Remarks on Clerical EducationJ. Hatchard and Son, 1831 - 330 sider |
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... appearing at in- tervals which admit of more matured discussion of public affairs than can be expected in the daily and weekly journals , and better adapted to take up questions of immediate urgency , than the Quar- terly Reviews . This ...
... appearing at in- tervals which admit of more matured discussion of public affairs than can be expected in the daily and weekly journals , and better adapted to take up questions of immediate urgency , than the Quar- terly Reviews . This ...
Side 32
... appear- ance destitute of education , and who should still possess , in a degree which education cannot reach , that great power of moving men's minds , for which it is the office of education to prepare the preacher ; and who in his ...
... appear- ance destitute of education , and who should still possess , in a degree which education cannot reach , that great power of moving men's minds , for which it is the office of education to prepare the preacher ; and who in his ...
Side 39
Henry Raikes. man ; but what would the combined effect of all appear , when weighed against the force of one single text of Scripture , resting , as it does , on its authority of the word of God ? Compared with this , what are the ...
Henry Raikes. man ; but what would the combined effect of all appear , when weighed against the force of one single text of Scripture , resting , as it does , on its authority of the word of God ? Compared with this , what are the ...
Side 48
... appears peculiarly the case in the preparation for the office of the ministry . It possesses beyond any other pursuit the quality of unity . The nature of the office , the end to which it is directed , the means by which it is to be ...
... appears peculiarly the case in the preparation for the office of the ministry . It possesses beyond any other pursuit the quality of unity . The nature of the office , the end to which it is directed , the means by which it is to be ...
Side 78
... appears pe- culiarly to be this , that nothing is required from them which is not read in Holy Scrip- ture , nor which may be proved thereby : and while the church of Rome , conscious of the fatal deviations it has made from the one ...
... appears pe- culiarly to be this , that nothing is required from them which is not read in Holy Scrip- ture , nor which may be proved thereby : and while the church of Rome , conscious of the fatal deviations it has made from the one ...
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acquaintance admit adopted advantage application Articles attainments authority Bible Bishop Bishop of Chester Bishop Porteus catechising character Christ Christian Church of England circumstances clergy clergyman considered course degree Deism dence derived desirable Diegesis difficulty dili divine truth doctrines doubt duties effect eminently endeavour error essential evidence excitement exercise exertion exhibition faith favourable feel gained gospel habits hearers heart hope important inquiries instruction intellect irreligion knowledge labour language latitudinarian learning lected ledge less manner means ment merely mind minister ministry mode nature necessary necessity neglected neral nister nistry object offer parish parochial peculiar piety possess prayer preacher preaching prepared present produce racter reason regard religion religious render sacred Scrip Scripture seems sermon Socinian species spects spirit statement student supply Tait theology things Thirty-nine Articles tion tone views word
Populære avsnitt
Side 92 - For the priest's lips should keep knowledge, and they should seek the law at his mouth : for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts.
Side 131 - Will you be ready with all faithful diligence to banish and drive away all erroneous and strange doctrines, contrary to God's word...
Side 261 - Christ; and see that you never cease your labour, your care, and diligence, until you have done all that lieth in you, according to your bounden duty, to bring all such as are or shall be committed to your charge, unto that agreement in the faith and knowledge of God, and to that ripeness and perfectness of age in Christ, that there be no place left among you, either for error in religion, or for viciousness in life.
Side 33 - that the Bible, and the Bible alone, is the religion of the Protestant," may be repeated, and even with greater correctness, as to the knowledge requisite for the minister.
Side 76 - Eye has. not seen nor ear heard, neither has it entered into the heart of man to conceive the things, which God has prepared for them, that love him.
Side 215 - ... experiments which only lead to conviction of error. He naturally begins by imitating the manner of some one whom he has been accustomed to admire, or by attempting some mode which he has been imagining to himself; but his first efforts are attempts in an art which he has never studied, and where he has no adviser to direct him. Even the theory of the system is unknown; and it is probable that years must elapse, before experience and reflection will lead him to discover that mode of preaching...
Side 260 - Christ's sheep that are dispersed abroad, and for his children who are in the midst of this naughty world, that they may be saved through Christ for ever.