This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A26895 | Are you willing and resolved to Give up your self to God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, according to the Gospel doctrine which your profess? |
A27036 | [ s.n., London printed: 1675?] |
A26942 | Who will affirm it, that knows what Christianity is? |
A27063 | If any question ▪ What is My Religion? |
A29382 | For who should strengthen the Peoples hearts, and defend the Cause of the LORD against them, if such a Ministry were down? |
A26958 | The Question, Who shall be Judge of Heresie, Schisme, or Church- Sins? |
A27003 | As to his Question, Whether the Presbyterians brought in the King? |
A27003 | Mr. Hunt, the Author of the Conformists Plea, Mr. Baxter and who not? |
A27003 | Who can affirm or deny any thing of equivocal Words? |
A27003 | Who saith, they( the Presbyterians) brought in the King, besides your self? |
A27003 | Why then have you called them Presbyterians so long, and do so still? |
A26941 | How few is there that are convinced of Original sin imputed to them? |
A26941 | It is very sad, when our affections are so little Heaven- ward, as that we aim not at all at Gods Glory, but altogether our own advantage? |
A26941 | or what can you do less for your own souls, then beg for their salvation of him who alone can grant it? |
A26945 | Whether we shall receive the Lords Supper at a Table, or in our seats; and whether the Table shall be of wood or stone? |
A26945 | whether it shall be round, or long, or square? |
A26945 | whether it shall have Rails, or no Rails? |
A26945 | whether it shall stand in the East or West- end of the Temple, or in the middle? |
A35057 | Was not Jerusalem, after the return from Babylon, the City of the great King, until such time as Nehemiah came and builded the Walls of the City? |
A35057 | Whether we shall receive the Lords Supper at a Table, or in our Seats; and whether the Table shall be of wood or stone? |
A35057 | whether it shall be round, or long, or square? |
A35057 | whether it shall have Rails, or no Rails? |
A35057 | whether it shall stand in the East or West- end of the Temple, or in the middle? |
A44196 | But do they not own too much more? |
A44196 | How then come they to fill the World with Blood and Division, for the Sake of their numerous humane Additionals? |
A44196 | There is one Lawgiver who can save and destroy: Who art thou that Judgest another? |
A44196 | Why was this great man so much against Bishops deputing their proper work to Chancellours, Commissaries, Officials? |
A26938 | If you ask, what then would God have done with one thus converted, if he had no Saviour, to ransom him from Justice for his sin? |
A26938 | See what I have said in my Treatise of the Life of Faith, to the question, Whether the Precept be for the Promise, or the Promise for the Precept? |
A26938 | The question is whether it be truth and clearly opened which is there written? |
A26938 | Their light is as the Moons derived from the Sun; Which of them but Christ, hath purchased and given a Covenant of Grace to the condemned world? |
A26938 | What Happiness is? |
A26938 | What Holiness or Virtue is? |
A26938 | Whether Holinesse be the only Design of Christianity? |
A26938 | Whether the Reward be the end of Obedience, or Obedience the end of the Reward? |
A27066 | Alas, will God leave Us, even Us also to the obdurateness of Pharaoh? |
A27066 | And shall they use our hands to do their work? |
A27066 | Do not you your selves condemn a carnal state? |
A27066 | Is there not crying sin with Us? |
A27066 | May one offer his Child to be baptized with the sign of the Cross, or the use of Chrism, the white garment,& c.? |
A27066 | There speaks an Oracle; good Reader, mark him; What could be said more Orthodox and honest? |
A27066 | We are obliged to take heed of countenancing this Errour — For if it prevail, what abundance of hurt will it do? |
A27066 | What Faith, and what Parents? |
A27066 | What have we done to Christs Kingdom, to this Kingdom, to our Friends, to our selves, and( alas) to our enemies, by our Divisions? |
A27066 | and do we not feel it, do we not know it? |
A27066 | into what hard- heartedness have we sinned our selves? |
A26946 | ( And on whose Authority then doth the Pope, and Council, themselves believe it?) |
A26946 | And as if it were in the Rulers power whether any of the Subjects shall be Religious, or be saved? |
A26946 | And do not all agree in this? |
A26946 | And they that ask, Whether Reason, and Religion be contray? |
A26946 | These things premised, the Question is not whether Socinians, Papists, Antinomians, Quakers,& c. differ from us? |
A26946 | nor is it whether our Reasons really differ about the sense of some Texts of Scripture, or Points of Religion? |
A26946 | nor whether any have used unmeet expressions justly blameable? |
A26946 | nor whether any odd Person, or Persons, called Protestants, have Ignorace enough to entangle them in an error in this Point? |
A26946 | nor whether there are any that Write against, or accuse each other on this account, and would make the World believe that we are of contrary minds? |
A26946 | or as if Subjects were not reasonable Creatures, or could obey without the use of Reason discerning whom ▪ and how far to obey? |
A26943 | But is not the power of Discipline given them in their Ordination? |
A26943 | But what is this less than the casting a stumbling Block in the way of his weak Brethren? |
A26943 | Do they with- hold mental communion from Parish- Assemblies, as by Law established( i. e.) as they are parts of the Diocesane ● nstitution? |
A26943 | Doth he hold Catholick Communion mentally with the Universal Church? |
A26943 | May we separate without contracting the guilt of Schisme? |
A26943 | The which considered, can Kneeling, wherewith Papists honour their Breaden God, be honourable to Christ in his holy Sacrament? |
A26943 | This being so, May we by any Act or Deed contribute to the fixing and establishing the Diocesane Episcopacy amongst us? |
A26943 | What then must we do? |
A26943 | Why doth he write so much for it, and can not suffer a few Lines in Manuscript to pass without a publick Confutation? |
A26943 | doth Mr. Baxter say and unsay, or is his Conscience against communicating with the parish Churches, and his Practice for it? |
A26920 | But why did you not candidly recite those reasonings, by which in that place I manifested the question to be ridiculous? |
