The Elements of Moral Science: With Questions for ExaminationReligious Tract Society, 1835 - 431 pagina's |
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Pagina 138
... arise rights on God's side and obligations on man's . Those rights in their fulness inconceivable . 1. He has the right of unlimited possession ; and we owe him entire obedience and submission . This obedience refers to two classes of ...
... arise rights on God's side and obligations on man's . Those rights in their fulness inconceivable . 1. He has the right of unlimited possession ; and we owe him entire obedience and submission . This obedience refers to two classes of ...
Pagina 359
... arise from servile fear ; resistance , from vain - glory , ambition , or desire of revolution . Suffering for the sake of right can arise only from a love of justice and a hatred of oppression . The real spirit of liberty can never ...
... arise from servile fear ; resistance , from vain - glory , ambition , or desire of revolution . Suffering for the sake of right can arise only from a love of justice and a hatred of oppression . The real spirit of liberty can never ...
Pagina 384
... arise from keeping his law so terrible as those which must arise from violating it . God commands us to love every man , alien or citizen , Samaritan or Jew , as ourselves ; and the act neither of society or of government can render it ...
... arise from keeping his law so terrible as those which must arise from violating it . God commands us to love every man , alien or citizen , Samaritan or Jew , as ourselves ; and the act neither of society or of government can render it ...
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The Elements of Moral Science: With Questions for Examination Francis Wayland,Joseph Angus Fragmentweergave - 1835 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
action amount of happiness benevolence bound cause character child civil society command concubinage condition conscience consider constitution contract Creator crime cultivation desire dition duty effect evident evil exercise existence fact faculty favour feel forbids give gospel gratification greatest amount guilty Hence human impulse Inasmuch individual inflict injury innocent intellectual intellectual liberty intended interfere Jews justice knowledge labour law of chastity liberty limits manifest manifestly manner marriage means of happiness ment mind moral character moral constitution moral obligation moral quality Mosaic law motives nations natural religion neighbour nexion oaths obedience obey object observed Old Testament parent party passion person possession prayer precept principles promise punishment question reason relation remarked render respect result revealed right of property rule sabbath Scriptures self-love slave slavery society specting suppose teach Testament thing tion truth universal unless veracity vidual violation virtue whole worship wrong