Natural Religion and Christian Theology: An Introductory Study |
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Page 42
... expressed it , the insistence on being oneself , the master of one's fate and in control of all the factors which would 1 The Concluding Unscientific Postscript . 412 . 2 Preface to Christian Theology , p . 45 . lead to that desirable ...
... expressed it , the insistence on being oneself , the master of one's fate and in control of all the factors which would 1 The Concluding Unscientific Postscript . 412 . 2 Preface to Christian Theology , p . 45 . lead to that desirable ...
Page 61
... expressed in terms of the two persons concerned . That is why they come to have a language all of their own which to ordinary mortals seems nonsense and exaggerated . Their experience cannot be expressed in the world's language because ...
... expressed in terms of the two persons concerned . That is why they come to have a language all of their own which to ordinary mortals seems nonsense and exaggerated . Their experience cannot be expressed in the world's language because ...
Page 72
... expression of it must be an expression of a creation of God . And while Barth is perfectly willing to condemn his fellow- men when anything goes wrong he might be expected at any rate to give them credit when their unconscious actions ...
... expression of it must be an expression of a creation of God . And while Barth is perfectly willing to condemn his fellow- men when anything goes wrong he might be expected at any rate to give them credit when their unconscious actions ...
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Natural Religion and Christian Theology: An Introductory Study Albert Victor Murray Limited preview - 1956 |
Common terms and phrases
accept action animal anthropology appear attitude Barth become believed called Catholic characteristic Christ Christian theology Church comes communion concerned conscious consideration course dead development of religion divine doctrine dogma Dogmatik existence explain fact factor Faust feeling Freud G. G. Coulton give gods Gospel Hebrew human nature idea ideal importance instance instinct institutions intellectual interpretation Jesus Jung Karl Barth kind living man's means mind modern moral mystery natural religion natural theology never Old Testament oneself ourselves person physical prevenient grace principle Protestantism psychological raw material realize reason recognition recognize relations relationship religious experience revelation Roman sacrament seek seen self-surrender sense social society soul speak spirit world spiritual survival T. F. Torrance T. S. Eliot term Testament theologian thing thought tribal land tribe true truth uncon unconscious unconscious mind universe unseen world words