A26920 | But, do you regard nothing in duty but the Essence? |
A26920 | Did you not intimate in these words, that I make it as necessary to salvation as these words import? |
A26920 | If a man have Ability and Opportunity, will not attending wholly to the work in hand, best Edifie him and further the success? |
A26920 | Is it not you now that forget the case of weak Christians? |
A26920 | Is it therefore no duty, because few perform it? |
A26920 | Nay doth not your saying that if I do but say[ It is ridiculous, you must be silent] imply that I do but barely say so? |
A26920 | Nothing at all the Integrity? |
A26920 | Nothing the Degree? |
A26920 | Now I perceive we differ indeed ▪ Do you think that neither unconverted nor unassured doubting persons, are called to Meditate much of Heaven? |
A26920 | Or may I doubt lest you did for want of leisure, confound the several parts of my Writing? |
A26920 | Tell me if you can, why the same arguing is not as strong against long Conference, or long Preaching? |
A26920 | What if I had given you a scheme of the admirably accurate Method of Prayer, which is found in the Lords Prayer? |
A26920 | What then? |
A27034 | And will you feign Christ to promise them help on condition they do it without? |
A27034 | Are these men worthy to be talkt with? |
A27034 | Are 〈 ◊ 〉 ordained with fasting, prayer, and imposition of hands? |
A27034 | Christ telleth us that a wise man will consider whether he can go through with it, before he build or make war? |
A27034 | For how shall we believe on him of whom we have not heard, and how shall we hear without a Preacher? |
A27034 | God gave not all the gift of Miracles that were employed in his work even in the Apostles daies: Are all workers of Miracles? |
A27034 | How common? |
A27034 | If you know not who they be or where, then how know you that there are any such? |
A27034 | It seems the rest were not bound to be Christians? |
A27034 | It tends to make men mad and as Ideots, that must know and believe no more then they see: what ▪ kind of folks must these be? |
A27034 | M 〈 … 〉 it be by one of a superiour Order? |
A27034 | Must no Parents teach their children to know Christ, but such as can work Miracles? |
A27034 | We challenge the adversary to name us the true Church and Ministry; if these be none of them, where be they, and who are they? |
A27034 | Whatever Doctrine we are preaching, the Opposers ▪ work is, to call us deceivers, and ask, How we prove our selves true Ministers? |
A27034 | Who then shall Ordain or consecrate the Pope? |
A27034 | and how shall they preach unless they be sent? |
A27034 | that know not that there is either Prince or Parliament, City or Countrey, or any folks in the world but those they have seen? |
A76168 | 4 verse, who hath hardned himself against him and hath prospered? |
A76168 | And now what is your resolution, perhaps you have been Enemie to Christ under the name of Christians, will you be so still? |
A76168 | Lord what wouldst thou have me to do? |
A76168 | Sinner I beseech thee in behalf of thy poor Soul not to renounce thy Saviour, till thou hast found a better Master, say as Peter, whither shall we go? |
A76168 | What would you now give to know for certain how it will then go with you? |
A76168 | Why no priviledge or power in the word can save them that doth not kiss the Son? |
A76181 | For who should strengthen the Peoples hearts and defend the Cause of the LORD against them, if such a Ministry were down? |
A26854 | And because, Sir, it is possible you may be asked, Who it is that thus boldly makes a Challenge unto one of our Learned Prelates? |
A26854 | And is it any wonder that those that are such Enemies to Kings, should not be friends to Bishops? |
A26854 | And therefore as God asked Adam and Eve, How, came you to know that you are naked? |
A26854 | But indeed is there in these words of ours so great a crime? |
A26854 | But what need I use any other Instances then that which was the matter of our dispute? |
A26854 | Did you or can you examine so many hundred years practise of the Church as Mr. Baxter speaks of? |
A26854 | Did you or can you your selves read those General Councels? |
A26854 | I mean the Government of the Church by Bishops in the sense wherein it is asserted and practised in one Church? |
A26854 | Is there more then he said before, or is it any defence of his Assertion at all? |
A26854 | Is this opinion inconsistent with all Government? |
A26854 | Or why did he perswade Subjects to take up Arms against their Soveraign? |
A26854 | Should I not have been judged unmeet to live in any Governed society? |
A26854 | What answer can they make to these demands, but that which Eve made unto God? |
A26854 | What then was he that deposed them? |
A26854 | if he do, why did he so furiously oppose that which all General Councels approve of and confirm? |
A26854 | if he would have them believe so, I demand again, whether he doth believe it himself or no? |
A26854 | nay, that judgest thy Mother, when thou doest the same, or worse, thing, then those are for which thou condemnest her? |
A26953 | 1. Who are you that dare dispute against God? |
A26953 | 4. Who is it( then) that with you goes for a Believer, or a Christian? |
A26953 | And how weak in Faith are the most of true Believers? |
A26953 | And that as verily as I ever see a man? |
A26953 | But why would not God let us have the SIGHT of Heaven and Hell; being that would have prevailed for our Conversion more generally and more certainly? |
A26953 | Do you count Faith an Infallible sort of Knowledge then? |
A26953 | Does it not concern every man, then, to make sure of this Faith? |
A26953 | How plain is the reason, that Believers are seriously holy, just, and charitable? |
A26953 | How plain is the reason, that Vnbelievers are careless of their hearts and ways; and mock at Believers care, and take them for fools and mad men? |
A26953 | If Faith be the Eye by which I do see, whereby should I quicken my self to live by it? |
A26953 | If I had seen Lazarus in Abraham''s Bosom? |
A26953 | If the Reward and Punishment were seen, what should difference wise men and fools good men and bad? |
A26953 | In worldly matters, men can go to much cost and pains for things they never saw; why not in spiritual matters? |
A26953 | O how rare a Jewel is true Faith? |
A26953 | O should I then ever chuse to be ungodly, or be patient of so being? |
