| Criticism - 1885 - 996 pages
...desirable or advantageous that religion should be excluded from the school. On the contrary, it ought then to be one of the chief agencies for moulding the young...Church, but not for the practical business of real life. . . . The school, which principally gives the knowledge fitting for practical life, ought preeminently... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - United States - 1885 - 922 pages
...desirable or advantageous that religion should be excluded from the school. On the contrary, it ought then to be one of the chief agencies for moulding the young...Church, but not for the practical business of real life. . . . The school, which principally gives the knowledge fitting for practical life, ought preeminently... | |
| Education - 1885 - 686 pages
...life to all that is true and virtuous and holy. To shut religion ^ut of the school and keep it for the home and the church is logically to train up a generation that will consider religion good for home and church but not for practical business in real life. But a more false and pernicious notion could not... | |
| Education - 1885 - 724 pages
...life to all that is true and virtuous and holy. To shut religion out of the school and keep it for the home and the church is logically to train up a generation that will consider religion good for home and church but not for practical business in real life. But a more false and pernicious notion could not... | |
| Education - 1905 - 848 pages
...that is true and virtuous, holy and good. To shut out religion from the school and keep it for the home and the church is, logically, to train up a generation that will consider religion good for home and church, but not for the practical business of daily life. Religion, in order to elevate a people, should... | |
| William Stang - Christian sociology - 1905 - 232 pages
...all that is true and virtuous and holy. To shut religion out of the school, and to keep it for the home and the Church, is, logically, to train up a generation that will consider religion good for the home and the Church, but not for the practical business of life." But religion, as all Christians... | |
| Peter George Mode - Religion - 1921 - 776 pages
...left without necessary spiritual aids, and might be lost to the Church and to God. CHRISTIAN EDUCATION To shut religion out of the school, and keep it for...Church, but not for the practical business of real life. Hut a more false and pernicious notion could not be imagined. Religion, in order to elevate a people,... | |
| Allen Sinclair Will - 1922 - 634 pages
...outweighs that of home and Church. the contrary, it ought there to be one of the chief agencies for molding the young life to all that is true and virtuous. and...Church, but not for the practical business of real life. A more false and pernicious notion could not be imagined. "Religion, in order to elevate a people,... | |
| Stephen Steinberg - Education - 1977 - 212 pages
...vocational activities. This belief was also expressed in the pastoral of the Third Plenary Council: To shut religion out of the school, and keep it for...a generation that will consider religion good for the home and the Church, but not for the practical business of real life. But a more fake and pernicious... | |
| JoEllen McNergney Vinyard - Education - 1998 - 334 pages
...not be shut out of the school and kept just for home and church, or a generation would be trained to consider religion good for home and the church "but not for the practical business of real life."14 The assembled men felt a sense of obligation and urgency. The bishops met in the long shadow... | |
| |