Men and Books: Or, Studies in Homiletics; Lectures Introductory to The Theory of Preaching |
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Page 1
... facts of his experience . His primary question was not , What is elo- quence in its philosophical germ ? or , Has it any such germ ? It was , How is it that men are actually moved by speech ? What , in fact , persuades men ? What has ...
... facts of his experience . His primary question was not , What is elo- quence in its philosophical germ ? or , Has it any such germ ? It was , How is it that men are actually moved by speech ? What , in fact , persuades men ? What has ...
Page 6
... fact in the history of preaching , that ministers who fall into un- philosophical modes of preaching are themselves the most uninterested listeners to such preaching ? Preach- LECT . 1. ] UNPHILOSOPHICAL PREACHING . 7 ers are 6 [ LECT ...
... fact in the history of preaching , that ministers who fall into un- philosophical modes of preaching are themselves the most uninterested listeners to such preaching ? Preach- LECT . 1. ] UNPHILOSOPHICAL PREACHING . 7 ers are 6 [ LECT ...
Page 8
... fact . Books should be conformed to life , not life to books . ( 1 ) Individual character in its rudest forms is power in speech . The market - place , the streets , the fields , the workshops , the counting - rooms , the court - rooms ...
... fact . Books should be conformed to life , not life to books . ( 1 ) Individual character in its rudest forms is power in speech . The market - place , the streets , the fields , the workshops , the counting - rooms , the court - rooms ...
Page 10
... fact that an army of sixty thousand men keeps in sub- jection sixty millions of aliens in British India is the same ... facts as these truthfully must dis- cover in the process some practical rhetorical wisdom , and that the very last ...
... fact that an army of sixty thousand men keeps in sub- jection sixty millions of aliens in British India is the same ... facts as these truthfully must dis- cover in the process some practical rhetorical wisdom , and that the very last ...
Page 11
... fact that great poets have , for the most part , passed their lives in cities . ( 3 ) We find also a specially valuable resource of homiletic culture in the study of masses of men under religious excitement . Sympathetic religious ...
... fact that great poets have , for the most part , passed their lives in cities . ( 3 ) We find also a specially valuable resource of homiletic culture in the study of masses of men under religious excitement . Sympathetic religious ...
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Men and Books; Or Studies in Homiletics; Lectures Introductory to The Theory ... Austin Phelps No preview available - 2023 |
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Page 241 - Sound needed none, Nor any voice of joy ; his spirit drank The spectacle : sensation, soul, and form, All melted into him ; they swallowed up His animal being; in them did he live, And by them did he live; they were his life. In such access of mind, in such high hour Of visitation from the living God, Thought was not; in enjoyment it expired.
Page 165 - Nothing at all. What do you learn from a cookerybook? Something new, something that you did not know before, in every paragraph. But would you therefore put the wretched cookerybook on a higher level of estimation than the divine poem? What you owe to Milton is not any knowledge, of which a million separate items are still but a million of advancing steps on the same earthly level; what you owe is power, that is, exercise and expansion to your own latent capacity of sympathy with the infinite, where...
Page 241 - ... minds of the greatest poets in those countries too much to the bondage of definite form; from which the Hebrews were preserved by their abhorrence of idolatry. This abhorrence was almost as strong in our great epic Poet, both from circumstances of his life, and from the constitution of his mind. However imbued the surface might be with classical literature, he was a Hebrew in soul; and all things tended in him towards the sublime.