The Quarterly Review, Volumes 264-265William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, John Murray, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1935 |
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Page 100
... doctrine of the Atone- ment remained almost constant so that , when religious art was most prolific , there would be little doctrinal change to reflect . Even the Reformation , revolutionary as were its effects in other directions , did ...
... doctrine of the Atone- ment remained almost constant so that , when religious art was most prolific , there would be little doctrinal change to reflect . Even the Reformation , revolutionary as were its effects in other directions , did ...
Page 105
... doctrine of the Atonement which was dominant was the ' satisfaction theory ' of Anselm , which seems to have been ... doctrines of their time were too slight to affect the representations of the Crucifixion . The followers of St ...
... doctrine of the Atonement which was dominant was the ' satisfaction theory ' of Anselm , which seems to have been ... doctrines of their time were too slight to affect the representations of the Crucifixion . The followers of St ...
Page 106
... doctrine of the Atone- ment remained substantially the same , a theory which regarded the death of Christ as a sacrifice made for sin . It was a conception which harmonised with the typical emphasis of medieval theology on penance and ...
... doctrine of the Atone- ment remained substantially the same , a theory which regarded the death of Christ as a sacrifice made for sin . It was a conception which harmonised with the typical emphasis of medieval theology on penance and ...
Contents
Life and the Professor | 7 |
Samuel Taylor Coleridge | 8 |
Sir Isaac Newton | 10 |
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