| Brander Matthews - 1906 - 380 pages
...lives by its incarnation of God in itself. Apart from God there would be no actual world. . . . He is the binding element in the world. The consciousness...love which is partial in us is allembracing in him. . . . Every act leaves the world with a deeper or a fainter impress of God. . . . The universe shows... | |
| Alfred North Whitehead - 1926 - 168 pages
...virtue of which the attainment of such a value for others transforms itself into value for ourselves. He is the binding element in the world. The consciousness...there could be no adjustment of individuality. His pur[158] pose in the world is quality of attainment. His purpose is always embodied in the particular... | |
| Margaret Elden Rich, Margaret E. Rich - 1928 - 266 pages
...of which the attainment of such a value for jothers transforms itself into a value for ourselves. He is the binding element in the world. The consciousness...universal in Him; the love which is partial in us is all embracing in Him. Apart from Him there could be no world because there could be no adjustment of... | |
| Creighton Peden, Larry E. Axel - 1989 - 272 pages
...tender patience leading it by his vision of truth, beauty, and goodness." "He is the binding element of the world. The consciousness which is individual in...love which is partial in us is all-embracing in him." "He is not the world, but the valuation of the world." "God is the great companion — the fellow-sufferer... | |
| Robert C. Neville - 1995 - 192 pages
...which the attainment of such a value for others transforms itself into a value for ourselves. . . . The consciousness which is individual in us, is universal...because there could be no adjustment of individuality. . . . He is not the world, but the valuation of the world. In abstraction from the course of events,... | |
| Henry Jansen - 1995 - 276 pages
...Reality, p. 58. o7 Cf. Ogden. Reality, pp. 58-59. o8 Cobb and Griffin. Process Theology, pp. 18-22. Gixl is the binding element in the world. The consciousness which is individual in us. is universal in him. Apart from him there could be no world, because there could be no adjusunent of individuality. His... | |
| Kathleen E. Smith, David Ray Griffin - 2001 - 444 pages
...general good to the greatest extent open to us, is his portrayal of God, the Holy One, as so motivated: "The consciousness which is individual in us, is universal...love which is partial in us is all-embracing in him" (RM 152). Therefore, truly to worship God, which involves imitating God as much as possible, means... | |
| Christine Helmer - 2004 - 376 pages
...imitate in order to become like God.154 God thus conceived stands in contrast with our limited vision: "The consciousness which is individual in us, is universal...the love which is partial in us is all-embracing in him."155 Given such a concept of the object of worship, "Religion is world-loyalty," in which the human... | |
| Andrew N. Woznicki - 2007 - 399 pages
...The reason for this mutual twofold participation of God in the theantropic conscience of man is that "He [God] is the binding element in the world. The...universal in him: the love which is partial in us is all embracing in him. Apart from him there could be no world, because there could be no adjustment... | |
| Meadville Theological School - 1927 - 384 pages
...with its creativity, there would be no rational explanation of the ideal vision which constitutes God. God is the binding element in the world. The consciousness...love which is partial in us is all-embracing in him." The following longer quotation might suggest that it was culled from the pages of some philosophical... | |
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