SHOPPING HOME
      >  The Books Store   >  Religion & Spirituality   >  Christianity   >  Theology   >  Theism   <<<   YOU ARE HERE

Shopper's Delight

Theism in The Books Store


 
Search Results:

Displaying records 151 through 160 of 321
First      Previous
Next      Last

 

  Theism;: Being the Baird lecture for 1876

 
Theism;: Being the Baird lecture for 1876 under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: C. Scribner's sons
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: Robert Flint
Publisher: C. Scribner's sons
Edition: 7th
Publication Date: 1889
Reading Level: 447
 

 

  ... The ethical and religious philosophy of idealism,

 
... The ethical and religious philosophy of idealism, under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: North India Christian Tract & Book Society
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: N. C Mukerji
Publisher: North India Christian Tract & Book Society
Publication Date: 1922
 

 

  Great reconcoliation, or, Theism all one with atheism

 
Great reconcoliation, or, Theism all one with atheism under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: s.n.]
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: Joseph Treat
Publisher: s.n.]
Publication Date: 1866
 

 

  Divine immanence: An essay on the spiritual significance of matter

 
Divine immanence: An essay on the spiritual significance of matter under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: MacMillan
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: J. R Illingworth
Publisher: MacMillan
Publication Date: 1898
Reading Level: 212
 
Description: 1898. The following brief essay is not an attempt to make any new or original contribution toward positive, synthetic thought; but it is written in the interest of synthesis, and aims at combining some ideas, which are familiar enough in themselves, but are not always viewed in combination, ideas on the relation of nature to religion. Contents: Matter and Spirit; Religious Influence of the Material World; Divine Immanence in Nature; Divine Immanence in Man; Incarnation and Miracles; Incarnation and Sacraments; Incarnation and the Trinity.

 

  Philosophy of theism

 
Philosophy of theism under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: Charles Scribner's Sons
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: Alexander Campbell Fraser
Publisher: Charles Scribner's Sons
Publication Date: 1900
Reading Level: 338
 
Description: This Elibron Classics book is a facsimile reprint of a 1895 edition by William Blackwood and Sons, London and Edinburgh.

 

  "The might of truth,"

 
 
Manufacturer: The Progressive Pub. Co
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: Martinus Van Gelder
Publisher: The Progressive Pub. Co
Publication Date: 1909
Reading Level: 69
 

 

  The word of God: A review of a sermon delivered by Rev. George F. Jones in Bucksport, Me., Sunday, P.M., January 24, 1858

 
The word of God: A review of a sermon delivered by Rev. George F. Jones in Bucksport, Me., Sunday, P.M., January 24, 1858 under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: Printed by Samuel S. Smith
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: Ella Elvira Gibson
Publisher: Printed by Samuel S. Smith
Publication Date: 1858
Reading Level: 29
 

 

  Theism: A survey of the paths that lead to God : chiefly in the light of the history of philosophy

 
Theism: A survey of the paths that lead to God : chiefly in the light of the history of philosophy under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: Barbee and Smith
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: Jno. J Tigert
Publisher: Barbee and Smith
Edition: 2nd
Publication Date: 1902
Reading Level: 351
 

 

  To all the people of the world

 
To all the people of the world under Theism in The Books Store
 
Manufacturer: Author
 
 
Binding: Unknown Binding
Author: Mykhaĭlo P Borovyk
Publisher: Author
Publication Date: 1979
Reading Level: 39
 

 

  The Basis of Early Christian Theism

 
The Basis of Early Christian Theism under Theism in The Books Store
Price: $16.95
Sale: $10.00
 
Manufacturer: Kessinger Publishing
Number of Items: 1
 
 
Binding: Paperback
Author: Lawrence Thomas Cole
Publisher: Kessinger Publishing
Dewey Decimal Number: 291
Publication Date: 2004-12-31
Reading Level: 60
 
Description: CONTENTS:
  • CHAPTER I Introduction9
  • CHAPTER II Greek and Roman Theistic Arguments14
  • CHAPTER III The Patristic Point of View26
  • CHAPTER IV Patristic Use of the Theistic Arguments38
  • CHAPTER V Eclectic Theism55
"Les preuves de Dieu metaphysiques sont si eloignees du raisonnement des hommes, et si impliquees, qu'elles frappent peu; et quand cela serviroit a quelques-uns, ce ne seroit que pendant l'instant qu'ils voient cette demonstration; mais, une heure apres, ils craignent de s'etre trompes. Quod curiositate cognoverint, superbia amiserunt." -Pensees de Pascal, II, xv. 2.

a selection from CHAPTER I:
INTRODUCTION

A question which every author ought to ask of himself before he sends forth his work, and one which must occur to every thoughtful reader, is the inquiry, Cui bono?-what justification has one for treating the subject at all, and why in the particular way which he has chosen? To the pertinency of this question to the present treatise the author has been deeply sensible, and therefore cannot forbear a few prefatory words of explanation of his object and method.

In accounts of the theistic argument, as in the history of philosophy in general, it has been customary to pass over a space of well-nigh ten centuries of the Christian era in silence, or with such scanty and unsympathetic notice as to make silence the better alternative. Largely through the influence of such treatment as this, we moderns have almost forgotten at times that during this period there lived men inferior to none in history in endowments of mind and influence on succeeding generations, and that there then took place some of the most significant and far-reaching intellectual conflicts in the history of thought. "With Cicero," says Professor Stirling, "we reached in our course a most important and critical halting-place.... We have still ... to wait those thousand years yet before Anselm shall arrive with what is to be named the new proof, the proof ontological, and during the entire interval it is the Fathers of the Church and their immediate followers who, in repetition of the old, or suggestion of the new, connect thinker[Pg 10] with thinker, philosopher with philosopher, pagan with Christian."[1] To attempt to account for even one of the details of thought during this period cannot be without its advantages.

For Christianity gave a new and unique turn to thought. It brought with it a new set of data, and a new subject-matter. The Christian doctrine of God, the distinctions in the Trinity, the great doctrines centering around the person of Jesus Christ, though, perhaps, faintly foreshadowed in some of the earlier speculations, are, in their fulness and completeness, first given to the world by the Founder of Christianity. The claims made for these doctrines, too, gave them a unique character. In contrast with the half-hearted, faltering conclusions of the prevalent philosophical schools, Christianity asserted that its teachings were absolute truth; it claimed to be nothing less than a revelation from the Creator of the world. It will be readily seen that the introduction of such a system as this into the Greek world would be attended with important results, not only in its effects upon the intellectual life of the times, but also in the influence of the current philosophical conceptions on the statement of its doctrine. The significance of this early period lies in the fact that, in the positive, definite system of Christianity, systematic thought, which was fast becoming disorganized and sceptical, found a center about which it might rally and focus itself, and the scattered fragments of philosophy were all collected together, by either friends or foes, about the new religion....


First      Previous
Next      Last
Displaying records 151 through 160 of 321