A26953 | Or for too much and plain Preaching? |
A26953 | Or had a Messenger from God to tell me, I must die to morrow? |
A26953 | Or if it be not, wherewithal should I stir up my self to seek Faith and the Life of Faith? |
A26953 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, why hast thou made me thus? |
A26953 | Should I ever be drawn away by Temptations again as I have been? |
A26953 | Should I ever be offended with a Minister again, for plainest Reproof, and closest Exhortation? |
A26953 | Should I ever be quiet under uncertainty of my Reconciliation unto God? |
A26953 | Should I ever stick at sufferings when God calls for them from me? |
A26953 | Should I not give over my greedy pursuit of worldly Wealth and Credit? |
A26953 | Should I not hear at another rate than ever yet I heard a Sermon? |
A26953 | Should I not highly value Christ, his Spirit, his Grace, his Promises, his Word, his Ordinances? |
A26953 | Should I not plead for the most serious Godliness? |
A26953 | Should I not say in my heart, that the most gainful sin is worse than madness? |
A26953 | Should I not then be all for Peace, Quietness and Love, with all that love the Lord Jesus Christ, and are seeking invisible things? |
A26953 | Should a man understand no more than he sees? |
A26953 | WHat means the Apostle by these words? |
A26953 | Well, how shall I know whether I have this true Faith and saving, tho''in the least and lowest degree of it? |
A26953 | What should I be if I had seen the things that God hath done already in time past? |
A26953 | What should I be if I heard Satan accusing me for all my sins unto God, and calling for justice against me? |
A26953 | What should I be if I saw the great and dreadful day of Judgment as Christ doth describe it? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I had seen and did now see the Damned in their miseries? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I saw the Lord continually before me? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I saw the face of Death, and were under the power of a mortal sickness, and were given over by all Physicians and Friends? |
A26953 | What should I be, if I saw the glory of Heaven above? |
A26953 | Why so? |
A23663 | 1. he saith, What shall we say then? |
A23663 | 27. saying, where is boasting then? |
A23663 | 6. said to be better Promises? |
A23663 | And God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself, and how? |
A23663 | And how did they so? |
A23663 | And in doing so, what more stress doth he lay upon Duty in this kind, than they that trust to be justified and saved upon their believing? |
A23663 | And in doing so, what more stress doth he lay upon Duty in this kind, than they that trust to be justified and saved upon their believing? |
A23663 | And what Nation is there so great, that hath Statutes and Iudgments so righteous, as all this Law which I set before you this day? |
A23663 | And what are they adopted to, but to an Inheritance for the future? |
A23663 | And why would not all this bring them to Heaven? |
A23663 | And yet how weak a motive is this in comparison of what comes from God, to reduce men to their love and loyalty to him? |
A23663 | But is any man so senseless as to think that Christ made them to see, to hear, and to speak, while they remained blind, deaf, and dumb? |
A23663 | By what Law? |
A23663 | David dealing so with Saul, though a bitter enemy, melted him into tears, and made him cry, Is this thy voice, my son David? |
A23663 | Do we make void the Law through Faith? |
A23663 | For what Nation is there so great, that hath God so nigh unto them, as the Lord our God is in all things that we call upon him for? |
A23663 | He that believeth What? |
A23663 | How can ye believe( saith our Saviour) which seek honour one of another, and seek not the honour that cometh from God only? |
A23663 | How was it then reckoned? |
A23663 | Is he the God of the Iews only? |
A23663 | Is the Law then against the Promises? |
A23663 | Just like some Iews of old, who though they were very bad in their lives, yet leaned upon the Lord, and said, is not the Lord among us? |
A23663 | Make you a new Heart, and a new Spirit, for why will ye dye, O house of Israel? |
A23663 | Of Works? |
A23663 | Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory? |
A23663 | Our Saviour saith, Many will say unto me in that day, Lord, Lord, open unto us: Have we not prophesied in thy Name? |
A23663 | That is, he can not enjoy it, and why? |
A23663 | Was not Abraham our Father justified by Works when he had offered Isaac his Son upon the Altar? |
A23663 | What doth it profit my brethren( saith he) though a man say he hath Faith, and have not Works? |
A23663 | Wherefore then serveth the Law? |
A23663 | Why doth this Faith remain alone in some, when as it is accompanied with Works in others? |
A23663 | as some it seems were ready to infer; God forbid, saith he; how shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? |
A23663 | can Faith save him? |
A23663 | for by Adoption they are made Heirs: If a Son, then an Heir of God through Christ: an Heir of what? |
A23663 | is he not also of the Gentiles? |
A23663 | none evil can come upon us? |
A23663 | shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? |
A23663 | when he was in Circumcision, or in Vncircumcision? |
A26983 | After all this shall wée again forsake thée, and deal falsly in thy Covenant? |
A26983 | And hast thou indéed forgiven us so great a debt, by so precious a Ransome? |
A26983 | And if you may mistake in any thing, may it not be in as great things as these? |
A26983 | And shall wée not love thée, that hast thus loved us? |
A26983 | And wee crave leave to ask whether you do not your selves in some things mistake, or may not do so for ought you know? |
A26983 | Can your heart endure, or your hands bee strong in the day when God shall deal with you? |
A26983 | Do you beleeve in God the Father Almighty,& c? |
A26983 | Do you remain stedfast in the Covenant, which you made in Baptism your self? |
A26983 | For if when wee were Enemies wee were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more being Reconciled, wee shall bee saved by his life? |
A26983 | He forgiveth our Iniquities, and will remember our sins no more; who shall lay any thing to Charge of Gods elect? |
A26983 | Hee that spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us All, how shall hee not with him also freely give us all things? |
