| Alfred Caldecott, Hugh Ross Mackintosh - 1904 - 506 lapas
...thought which are yielded, eg, by ethics and testhetics. other things ; but as spirit he is moved by the impulse to maintain his independence against them....kind which is a match for the pressure of the natural world.4 The idea of gods, or Divine powers, everywhere includes belief in their spiritual personality,... | |
| 1906 - 812 lapas
...independence against it. In this juncture religion springs up as faith in a superhuman spiritual power, by whose help the power which man possesses of himself is in some way supplanted and elevated into a unity of its own kind, which is a match for the pressure of the natural... | |
| William G. McLoughlin - 1978 - 260 lapas
...words, that free will lies in the ability (through faith in Christ) to rise above cultural values: "Religion springs up as faith in super-human spiritual...into a unity of its own kind which is a match for the pressures of the natural world. ' ' But in reality the ability of man to have dominion over nature... | |
| James C. Livingston, Francis Schüssler Fiorenza - 456 lapas
...nature, dependent upon her, subject to and confined by other things; but as spirit he is moved by the impulse to maintain his independence against them....kind which is a match for the pressure of the natural world.3 Ritschl also disagrees with Schleiermacher's idea of God as the source or object of the mystical... | |
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