Chapter, Paragraph
1 1 | review of Apologetic works.~Religious delusions (paganism, pantheism,
2 1 | defending the foundations of religious beliefs and for criticizing
3 1 | scientific-philosophical knowledge and true religious faith, and the motto of
4 1 | Reformation stimulated new religious interests and evoked a new
5 1 | recognized as the main source of religious knowledge and all theology;
6 1 | before the defense of private religious convictions.~An impulse
7 1 | so-called deism. Deism is a religious, philosophical teaching
8 1 | mathematician and a deeply religious thinker, the great apologist
9 1 | illuminated in natural science the religious understanding of nature.
10 1 | the scientific basis for religious truths, and sharply objected
11 1 | two volume textbook for religious academies by Professor N.
12 2 | these questions comprise the religious foundation of every world-view.
13 2 | aim.~The solution of this religious problem can be many-sided:~ ~
14 2 | and peoples were deeply religious people!~Ordinary people,
15 3 | that youths, brought up in religious families and ardently believing
16 3 | impudent, evil and shameless. Religious doubts arise alongside vice,
17 4 | morality, too, without a religious foundation and religious
18 4 | religious foundation and religious light, cannot exist and
19 4 | The difference between a religious feeling and a moral feeling
20 4 | appropriate” conduct; a religious feeling, however, tends
21 4 | of Christian morality is religious: Be ye therefore perfect,
22 5 | Likewise, the more deeply his religious faith is developed, the
23 5 | scientific scholars regarded religious faith with deep esteem and
24 5 | humble scholar, like a humble religious thinker, always remembering
25 6 | representation of the ideal world, religious feeling thirsts for a living
26 6 | the same phenomena under a religious feeling opens up the possibility
27 6 | aesthetic feeling for a religious one is a proud and harmful
28 6 | art is not suitable to the religious idea. The hostile attitude
29 7 | rise of various forms of religious cults and well-known historical
30 7 | or any other motive that religious considerations arose; the
31 7 | of whether one or another religious conviction is true or false.~
32 7 | For example: Tabrum: The Religious Beliefs of Contemporary
33 8 | highest rank among fundamental religious truths belongs to the truth
34 8 | proofs for the benefit of religious truths fall into three categories:
35 8 | and of other fundamental religious truths were impossible was
36 8 | the indemonstrability of religious truth. At times in this
37 8 | mathematically prove basic religious truths, and, in general,
38 8 | exact mathematical proof of religious truths, which reveals the
39 8 | possibility of faith, makes religious truths (and, first of all,
40 8 | existence of God and other religious truths is part of the nature
41 8 | touched upon. In political, religious, philosophical and even
42 8 | rationalistic proofs of the religious truths in which he believes.
43 8 | existence, regarding this basic religious truth to be so evident that
44 8 | while the atheist, free of religious convictions, does not experience
45 8 | not the conviction of a religious man assist in reassuring
46 9 | native to man’s spirit. The religious conviction that the alliance
47 9,1 | beyond the grave, these are religious themes. Christianity has
48 9,1 | righteously. Owing to this, religious writings have a significant
49 9,1 | conditions.~ Both ancient religious stories as well as doctors’
50 10 | the natural development of religious consciousness of ancient
51 10 | times, as each individual religious system of ancient times
52 10 | possibilities of natural religious development. Pagan religion
53 10 | reason, from a strictly religious point of view, pagan religions
54 10 | would have taught the people religious truth. The thinkers that
55 10,4 | rich, the powerful, and the religious leaders who have held them
56 10,6 | civilization” rather than a religious community, although the
57 11 | Himself of one or another religious truth to a selected person (
58 13 | 3:14-15). Among all the religious and philosophical definitions
59 13 | religion about God? All the religious and philosophical representations
60 14 | their own understanding of religious principles. For example,
61 15,2 | criticism among scientists and religious leaders alike, even though
62 16,2 | creation was to instill basic religious truths into his people and,
63 20 | to the idea of sacrifice. Religious cults of all ancient peoples
64 20 | constitutes an implement of all religious cults.~ But nowhere — not
65 20 | vital content of the purest religious experience: communion with
66 21 | object of the most ardent religious hopes and desires of the
67 23 | wholehearted firmness of religious will.~ There are none equal
68 24 | external, formal bond with religious doctrine. Christianity is
69 24 | justify ethical demands with religious sanction and to base the
70 24 | so much a new system of religious and ethical doctrine as
71 App,1| language, as well as the religious, social, and political practices
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