Origines Sacrae: Or a Rational Account of the Grounds of Natural and Revealed Religion ... Together with a Letter to a Deist, Volume 2Clarendon Press, 1797 - Apologetics |
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Page vi
... given of the many Hebrew words in the Greek language , and the remainders of the Eaftern languages in the islands of Greece ; both which not from the Phoenicians , as Bochartus thinks , but from the old Pelafgi . XV . Of the ground of ...
... given of the many Hebrew words in the Greek language , and the remainders of the Eaftern languages in the islands of Greece ; both which not from the Phoenicians , as Bochartus thinks , but from the old Pelafgi . XV . Of the ground of ...
Page 2
... given us in the writings of Mofes ; which , beginning with the world itself , leads us to a particular confi- deration of the origin of the univerfe ; the right un- derftanding of which hath great influence upon our belief of all that ...
... given us in the writings of Mofes ; which , beginning with the world itself , leads us to a particular confi- deration of the origin of the univerfe ; the right un- derftanding of which hath great influence upon our belief of all that ...
Page 3
... given of it in the very entrance of the books of Mofes ; wherein we read the true origin of the world to have been by a production of it , by the omnipotent will and word of God . This being then the plain affertion of Mofes , we come ...
... given of it in the very entrance of the books of Mofes ; wherein we read the true origin of the world to have been by a production of it , by the omnipotent will and word of God . This being then the plain affertion of Mofes , we come ...
Page 6
... given a large account , yet they were more faithful in the account they gave of the origin of the whole univerfe . For it appears from Diogenes La- ert . Proam . ertius , that the Egyptians did conftantly believe that the world had a ...
... given a large account , yet they were more faithful in the account they gave of the origin of the whole univerfe . For it appears from Diogenes La- ert . Proam . ertius , that the Egyptians did conftantly believe that the world had a ...
Page 11
... given to a fhuffling philofopher that things were ever otherwife than they are ; they found it moft defenfible to affert that the world never had a beginning , nor would have an end , but always did , and would continue in the state ...
... given to a fhuffling philofopher that things were ever otherwife than they are ; they found it moft defenfible to affert that the world never had a beginning , nor would have an end , but always did , and would continue in the state ...
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Common terms and phrases
afferted againſt Anaxagoras Anaximander ancient animals anſwer Ariftotle atoms becauſe befides bodies BOOK Cartes caufe cauſe Chalcidius Chrift Chriftian Cicero confider Dæmon defign deftroyed Democritus difcourfe Diodorus Siculus Divine doth earth Egyptians Epicurus eſpecially eternal evil exift exiſtence extenfion faid faith fame feems fenfe ferve feveral fhall fhew fhould fince firft firſt fome foul fpeaks ftill ftrange fubftance fuch things fufficient fuppofe give God's goodneſs greateſt Greece Greeks hath himſelf hypothefis impoffible infinite itſelf Lucretius mankind matter mind Mofes moft moſt motion muft muſt nature neceffary neceffity obferved opinion paffage particles Pelafgi perfons Phaleg philofophers Plato Plutarch poffible prefent preferved principles puniſhment purpoſe Pythagoras queftion reafon reft religion Scriptures ſeems ſenſe ſeveral ſome ſpeak Strabo ſuppoſe teftimony thefe themſelves thence theſe things thofe thoſe tion truth underſtand univerfe unleſs uſe whofe worship δὲ καὶ τὴν τῆς τὸ τῶν