The Chief End of ManGood Press, 24. dec. 2019 - 258 sider "The Chief End of Man" by George Spring Merriam argues that religion must develop away from superstition and supernaturalism and embrace tolerance and rationalism. It shows how Christianity developed from its Jewish and Classical roots into the anti-rational dogma of the Middle Ages, and how the promise of the Reformation was never really delivered. Though this book was written many years ago, people will be surprised to learn how relevant it is to today's world. |
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... come times of momentous progress in the physical world; the establishment of the Copernican theory, the discovery of ... comes in our own day. In this hasty panorama of the past, then, the effort has been to give real history. But every ...
... come times of momentous progress in the physical world; the establishment of the Copernican theory, the discovery of ... comes in our own day. In this hasty panorama of the past, then, the effort has been to give real history. But every ...
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... come to the ideal of the present. The religious transition of the last four centuries is in one aspect marked by the waning of authority and the growth of individual freedom; and in another aspect it is the substitution for a ...
... come to the ideal of the present. The religious transition of the last four centuries is in one aspect marked by the waning of authority and the growth of individual freedom; and in another aspect it is the substitution for a ...
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Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
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Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
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aspiration beauty belief blended book of Daniel book of Job celestial centuries character chastity child Christ Christianity church comes comfort consciousness courage creed death Deity disciples divine divine grace earth elements Emerson emotion Epictetus ethical evil experience faith father feeling fidelity forces Francis Cook George Eliot give glad gospel happiness heart heaven Hebrew hell higher highest holy hope human idea ideal Iliad imagination immortality inspiration intellectual interpretation Jesus Jewish Judaism knowledge living Lord Lucretius man's mankind mind moral nature noble Old Testament passion Paul peace perfect philosophy Plato present prophets Protestantism pure Puritan purity reality religion religious seems sense Shakspere social society Socrates sorrow soul spiritual Stoic Stoicism story struggle sublime supernatural supreme sympathy tenderness Testament thee things thou thought touch true truth universe Victor Hirtzler victory virtue vision voice whole word worship Xenophon