Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 142
... divine law , it must be somewhere distinctly prohibited by divine Revelation , through which alone the will of God is clearly and fully made known to the human race . If it be not so prohibited , it is no sin . Is , then , slavery ...
... divine law , it must be somewhere distinctly prohibited by divine Revelation , through which alone the will of God is clearly and fully made known to the human race . If it be not so prohibited , it is no sin . Is , then , slavery ...
Page 143
... divine decree has gone out against it , and that it is , consequently , sin and wickedness , deserving the divine wrath and curse , and the pains of hell forever . " No such evidence is to be found in the New Tes- tament or the Old ...
... divine decree has gone out against it , and that it is , consequently , sin and wickedness , deserving the divine wrath and curse , and the pains of hell forever . " No such evidence is to be found in the New Tes- tament or the Old ...
Page 149
... divine Lawgiver and Judge of men , was , in the particular instance of slavery , influenced by prudential considerations , and , through a fear of the consequences , withheld the rebuke which he would otherwise have uttered against this ...
... divine Lawgiver and Judge of men , was , in the particular instance of slavery , influenced by prudential considerations , and , through a fear of the consequences , withheld the rebuke which he would otherwise have uttered against this ...
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abolitionists American ancient appear Aristotle Athens beauty better Bolingbroke British called Canaan cause Champollion Channing character Christianity Cicero citizens civil classes Colchians common constitution Demosthenes divine doctrine doubt duty Egypt Egyptians England equal Euripides existence fact feeling friends genius give Greece Greek heart Herodotus Hesiod History of Literature honor human idea influence instinct institutions intellectual interest Japheth justice king labor liberty literature living marriage master ment mind Mongul moral nations nature never opinion Osiris party peculiar persons philosophy Plato poetry political possess present principles prove punishment race readers reason regard religion religious remarkable Revelation Rhode Island Roman Rome Scripture sense servants slavery slaves society soul South Southern spirit supposed theory thing tion Transcendentalists true truth Whewell Whig whole writers Zanoni