| 1878 - 618 pages
...tutors ; and make no account of their lives when they can devote them to the service of their God. They believe in the unity of the Godhead, and although...veneration, yet they are by no means idolaters, as tha ignorant suppose." I must admit that in another place he says that the Hindus differ widely in... | |
| Sir Monier Monier-Williams - 1878 - 264 pages
...tutors ; and make no account of their lives when they can devote them to the service of their God. They believe in the unity of the Godhead, and although...by no means idolaters, as the ignorant suppose.' I must admit that in another place he says that the Hindus differ widely in different places, and that... | |
| Sir Monier Monier-Williams - 1878 - 256 pages
...tutors ; and make no account of their lives when they can devote them to the service of their God. They believe in the unity of the Godhead, and although...by no means idolaters, as the ignorant suppose.' I must admit that in another place he says that the Hindus differ widely in different places, and that... | |
| Robert Montgomery Martin - 1879 - 770 pages
...adversity." He adds his conviction, from frequent discourses with learned Brahmins, that they " one and all believe in the unity of the Godhead; and although...high veneration, yet they are by no means idolaters," which latter assertion may be doubted as applied to the lower and less-informed professors of any religion... | |
| Baij Nath (Lala.) - 1905 - 394 pages
...their lives when they can devote it to the service of God. They one and all believe in the unity of Godhead, and although they hold images in high veneration, yet they are by no means idolators as the ignorant suppose. I have myself frequently discoursed upon the subject with many learned... | |
| Rajmohan Gandhi - 1986 - 376 pages
...ear-ring.6' Nor was Iqbal like Akbar's minister Abul Fazl, who wrote of the 1 lindus: They one and all believe in the unity of the Godhead, and although...images in high veneration, yet they are by no means idolators. I have myself frequently discoursed upon the subject with many learned and upright men of... | |
| Edward Moor - 1999 - 702 pages
...III. " They, one and all, believe in the unity of the Godhead," (this surely is too unqualified) ; " and although they hold images in high veneration,...idolaters, as the ignorant suppose. I have myself," continue* ABU'L FAZIL, " frequently discoursed with many learned and upright men of this religion,... | |
| Michael J. Franklin - 2000 - 592 pages
...and make no account of their lives, when they can devote them to the fervice of God. They one and all believe in the unity of the Godhead; and although...yet they are by no means idolaters, as the ignorant fuppofe. I have myfelf frequently difcourfed upon the fubject with many learned and upright men of... | |
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