebtedness of the Greeks to the Hebrews , in ...
... evidence in the notes , which could not so conveniently be introduced into the text of the Lectures . Besides ; as some of the positions which I have taken may seem new , such as the indebtedness of the Greeks to the Hebrews , in ...
Page 22
... that day . He came , performing miracles , to attest the inspiration of his message ; and they endeav- oured to discredit this evidence of his mission from heaven , by imitating and explaining away the mira- cles 22 FIRST LECTURE .
... that day . He came , performing miracles , to attest the inspiration of his message ; and they endeav- oured to discredit this evidence of his mission from heaven , by imitating and explaining away the mira- cles 22 FIRST LECTURE .
Page 29
... evidence , and in a history abundant in false colorings and garbled statements , all written in a style of almost Grecian ease and finish , he prevailed with readers who , obdurate in heart , and ambitious to be thought more knowing ...
... evidence , and in a history abundant in false colorings and garbled statements , all written in a style of almost Grecian ease and finish , he prevailed with readers who , obdurate in heart , and ambitious to be thought more knowing ...
Page 62
... evidence in the least equivocal or inconclusive . The proofs should be irrefragable and obvious to every candid judge ; and such is the proof we have to offer . It is taken mainly from the confessions made by the accused themselves ...
... evidence in the least equivocal or inconclusive . The proofs should be irrefragable and obvious to every candid judge ; and such is the proof we have to offer . It is taken mainly from the confessions made by the accused themselves ...
Page 63
... the heart becomes so unveiled as to show , not only what they have done , but why they have done it ; not only what they have believed , but why they have believed it . From such evidence , and from the manner in which SECOND LECTURE . 63.
... the heart becomes so unveiled as to show , not only what they have done , but why they have done it ; not only what they have believed , but why they have believed it . From such evidence , and from the manner in which SECOND LECTURE . 63.
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admiration Architecture argument Aristotle assailed astronomical authority avowed Bacon beautiful believe Bible blasphemy blessed called cause cella Christianity Church Church of Rome claim confession darkness death declared deist Diogenes Laƫrtius discoveries distinguished divine doctrines dying earth Egypt eternity faith father friends furnish Galileo Gibbon give glory gospel Greece hand happiness heart heaven Hebrews Holy honor hope human Hume Hume's impiety Inductive Philosophy infidelity influence inspired intellect irreligion JAMES TALLMADGE Judea judgment knowledge known labors language learning LECTURE light lived Lord magicians of Egypt ments mind moral nations never opinions pass peribolus philosophy proof Redeemer religion religious remarkable render revelation Rome sacred Scriptures Socrates soul speak spirit spread stars tells temple thing thou thought tion true truth unto Vitruvius Voltaire whole wisdom wise words writings zodiac