So that now when I open and turn over with reverent joy the leaves of the Gospels, I feel that here is enshrined the highest achievement of Man the Artist, a creation to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken away. Physiognomy - Page 127by Johann Caspar Lavater - 1826Full view - About this book
| 1771 - 882 pages
...any authority to make articles of faith : Chrift Jefus was the author and the finifher of the faith, to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken." Confequently no church can be juftified in impofiiig articles of faith upon the confidences of men,... | |
| Thomas Sherlock - 1758 - 410 pages
...Authority to make Articles of Faith ; that Chrift Jefus -was the Author and the Finijker of the Faith, to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken : If they afk us, why we have difcarded much of their Ceremony and Difcipline ; we may, without entering... | |
| Johann Caspar Lavater - 1804 - 422 pages
...fashionable, at least, it was the most common. Some Canadians had their heads perfectly spherical. Although the natural form of the head really approaches the...the result, which is destructive to the animal. " In fine we have seen, on the banks of the Maragnon, Americans with square, or cubical, heads ; that is... | |
| T Nixon - 1806 - 176 pages
...they haye a voice, and their voice is as intelligible as any common language. God is a pure spirit, to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken. *' In him there is light and no darkness," spirituality without any matter; perfection without any... | |
| 1808 - 614 pages
...of any future age. At the period of its first promulgation, it contained an entire system in itself, to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken without rendering it less perfect.* lis rich treasures are deposited in one volume, which was complete... | |
| Thomas Sherlock - 1812 - 492 pages
...authority to make articles of faith ; that Chrift Jefus was the author and thefiniJhtr of the faith t to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken : if they afk us, why we have difcarded much of their ceremony and difcipline; we may, without entering... | |
| Johann Caspar Lavater - 1827 - 394 pages
...approaches the earcular, these savages, who, by being thus distorted, acquired the appellation of bowl w bullet-head, do not appear less disgusting, for having...which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taku, away, without some essential error being the result, which is destructive to the animal. In short,... | |
| Thomas Sherlock - 1830 - 500 pages
...authority to make articles of faith ; that ' Christ Jesus was the author and the finisher of the faith,' to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken : if they ask us why we have discarded much of their ceremony and discipline ; we may, without entering... | |
| Thomas Sherlock, Thomas Smart Hughes - 1830 - 504 pages
...authority to make articles of faith ; that ' Christ Jesus was the author and the finisher of the faith,' to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken : if they ask us why we have discarded much of their ceremony and discipline ; we may, without entering... | |
| Thomas Sherlock, Thomas Smart Hughes - 1830 - 508 pages
...authority to make articles of faith ; that ' Christ Jesus was the author and the finisher of the faith,' to which nothing can be added, from which nothing can be taken : •if they ask us why we have discarded much of their ceremony and discipline ; we may, without entering... | |
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