| 1865 - 366 pages
...grace and wisdom which proceeded from His lips; yet, when told of the necessity of a living faith, by eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of man, they were offended, and walked no more with Him (John vi. 53 — 06, compared with John ii. 23 —... | |
| John Seely Stone - 1866 - 648 pages
...is at war both with experience and with exegesis. Neither reason nor revelation shows any other way of " eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of man," than that now indicated. This way both reason and revelation concur in showing, and it is the way of... | |
| John William Colenso - 1866 - 402 pages
...the living words of Christ, ' which shall not pass away/ — in which we ' have Eternal Life/ — ' eating the flesh, and drinking the blood, of the Son of Man.' And let us remember also, that we cannot avoid the responsibility of feeding on this Living Bread,... | |
| John William Colenso (bp. of Natal.) - 1866 - 432 pages
...and true-hearted in every age,—that he was fed daily with the living bread and the living water, ' eating the flesh and drinking the blood' of the Son of Man, and receiving abundantly, according to his need, supplies of Eternal Life, from his faithful and compassionate... | |
| John William Colenso - 1866 - 396 pages
...true-hearted in every age, — that he was fed daily with the living bread and the living water, ' eating the flesh and drinking the blood ' of the Son of Man, and receiving abundantly, according to his need, supplies of Eternal Life, from his faithful and compassionate... | |
| 1866 - 586 pages
...doctrines, he is most reprehensible in stating absolutely that the ' life ' imparted to the Christian ' by eating the flesh, and drinking the blood of the Son of Man,' is ' a certain enthusiasm of love for human beings.' Subsequent explanations cannot render language... | |
| 1866 - 582 pages
...doctrines, he is most reprehensible in stating absolutely that the ' life ' imparted to the Christian ' by eating the flesh, and drinking the blood of the Son of Man,' is ' a certain enthusiasm of love for human beings.' Subsequent explanations cannot render language... | |
| 1866 - 604 pages
...doctrines, he is most reprehensible in stating absolutely that the ' life ' imparted to the Christian ' by eating the flesh, and drinking the blood of the Son of Man,' is ' a certain enthusiasm of love for human beings.' Subsequent explanations cannot render language... | |
| James Lee (M.A.) - 1867 - 484 pages
...attachment to every thing ritual and ceremonial, they would feel no hesitation in submitting to the ceremony enjoined. But when the kingdom, which they eagerly...of a spiritual nature, divested of secular pomp and grandenr ; when the sublimer mysteries of the Gospel began to be unfolded, and the necessity inculcated... | |
| Edward Meyrick Goulburn - 1867 - 248 pages
...be repaired in us, we must belong to, and become part of, His humanity. And so He speaks in the text of eating the flesh, and drinking the blood, of the Son of Man, as an . indispensable condition of life. There is a £•/ twofold significance in the expression "flesh... | |
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