The British Quarterly Review, Volume 39Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1864 - Christianity |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 4
... hands of priests , this agency becomes terrible . Left in the bands of kings it becomes hardly less so . The human conscience was not designed to be in the hands of either . It was designed to be in each man's own keeping . But as the ...
... hands of priests , this agency becomes terrible . Left in the bands of kings it becomes hardly less so . The human conscience was not designed to be in the hands of either . It was designed to be in each man's own keeping . But as the ...
Page 5
... hands of those two parties . In the English Church as we now know it , the civil power is ascendant . The ecclesiastical power is everywhere bound by it . This has happened because the ecclesiastical power , after many experiments , has ...
... hands of those two parties . In the English Church as we now know it , the civil power is ascendant . The ecclesiastical power is everywhere bound by it . This has happened because the ecclesiastical power , after many experiments , has ...
Page 6
... hands it is vieing with the Established Church in the signs of wealth and of cultivated taste . This all men know who are willing to know anything on the subject . But the feeling of Churchmen seems to be that the only barrier against ...
... hands it is vieing with the Established Church in the signs of wealth and of cultivated taste . This all men know who are willing to know anything on the subject . But the feeling of Churchmen seems to be that the only barrier against ...
Page 10
... hand . The Anglican Church became alarmed to an unprecedented degree . She had been long leaning in great confidence on the State . During the space of two generations power had been in the hands of men deemed specially her friends ...
... hand . The Anglican Church became alarmed to an unprecedented degree . She had been long leaning in great confidence on the State . During the space of two generations power had been in the hands of men deemed specially her friends ...
Page 12
... hands . This is the language addressed to the clergymen of London , and of the other great towns of England , in the year of grace 1864 ! But it seems to be the privilege of divines of the Archdeacon's order to live in a world which is ...
... hands . This is the language addressed to the clergymen of London , and of the other great towns of England , in the year of grace 1864 ! But it seems to be the privilege of divines of the Archdeacon's order to live in a world which is ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Amy Robsart appear authority barons become Bishop blank verse British Catholic cause character Christian Church Church of England clergy Colonel Crawley common court Court-martial Crawley Darjeeling degeneration Divine doctrine doubt Earl effect Elizabeth England English Europe Evangelical evidence evil existence fact faith favour feeling France French friends give Government hands heart Henry Himalayas honour human influence interest Italy King labour liberty Lilley London Lord Lord Palmerston Madagascar Majesty's Government ment Mhow mind Minister Montfort moral nation nature never noble Nonconformist opinion Parliament party passed persons poem poet popular present principle Protestant Puritans Queen question Radama II readers relation religious result Schleswig Scripture seems sentry Shakspere Simon de Montfort songs spirit supposed things thought tion treaty true truth Turin verse volume Whigs whole words writer