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- catalog contributor b3744859.
- catalog created "1917, c1886.".
- catalog date "1917".
- catalog date "1917, c1886.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1917, c1886.".
- catalog description "His defense before Pilate, all that could be made -- He undertakes what is humanly impossible -- he assumes to set up the kingdom of God among men -- His plan covers ages of time -- Such attempts not human -- He takes rank with the humblest orders of society -- No great social architect ever saw the wisdom of it -- And still he raises no partisan felling -- No human leader in this -- Original and independent as no man is -- Teaches by no human method -- Warped by no desire to gain assent -- Comprehensive, under no human conditions -- Could not hold a one-sided view -- Clear of all current superstitions -- But no liberalist -- His simplicity is perfect -- Shining as pure light -- Adequately teaches God even to the humble -- This morality is not artistic -- But intuitive and original -- Never anxious for success -- Raised and made sacred by familiarity -- Our experience of men reversed in him -- Recapitulation -- Did such a being actually exist -- Was he a sinless character".
- catalog description "Mr. Parker's estimate of him -- Mr. Hennel's estimate -- Faults charged -- Faults supposed and intimated -- His invective against the Pharisees -- Milton's right of invective -- The fact of his miracles inferred -- His errand is order itself -- The mythical hypothesis impossible -- Their successes Mr. Parker concedes -- The miracles are in place in a gospel -- Miracles rejected, so is Jesus the grand miracle -- Jesus himself is sufficient evidence.".
- catalog description "We assume nothing reported of him to be true -- The only character that has a perfect youth -- The picture stands by itself -- The absurd pictures given of infant prodigies -- Jesus the only great character that holds a footing of innocence -- The only religious character that disowns repentance -- He unites characters difficult to be united -- The astonishing pretensions of Jesus -- His pretensions enter also into his actions -- Nobody offended by these pretensions -- What mere man could support such pretensions? -- Peculiar in the passive virtues -- Does not falter n the common trials of existence -- His passion, no mere human martyrdom -- His agony misplaced, taken as being only a man's -- It is, humanly speaking, excessive -- The pathology is divine".
- catalog extent "87 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Character of Jesus.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Character of Jesus.".
- catalog issued "1917".
- catalog issued "1917, c1886.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Charles Scribner's Sons,".
- catalog relation "Character of Jesus.".
- catalog subject "BT215 .B97 1917".
- catalog subject "Jesus Christ Divinity.".
- catalog tableOfContents "His defense before Pilate, all that could be made -- He undertakes what is humanly impossible -- he assumes to set up the kingdom of God among men -- His plan covers ages of time -- Such attempts not human -- He takes rank with the humblest orders of society -- No great social architect ever saw the wisdom of it -- And still he raises no partisan felling -- No human leader in this -- Original and independent as no man is -- Teaches by no human method -- Warped by no desire to gain assent -- Comprehensive, under no human conditions -- Could not hold a one-sided view -- Clear of all current superstitions -- But no liberalist -- His simplicity is perfect -- Shining as pure light -- Adequately teaches God even to the humble -- This morality is not artistic -- But intuitive and original -- Never anxious for success -- Raised and made sacred by familiarity -- Our experience of men reversed in him -- Recapitulation -- Did such a being actually exist -- Was he a sinless character".
- catalog tableOfContents "Mr. Parker's estimate of him -- Mr. Hennel's estimate -- Faults charged -- Faults supposed and intimated -- His invective against the Pharisees -- Milton's right of invective -- The fact of his miracles inferred -- His errand is order itself -- The mythical hypothesis impossible -- Their successes Mr. Parker concedes -- The miracles are in place in a gospel -- Miracles rejected, so is Jesus the grand miracle -- Jesus himself is sufficient evidence.".
- catalog tableOfContents "We assume nothing reported of him to be true -- The only character that has a perfect youth -- The picture stands by itself -- The absurd pictures given of infant prodigies -- Jesus the only great character that holds a footing of innocence -- The only religious character that disowns repentance -- He unites characters difficult to be united -- The astonishing pretensions of Jesus -- His pretensions enter also into his actions -- Nobody offended by these pretensions -- What mere man could support such pretensions? -- Peculiar in the passive virtues -- Does not falter n the common trials of existence -- His passion, no mere human martyrdom -- His agony misplaced, taken as being only a man's -- It is, humanly speaking, excessive -- The pathology is divine".
- catalog title "The character of Jesus : forbidding his possible classification with men / by Horace Bushnell.".
- catalog type "text".