Remains of the Rev. Richard CecilS. T. Armstring, 1817 - 271 sider |
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Side 21
... pride . It seems to me that this dissatisfaction with myself , is the mes- senger sent to buffet me and keep me down . In other men , the separation between complacency and pride may be possible ; but I scarcely think it is so in me ...
... pride . It seems to me that this dissatisfaction with myself , is the mes- senger sent to buffet me and keep me down . In other men , the separation between complacency and pride may be possible ; but I scarcely think it is so in me ...
Side 22
... pride , and his passions - that he was , more than most men , superior to that little feeling which makes us quit the scholar's form . Many men speak of themselves and of all around them as in a state of pupilage and childhood , but I ...
... pride , and his passions - that he was , more than most men , superior to that little feeling which makes us quit the scholar's form . Many men speak of themselves and of all around them as in a state of pupilage and childhood , but I ...
Side 77
... pride of station crosses him in his way . Nor is the contrary change less dangerous . Poverty has its trials . That is a fine trait in the Pilgrim's Progress , that Christian stumbled in going down the Hill into the Valley of ...
... pride of station crosses him in his way . Nor is the contrary change less dangerous . Poverty has its trials . That is a fine trait in the Pilgrim's Progress , that Christian stumbled in going down the Hill into the Valley of ...
Side 78
... pride in this than they are aware of . They re unwilling to allow so simple and natural a cause of their feelings ; and wish to find something in the hing more sublime . sy of pa THERE are so many things to lower a man's top- qsails he ...
... pride in this than they are aware of . They re unwilling to allow so simple and natural a cause of their feelings ; and wish to find something in the hing more sublime . sy of pa THERE are so many things to lower a man's top- qsails he ...
Side 80
... Pride would choose for us such means of pro- vision , as have some appearance of our own agency in them ; and stout - heartedness would lead us to re- fuse things , if we cannot have them in our own way . THE blessed man is he , who is ...
... Pride would choose for us such means of pro- vision , as have some appearance of our own agency in them ; and stout - heartedness would lead us to re- fuse things , if we cannot have them in our own way . THE blessed man is he , who is ...
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admire affairs Albert Durer Arminian Balaam BARTHOLOMEW Fair Bible called carnal Cecil character child Chobham Chris Christian church circumstances conduct conscience creature danger declension dispensation divine divine grace doctrine duty effect eternal evil faith feel felt fool give glory God's Gospel grace grand habit hear hearers heart heaven holy humility impressions imputed righteousness infidel influence Jesus Christ labor live look Lord Lord Chesterfield man's manner matter means meet ment minister ministry nature ness never object occasions of enmity Old Dispensation Paul peculiar perhaps persons Pharisee prayer preacher preaching pride principle pulpit religion religious rience Satan Scrip Scripture seems sense sermon shew simplicity soul speak spirit spiritual mind stand suffer talk tenderness thee thing thou thought tion truth ture turn unto walk wisdom wise word
Populære passager
Side 227 - Let your loins be girded about, and your lights burning; And ye yourselves like unto men that wait for their lord, when he will return from the wedding; that when he cometh and knocketh, they may open unto him immediately. Blessed are those servants whom the lord when he cometh shall find watching...
Side 70 - And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness, to humble thee, and to prove thee, to know what was in thine heart, whether thou wouldest keep his commandments, or no.
Side 262 - Have mercy on me, O God, according to Your steadfast love; according to Your abundant mercy blot out my transgressions. Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity and cleanse me from my sin!
Side 137 - And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon.
Side 42 - ... true eloquence I find to be none but the serious and hearty love of truth...
Side 144 - there let them lie ; you shall hear more about them another time, but say no more about them now.' Some days after, I bought her a box full of larger beads, and toys of the same kind. When I returned home, I opened the treasure and set it before her ; she burst into tears^ with ecstasy. 'Those, my child...
Side 159 - ... sees a thousand traits of the divine character, of himself, and of the world — some striking and bold, others cast as it were into the shade, and designed to be searched for and examined — some direct, others by way of intimation or inference.
Side 143 - She looked at me a few moments longer, and then (summoning up all her fortitude, her breast heaving with the effort) she dashed them into the fire.
Side 217 - I have more fully made up my mind on a principle, I put it on the shelf. A hundred subtle objections may be brought against this principle; I may meet with some of them, perhaps; but my principle is on the shelf. Generally, I may be able to recall the reasons which weighed with me to put it there; but, if not, I am not to be sent out to sea again. Time was, when I saw through and detected all the subtleties that could be brought against it; I have past evidence of having been fully convinced : and...
Side 150 - The most common of all human complaints is — Parents groaning under the vices of their children ! This is all the effect of parental influence.