| 1842 - 916 pages
...said he, his voice growing tremulous with compassionate entreating — "Brethren, we must love our God with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind. It is the great commandment. Yea, love him with all the ability, with all the faculties, with... | |
| Julian (of Norwich) - 1843 - 268 pages
...feeling: but that each holy assent that we assent to God when we feel him, truly willing to be with him with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our might. And then we hate and despise our evil stirring, and all that might be occasion of sin, ghostly... | |
| Emile de Bonnechose - 1844 - 236 pages
...persons, as is taught in the Holy Scriptures, and in the Nlcean and Athanasian creeds ; we must love him with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our strength. 3. After having been well acquainted with God, man must know himself; he must understand that Tjefore... | |
| John Davenant - 1844 - 544 pages
...manage an escape from it. For, perceiving as he does, that if all the duties which we can discharge with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our might, are due to God in virtue of his command, there will be nothing remaining whereby we can supererogate... | |
| 1872 - 722 pages
...friendship. We want Him enshrined in the inmost recesses of our being, — in a word, we want to love Him with all our heart, with all our soul, and with all our mind. And then we want a knowledge of Him that will admit us into His heart, that will enable us to... | |
| Sir James Mackintosh - 1846 - 618 pages
...actuating principle within him this b<;iiig the moral quality which is the immediate object of love." "The highest, the adequate object of this affection,...heart, with all our soul, and with all our strength." " We should refer ourselves implicitly to him, and cast ourselves entirely upon him. The whole atention... | |
| Walter Farquhar Hook - 1847 - 616 pages
...actuating principle within him ; this being the moral quality which is the immediate object of love.' ' The highest, the adequate object of this affection,...heart, with all our soul, and with all our strength.' ' We should refer ourselves implicitly to him, and cast ourselves entirely upon him. The whole attention... | |
| Benedetto (da Mantova.) - 1847 - 152 pages
...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 oflhe'perhe... | |
| 1847 - 724 pages
...Commandments, which they call the Decalogue. And thesa again are reduced Mnt.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... | |
| Robert Haldane - 1847 - 780 pages
...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... | |
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