JOHANN GOETHE
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| "General, natural religion,
properly speaking, requires no faith, for the persuasion that a great producing,
regulating and conducting Being conceils himself, as it were, behind nature, to make
himself comprehensible to us. Such a conviction forces itself upon every one. Nay, if we
for a moment let drop this thread, which conducts us through life, it may be immediately
and everywhere resumed." (Goethe, 1882, 114) "...God,
the only, Eternal, Infinite, to whom all the splendid yet limited creatures owe their
existence." "Nothing, therefore, remained to me but to
part from this society; and as for my love for the Holy Scriptures, as well as of the
founder of Christianity and its early professors, could not be taken from me." |