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A HISTORY OF BOHEMIAN LITERATURE

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and also the heat sun, the light which proceeds from of the sun but when the sun comes to us gives us its light and its heat. But the light alone takes (on itself)

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that colour of the glass or the membrane or the cloud but the sun itself and appears to us through which the heat will not have this colour. " Oh, wondrous power oh, unfathomable wisdom to gaze oh, most delightful goodness, how charming on you that have deigned to open our eyes And does not beseem us to admire this how in Christ in this Unity are gathered together — and how properly and how usefully for us — three things in their nature most dissimilar, as But what appears to our minds. Oh, there impossible to God something new, greater, and eternal joined together in this Unity. The new that was created when the Son of God spirit man. The body accepted to become greater than was when long ago was created for Adam for from that body the bodies of all men proceeded, and afterwards the body of Christ, which He took from the pure virginal blood of her whom He chose for Himself as mother. The Word of God, then, the Son of God the eternal. And all this met in the one Father, that person of our Lord Christ. And in this strange act of the entire Holy Trinity the threefold power of God was shown. Firstly, because out of nothing He created something. Secondly, because He made something new out of something greater. Thirdly, because out of something mortal He made something eternal, or, as should rather say, because out of something dead He made something eternal." Stitny's two works— his books Of General Christian Matters and his Religious Conversations — give us all

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