Hence a legal norm is a norm based on a human will.
So God does not bend to human thought any more than to human will.
You say that your God "does not bend to human thought any more than to human will," and that "the more we study him, the more we find that he is not what we imagined him to be.
You seem to have forgotten your statement in the commencement of your letter, that your God is as inflexible as Nature--that he bends not to human thought nor to human will.
He disclaimed Magic and Sorcery, with ceremonies, and endeavored to base all cure on human will.
There is in Him a human will, limited in scope, varying in intensity, developing with the growth of His human experience, a will like ours in everything, except that it was free from moral imperfection.
Christ's human will is no less a fact than His divine will.
This very sorrow, moreover, is not the mere product of human will, but is the gift of God.
Hence besides the Divine will it is necessary to place in Christ a human will, not merely as a natural power, or a natural movement, but even as a rational movement.
Or it may be said that this will of Christ was not with regard to what was to be carried out by it, but with regard to what was to be done by others, which did not come under His human will.
Science cannot ever hope to reduce all phenomena to unity if a whole class of phenomena, all those that belong to the action of human will, are to be excluded from the postulate of invariable sequence.
Uniformity of nature not demonstrated, but established, except in two cases; the interference of human will and of Divine Will.
Human will-power may in- fringe the rights of man.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "human will" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.