Certain Movements in England and America which Influenced the Transition from the Ideals of Personal Righteousness of the Seventeenth Century to the Modern Ideals of Social Service: A Disertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Literature in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy

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University of Chicago Libraries, 1917 - 107 pàgines
 

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Pàgina 16 - Such a nation might truly say to corruption, thou art my father, and to the worm, thou art my mother and my sister.
Pàgina 18 - There is no other name given under heaven among men whereby we must be saved, but the name of Jesus.
Pàgina 13 - Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are his.
Pàgina 73 - During his three years' tenure of office He abolished the ancient method of conveying land, The time-honoured institution of the Insolvents' Court, And The Eternity of Punishment. Toward the close of his earthly career, In the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, He dismissed Hell with costs, And took away from Orthodox members of the Church of England Their last hope of everlasting damnation.
Pàgina 61 - DARTMOUTH COLLEGE for the education and instruction of Youth of the Indian Tribes in this Land in reading, writing and all parts of Learning which shall appear necessary and expedient for civilizing and christianizing Children of Pagans as well as in all liberal Arts and Sciences ; and also of English Youth and any others...
Pàgina 71 - Jewish high-church party for countenancing all these iniquities, and prophesying smooth things to please the aristocracy. If the clergy would come forward as one man from Cumberland to Cornwall, exhorting peaceableness on the one side, and justice on the other, denouncing the high rents and the game laws, and the carelessness which keeps the poor ignorant and then wonders that they are brutal, I verily believe they might yet save themselves and the state.
Pàgina 84 - He introduced into morals and politics those habits of thought and modes of investigation, which are essential to the idea of science; and the absence of which made those departments of inquiry, as physics had been before Bacon, a field of interminable discussion, leading to no result. It was not his opinions, in short, but his method, that constituted the novelty and the value of what he did...
Pàgina 79 - The greatest possible benevolence 1 of every rational agent towards all the rest constitutes the happiest state of each and all, so far as depends on their own power, and is necessarily required for their happiness ; accordingly Common Good will be the Supreme Law.
Pàgina 61 - Fellows, and for all accommodations of buildings, and all other necessary provisions, that may conduce to the education of the English and Indian youth of this country, in knowledge and godliness.
Pàgina 81 - ... to make two blades of grass grow where one grew before; to him we say,

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