"IN the day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him." We have already studied the Scriptural account of man's creation, so far as was necessary to a clear understanding' of the fact that this race of ours had an actual and definite beginning. Adam was not the son of a father, who was the son of another father, and so on up to an eternity of generations, an endless succession of ancestors. God made him out of the dust of the earth at once; all at once; he did not evolve or develop an insect or a reptile out ...
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"IN the day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him." We have already studied the Scriptural account of man's creation, so far as was necessary to a clear understanding' of the fact that this race of ours had an actual and definite beginning. Adam was not the son of a father, who was the son of another father, and so on up to an eternity of generations, an endless succession of ancestors. God made him out of the dust of the earth at once; all at once; he did not evolve or develop an insect or a reptile out of some organic monad, some protoplasm of jelly, and then better that into an animal, and then educate or finish up that animal into a more respectable ape or chimpanzee, and then out of him fashion a human being, who would have fitting gifts to be a lawyer, a preacher, or a professor of geology. Those of our book-writers who scientifically believe they had such an ancestry, long drawn out, are quite welcome to their faith. Our revelation of a divine will in the creation informs us that the Almighty did for human beings what he did for no other creature that be then brought into existence; he gave them some sort of mysterious resemblance to Himself. Now, in this study, we advance to a still more interesting inquiry concerning the nature of the man whom the creation ushered forth into history with such abruptness and force. The importance of the opening chapter of Genesis settles itself around the announcement that man was mode "in the image of God" what can that declaration mean? It meets no person's mind to imagine that this expression refers to any mere physical form or figure. It would be a coarse way of disposing of our questions to say that in the Scriptures God is personally represented as having eyes and hands, ears and feet, and these were given to human beings in the likeness of Him. For God is a spirit; we are not able to fashion any conception of Him, even in our minds, as one wearing a shape or size or figure. These verses of the Bible are only rhetorical methods of description, mere accommodations of speech so as to employ human ideas in the exhibition of divine mysteries. The "image of God" surely does not mean a portrait or a statue of God.... -- The Homiletic Review , Volume 14
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Add this copy of God's Image in Man Some Intuitive Perceptions of Truth to cart. $23.31, new condition, Sold by Paperbackshop rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Bensenville, IL, UNITED STATES, published 2013 by Hardpress Publishing.
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Very Good. 258pp; Green cloth boards with gilt titling to front & spine, minor staining to front board, previous owner's names to front endpaper, frontispiece tissue guard intact, text unmarked, binding is sound, VG condition. Antique New Thought treatise by a pioneer in the New Thought movement. Contents: The Nature of God; Revelation Through Nature; Direct Revelation; Biblical Revelation; Revelation Through the Son; The Universality of Law; The Solidarity of the Race; Man's Dual Nature; The Unseen Realm; Evolution as a Key; From the Old to the New.
Add this copy of God's Image in Man: Some Intuitive Perceptions of Truth to cart. $50.84, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Hialeah, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2010 by Nabu Press.
Add this copy of God's Image in Man: Some Intuitive Perceptions of Truth to cart. $59.74, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Hialeah, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2016 by Palala Press.
Add this copy of God's Image in Man: Some Intuitive Perceptions of Truth to cart. $60.00, very good condition, Sold by Book Happy Booksellers rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Portland, OR, UNITED STATES, published 1896 by Lee and Shepard Publishers.
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Very Good. 258pp; Green cloth boards with gilt titling to front & spine, original decorated endpapers, frontispiece tissue guard intact, slight wear to corners of boards, boards square, clean & slightly scuffed, corner creases to a few pages, text unmarked, binding is tight, VG condition. Antique New Thought treatise by a pioneer in the New Thought movement. Contents: The Nature of God; Revelation Through Nature; Direct Revelation; Biblical Revelation; Revelation Through the Son; The Universality of Law; The Solidarity of the Race; Man's Dual Nature; The Unseen Realm; Evolution as a Key; From the Old to the New.