The Project Gutenberg eBook, Church and State as Seen in the Formation of Christendom, by T. W. Allies
Title: Church and State as Seen in the Formation of Christendom
Author: T. W. Allies
Release Date: January 9, 2012 [eBook #38537]
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
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CHURCH AND STATE
AS SEEN IN
THE FORMATION OF CHRISTENDOM.
BY
T. W. ALLIES, M.A.
AUTHOR OF
“PER CRUCEM AD LUCEM, THE RESULT OF A LIFE,”
“A LIFE’S DECISION,” “JOURNAL IN FRANCE AND LETTERS FROM ITALY,”
“THE FORMATION OF CHRISTENDOM,” ETC.
LONDON: BURNS AND OATES.
1882.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
|
| |
| PROLOGUE. |
| |
PAGE |
| The Kingdom as Prophesied and as Fulfilled, |
xix |
| |
| CHAPTER I. |
| |
| Relation Between the Civil and the Spiritual Powers from Adam to Christ. |
| |
| 1. The Divine and the Human Society, founded in Adam, refounded in Noah. |
| |
| The origin of man, of woman, of marriage, and of the human family, |
1 |
| Archetypal character of the fact that man is created a Race, |
3 |
| Sole creation of Adam in the maturity of thought and speech and the perfection of knowledge, as shown in the naming of creatures, |
4 |
| Subsequent building of woman from man, |
5 |
| The divine Image and Likeness in the individual man, |
5 |
| A further Image of the ever-blessed Trinity in the Race, |
6 |
| Indication of the Headship and the Passion of Christ in the original creation, |
8 |
| Beauty and splendour of the divine plan, |
9 |
| The part in the divine plan which belongs to man’s free-will, |
10 |
| The divine treatment of man as a Race not broken by the Fall, |
11 |
| Adam after the Fall the head of the civil and the religious order, |
12 |
| Bearing of man’s condition before the Fall upon his subsequent state, |
13 |
| Adam receives in a great promise a disclosure of the future, |
14 |
| He becomes the Teacher and likewise the Priest of his Race, |
15 |
| The rite of sacrifice, |
15 |
| Triple dignity of Adam in this first society, |
16 |
| Man breaks up this society by the misuse of his free-will, |
17 |
| Resumption of the unity of the Race and its reparation in Noah, |
18 |
| Condition of man, individual and collective, at this new beginning of the race; marriage and sacrifice, |
19 |
| Express establishment of civil government by divine authority, |
20 |
| Union of religion with civil government from the beginning, |
21 |
| Parallel between Adam and Noah, |
22 |
| |
| 2. The Divine and Human Society in the Dispersion. |
| |
| Unity of human language withdrawn on account of a great sin, |
24 |
| Coeval with which the various nations spring forth out of the one original society, |
26 |
| Injury to human society by the degradation of the conception of God, |
28 |
| Loss of belief in the divine unity followed by loss of the sense of man’s brotherhood, |
29 |
| Proof of this brotherhood recovered by science in the case of the Aryan family of nations, |
31 |
| The one universal society becomes many nations at enmity with each other, |
32 |
| Their state after a long lapse of time, when their several histories begin, |
33 |
| Original goods of the race still remaining— |
| 1. Marriage, |
35 |
| 2. Religion as centered in the rite of sacrifice, |
37 |
| 3. Civil government, |
38 |
| 4. Alliance between government and religion, |
41 |
| Cumulative testimony of the four in their contrast with slavery to the unity of man’s Race, as its origin is recorded by Moses, |
43 |
| Summary of the course of mankind from the Dispersion to Christ, |
44 |
| |
| 3. Further Testimony of Law, Government, and Priesthood in the Dispersion. |
| |
| The fiction of universal savagery, or different races, or simial descent, |
45 |
| The author of “Ancient Law” upon original society, |
46 |
| Proof from comparative jurisprudence of the patriarchal theory, |
47 |
| Law and government in their commencement, |
48 |
| Family the ancient unit of society, |
49 |
| Universal belief or assumption of blood-relationship, |
50 |
| The Roman Patria Potestas a relic of the original rule, |
52 |
| Family everything, the individual unknown, |
52 |
| Original union of religion with government, |
53 |
| Origin of law and property, |
54 |
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