Some degree of goodness must be previously supposed : this always implies the love of itself, an affection to goodness : the highest, the adequate object of this affection, is perfect goodness; which, therefore, we are to " love with all our heart, with... Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Página 3661842Visualização integral - Acerca deste livro
 | James Ussher - 1654 - 620 páginas
...we owe unto man in the second. Q. What is the sum of the first table ? A. That we™ love the Lord our God, with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind. Q. How many commandments belong to this table ? A. Four1. Q. Which is the first commandment ? A. I... | |
 | Saint Augustine (of Hippo) - 1847 - 732 páginas
...Commandments, which they call the Decalogue. And these again are reduced Mat.22, to two, that we love God with all our heart, with all our ' soul, and with all our mind, and that we love our neighbour as ourselves. For that on these two Commandments hang all the Law and... | |
 | Robert Haldane - 1847 - 780 páginas
...Christ is set before us in a multitude of passages, as the most powerful motive we can have to love him with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind. When we are exhorted to look not to our own things only, but also to those of others, it is because... | |
 | Benedetto (da Mantova.) - 1847 - 152 páginas
...attain to righteousness by the keeping of God's commandments, which are all comprehended in loving God with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our strength, and our neighbour as ourself. But who is so No man arrogant or so mad as to presume that... | |
 | Walter Farquhar Hook - 1847 - 616 páginas
...highest, the adequate object of this affection, is perfect goodness ; which, therefore, we are to love with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our strength.' ' We should refer ourselves implicitly to him, and cast ourselves entirely upon him. The... | |
 | John Foxe - 1848 - 830 páginas
...God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost: three Persons and one God. Jane. Yes, we must love him with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind ; and our neighbour as ourself. Fecknam. Why ? then faith justifielh not, nor saveth not. Jane. Yes... | |
 | 1848 - 116 páginas
...before envy ?" O most loving Lord, pattern of charity, grant us to love Thee, our God and Redeemer, with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind, for Thou hast first so dearly loved us, that Thou hast given Thy life for us. 6* Make us to love our... | |
 | Robert Drumond Burrell Rawnsley - 1848 - 396 páginas
...from perfect love ! How far are any of us from loving God up to the measure of our Lord's commands, " with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind : and our neighbour as ourself !" When this shall be the case with us ; when that which is perfect... | |
 | Joseph Butler, Samuel Hallifax - 1848 - 632 páginas
...highest, the adequate object of this affection, is perfect goodness; which therefore we are to love with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our strength. " Must we, then, forgetting our own interest, as it were go out of ourselves, and love God... | |
 | Sir James Mackintosh - 1848 - 630 páginas
...highest, the adequate object of this affection, is perfect goodness, which, therefore, we are to love with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our strength." :: We should refer ourselves implicitly to him. and cast ourselves entirely upon him. The... | |
| |