A26983 | How glad would you make the peoples hearts? |
A26983 | How good and how happy a thing would it bee for Brethren to dwell together in unity? |
A26983 | If any man bee in Christ, hee is a new Creature, old things are passed away, behold all things are become new? |
A26983 | If men cut off the lives of those that break their laws, will God bee out- faced by the pride, and stubborness of sinners? |
A26983 | If you say, Rulers imposition maketh indifferent things cease to be indifferent? |
A26983 | If you will needs use such things your selves, will it gain you so much to force them upon others, as will answer all the foresaid Inconveniences? |
A26983 | Is it not for matter and phrase at least as agreeable to the holy Scriptures? |
A26983 | It is God that Justifieth, who is hee that Condemneth? |
A26983 | O how should wee bee covered with shame, and loath our selves, that have both procured the death of Christ by sin, and sinned against it? |
A26983 | O save him from the Gall of Bitterness, and from the Bonds of his Iniquity? |
A26983 | Or will you not mourn at last( with weeping and gnashing of teeth) And say; How have I hated Instruction, and my heart despised Reproof? |
A26983 | Shall wée not love thy Servants, and forgive our Neighbours their little debt? |
A26983 | Will it cost you as dear to grant this Liberty, or abate these things, as the Imposition will cost your Brethren and you? |
A26983 | Will you defend it as your friend? |
A26983 | Will you endeavour by your own Teaching, and Example, and Restraint, to keep him from wickedness, and train him up in a holy life? |
A26983 | Will you then deny it, or will you stand to all the reasonings, or excuses, by which you would now extenuate or cover it? |
A26983 | Wilt thou indéed give us to reign with Christ in Glory, and sée thy face, and love thée, and bée beloved of thée for ever? |
A26983 | and doth this shew that you love your neighbours as your selves? |
A26983 | and that so many have been put upon so new and so generally dis- relished a thing? |
A26983 | and whether your understandings are not still imperfect, and all men differ not in some opinions or other? |
A26983 | can it be expected, that wee should all be past erring about the smallest Ceremonies and Circumstances of worship? |
A26983 | for your souls sake, let not Satan abuse your understanding, and sin befool you, must you not die? |
A26983 | will sin goe then with you for as light a matter as it doth now? |
A26065 | 21000. if they could engage them to our ruine, what would they not do? |
A26065 | A famous example of Polanus Nolinus, that when he had given all that he had away, and being asked, why he would give so much to the poor? |
A26065 | Besides, who can answer they shall be better by the retu ● … n of the dispossessed party? |
A26065 | But it may be some others will object and say, why should we that are Ministers, engage our s ● … lves so much in this business? |
A26065 | But what if an open Enemy should come, could or ought the Subjects joyn against him with their new Magistrate? |
A26065 | But you may demand, How shall it be known when the common good holdeth it self on the possessour''s hand? |
A26065 | Have not many of you spent your blood in this Cause, yea, how many young ones in this City have lost their blood? |
A26065 | He crys out, shall the best of Governours, the greatest of mercies seem intolerable? |
A26065 | How many professors will rashly rail, and lie in their passions; how few will take well a reproof, but rather defend their sin? |
A26065 | IS Prelacy indeed the way of Gospel- government,& c? |
A26065 | If you say, Well, but were it not better we bent all our forces to some Accommodation? |
A26065 | MOses fell on his f ● … ce, as Joshua here, and makes God cry out Let me alone; will this Cure it? |
A26065 | Secondly, If he wi ● … l needs thrust himself upon the hazard, when he needs not, whose fault is that? |
A26065 | Some of your Brethren have come in and submitted to you, Stars of the first Magnitude, and may it not be expected the Sun and Moon nill do so too? |
A26065 | That is, why come not in the Scotish A ● … my against the King? |
A26065 | This they can not subscribe to: why? |
A26065 | To what a dead low ebb were We brought, our liberty almost swallowed up, and turned into slavery, our Religion into Popery? |
A26065 | VVhat then was he that deposed them? |
A26065 | Was not that Calling as bad as the Men? |
A26065 | Were not the Book of Service, and the Book of Canons obtruded on them, the Occasion of their late mercies? |
A26065 | What warrant have we to take up Arms to maintain Religion? |
A26065 | What wilt thou do unto thy great name? |
A26065 | What would the Kings party do, if they could engage another Nation to their help? |
A26065 | Why rest you not contented with this? |
A26065 | and the Tyranny of a few of their Prelates, a means to unburthen them of their whole Prelacy? |
A26065 | did the King forgive? |
A26065 | what a Reformation hath follow''d at the heels of this glorious Ordinance? |
A76214 | And should not a Creature live to the Ends and Uses which it was made for? |
A76214 | And that the attaining of such an Endless Glory, had been worth thy greatest care and labour? |
A76214 | At last bethink thee what thou art? |
A76214 | Do you not heartily wish that this had been your course? |
A76214 | Hast thou got more by the world and sin, than Heaven is worth? |
A76214 | How justly are they condemned, who sell their part of endless Joyes, for a shadow and dream of transitory pleasures? |
A76214 | How wilt thou answer for such treacherous ungodliness? |
A76214 | O how much happier are the blessed Souls in Heaven, than we? |
A76214 | Therefore let it be speedily your work, to try whether this be your case or not? |
A76214 | Thou art almost at the end of worldly pleasures, and hast all that ever they will do for thee? |
A76214 | What think you now of a sinful and of a holy life? |
A76214 | Would you take this course if it were to do again? |
A76214 | and God recover you? |
A76214 | and for what End and Work thou camest into the world? |
A76214 | to hate your sin, and to live and love a holy life, in mortifying the flesh, and seeking Heaven before the world? |
A76214 | what suffering too dear for such a Blessedness? |
A52204 | Actually so, or, that it may and can reduce into Act? |
A52204 | But what needeth to add any more? |
