| Moncure Daniel Conway - 1874 - 706 pages
...things live and remain for ever for all uses, and they are all obedient. All things correspond one to another : and he hath made nothing imperfect. One...establisheth the good of another, and who shall be satisfied in beholding his glory ? CXL. God the Blinding Glory. 0 thou who existest from eternity,... | |
| Proverbial folk-lore - 1874 - 176 pages
...days do men mourn for him that is dead. But for a fool, and an ungodly man all the days of his life. All things are double one against another, And He hath made nothing imperfect. Go weigh me the weight of the fire, Or measure me the blast of the wind, Or call again the day that... | |
| M. A. (Trinity College, Cambridge.) - 1874 - 170 pages
...furnished Bishop Butler with the key-note to his work. It is to he found in Ecclesiasticus, xlii., v. 24, " All things are double one against another, and he hath made nothing imperfect." But this verse really does not bear the sense which is sought to be fixed upon it, viz. : that the... | |
| Alan Benjamin Cheales - 1875 - 188 pages
...days do men mourn for him that is dead. But for a fool, and an ungodly man all the days of his life. All things are double one against another, And He hath made nothing imperfect. Go weigh me the weight of the fire, Or measure me the blast of the wind, Or call again the day that... | |
| John George Wenham - 1875 - 396 pages
...but as a spark. All these things live, and remain for ever, and for every use all things obey Him. All things are double, one against another, and He hath made nothing defective. He hath established the good things of every one. And who shall be filled with beholding... | |
| Walter Augustus Gray - 1876 - 184 pages
...specially provided to satisfy their want b , obtaining it by a " fixed " law, b Ecclesiasticus xlii. 24: "All things are double one against another, and He hath made nothing imperfect." and, as it were, in answer to a mute appeal. Shall then the soul of man alone derive no benefit from... | |
| Moncure Daniel Conway - 1877 - 564 pages
...things. He hath garnished the excellent works of his wisdom, and he is from everlasting to everlasting. All these things live and remain for ever for all uses, and they are all obedient. 93 One thing establisheth the good of another, and who shall be satisfied in beholding his glory ?... | |
| Mary Wilder Tileston - 1878 - 192 pages
...! and that a man may see even to a spark.1 1 Vulgate — And what we can know is but as a spark. 23 All these things live and remain for ever for all uses, and they are all obedient. 24 All things are double one against another: and he hath made nothing imperfect. 25 One thing establisheth... | |
| James Ridgway (B.D.) - 1878 - 214 pages
...gath'ring nations all See thy light, and hear thy eall. Translated from t/ie German. GOD'S OMNISCIENCE. " All things are double one against another ; and He hath made nothing imperfect." — Eoclus. xlii. 24. RESPECTING man whatever wrong we call May, must be right, as relative to all.... | |
| William Francis Ainsworth - 1879 - 734 pages
...the words of the son of Sirach are to him the declaration of its immortality and its sanctification, All these things live and remain for ever for all uses, and thus are all obedient. THE MAID OF ERCILDOUNE. An ancient Ballade, wherein are set forth the Dangers... | |
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