« Prev Chapter XII. Next »

CHAPTER XII.

BUT since, as our reasoning shows, it is equally certain that whatever the supreme Substance created, it created through nothing other than itself; and whatever it created, it created through its own most intimate expression, whether separately, by the utterance of separate words, or all at once, by the utterance of one word; what conclusion can be more evidently necessary, than that this expression of the supreme Being is no other than the supreme Being? Therefore, the consideration of this expression should not, in my opinion, be carelessly passed over. But before it can be discussed, I think some of the properties 60of this supreme Substance should be diligently and earnestly investigated.

« Prev Chapter XII. Next »
Please login or register to save highlights and make annotations
Corrections disabled for this book
Proofing disabled for this book
Printer-friendly version


Six decades. Millions of lives changed. Watch the Billy Graham TV special.


| Define | Popups: Login | Register | Prev Next | Help |