| Robert Willis - 1877 - 614 pages
...have set ourselves here,' says the Author in his Preface or Introduction, ' is truly sublime ; for it is no less than to make God known in his substantial...the Spirit, both comprised in Christ, through whom alone do we learn how the divineness of the Word and the Spirit may be apprehended in Man. Hidden from... | |
| Constance E. Plumptre - 1878 - 422 pages
...the introduction. ' The task we have set ourselves here,' runs the preface, ' is truly sublime, for it is no less than to make God known in His substantial manifestations by the Word, and His divine communication by the Spirit, both comprised in Christ, through... | |
| Constance E. Plumptre - 1878 - 432 pages
...the introduction. ' The task we have set ourselves here,1 runs the preface, ' is truly sublime, for it is no less than to make God known in His substantial manifestations by the Word, and His divine communication by the Spirit, both comprised in Christ, through... | |
| Jabez Thomas Sunderland, Brooke Herford, Frederick B. Mott - 1889 - 608 pages
...Reformers, it was a dangerous undertaking to attempt publication even with every precaution to not let the authorship be known. The title, " Christianismi...Word, and his divine communication by the Spirit, bofli comprised in Christ, through whom we learn how the divineness of the Word and the Spirit may... | |
| Philip Schaff - 1894 - 928 pages
...says in the preface, "is sublime in majesty, easy in perspicuity, and certain in demonstration ; for it is no less than to make God known in his substantial...communication by the Spirit, both comprised in Christ alone, through whom alone do we plainly discern how the deity of the Word and the Spirit may be apprehended... | |
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