On the miraculous and internal evidences of the Christian revelationR. Carter, 1840 - Presbyterian Church |
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Page 14
... principle . That the machinery of his own internal system may be kept prosperously a - going it is no more required that he should look inwardly , than that he should look outwardly or upwardly to the Heavens lest the mechanism of the ...
... principle . That the machinery of his own internal system may be kept prosperously a - going it is no more required that he should look inwardly , than that he should look outwardly or upwardly to the Heavens lest the mechanism of the ...
Page 18
... principle is engaged , and not with the understanding itself and while there are many who , to magnify their own office , will tell of the science of mind that it is the parent of all other sciences ; and which there- fore occupy a ...
... principle is engaged , and not with the understanding itself and while there are many who , to magnify their own office , will tell of the science of mind that it is the parent of all other sciences ; and which there- fore occupy a ...
Page 32
... principles whether of Logic or of Ethics are controverted , that we are thrown back as it were on our own minds , to take a view there , of what the laws are , whether of human feeling or of human thought . When there is a denial of ...
... principles whether of Logic or of Ethics are controverted , that we are thrown back as it were on our own minds , to take a view there , of what the laws are , whether of human feeling or of human thought . When there is a denial of ...
Page 33
... principles of belief . Men achieved the intellectual process legitimately , ere the legitimacy of the process was traced or recognised . From the beginning of the world man's faith in the constancy of nature was as vigorously in ...
... principles of belief . Men achieved the intellectual process legitimately , ere the legitimacy of the process was traced or recognised . From the beginning of the world man's faith in the constancy of nature was as vigorously in ...
Page 41
... principles of reasoning , or of the properties of the reasoning mind . It never , we believe , was suggested to any mind , when immediately engaged in the direct process of view- ing or of estimating the actual evidence for the miracles ...
... principles of reasoning , or of the properties of the reasoning mind . It never , we believe , was suggested to any mind , when immediately engaged in the direct process of view- ing or of estimating the actual evidence for the miracles ...
Common terms and phrases
actual admitted affirm alleged altogether antece antecedent antiquity Apostles apostolic Fathers appearance assertion Atheist authentic authority bability belief Celsus character christian argument christian miracles church circumstances conceive concurrence confidence conviction Corinth credibility deceived Deist diffidence distinct doctrine Dugald Stewart Edinburgh Review epistle epistle of Clement establish Evangelists event evidence of testimony existence experience fact faith in testimony false falsehood favour feel Gilgal give given gospel history historian historical evidence human Hume imagination impression improbability inductive philosophy infidel inquiry instance instinct instrument investigation Irenæus Jesus Jewish Jews Josephus Judea Julius Cæsar look low-water matter ment mind mony moral narrative never object observation Old Testament original phenomena philosophy Polycarp present principle proof prophecy question reasoning religion revelation Saviour Scripture sense sort of testimony species speculation strength suspicion term Testament testi thing thousand tion true truth understanding whole witnesses writers
Popular passages
Page 284 - Shakespeare, alas ! to shed a never-setting light on his contemporaries: — and if we continue to write and rhyme at the present rate for 200 years longer, there must be some new art of short-hand reading invented — or all reading will be given up in despair.
Page 187 - that there are more, and larger quotations of the small volume of the New Testament in this one Christian author, than there are of all the works of Cicero in writers of all characters for several ages...
Page 71 - Now, a miracle is a violation of the laws of nature : and as a firm and unalterable experience has established these laws, the proof against a miracle, from the very nature of the fact, is as complete as any argument from experience can possibly be imagined...
Page 272 - FORASMUCH as many have taken in hand to set forth in order a declaration of those things which are most surely believed among us...
Page 284 - Our living poets will then be nearly as old as Pope and Swift are at present — but there will stand between them and that generation nearly ten times as much fresh and fashionable poetry as is now interposed between us and those writers : — and if Scott, and Byron, and Campbell, have already cast Pope and Swift a good deal into the shade, in what form and dimensions are they themselves likely to be presented to the eyes of their great-grandchildren?
Page 70 - All probability, then, supposes an opposition of experiments and observations, where the one side is found to overbalance the other, and to produce a degree of evidence, proportioned to the superiority.
Page 277 - I can tell the place in which the blessed Polycarp sat and taught, and his going out and coming in, and the manner of his life, and the form of his person, and the discourses he made to the people ; and how he related his conversation with John, and others who had seen the Lord, and how he related their sayings, and what he had heard...
Page 45 - ... with no different effect; if it was at last executed ; if I myself saw them, one after another, consenting to be racked, burnt, or strangled, rather than give up the truth of their account;— still, if Mr Hume's rule be my guide, I am not to believe them. Now I undertake to say that there exists not a sceptic in the world, who would not believe them, or who would defend such incredulity.
Page 242 - This is the teacher of Asia, the father of the Christians, the destroyer of our gods, who teacheth all men not to sacrifice, nor to 'worship them!
Page 114 - La Place in his treatise on the doctrine of probabilities admits this power of the senses to ascertain the truth even of events the most violently improbable. He puts the case of a hundred dice being thrown into the air, and of their all falling on the same faces. " If we had ourselves," he says, " been spectators of such an event, we would not believe our own eyes, till we had scrupulously examined all the circumstances, and assured ourselves that there was no trick nor deception. After such an...