A52204 | Did not Sol ● mon King''of ▪ Israel sin by these things? |
A52204 | Is God Vnrighteous when he taketh Vengeance? |
A52204 | Or if so, what it is to be the Author of it? |
A52204 | Shall not the Judge of all the Earth do right? |
A52204 | Should a Judg so proceeding, be like unto God? |
A52204 | The Fact, or Omition I mean, not the anomie only, which results from the same? |
A52204 | The Question is whether Sin hath an ● Efficient, or Author, or not? |
A52204 | The Question is, of what all this is Denominated? |
A52204 | The Question is, what according to them, God did more in the Inspiration of the true Prophets, than in the false, in linea Physica as they speak? |
A52204 | VVhat colour of Justice were there? |
A52204 | What can all this and the like be affirmed of: but of somewhat that hath Entity? |
A52204 | What is a Natural Faculty or Active power, but an Ability connate to the Subject,( founded in nature,) rendering it potent to such an Effect? |
A52204 | What is it that he can do? |
A52204 | What shall we think of his Upbraiding Men for it, and protesting he willed the contrary? |
A52204 | What though a m ● n can not turn the course of the Sun in the Firmament? |
A52204 | Where then is the Equity of ● he Law? |
A52204 | Who can make out these things? |
A52204 | Whose Heart is it that reproacheth him not for preventable Miscarriages? |
A52204 | Why will you die saith he? |
A52204 | You know the Arguments that mov''d you then; and what hinders but they should now prevail? |
A52204 | absit, God forbid, saith the Apostle: how then shall he Judge the World? |
A52204 | and 5.20? |
A52204 | and can not obtain of himself to do otherwise? |
A52204 | and said to be ours by real Inhesion and Contagion, as the whole Church consesseth? |
A52204 | or by what shall the Righteousness of God be vindicat ● d? |
A52204 | or if it be nihil, a non- Entity, how then doth it descend? |
A52204 | or of meerness in the Recompence? |
A52204 | or to what End should it be designed? |
A52204 | or why should it be termed Sin to want it? |
A52204 | or will it solve the matter to tell them that it''s a Privation, Darkness, a non- Entity, and therefore he could not cause it? |
A52204 | what did they more in the One, than in the Other? |
A52204 | what is this that thou hast done? |
A52204 | what it is, that whoever can justly be ch ● rged therewith, the G ● ilt of all that cleaveth to him? |
A52204 | when it''s by no fault of his that it''s wanting, nor was it ever by God intended to be continued? |
A26927 | 5. of November, to thank God that he delivered us from the superstition, Idolatry, Heresie, Tyranny and cruelty of Rome: and shall we admit them? |
A26927 | Be wise O ye Kings, be instructed O ye Judges of the Earth? |
A26927 | But is the worshipping of Creatures but a quirk ● s with you? |
A26927 | Catholicks( and shall they be Indulgent?) |
A26927 | Do you not know this to be true? |
A26927 | Idolatry is not to be Tolerated? |
A26927 | If so small the difference between us, why so great your cruelty towards us? |
A26927 | If you keep correspondence with our enemies, and practise against us, when you are in danger of punishment; what will you do when you are tolerated? |
A26927 | Is it persecution to allow something of your superfluities for the Kings necessities? |
A26927 | Our Saviour answereth what is written in the Law, how readest thou? |
A26927 | That way that leaves men, no certain way to be saved is not to be Tolerated: Popery is that way& c. When poor Souls would know how to be saved? |
A26927 | They say hear the Church: If he say how shall I know wether the Church is infallible? |
A26927 | What have we to do any more with Idols? |
A26927 | What shall I do saith the man in the Gospel that I may inherit eternal Life? |
A26927 | Will you allow them amongst us whose business it is to perswade the world that you and we are damned? |
A26927 | and to God, Thou art not able to instruct us for salvation without humane tradition, but a Toy? |
A26927 | and will you suffer Anti- Christ to advance himself above every thing that is called God? |
A26927 | doth not God see this? |
A26927 | doth not he observe it? |
A26927 | for you — how modestly you insinuate — should not be persecuted? |
A26927 | hath he exalted you, and will you see him thus debased? |
A26927 | have you any care of precious Souls? |
A26927 | how can we know the Scripture and believe it? |
A26927 | if we can not trust our sences how can we know you, and obey you? |
A26927 | is saying to a peice of bread, Thou art God, but a trifle? |
A26927 | shall God avenge? |
A26927 | to what end hath God advanced you but to see that men lived according to his Law hath God raised you up? |
A26927 | to what end hath he set up you, but to see that men should walk according to his will? |
A26927 | will you not keep them to the Sure word of prophecy? |
A26927 | would you see an Usurper upon your Throne, and can you endure stocks and stones in Gods house? |
A26927 | yea many of them come to our Churches now, — why may they not all do so? |
A26927 | — Should not be persecuted: — and who of you is persecuted? |
A26927 | — were we burned, massacred, tortured, banished, imprisoned, famished, upon quirkes, and differences in words, rather then in real points? |
A26914 | 2. Who would you have to be Judge in this matter? |
A26914 | And if Princes and people will believe all this, and will be deceived, and will voluntarily subject themselves to such an Usurper, who can help it? |
A26914 | And if horning, or Writs de Excommunicato Capiendo, or imprisonment, or burning men as Hereticks follow this, all this is the Magistrates own doing? |
A26914 | And is not all this enough to satisfie you, that we claim no part of the Magistrates Office? |
A26914 | And what would you or any man have more? |
A26914 | And who will trouble the Church unnecessarily about words and names? |
A26914 | And would they not encrease this pollution that would have the most vicious to be equally received with the best? |
A26914 | Are not such regular proceedings necessary even in Cases of meer arbitration? |
A26914 | Be not righteous over much; neither make thy self over wise: why shouldst thou destroy thy self? |
A26914 | But how shall men be heard, if they be not cited? |
A26914 | Can you sh ● w their Interest plainlier than all this? |
A26914 | Do you think this is not plain dealing enough, if men are willing to understand? |
A26914 | Etiamne Equisoni suo subjectus Rex? |
