Pronouns referring to the Deity are not usually put up,—excepting the personals “He,” “Him.”
O thou, whose justice reigns on high.—Watts.
O thou, Most High—Ps. 56 : 2.
Father of all mercies, we, thine unworthy servants, do give thee most humble and hearty thanks for all thy goodness.—Common Prayer.
Thou, whose, thine, thy, properly lower-case.
Usage is ununiform as to capitalizing the pronoun of the third person, when referring to the Deity; some using the capital in all three cases (He, His, Him), while others capitalize the nominative and objective, and put “his” down; and still others put all the cases down.
God does love us. As any loving father or mother, He wants us to want His society, and to love to be with and talk with Him.—Congregationalist.
Small letter in the possessive, capital in the objective: {p178}
All the works of God . . . declare the glory of his perfections. . . . But how gross are the conceptions generally entertained of the character of Him “in whom we live and move!”
Dick. Improv’t Soc. § VI.