| 1835 - 792 sivua
...reposes after piercing the thickest veil that envelopes nature — grasping and arresting in their course the most subtle of her elements, and the swiftest...power and of his wisdom, better understood by men. — Pp. 193, 191. But, still further, the student of natural theology cannot fail to discover an intimate... | |
| 874 sivua
...universe in eternal order ! He rests, as by an inevitable necessity, upon the contemplation of the first great First Cause, and holds it his highest glory...as sufficient proofs of the Deity's power and skill in the creation of the world. That one sufficient proof of this kind is, in a certain sense, enough... | |
| Henry Brougham Baron Brougham and Vaux - 1835 - 324 sivua
...reposes after piercing the thickest veil that envelopes nature — grasping and arresting in their course the most subtle of her elements and the swiftest...as sufficient proofs of the Deity's power and skill in the creation of the world. That one sufficient proof of this kind is in a certain sense enough cannot... | |
| Henry Brougham Baron Brougham and Vaux - 1835 - 272 sivua
...— traversing the regions of boundless space, — exploring worlds beyond the solar way,—giving out the law which binds the universe in eternal order!...sufficient proofs of 'the Deity's power and skill in the creation of the world. That one sufficient proof of this kind is in a certain sense enough cannot... | |
| 1835 - 550 sivua
...necessity, upon the contemplation of the great First Cause, and holds it his highest glory to hare made the evidence of His existence, and the dispensations...His power and of His wisdom, better understood by man. ' If such are the peculiar pleasures which appertain to this science, it seems to follow, that... | |
| Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood - 1835 - 644 sivua
...necessity, upon the contemplation of the great First Cause, and holds it his highest glory to hare made the evidence of His existence, and the dispensations...His power and of His wisdom, better understood by man. ' If such are the peculiar pleasures which appertain to this science, it seems to follow, that... | |
| Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith - 1835 - 1138 sivua
...Great I'irst Cause, and holds it his highest glory to have made the evidence of his existence, and tho dispensations of his power and of his wisdom, better understood by men." — pp. 1U2 — 134. The last section of the work treats of the connection between natural and revealed... | |
| William Buckland - 1837 - 646 sivua
...on the Economy of Manufactures, 1 Ed. p. 319. envelopes nature — grasping and arresting in their course the most subtle of her elements and the swiftest...power and of his wisdom better understood by men."* If then it is admitted to be the high and peculiar privilege of our human nature, and a devotional exercise... | |
| William Buckland - 1837 - 476 sivua
...reposes after piercing the thickest veil that envelopes nature — grasping and arresting in their course the most subtle of her elements and the swiftest...of his power and of his wisdom better understood by men."f If then it is admitted to be the high and peculiar privilege of our human nature, and a devotional... | |
| 1837 - 568 sivua
...the thickest veil that envelopes nature — grasping and arresting in their course the most suhtle of her elements and the swiftest — traversing the...power and of his wisdom better understood by men.' ****** ' It is, in truth, an exercise at once intellectual and moral, in which the highest faculties... | |
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