The Protestant reformers and the Reformation, a lecture1853 |
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Página 20
... prayer for his murderers , as well as for himself ; and when he was being bound to the stake , he was still engaged in devotion . Layer after layer of faggots and straw was piled around him , until the pile reached to his very neck ...
... prayer for his murderers , as well as for himself ; and when he was being bound to the stake , he was still engaged in devotion . Layer after layer of faggots and straw was piled around him , until the pile reached to his very neck ...
Página 24
... prayer . John Luther , the father , had a more cultivated mind than most persons of his station in society ; and , rare and expen sive as were books , he found the means to satisfy his great appetite for reading . At his humble cottage ...
... prayer . John Luther , the father , had a more cultivated mind than most persons of his station in society ; and , rare and expen sive as were books , he found the means to satisfy his great appetite for reading . At his humble cottage ...
Página 29
... prayer , he lies- A dead Immortal , deep in glory now ! " I intended to glance at the life and labours of Calvin , Knox , Zuingle , and Cranmer ; but must decline it . With the glorious deeds of these worthy men , however , you may , in ...
... prayer , he lies- A dead Immortal , deep in glory now ! " I intended to glance at the life and labours of Calvin , Knox , Zuingle , and Cranmer ; but must decline it . With the glorious deeds of these worthy men , however , you may , in ...
Página 30
... prayer and vigil for the encounter with that power which made them what they are . It is the shock of great principles , the cry to heaven is not in vain . A spirit is poured upon these nations . Let it be said that 30.
... prayer and vigil for the encounter with that power which made them what they are . It is the shock of great principles , the cry to heaven is not in vain . A spirit is poured upon these nations . Let it be said that 30.
Página 34
... prayer of faith , ever lost . For these deeds , and words , and prayers , are lasting as the elements of this material globe : yea , when these latter shall have perished from the spaces of creation , the former will abide imperishable ...
... prayer of faith , ever lost . For these deeds , and words , and prayers , are lasting as the elements of this material globe : yea , when these latter shall have perished from the spaces of creation , the former will abide imperishable ...
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The Protestant Reformers and the Reformation, a Lecture William Antliff Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance Antichrist archbishop began Bible bishops Bohemia bull called casuist Christ Christendom CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION church claims clergy conscience council darkness and supersti days of books death deeds devoted Doctor doctrine Duke of Lancaster earnestly earth ecclesiastical effect eminence enemies England enligh Europe exclaimed faith father flames France friars friend Jerome Germany gospel heart heaven heresy heretic holy HUDDERSFIELD YOUNG MEN'S hurled ILKESTON illustrious indulgences infallible JEROME OF Prague John Huss John Wickliffe king labours laity learning lecture lived Lord Luther Lutterworth martyrdom Melancthon mendicants ment Moldau monks moral mother noble o'er obtained ocean Oxford paganism papacy Papal aggression persecution piety pious Pontiff Pope of Rome popedom popery popish prayer preached precious priests PRIMITIVE METHODIST MINISTER principles PROTESTANT REFORMERS recant religion retract saints salvation Saxon reformer scriptures Severn soul spirit sufferings superstition Tetzel Tetzel's signature tion truth university of Prague vengeance Wickliffe's Wittemberg WOMBELL zeal
Pasajes populares
Página 33 - Act, — act in the living Present ! Heart within, and God o'erhead! Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime, And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time ; Footprints, that perhaps another, Sailing o'er life's solemn main, A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall take heart again. Let us, then, be up and doing, With a heart for any fate; Still achieving, still pursuing, Learn to labor and to wait.
Página 13 - The jewel of the church is turned into the sport of the people, and what was hitherto the principal gift of the clergy and divines, is made for ever common to the laity.
Página 13 - But this master John Wycliffe translated it out of Latin into English, and thus laid it more open to the laity, and to women, who could read, than it had formerly been to the most learned of the clergy, even to those of them who had the best understanding. And in this way the gospel pearl is cast abroad, and trodden under foot of swine, and that which was before precious to both clergy and laity, is rendered as it were the common jest of both.
Página 31 - ... *boy's own book," the solace of the sick, the light of the dying, the grand hope and refuge of simple, sincere, and sorrowing spirits ; — it is this which at once proclaims its unearthly origin, and so clasps it to the great common heart of humanity, that the extinction of the sun were not more mourned than the extinction of the Bible, or than even its receding from its present pride of place.
Página 14 - The devil's instrument, church's enemy, people's confusion, heretics' idol, hypocrites' mirror, schism's broacher, hatred's sower, lies' forger, flatteries' sink ; who at his death despaired like Cain, and, stricken by the horrible judgments of God, breathed forth his wicked soul to the dark mansion of the black devil...
Página 31 - Tis past conjecture, all things rise in proof." This book is the mirror of the Divinity — the rightful regent of the world. Other books are planets shining with reflected luster; this book, like the sun, shines with ancient and unborrowed ray. Other books have, to their loftiest altitudes, sprung from earth ; this book looks down from heaven high. Other books appeal to understanding or fancy; this book to conscience and faith.
Página 31 - Other books guide gracefully along the earth, or onwards to the mountains of the ideal; this, and this alone, conducts up the awful abyss which leads to heaven. Other books, after shining their little season, may perish in flames, fiercer than those which destroyed the Alexandrian Library ; this must, in essence, remain, pure as gold, but unconsumablc as asbestos, in the general conflagration.
Página 27 - an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and church of the first-born, to God the Judge of all, to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant.
Página 31 - Library ; this must, in essence, remain, pure as gold, but unconsumable as asbestos, in the general conflagration. Other books may be forgotten in a universe where suns go down and disappear, like bubbles in the stream; the memory of this book shall shine as the brightness of that eternal firmament, and as those higher stars, which are for ever and ever.
Página 10 - He called him ANTICHRIST, the proud worldly priest of Rome, and the most cursed of clippers and pursekervers.