... selfish and not agreeable to the word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great annoyance and loss, recklessly permitting the unreasoning animals to destroy to no purpose our crops which God suffers to grow for the use... Compendium of Ecclesiastical History - Page 348by Johann Carl Ludwig Gieseler, Johann Karl Ludwig Gieseler - 1855Full view - About this book
| Johann Carl Ludwig Gieseler - 1862 - 620 pages
...touch venison, wild fowl, or fish in flowing water, which seems to us quite unseemly and unhrotherly, but also selfish and not agreeable to the Word of...the game to our own annoyance and great loss ; the uureasoning animals destroy for no purpose our erops, which God suffers to grow for the use of man,... | |
| Johann Carl Ludwig Gieseler, Johann Karl Ludwig Gieseler - 1862 - 612 pages
...hare power, or be allowed to touch venison, wild fowl, or fish in flowing water, which seems to ns quite unseemly and unbrotherly, but also selfish and...which God suffers to grow for the use of man, and we must remain quiet ; this is neither godly nor neighborly. For when God created man he gave him dominion... | |
| University of Pennsylvania. Department of History - 1902 - 230 pages
...or wild fowl, or fish in flowing water, which seems to us quite unseemly and unbrotherly, as well as selfish and not agreeable to the word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great annoyance and loss, recklessly permitting the unreasoning... | |
| James Harvey Robinson - 1906 - 616 pages
...or wild fowl, or fish in flowing water, which seems to us quite unseemly and unbrotherly as well as selfish and not agreeable to the word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great annoyance and loss, recklessly permitting the unreasoning... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 502 pages
...or wild fowl or fish in flowing water, which seems to us quite unseemly and unbrotherly as well as selfish and not agreeable to the word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great annoyance and loss, recklessly permitting the unreasoning... | |
| Jacob Salwyn Schapiro - 1909 - 174 pages
...wild fowl, or fish in flowing water, which seems to us quite unseemly and unbrotherly as ' well as selfish and not agreeable to the Word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great annoyance and loss, recklessly permitting the unreasoning... | |
| Beresford James Kidd - 1911 - 786 pages
...or wild fowl, or fish in flowing water, which seems to us quite unseemly and unbrotherly, as well as selfish and not agreeable to the word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great annoyance and loss, recklessly permitting the unreasoning... | |
| Friedrich Engels - 1926 - 204 pages
...wild fowl or fish in flowing water, which } seems to us quite unseemly and unbrotherly as well as .^w selfish and not agreeable to the word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great any" • noyance and loss, recklessly permitting the... | |
| Wendy S. Wilson, Gerald Herman - 2004 - 148 pages
...or wild fowl, or fish in flowing water, which seems to us quite unseemly and unbrotherly as well as selfish and not agreeable to the word of God. In some places the authorities preserve the game to our great annoyance and loss, recklessly permitting the unreasoning... | |
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