Page:Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion volume 3.djvu/382

370 definite doctrine in Christian religion, iii. 105; immortality of Spirit, iii. 57, 302

Incarnation, the, i. 70; idea of, pervades every religion, 77; its importance, 151; iii. 73

Incarnations, Indian, ii. 23

India, religion of, ii. 1 ff.

Indian literature, i. 285

Infinite and finite, i. 184, 325; iii. 259, 293, 299

Innocence, the state of, i. 272; not the true state of Man, 279

, quoted on faith, i. 118 Pantheism in system of, 333; and Kant, iii. 250; on the knowledge of God, 282; on the Causa Sui, 322

Jesus: was He the Son of God? iii. 111; belief in, 120

Jews, as chosen people, ii. 209

Job, Book of, ii. 193

, his Critique of Pure Reason, i. 55, 250; his moral standpoint, 228; on Teleological Proof, ii. 159; iii. 328; on Ontological Proof, ii. 353; iii. 363; on Cosmological Proof, 238 ff.; quoted, 68

Kingdom of God, the, iii. 78, 85, 135, 149; and Roman Empire, 90

Knowledge, defined, i. 119; iii. 162, 296; in relation to religion. 295; immediate knowledge, i. 42, 162

, the, ii. 57

Life defined, iii. 336

Light, religion of, ii. 70

Love, God as, iii. 10; as understood by Christ, 83; of Spiritual Community, 106

, religion of, i. 290; prayer as, 293

Man, and God, i. 228; his freedom, 244; ii. 223; as essential end, 165; in religion of sublimity, 191; and animals, 252; his real nature, iii. 45; and Nature, 340; knows God, 303; and religion, 366

Manicheism, iii. 297

Manu, code of, ii. 17

Marriage v. celibacy, i. 251

Mendelssohn on the Christian religion, i. 220; iii. 362

Middle Ages, i. 21, 101, 280, 285; theology of, iii. 158

Miracles, as basis of faith, i. 218; ii. 338; none amongst Hindus, 92; in Jewish religion, 187; rejected by Christ as criterion of truth, i. 219; ii. 339; iii. 116; how to be understood, 118; Spirit the true miracle, 119

Mithras-worship, ii. 81

Mohammedan religion, ii. 198, 212, 297; contrasted with Christian, iii. 143

Mongols, the, i. 296

Mysteries, Greek and Christian, ii. 283

Mystery, religion of, ii. 85

Nature, design in, i. 12; not worshipped in any religion, 81; and Spirit, 108, 208; iii. 210; religion of, i. 270; in Jewish religion, ii. 184; in relation to Man, iii. 42; organic and inorganic, 339; waste in, 344

Necessity, its various forms, ii. 141; idea of, amongst the Greeks, iii. 277, 314

Nemesis, ii. 240

Notion, the, what it is, i. 275; defined, ii. 348; iii. 208; and Being, 15, 222, 354; refuge of religion, 147

, standpoint of, criticised, i. 176

Œdipus Coloneus, ii. 266, 288

One, conception of the, ii. 135

Ontological Proof, ii. 352; iii. 347 ff., 360 ff.

Oracles, Greek, ii. 278

Osiris, in Egyptian religion, ii. 101; identified with Nile, 107, 285

, misunderstood, i. 96; iii. 319; philosophy not, i. 214217; criticised, 333; ambiguity of term, ii. 54; in Hindu religion, iii. 317

Paradise, i. 273, 279

Parmenides, i. 333; ii. 135; iii. 325, 326

Parsis, religion of the, ii. 77

Penitence, Christian and Hindu, ii. 37; defined, iii.