Cardinal NewmanL. MacVeagh, The Dial Press, 1930 - 295 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 46
Page 87
... religions of Greece and Rome , we may discern vague glimpses , inchoate , rudimentary premonitions and patterns of those great religious truths which , threading their way upwards in a long ascent through Judaism , find their ultimate ...
... religions of Greece and Rome , we may discern vague glimpses , inchoate , rudimentary premonitions and patterns of those great religious truths which , threading their way upwards in a long ascent through Judaism , find their ultimate ...
Page 258
... religious for a movement which , on the Continent , seems to be founded on infidelity ; but the misfortune with us is that , though it ends in infidelity as in other places , it does not necessarily arise out of infidelity . It must be ...
... religious for a movement which , on the Continent , seems to be founded on infidelity ; but the misfortune with us is that , though it ends in infidelity as in other places , it does not necessarily arise out of infidelity . It must be ...
Page 273
... religious , in all its diversities , should for once unite in love and veneration of a man who had broken through its sacred barriers and defied its religious prejudices , who could have believed it ? He had committed the hitherto ...
... religious , in all its diversities , should for once unite in love and veneration of a man who had broken through its sacred barriers and defied its religious prejudices , who could have believed it ? He had committed the hitherto ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
addressed Ambrose St Anglican Apologia beautiful Birmingham Bishop Bishop of Birmingham Bishop of Clifton blessing called Cardinal Cardinal's Catholic CHAPTER charm Christianity Church of England College Cullen dear divine doctrine Dream of Gerontius ecclesiastical English Essay face faith feel followed genius grace hand heart Holy Father honour human idea intellectual John Henry Newman Keble kindly Light Kingsley language letter Littlemore living looked man's matter Matthew Arnold memory ment mind nature never Old Oscott once Oratorian Oratorian Fathers Oratory Oriel Oscott Oxford passage perfect perhaps poem poet poetry Pope preached Prose Protestant Pusey R. W. CHURCH reason religion religious rhetoric Rome says Newman seemed sense Sermons sorrow sort soul sound speak spirit surely things thought tion Trinity truth turned Ullathorne University verse voice whole Wiseman words writing wrote