| 1848 - 530 pages
...14. Now these things of the Spirit of God are the great truths and doctrines of the gospel ; such as the union of the Divine and human natures in the person of Jesus Christ ; his substitution in the room and E lace of us guilty rebels ; that any of the illen... | |
| Thomas Boston - 1848 - 672 pages
...people before his manifestation in the flesh. Though this office be most eminently performed since the union of the divine and human natures in the person of Christ, yet it was also effectually performed by him before his assumption of our flesh. He interposed... | |
| 1849 - 470 pages
...the principles of divine justice, which require life for life. They, also, overlook the importance of the union of the divine and human natures in the person of the Son of God, by which infinite merit is imparted to the death of Christ: "He was made a little lower than the angels,... | |
| Leonard Woods - 1850 - 604 pages
...known. Our inability to answer these questions has no influence upon the proof which the Bible affords, of the union of the divine and human natures in the person of Christ. This proof is just as satisfactory as it would be, if the mode of his becoming incarnate were... | |
| John Brown - 1850 - 620 pages
...glorify the Divine power. I do not here refer to that manifestation of the Divine power which was made in the union of the divine and human natures in the person of our Lord, without which union no such sufferings as we are speaking of could have taken place, —... | |
| Robert Wallace - 1850 - 610 pages
...to shew, as the title indicates, that the "communication of forms or properties," said to arise from the union of the divine and human natures in the person of Christ, is " neither a logical nor a physical one, and therefore no communication at all." This is... | |
| Walter Augustus Shirley (bp. of Sodor and Man.) - 1850 - 554 pages
...do. But the question is, whether, beside these truths, there is not also another revealed, namely, the union of the divine and human natures, in the person of Him who, " though he thought it not a robbery to be equal with God," yet condescended to take upon... | |
| 1850 - 616 pages
...conduct. All carefulness about right, and especially precise views of the Trinity, the Incarnation, and the union of the Divine and human natures, in the person of our Blessed Lord, and the personality of the Holy Ghost — all reverence for the great objects of... | |
| Leonard Woods - 1849 - 604 pages
...known. Our inability to answer these questions has no influence upon the proof which the Bible affords, of the union of the divine and human natures in the person of Christ. This proof is just as satisfactory as it would be, if the mode of his becoming incarnate were... | |
| Isaac Taylor - 1851 - 426 pages
...clearly perceived, to this effect — namely, That inasmuch as the principal fact of Christianity — the union of the Divine and human natures in the person of Christ, and its propitiatory intention has, and can have, no parallel — no instance strictly analogous,... | |
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