The Life and Travels of George Whitefield, M. A.Longmans, Green, and Company, 1871 - 533 páginas |
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Página viii
... believe that in no instance have I wronged them to screen him . His excellences were too great to need adornment , and his faults too obvious to admit of misapprehension . PREFACE . ix It may be felt , in the viii PREFACE .
... believe that in no instance have I wronged them to screen him . His excellences were too great to need adornment , and his faults too obvious to admit of misapprehension . PREFACE . ix It may be felt , in the viii PREFACE .
Página 2
... believe that some children , like the favourites of fairies , are capri- ciously dowered with their splendid gifts , we look for the original of the son in the father or the mother , or in some combination of their respective qualities ...
... believe that some children , like the favourites of fairies , are capri- ciously dowered with their splendid gifts , we look for the original of the son in the father or the mother , or in some combination of their respective qualities ...
Página 9
... believe many would gladly have me for an apprentice ; but every way seems to be barred up , so that I think God will provide for me some . way or other that we cannot apprehend . " The deterioration of character which must have re ...
... believe many would gladly have me for an apprentice ; but every way seems to be barred up , so that I think God will provide for me some . way or other that we cannot apprehend . " The deterioration of character which must have re ...
Página 10
... , having herself passed through it , prepares us to believe that ' Drelincourt's Book of Death is , since this happened , bought up strangely . ' AT OXFORD . 11 is as little surprising that his 10 LIFE AND TRAVELS OF GEORGE WHITEFIELD .
... , having herself passed through it , prepares us to believe that ' Drelincourt's Book of Death is , since this happened , bought up strangely . ' AT OXFORD . 11 is as little surprising that his 10 LIFE AND TRAVELS OF GEORGE WHITEFIELD .
Página 54
... believe that he would see plenty of both in such a com- munity that he soon had a greatly diminished audience . He seemed bent upon driving the people to accept his own rigid form of religion , and the people were equally determined not ...
... believe that he would see plenty of both in such a com- munity that he soon had a greatly diminished audience . He seemed bent upon driving the people to accept his own rigid form of religion , and the people were equally determined not ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The Life and Travels of George Whitefield, M. A. James Paterson Gledstone Visualização integral - 1871 |
The Life and Travels of George Whitefield, M. A. James Paterson Gledstone Visualização integral - 1871 |
The Life and Travels of George Whitefield, M. A. James Paterson Gledstone Visualização integral - 1871 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
answer believe Bethesda bishop blessed brethren Bristol brother called Cambuslang chapel Charles Wesley Christian church Church of England clergy clergyman congregation conversation Countess Countess of Huntingdon crowded Crown 8vo dear Dissenters divine doctrine Ebenezer Erskine Edition England faith feeling felt field friends gave GEORGE WHITEFIELD Georgia give gospel grace hands hath hear heard hearers heart heaven Holy honour Howel Harris hundred Jesus Christ JOHN TYNDALL Kennington Common labours Lady Huntingdon letter live London Lord Jesus lordship Methodists mind minister Moorfields morning Negroes never night orphan-house orphans Oxford persons poor Post 8vo pray prayer preached preacher pulpit R. A. PROCTOR received religion religious Savannah says Scotland sent sermon sinners soon soul spirit Sunday Tabernacle things thou thought thousand tion town truth unto vols voyage Wesley's Woodcuts word write wrote zeal
Passagens conhecidas
Página 418 - Except the Lord of hosts had left unto us a very small remnant, we should have been as Sodom, and we should have been like unto Gomorrah.
Página 341 - Then he called for a light, and sprang in, and came trembling, and fell down before Paul and Silas, and brought them out, and said, Sirs, what must I do to be saved?