They all evidently refer to the mystic womb of Nature and of Woman, and are symbols of salvation and redemption (For a full discussion of this subject, see The Great Law of religious origins, by W.
These Mysteries were probably survivals of the oldest religious rites of the Greek races, and in their earlier forms consisted not so much in worship of the gods of Heaven as of the divinities of Earth, and of Nature and Death.
It is the return home, the return into direct touch with Nature and Man--the liberation from the long exile of separation, from the painful sense of isolation and the odious nightmare of guilt and 'sin.
Not only does the Third Stage bring illumination, intuitive understanding of processes in Nature and Humanity, sympathy with the animals, artistic capacity, and so forth, but it necessarily brings a new Order of Society.
Nature and History do not deal in such things, or supply them for a sop to Man's vanity.
To the Deity alone he was accountable for the abuse of his power; and his subjects were indissolubly bound, by their oath of fidelity, to a tyrant, who had violated every law of nature and society.
The Barbarians opposed to his progress the obstacles of nature and of courage; and still continued to retreat, from one hill to another, till they were satisfied, by repeated trials, of the power and perseverance of their enemies.
The Catholics of Alexandria and Egypt were abandoned to a tyrant, qualified, by nature and education, to exercise the office of persecution; but he oppressed with an impartial hand the various inhabitants of his extensive diocese.
At each step that we take in our investigation of Nature and of causes, the idea of God is extended and exalted; the farther science advances, the more God seems to grow and broaden.
The two queens, rendered desperate by finding in the two princes such virtue as should have made them look inwardly on themselves, renounced all sentiments of nature and of mothers and conspired together to destroy them.
But there is a mere and deep silence touching the nature andoperation of those common adjuncts of things, as in nature; and only a resuming and repeating of the force and use of them in speech or argument.
The soul is divine bynature and cannot be destroyed.
Nature and especially of mankind, differed in expression according to its application.
It was, however, reserved for a later and more sensuous age to permanently adopt an absurdity so opposed to all established ideas relative to a creative force in Nature and in man.
Thou shall do no injury to thy neighbour, is the voice of nature and reason, and it is confirmed by written revelation.
Pertaining to Arius, a presbyter of the church of Alexandria, in the fourth century, or to the doctrines of Arius, who held Christ to be inferior to God the Father in nature and dignity, though the first and noblest of all created beings.
The doctrine of sthetics; sthetic principles; devotion to the beautiful in nature and art.
The theory or philosophy of taste; the science of the beautiful in nature and art; esp.
He had come forth to look abroad upon this strange wreck of nature and peril to his kind.
They, too, are part of Man's nature and civilization, of his never ceasing search.
That God's nature and existence, and consequently His providence cannot be known from miracles, but that they can all be much better perceived from the fixed and immutable order of nature.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nature and" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.