A26914 | Etiamre medico? |
A26914 | For what dishonour is it for a man to be subject to his Maker and Redeemer? |
A26914 | For who will have a Co- partner with him in his Kingdom, that may choose? |
A26914 | Hath not all Christs Church exercised such a Discipline as I have described since the Apostles days till now? |
A26914 | How shall such things be Justly and Regularly, transacted, if there be not a known Time and Place, and if Accusers and Witnesses be not summoned? |
A26914 | If Rulers will make such Laws, and if they will so far be Executioners of the Clergies Decrees, who can hinder them? |
A26914 | If it be, how can our Religion be good? |
A26914 | If it be, with whom shall the ignorant trust the conduct of their souls, that will not make merchandize of them? |
A26914 | If not — If you would, it must be such a difference as Christ hath appointed us to make? |
A26914 | If not, why should you think that others will not be as just and impartial as you would be? |
A26914 | If you say, Why then did you not forbear a work so ungrateful? |
A26914 | In such cases which must you conform to and obey? |
A26914 | Is it not the wickedness of Christians that is the chief hardening of Turks and other Infidels against Christianity? |
A26914 | Is not Faith for Holiness, and did not Christ come to purifie a peculiar people, and restore us to the Image of God? |
A26914 | Is the Office so malignant to infect all that undertake it? |
A26914 | Nay, what greater honour can there be? |
A26914 | Or all the Bishops of Christendome without exception, were ever present at any Council? |
A26914 | Or is not Reformation a righter way than extirpation, of Discipline as well as of Doctrine and Worship? |
A26914 | Or shall he whom by mis- information you refuse or reject from your family or service, become your houshold servant in despight of you? |
A26914 | Shall every one be Judge himself? |
A26914 | Shall they force themselves into our familiarity or communion in spight of us? |
A26914 | The Bishop commandeth you to use a Ceremony, or to keep a holy day, and your Parents forbid it you? |
A26914 | Undoubtedly they give away more of their own Interest hereby, than you have opened? |
A26914 | What if the Magistrate, Minister, and Parents have opposite Commands? |
A26914 | What impudency then is it in these men to challenge me to prove, and yet overlook my proof? |
A26914 | Where they have no profit, no preterment, no man- pleasing, no worldly honour to invite them? |
A26914 | Whether it be convenient for the King to make Church- men Magistrates, or not? |
A26914 | Which of them is to be obeyed? |
A26914 | Who can administer on these terms? |
A26914 | Who had not rather Rule alone, than divide his Kingdom with the Pope? |
A26914 | Who were the Judges of the Capacity of persons to be baptized, or the desert of persons to be rejected? |
A26914 | Whom do you think Christ committed this business to? |
A26914 | Would you be partial and false to the Truth of Christ your self, if you were the Pastor of a Church? |
A26914 | Would you have any difference made between the Christian Church and the Pagan and Infidel world? |
A26914 | Yea, where it is like to diminish their gain, to hinder them from preferment, to make them hated by most on whom their discipline is exercised? |
A26914 | doth the Jansenist himself therefore disclaim all Temporal Power in the Church, or is he just to Kings? |
A26914 | e. g. The Magistrate bids you meet in one place for publick Worship; the Bishop in another, and the Parent in a third? |
A27044 | 2 And to be presently awakened to use them better before the rest be taken away? |
A27044 | 3 But let us all know the use of suffering, what cure hath this Medicine wrought? |
A27044 | And are we not taught by such a glass as this, how Great and how Good a God we serve? |
A27044 | And how farre they know the things on Earth? |
A27044 | And how is Gods strength manifested in our weakness? |
A27044 | And how their state before the Resurrection differs from what it will be after? |
A27044 | And how they converse with one another? |
A27044 | And how they do enjoy? |
A27044 | And how they see, Praise and enjoy God? |
A27044 | And is not this Providence of God, and this example of our deceased friend of use to us? |
A27044 | And many more? |
A27044 | And whether Christ ever directed the Church to exclude such, or did not plainly require the contrary? |
A27044 | And whether the Apostles ever excluded such, or made such Rules? |
A27044 | And why do we so much fear every Thorn in the Flesh: Every Sickness, Pain, or Cross, as if Pride could be prevented or killed at too dear a rate? |
A27044 | But how doth God do it? |
A27044 | But how doth Paul endure the Thorn? |
A27044 | But how doth Paul pray? |
A27044 | But how was Paul in danger of being exalted above measure, by the abundance of Revelations? |
A27044 | But if we suffer not, how shall suffering- graces be exercised, faith, patience, self- denial, and hope? |
A27044 | But who put this Thorn into Pauls Flesh? |
A27044 | Did they live then more humbly, peaceably and heavenly? |
A27044 | Do we not find that we are better when we suffer than when we are high? |
A27044 | Have you heard and seen more of heaven than others? |
A27044 | How easily should we bear our short afflictions? |
A27044 | How far one or not one with Christ, and one another? |
A27044 | How far they have still sensation? |
A27044 | How greedily do some Religious People desire it? |
A27044 | How shall grace and divine strength be manifested to our selves and others? |
A27044 | How shall we get the benefit of suffering, if we feel it not? |
A27044 | How they are indivuate, and yet how far one? |
A27044 | How they subsist, and act out of the body? |
A27044 | If Faith have not taught you to pray as Christians, methinks feeling should teach you to pray as men? |
A27044 | Is Pride so rare or so small a sin? |
A27044 | Is not grace better than ease or life? |
A27044 | Is not this a Paradise indeed, that is a place of purest greatest pleasure? |
A27044 | O had we lived as Beleivers should have lived, how much more of heavenly mindedness, and delight might we have attained than we have done? |
A27044 | O how it would overcome all these distrustful trembling fears of death, and make us long, and grown and cry, to be with Christ? |
A27044 | O let our pains drive us all to God, who hath not some? |
