Lectures on the Origin and Growth of Religion as Illustrated by the Religion of Ancient Egypt: Delivered in May and June, 1879Williams and Norgate, 1884 - 259 pages |
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Page xvi
... divine power , eternal , infinite , ubiquitous and self - existent , wise and good . It was by wholly different and independent exercises of thought that the Egyptian mind gave birth to its mythology , to its practical system of ethics ...
... divine power , eternal , infinite , ubiquitous and self - existent , wise and good . It was by wholly different and independent exercises of thought that the Egyptian mind gave birth to its mythology , to its practical system of ethics ...
Page xvii
... divine power . Professor Lieblein could not have supposed that in asserting the identity of Egyptian religion during some thousands of years I intended to deny that new gods had been introduced into the pantheon , or that new ...
... divine power . Professor Lieblein could not have supposed that in asserting the identity of Egyptian religion during some thousands of years I intended to deny that new gods had been introduced into the pantheon , or that new ...
Page xxii
... divine power , so , on the other hand , did the late M. de Rougé , and so now do his able successors of the French school , M. Pierret , M. Grébaut , and others , depending chiefly upon texts of the henotheistic period , argue that the ...
... divine power , so , on the other hand , did the late M. de Rougé , and so now do his able successors of the French school , M. Pierret , M. Grébaut , and others , depending chiefly upon texts of the henotheistic period , argue that the ...
Page 7
... divine beasts , but that the universal superstition finished by overpowering them also . Apol- lonios of Tyana , according to his biographer Philos- tratos , decidedly condemned the Egyptian system as absurd and ridiculous . But the ...
... divine beasts , but that the universal superstition finished by overpowering them also . Apol- lonios of Tyana , according to his biographer Philos- tratos , decidedly condemned the Egyptian system as absurd and ridiculous . But the ...
Page 8
... Divine essence , and " under the semblances of animals the Egyptians worship the universal power which the gods have revealed in the various forms of living nature . " 1 Vit . Apollonii , vi . 19 . 2 De Abstinentia , iv . c . 9 . Modern ...
... Divine essence , and " under the semblances of animals the Egyptians worship the universal power which the gods have revealed in the various forms of living nature . " 1 Vit . Apollonii , vi . 19 . 2 De Abstinentia , iv . c . 9 . Modern ...
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Common terms and phrases
abode Abydos Amenhotep II Amon ancient ancient Egypt Anubis Book Brugsch called Chabas Champollion chapter Christian cloth coffin Dead deceased deity Dendera derived divine doctrine dynasty earth Egyp Egypt Egyptian language Egyptian mythology Egyptian religion Egyptian texts Egyptian word eighteenth dynasty eleventh dynasty evidence existence expressed father feast Fravashi funereal genius goddess gods Greek hath Hathor heart heaven Hebrew Heliopolis Henotheism hieroglyphic Horus hymns Indo-European inscriptions Isis king language Lectures legend living Lord Maat manuscripts Mariette Max Müller meaning monuments mother Museum myth mythology Nephthys nether world notion nutar nutra Osiris papyrus period person prayers Ptah Pyramids Rameses reign religious Renenet represented Rougé royal sacred says scholars Semitic Seti signifies soul sovereign speak sun-god symbol tablet Tefnut Tehutimes temple Thebes thine things thou art thou hast tion tombs translated verb worship written
Popular passages
Page 95 - And God spake unto Moses, and said unto him, I am the LORD: and I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob, by the name of God Almighty, but by my name JEHOVAH was I not known to them.
Page xi - Which an earthquake rocks and swings An eagle alit one moment may sit In the light of its golden wings.
Page 66 - Go thy way, eat thy bread with joy, and drink thy wine with a merry heart; for God now accepteth thy works.
Page 260 - FP) Broken Lights. An Inquiry into the Present Condition and Future Prospects of Religious Faith.
Page 238 - ... te, dea, te fugiunt venti, te nubila caeli adventumque tuum, tibi suavis daedala tellus summittit flores, tibi rident aequora ponti placatumque nitet diffuso lumine caelum.
Page 53 - TRANSACTIONS OF THE SECOND SESSION OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF ORIENTALISTS. Held in London in September 1874. Edited by Robert K. Douglas, Hon.
Page 99 - is not far from any one of us, for in Him we live and move and have our being...
Page 70 - Doing that which is right and hating that which is wrong, I was bread to the hungry, water to the thirsty, clothes to the naked, a refuge to him that was in want; that which I did to him, the great God hath done to me.