The British Quarterly Review, Volume 39Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1864 - Christianity |
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Page 3
... it is no marvel that attachment to the Anglican Church , in the case of not a few , should be in the main a spiritual and Christian attachment . Minds which have drawn their religious life in this manner from the services of a State.
... it is no marvel that attachment to the Anglican Church , in the case of not a few , should be in the main a spiritual and Christian attachment . Minds which have drawn their religious life in this manner from the services of a State.
Page 4
... religious life , is the connection in which it gets its notions of religious polity . Attempts to make men Churchmen , or to make them Nonconformists , without aiming at something much higher , are a mistake . Such differences are best ...
... religious life , is the connection in which it gets its notions of religious polity . Attempts to make men Churchmen , or to make them Nonconformists , without aiming at something much higher , are a mistake . Such differences are best ...
Page 5
... religious things as in secular things . This was the settlement of 1662. Toleration , accordingly , was resisted as long as that was possible . Nonconformity was pro- scribed until it could be proscribed no longer . And every attempt ...
... religious things as in secular things . This was the settlement of 1662. Toleration , accordingly , was resisted as long as that was possible . Nonconformity was pro- scribed until it could be proscribed no longer . And every attempt ...
Page 6
... religion lacked the aids of wealth , of education , and of refine- ment ? Clearly the fault of that large and potent section of the community which would still survive as the wealthy , the edu- cated , and the refined . With our upper ...
... religion lacked the aids of wealth , of education , and of refine- ment ? Clearly the fault of that large and potent section of the community which would still survive as the wealthy , the edu- cated , and the refined . With our upper ...
Page 7
... religion to be vulgarised would be to suffer it to be desecrated , and that whatever they may do to prevent that catastrophe should be done . But there are cases in which the mere pelf is of much greater influence than any semblance of ...
... religion to be vulgarised would be to suffer it to be desecrated , and that whatever they may do to prevent that catastrophe should be done . But there are cases in which the mere pelf is of much greater influence than any semblance of ...
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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