A27044 | O what a help to mortification would such a sight of Paradise be? |
A27044 | Our souls would fain have more sensible perceptions of themselves, as to their substance, and their separate state? |
A27044 | Paul was thither taken up; had he no interest there, no hopes, no friends, no business there; VVhy then should he have been rapt up thither? |
A27044 | Say not, Why then is it my duty to pray? |
A27044 | Sicknesses are all abroad, what house, how few persons have not some; and yet is there a Prayerless house, or person? |
A27044 | The spirit of a man( if sound and well) will sustain( his bodily) infirmities: But a wounded spirit who can bear? |
A27044 | To repent of our neglect of such helps as God is now removing? |
A27044 | VVhat life would it put into all holy duty? |
A27044 | VVhy should we enquire, when they must not be uttered? |
A27044 | Was not Paul a strong believer? |
A27044 | Was that Church therein guided by the Spirit of Christ, which made the Canon which ipso facto excommunicateth such? |
A27044 | We would fain know more of the decrees of God, and how all his acts are Eternal, and yet produce their effects in time? |
A27044 | Were we designed but to inhabit the Sun, or some resplendent Star, how high is it above this Earth? |
A27044 | What faithful Soul that hath been bred up in the School of afflictions doth not by experience say that it was good for him? |
A27044 | What is it in this confused and imperfect VVorld that hath not its inconveniencies? |
A27044 | What is it that Grace is sufficient for? |
A27044 | What may we conjecture those things are which Paul had seen and must not utter? |
A27044 | What trifling should we think most of the busles of this world? |
A27044 | Whether they are substances utterly immaterial, how they are generated? |
A27044 | Whether wise and good men could find no better? |
A27044 | Why did Christ pray against his Cup? |
A26936 | And darest thou refuse this when God and Conscience do command it? |
A26936 | And dost thou see and know this, and yet wilt thou not be instructed, and be wise in time? |
A26936 | And is he not self- condemned, that honoureth the Names of Saints, and will not imitate them? |
A26936 | And is not this Christ the Author of our Holiness, and this Scripture the Commander of it? |
A26936 | And is this Nature given thee in vain? |
A26936 | And what can we do to satisfie Justice, and reconcile such a rebel Soul to God? |
A26936 | And who can be our Owner, but He that made us? |
A26936 | And who can be our highest Governour, but our Owner? |
A26936 | Ask your Hearts seriously, What is it that I shall need at a dying Hour? |
A26936 | Believe: Tell me now what is the full Resolution and Desire of your Will, concerning all this which you Believe? |
A26936 | Blessed are they that are thy faithful Subjects; But who hath hardened himself against thee, and hath prospered? |
A26936 | Can not Carcases and Dust instruct thee to see the end of Earthly Glory, and all the Pleasures of the Flesh? |
A26936 | Can they be wise for thee, that are foolish for themselves? |
A26936 | Can you travel one whole day to such an End, and never think of the Place that you are going to? |
A26936 | Did they deride or persecute a Holy Life? |
A26936 | Do they then speak well of Lust and Pleasures and magnifie the Wealth and Honours of the World? |
A26936 | For want of these, how woful are our divisions? |
A26936 | Had they not rather die as the most mortified Saints, then as careless, fleshly, worldly Sinners? |
A26936 | How dangerous a case is that Man in, who hath so greedy a Beast continually to restrain? |
A26936 | How deplorable then is a World ● ings case? |
A26936 | How should that Man be filled with Joy, who must live in the Joys of Heaven for ever? |
A26936 | How small else would the Church seem in the World? |
A26936 | Is it a Controversie, whether thy Flesh must shortly perish? |
A26936 | Is there any Felicity more desirable than Heaven? |
A26936 | O Man, canst thou pass one day in Company, or alone in Business or in Idleness, without some sober Thoughts of Everlastingness? |
A26936 | Unless it be some desperate forsaken Wretch do they not all speak well of a Holy Life? |
A26936 | WHat do you believe concerning GOD? |
A26936 | WHat is the Christian Religion? |
A26936 | Were they not more strictly Holy than any that thou knowest? |
A26936 | What Miseries come from small beginnings? |
A26936 | What a Mercy is it to be driven from the World to God, when the love of the World is the greatest danger of the Soul? |
A26936 | What believe you of Man''s Redemption by Jesus Christ? |
A26936 | What believe you of Man''s fall into sin and misery? |
A26936 | What believe you of the Creation, and the nature of Man, and the Law which was given to him? |
A26936 | What believe you of the Holy Catholick Church, the Communion of Saints, and the Forgiveness of Sins? |
A26936 | What believe you of the Holy Ghost? |
A26936 | What believe you of the Resurrection and Everlasting Life? |
A26936 | What haste doth it make? |
A26936 | What is that Practice which by this Covenant, 〈 ◊ 〉 are obliged to? |
A26936 | What is the New Testament, or Covenant, 〈 ◊ 〉 Law of Grace? |
A26936 | When Custom hath rooted your natural Corruptions, are they easily rooted up? |
A26936 | Where is our Covenant- part and Duty fullier opened? |
A26936 | Where is the Christian Religion most fully opened, and entirely contained? |
A26936 | Whether any deserve thy Love and Obedience more than God? |
A26936 | Who can be safe that standeth long on so terrible a precipice? |
A26936 | Will a Nature that is Carnal resist and overcome the Flesh, and abhor the Sin which it most dearly loveth? |
A26936 | Will a Worldly Mind overcome the World? |
A26936 | Will a few days fleshly Pleasures pay for the loss of heaven and thy immortal Soul? |
A26936 | Will they help thee to Heaven, who are running so furiously to Hell? |
A26936 | With what Eyes do they read the Gospel, who see not this in every Page? |
A26936 | You are loath to be Heathens or Infidels: But do you think a Christian excelleth them but in Opinion? |
A26936 | and darest thou live unready, and part with Heaven for such a World as this? |
A26936 | and how quickly will it be gone? |
A26936 | and then how highly will it be valued; when a Minute of it can never be recalled? |
A26936 | and thy thankful Remembrance more then Christ, and thy Care and Diligence more than thy salvation? |
