In no way can these phenomena be so satisfactorily accounted for and explained as by admitting the brief account of the creation of the world in the first chapter of Genesis; and that there is no necessity for making the world appear older than its date... T. Lucreti Cari De rerum natura ...: the fifth book ... - Side 32af Titus Lucretius Carus - 1907 - 67 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| John Owen - 1812 - 486 sider
...fourth commandment. The words are the continuation of a plain historical narration. Having finished the account of the creation of the world in the first chapter, and given a recapitulation of it in the first verse of this, Moses declares what immediately ensued... | |
| John Owen - 1854 - 572 sider
...fourth commandment. The words are the continuation of a plain historical narration. Having finished the account of the creation of the world in the first chapter, and given a recapitulation of it in the first verse of this, Moses declares what immediately ensued... | |
| 1859 - 918 sider
...compassion, and ran, and fell on hie neck, and kissed him." — LUKE XT. 20. IN the account which is given us Wɇ 3 c jT { %= | V g ' % t0 % d ' we read, " So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him ; male and female... | |
| Aubrey Charles Price - 1872 - 236 sider
...Lord, who bought them and made them His. dptristtan WM, ITS RELATION TO THE WORLD. the close of his account of the creation of the world, in the first chapter of Genesis, the inspired writer says, "And God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very good."... | |
| United States National Museum - 1906 - 944 sider
...way can these phenomena be so satisfactorily accounted for and explained as by admitting the brief account of the creation of the world in the first chapter of Genesis; and that there is no necessity for making the world appear older than it« date given by Moses. Again:... | |
| United States National Museum - 1906 - 940 sider
...way can these phenomena be so satisfactorily accounted for and explained as by admitting the brief account of the creation of the world in the first chapter of Genesis; and that there is no necessity for making the world appear older than its date given by Moses. Again:... | |
| George Perkins Merrill - 1906 - 642 sider
...way can these phenomena he so satisfactorily accounted for and explained as by admitting the brief account of the creation of the world in the first chapter of Genesis; and that there is no necessity for making the world appear older than ita date given by Moses. Again:... | |
| George Perkins Merrill - 1906 - 545 sider
...way can these phenomena be so satisfactorily accounted for and explained as by admitting the brief account of the creation of the world in the first chapter of (íenwis; and that there is no necessity for making the world appear older than its dato (aven by Moses.... | |
| Titus Lucretius Carus - 1910 - 184 sider
...in luminis erigit oras. 1455 namque alid ex alio clarescere cordi' videbant artibus, ad summum donee venere cacumen. NOTES 783. principle, 'at the beginning...beginning of the first book of Ovid's Metamorphoses and in Hesiod's Works and Days. 786. arboribus. Wakefield quotes Empedocles' theory that herbage was created... | |
| Titus Lucretius Carus - 1910 - 184 sider
...alid ex alio clarescere cordi' videbant artibus, ad summum donec venere cacumen. NOTES 783. principl0, 'at the beginning of the world.' The account of the...beginning of the first book of Ovid's Metamorphoses and in Hesiod's Works and Days. 786. arboribus. Wakefield quotes Empedocles' theory that herbage was created... | |
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