The devotional spirit is evident; a sense of purity, that spiritualised humanity with its heavenly brightness, dims the imperfections of style, casting out of observation minor and uncouth parts.
These are senses that the spiritualised body will not lose.
Patriotism thus spiritualised and moralised is the true patriotism.
It is historically connected with the Jewish prophetic tradition, which it carried to its fullest development and presented in an universalised and spiritualised form.
In this respect the mixture with paganism altered nothing; it merely reinforced the spiritualised and lyric despair of the Hebrews with the personal and metaphysical despair of the Romans and Greeks.
Even this physical efficacy, however, is spiritualised as much as possible, since deity is said to move the cosmos only as an object of love or an object of knowledge may move the mind.
He accepted in their fullness both ideals, and so spiritualised his humanism and humanised his idealism.
The French interpreter, Nicolas, has indeed spiritualisedhis work.
It is true the schoolmaster asserted that he occasionally caught passing glimpses of him; but that was because he had been himself nearly spiritualised by affliction, and his visual ray purged in the furnace of domestic tribulation.
The Persian religion, in the stage at which it is preserved in the Avesta, spiritualised much of the primitive Aryan mythology, allegorising many of its deities into personifications of good and evil principles and qualities.
The Holy War is just John Bunyan's soldierly life spiritualised--spiritualised and so worked up into this fine English Classic.
And then the proverb has been preserved out of the old political life of England, and has been moralised and spiritualisedto us in the Holy War.
Consequently the Gospel was in origin nothing but a Judaised and spiritualised Adonis cult.
It is certain that the old Israelite Jahwe only attained that spiritualised character for which he is nowadays extolled under the influence of the Persians' imageless worship of God.
The gain-serving lawyers, each distinctly isolated, tell their worldly thoughts as clearly as Caponsacchi reveals his redeemed and spiritualised soul.
Nowhere else has love been spiritualised so nobly, with such crystal purity, nowhere else has the synthesis of love and wedlock been more intrinsically fashioned.
Are not the ancient Teutonic cities of Bruges, Courtrai, and Ypres spiritualised in the stanzas of Rodenbach, in the pastels of Fernand Khnopff, in the mystic statues of Georges Minne?
Many of the poems again arespiritualised theories of art.
The Shaikh-al-Ishraq combines the objective attitude of Pre-Islamic Persian thinkers with the subjective attitude of his immediate predecessors, and restates the Dualism of Zoroaster in a much more philosophical and spiritualised form.
The modifications thus introduced have been distinguished in modern phrase by the term naturalism, in contradistinction to those traditional forms and spiritualised countenances which constitute the mysticism of mediaeval art.
For a time the spiritualised idea of the Kingdom was dominant in His mind, the Messianic eschatological idea falling rather into the background.
John the Baptist had probably come forth from among the Essenes, and he preached a spiritualised Kingdom of Heaven.
A picture of the future is not spiritualised simply by being projected upon the clouds.
Salvator looks to a spiritualised mystical Mosaism as destined to be the successful rival of Christianity.
No matter what direction I started to take, it almost became a necessity to begin or end my daily wanderings by a pause in this spiritualised immensity of stone.
The passionate sexual nature of the dove made it emblem of Aphrodite, and it became spiritualised in its consecration to the Madonna.
His pharisaism was spiritualised and intensified in his new faith, to which the great world was all an Adversary.
When it became spiritualised it was as Christ conquering Death and Hell, and releasing the spirits from prison.
Venus' doves, soiled for a time, were spiritualised at last and made white, while the snowy swan grew darker.
But no, far from having such a bodily quality, it had spiritualised his whole being.
Even those she had met often since her arrival in St. Petersburg seemed different beings now, as though spiritualised into that mysterious force that seemed mightier than the Czar and holier than divinity.
The law then was spiritualised by the Stoics, just as the state was.
By the state was meant, not Athens or Sparta, as would have been the case in a former age, but the society of all rational beings into which the Stoics spiritualised the state.
Footnote 413: What is called the ever-increasing legal feature of Gentile Christianity and the Catholic Church is conditioned by its origin, in so far as its theory is rooted in that of Judaism spiritualised and influenced by Hellenism.
The question whether righteousness comes from the works of the law or from faith, was displaced by this conception, and therefore remained in its deepest grounds unsolved, or was decided in the sense of a spiritualised legalism.
Besides these spiritual doctrines there were not a few spiritualised myths which were variously made use of in the Apocalypses.
It may be that, as Professor Burkitt has suggested, the awful experiences of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple produced within Pharisaism a moral reformation which drove the Jew within and thus spiritualised Judaism.
Many Jewish liturgies have, for instance, eliminated the prayers for the restoration of sacrifices; and several have removed orspiritualised the petitions for the recovery of the Jewish nationality.
Maimonides entirely spiritualised the idea, and his example was here decisive.
That spiritualism had a wholesome effect on the over-robust races of the north; the ruddy barbarians becamespiritualised through Christianity; European civilisation began.
But now from this Christianised, spiritualised brute force is developed the peculiar feature of the middle ages, chivalry, which finally becomes exalted into a religious knighthood.
The Quakers believe, as a farther argument in their favour, that there is reason to presume that St. Paul never looked upon the spiritualised passover as any permanent and essential rite, which Christians were enjoined to follow.
If this higher knowledge, this nobler conception, this spiritualised ideal, came not from God, whence did it come?
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "spiritualised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.