The wisdom of God manifested in the works of the CreationR. Harbin, 1717 - 405 sider |
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Side 1
... pleasant and acceptable : And fo to mo- derate my Difcourfe , as to make an End of Wri- ting , before I might prefume he should be quite tired with Reading . I shall I shall now add a Word or two concerning the The PREFACE .
... pleasant and acceptable : And fo to mo- derate my Difcourfe , as to make an End of Wri- ting , before I might prefume he should be quite tired with Reading . I shall I shall now add a Word or two concerning the The PREFACE .
Side 88
... pleasant Profpects ? How cu- riously cloath'd and adorn'd with the gratefulVer- dure of Herbs and stately Trees , either difpers'd and scatter'd fingly , or as it were affembled in Woods and Groves , and all these beautified and ...
... pleasant Profpects ? How cu- riously cloath'd and adorn'd with the gratefulVer- dure of Herbs and stately Trees , either difpers'd and scatter'd fingly , or as it were affembled in Woods and Groves , and all these beautified and ...
Side 105
... more frequently than any of the five regular Solids , as being more comely and pleasant to behold . If any Man shall object , that Comeliness of Propor- tion and Beauty is but a mere Conceit , and tion Part I. in the CREATION . 105.
... more frequently than any of the five regular Solids , as being more comely and pleasant to behold . If any Man shall object , that Comeliness of Propor- tion and Beauty is but a mere Conceit , and tion Part I. in the CREATION . 105.
Side 113
... pleasant Taste and wholesome Nourishment , furely it ought not to be paffed over by us Chriftians without Notice taking and Thanksgiving , * Dr. More As for the Signatures of Plants , or the Notes impreffed upon them , as Indices of ...
... pleasant Taste and wholesome Nourishment , furely it ought not to be paffed over by us Chriftians without Notice taking and Thanksgiving , * Dr. More As for the Signatures of Plants , or the Notes impreffed upon them , as Indices of ...
Side 120
... pleasant Works . After their Young are hatch'd , for fometimes they do almost con- ftantly brood them under their Wings , left the Cold and fometimes perhaps the Heat should harm them . All this while also they labour hard to get them ...
... pleasant Works . After their Young are hatch'd , for fometimes they do almost con- ftantly brood them under their Wings , left the Cold and fometimes perhaps the Heat should harm them . All this while also they labour hard to get them ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
admirable againſt alfo almoſt alſo Animals anſwer aqueous Humour Arteries Beafts becauſe befides Birds Blood Body caft Caufes cauſe Chyle confequently confiderable Contrivance convenient Creatures defcend Defign demonftrate diſcover Diſtance doth Earth eaſily Eggs eſpecially faid fame Fatus feems feen ferve feveral fhall fhort fhould firft firſt Fiſhes fmall fome fometimes Food foon ftand ftrong fuch fufficient fuppofe greateſt Heart Heat himſelf Houſes Humour Hypothefis Induſtry Infects infinite Inftance itſelf leaſt lefs Membrane moft moſt Motion Mufcles muft Muſcles muſt needs myſelf Nature hath neceffary Neft Nouriſhment Number obferv'd obferved Optick Pericardium Pfal Plants pleaſant Pleaſure prefent preferve Provifion Purpoſe Quadrupeds raiſe Reaſon reft Secondly ſee Seed ſeems ſeen Senfe Senſe ſerve ſeveral ſmall ſome Soul Species thefe themſelves thereof theſe Things thofe thoſe tion Tunicles ture Underſtanding unleſs uſe Veffels Water whereas whofe Wiſdom World
Populære passager
Side 397 - And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat : for hitherto ye were not able to bear it. Neither yet now are ye able.
Side 1 - He hath made every thing beautiful in his time: also he hath set the world in their heart, so that no man can find out the work that God maketh from the beginning to the end.
Side 79 - Thou coveredst it with the deep as with a garment: the waters stood above the mountains. At thy rebuke they fled; at the voice of thy thunder they hasted away.
Side 51 - God neither, that he should avrov^yity itrann, set his own hand, as it were, to every work, and immediately do all the meanest and triflingest things himself drudgingly without making use of any inferior and subordinate instruments.
Side 227 - I have no need of thee ; nor the head to the feet, I have no need of .you.
Side 175 - Creation; as if there were no other end of any creature, but some way or other to be serviceable to man. . . . But though this be vulgarly received, yet wise men now-a-days think otherwise. Dr. Moore affirms, That creatures are made to enjoy themselves as well as to serve us.
Side 128 - ... their own, and which themselves are masters of, and that without deliberation and consultation, were to make them to be endued with a most perfect intellect, far transcending that of human reason ; whereas it is plain enough that brutes are not above consultation, but below it, and that these instincts of nature in them are nothing but a kind of fate upon them. "The migration of birds...
Side 183 - I am the LORD : that is my name : and my glory will I not give to another, neither my praise to graven images.
Side 172 - Let us endeavour to promote and increase this knowledge, and make new discoveries, not so much distrusting our own parts, or despairing of our own abilities, as to think that our industry can add nothing to the invention of our ancestors, or correct any of their mistakes. Let us not think that the bounds of science are fixed like Hercules' pillars, and inscribed with a ne plus ultra.
Side 238 - Man is always mending and altering his works ; but nature observes the same tenor, because her works are so perfect, that there is no place for amendments, nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious men in so many ages have not been able to find any flaw in these divinely contrived and formed machines ; no blot or error in this great volume of the world, as if any thing had been an imperfect essay at the first ; nothing that can be altered for the better ; nothing but if it were...