... of the discourse, and always appealed to the religious instinct in mankind. At the beginning I resolved to preach the Natural Laws of man as they are writ in his constitution, no less and no more. After preaching a few months in various places, and... West Roxbury Sermons: 1837-1848 - Page xiby Theodore Parker - 1892 - 235 pagesFull view - About this book
| Theodore Parker - 1859 - 198 pages
...more. After preaching a few months in various places, and feeling my way into the consciousness of men, I determined to preach nothing as Religion which I...would rest on facts that I was sure of, and not on the words of another. I was indebted to another young candidate for the hint. I hope I have not been faithless... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1859 - 202 pages
...places, and feeling my way into the consciousness of men, I determined to preach nothing as Eeligion which I had not experienced inwardly, and made my...would rest on facts that I was sure of, and not on the words of another. I was indebted to another young candidate for the hint. I hope I have not been faithless... | |
| John Weiss - 1864 - 558 pages
...After preaching a '(few months in various places, and feeling my way into the conscious. ness of men, I determined to preach nothing as religion which I...experienced inwardly, and made my own, knowing it by heart. iiThus, not only the intellectual, but also the religious part of my sermons would rest on facts that... | |
| John Weiss - 1864 - 554 pages
...more. After preaching a few months in various places, and feeling my way into the consciousness of men, I determined to preach nothing as religion which I...experienced inwardly, and made my own, knowing it by heart. Tims, not only the intellectual, but also the religious part of my sermons would rest on facts that... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1865 - 372 pages
...more. After preaching a few months in various places, and feeling my way into the consciousness of men, I determined to preach nothing as religion which I...would rest on facts that I was sure of, and not on the words of another. Ill was indebted to another young candidate for the hint. I hope I have not been... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1865 - 682 pages
...more. After preaching a few months in various places, and feeling my way into the consciousness of men, I determined to preach nothing as religion which I...would rest on facts that I was sure of, and not on the words of another. I was indebted to another young candidate for the hint. I hope I have not been faithless... | |
| T. W. Freckelton - 1893 - 232 pages
...evidence. Spiritual things on the witness of the soul to them. ' I determined to preach nothing on religion which I had not experienced inwardly, and made my own, knowing it by heart.' With such resolves, he left the Divinity School, on the completion of his course, and presently became... | |
| Jabez Thomas Sunderland, Brooke Herford, Frederick B. Mott - 1894 - 608 pages
...historical evidence, spiritual things on the witness of the soul to them. "I determined to preach nothing on religion which I had not experienced inwardly, and made my own, knowing it by heart." With such resolves, he left the Divinity School on the completion of his course, and presently became... | |
| John White Chadwick - 1900 - 464 pages
...thought was fresh, the form was the old, stereotyped conventionalism. Nevertheless he began well: — At the beginning I resolved to preach the natural...inwardly and made my own — knowing it by heart. Seven of his forty sermons written in advance of his settlement were Divinity School products. Among... | |
| 1903 - 418 pages
...the description of his experience. "After preaching a few months in various places," he declares, " I determined to preach nothing as religion which I...inwardly and made my own, — knowing it by heart." And Chadwick writes of him, " It was not his philosophy or theology, it was his religion, the product... | |
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