| 1829 - 742 頁
...for happiness which is an original principle o our nature. Then it is, we apprehend, that God and th< world, are contemplated by the mind as objects of...substantially as they would be by a being who had just en tered on existence, and who was called upon for the firs time to select the one or the other as... | |
| Bennet Tyler - 1837 - 192 頁
...selfish principle, so long cherished in the heart, is suspended ; and the mind is left to the control of that constitutional desire for happiness, which .is an original principle of our nature." " Let the sinner, then, as a being who loves happiness and desires the highest degree of it, under... | |
| Charles Hodge, Lyman Hotchkiss Atwater - 1842 - 672 頁
...cherished in the soul is superseded; and the mind is left to the control of that constitutional desire of happiness which is an original principle of our nature....substantially as they would be by a being who had first entered on existence, and who was called on for the first time to select one or the other as... | |
| James Wood - 1845 - 342 頁
...cherished in the heart is suspended; and the riiind is left to the control of that constitutional desire of happiness which is an original principle of our nature....select the one or the other as his supreme good." — Christian Spectator, 1829, p. 210. "Now we readily concede that sinners never use the means of... | |
| James Wood - 1853 - 306 頁
...cherished in the heart is suspended; and the mind is left to the control of that constitutional desire of happiness which is an original principle of our nature....select the one or the other as his supreme good." — Christian Spectator, 1829, p. 210. "Now we readily concede that sinners never use the means of... | |
| Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Board of Publication - 1845 - 342 頁
...cherished in the heart is suspended; and the mind is left to the control of that constitutional desire of happiness which is an original principle of our nature....select the one or the other as his supreme good." — Christian Spectator, 1829, p. 210. "Now we readily concede that sinners never use the means of... | |
| 1829 - 732 頁
...selfish principle, so long cherished in the heart, is suspended ; and the mind is left to the control of that constitutional desire for happiness which is...Then it is, we apprehend, that God and the world, arc contemplated by the mind as objects of choice. substantially as they would be by a being who had... | |
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