
The work examines human character as a miniature echo of the divine Trinity, pairing affection, understanding, and purposeful action. It argues that education focused solely on intellect, morality, or religion inevitably leads to hardness, sentimentality, or fanaticism, and that true development requires a harmonious blend of all three faculties.
Tracing humanity’s descent from its original, innocent likeness to the Creator, the author shows how self‑centered love and the worship of personal passions have corrupted that image. He then offers a thoughtful framework for restoring balance, urging readers to cultivate pure affections, wise intellect, and a life that expresses both in harmony. This early‑modern treatise invites listeners to reflect on the foundations of moral character and consider a practical path toward inner renewal.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (280K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
b. 1818
An American writer and hymn compiler from the 19th century, remembered for devotional and religious work that circulated widely in her time. The surviving record is fairly thin, but she appears in library and reference sources as Mary G. Ware, also given as Mary Greene Ware, born in 1818.
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