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The Substance of Faith Allied with Science (6th Ed.) / A Catechism for Parents and Teachers cover

The Substance of Faith Allied with Science (6th Ed.) / A Catechism for Parents and Teachers

Chapter 3: REFERENCES TO QUOTATIONS
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About This Book

Aimed at parents and teachers, the work presents a concise catechism that seeks to reconcile Christian belief with modern scientific knowledge by framing core doctrines in terms of divine immanence and moral development. It surveys human ascent, conscience, character, duty, and the nature of evil and sin, then addresses biological and cosmic perspectives, the idea of spirit or higher faculties, grace and incarnation, and the reality of inspiration. Practical sections consider prayer, the Lord's Prayer, communal life, and an outline creed, offering accessible guidance for religious instruction in an intellectually informed age.

REFERENCES TO QUOTATIONS

PAGE
ix “Old paths” Jer. vi. 16.
13 “Hear no yelp” Tennyson, “By an Evolutionist.”
22 “Then welcome” Browning, “Rabbi Ben Ezra.”
22 “We fall to rise” Browning, “Asolando.”
23 “Nor shall I deem” Browning, “Paracelsus.”
30 “If my body” Tennyson, “By an Evolutionist.”
33 “Our wills” Tennyson, “In Memoriam.”
37 “The old order” Tennyson, “Morte d’Arthur.”
39 “Lilies that fester” Shakespeare, Sonnet 94.
43 “All tended” Browning, “Paracelsus.”
44 “He hath shewed thee” Micah vi. 8.
48 “The best is yet to be” Browning, “Rabbi Ben Ezra.”
49 “My son, the world” Tennyson, “Ancient Sage.”
50 “There shall never be” Browning, “Abt Vogler.”
51 “No ill no good” Tennyson, “Ancient Sage.”
55 “All we have willed” Browning, “Abt Vogler.”
59 “Where dwells enjoyment” Browning, “Paracelsus.”
59 “God tastes an infinite” Browning, “Paracelsus.”
65 “πάντα ῥεὶ ϰαὶ οὐδὲν μένει.” Heraclitus.
(Everything flows and nothing is stagnant.)
65 “The hills are shadows” Tennyson, “In Memoriam.”
73 “πάντα πλήρη θεῶν.” Thales, quoted by Aristotle.
(All things are full of gods.)
73 “Earth’s crammed” E. B. Browning, “Aurora Leigh.”
78 “Our birth” Wordsworth, “Immortality.”
81 “We are such stuff” Shakespeare, “Tempest.”
83 “Climb the mount” Tennyson, “Ancient Sage.”
86 “That none but Gods” Tennyson, “By an Evolutionist.”
87 “Flash of the will” Browning, “Abt Vogler.”
87 “All through my keys” Browning, “Abt Vogler.”
89 “’Tis the sublime” Coleridge, “Religious Musings.”
90 “Enough that he heard it” Browning, “Abt Vogler.”
101 “A sun but dimly seen” Tennyson, “Akbar’s Dream.”
106 “But that one ripple” Tennyson, “Ancient Sage.”
110 “Signs of his coming” Morris, “Love is Enough.”
115 “Then stirs the feeling” Byron, “Childe Harold.”
115 “ἡ φυχὴ τῷ ὅλῳ μέμιϰται” Aristotle, “De Animâ.”
(Spirit permeates the whole.)
115 “Whose dwelling” Wordsworth, “Tintern Abbey.”
124 “Their prejudice” Browning, “Paracelsus.”
126 “And we the poor earth’s” Tennyson, “Ancient Sage.”