One thing alone is certain and indubitable, that which Christ said when he was dying: " Into Thy hands I commend my spirit " — that is to say, at death I return whence I came. The Christian Teaching - Page 210by graf Leo Tolstoy - 1898 - 210 pagesFull view - About this book
| graf Leo Tolstoy - 1904 - 292 pages
...world, and that, having attained a certain extent of growth, it has passed out of these conditions. One thing alone is certain and indubitable, that which...the thought of the passage which awaits me. — The Christian Teaching. THE END PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, IIMITKD, LONDON AND BECCLES. THE UNIVERSITY... | |
| William Chislett - 1928 - 236 pages
...chose to reassert the integrity, the soundness of primitive Christianity. At the end he could say, "Not only have I no regret, but I rejoice at the thought of the passage which awaits me. 'Into thy hands I commend my spirit.' " Tolstoy's theories have grave practical defects that, be we... | |
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