A26936 | and wilt thou yet provide for it before thy Soul? |
A26936 | and wish that their Lives had been spent in the most fervent Love of God, and strictest Obedience to his Laws? |
A26936 | or Friends to thee, that are undoing themselves? |
A26936 | or any Misery more terrible than Hell? |
A26936 | or any thing so regardable as that which is everlasting? |
A26936 | or have any pity on thy Soul, when they make a Jest of their own Damnation? |
A26936 | or will thy Sin and thy Prosperity be sweet at Death, and in the Day of Judgment? |
A26936 | that if he do but neglect his Watch one Hour, is ready to run him headlong into Hell? |
A26979 | 8, 9, 10. and judge, and be ashamed[ Will a man rob God? |
A26979 | And besides this Ministry( as much as they revile them) who have we to carry on the work of the Gospel? |
A26979 | And doth the Christian Religion consist in such ridiculous accusations as these? |
A26979 | And if I had any cause to be weary of the Christian Catholick Reformed Religion, what reason have I to turn Quaker any more then to any other sect? |
A26979 | And seriously would these wise men have no man called Father, or sit uppermost? |
A26979 | And shall we play an old game as if it were a new one, where all have sped so ill before? |
A26979 | And shall we run our selves into the fire, which hath consumed such Heresies through former ages? |
A26979 | And they will revile the Ministers as blind guides, and tell their people they are all in darkness, and the way to damnation? |
A26979 | And what do they preach? |
A26979 | And where is this forbidden? |
A26979 | And whether the Quakers have not condemned themselves in condemning these sects that hold their opinions? |
A26979 | And yet all have sufficient Light within them? |
A26979 | Are not they men? |
A26979 | But see now a new generation of preachers; and what is their message? |
A26979 | But ye say, Wherein have we robbed thee? |
A26979 | Can I see the witness in him? |
A26979 | Consider also how suitable their Doctrine is to the Interest and Pleasure both of the Papists and the Devil? |
A26979 | Do you need any proof? |
A26979 | Doth God lay mens salvation upon an hour- glass, or a Pulpit, or being called Master? |
A26979 | Doth it go well with any Nation on earth without them? |
A26979 | For if they are perfect and sinless, what''s that but a great part of heaven? |
A26979 | For what can they have more then a sinless perfection? |
A26979 | How could the Devil himself shew Pride more notoriously? |
A26979 | How do they prove that they are more in the right then all these? |
A26979 | If all, why not the Ministers, and their people? |
A26979 | If darkness, who would have such Preachers? |
A26979 | If light, what needless labour is this, when all men have sufficient Light already? |
A26979 | Know you not that Heresies must arise, that those that are approved may be made manifest? |
A26979 | O what a shame is this to your profession? |
A26979 | O what would he give them that this were but true? |
A26979 | Or have you better enough if all these were down? |
A26979 | Or whether the same point be Heavenly in a Quaker, and Hellish in a Ranter, Papist or Drunkard? |
A26979 | Say I these things as a man? |
A26979 | They will not say, Forgive us our trespasses: For what need they a Christ and pardon that have no sin? |
A26979 | Very few experienced, humble, so ● er Christians, that ever I heard of that turn to them? |
A26979 | Well, and will any but a mad man let go his Christian Faith, before he know where to have a better? |
A26979 | What do they bring to satisfie a wise man that they only among all these and many other sects are in the right? |
A26979 | What good do they where they come? |
A26979 | What is proud boasting if this be not? |
A26979 | What reasonable man would turn Quaker that seeth the common fruit of their Doctrine? |
A26979 | When they damn all the Ministers and Churches of Christ, how can they please the Devil better? |
A26979 | When they have called me Dog and Devil, and abundance of such names, and I have asked them what was my fault? |
A26979 | Where be they? |
A26979 | Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charge? |
A26979 | Will the Gospel be propagated without Preachers? |
A26979 | Will they perswade others with such exceeding pains and zeal to that which they would not do themselves? |
A26979 | Would you not turn Jews and Infidels, and renounce Christ himself, if you had but some body to ● ry you? |
A26979 | Ye take too much upon you — wherefore list ye up your selves above the Congregation of the Lord?] |
A26979 | [ Have not we power to forbear working? |
A26979 | but make people hare both godly Teachers and people whom they loved? |
A26979 | for what can hinder them but sin? |
A26979 | is it light or darkness? |
A26979 | or for he knows not what? |
A26979 | or to the Anabaptists, or the Antinomians, or Libertines, or Familists, or Socinians, or such like? |
A26979 | or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? |
A26979 | or, saith not the Law the same also? |
A26979 | when they proclaim themselves perfect without sin; can they yet think highlier of themselves, or speak highlier of themselves, then this? |
A26979 | who planteth a Vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? |
A26979 | why not to the sect of Papists as well? |
A26979 | — If we have sown to you spiritual things, is it a great thing if we shall reap your carnal things? |
A55108 | 3. we are told, That God condemn''d Sin in the flesh of Christ; but how, which way? |
A55108 | And if meer Forbearance have this effect, what( may we suppose) wou''d have been the consequence of absolute Forgiveness? |
A55108 | And in that other Book to which our Accuser refers us, he thus expresses his Sense, at his very entring upon this Point? |
A55108 | And should not this( will it not) be laid to Heart by such as have any serious Regard to the Welfare of Christianity, or of their own Souls? |
A55108 | But upon this Supposal, That that Law only oblig''d either Christ, or us to suffer, what reason was there for so dismal Apprehensions? |
A55108 | But what Condecency or Becomingness wou''d there have been in it; if Sin might have been pardon''d, and the Sinner sav''d as well without it? |
A55108 | By what Rules their Necessity, or no- Necessity shall be adjusted? |
A55108 | Can a Penalty be said to be forgiven, that was not due? |
A55108 | Can any one think? |
A55108 | Christ is said to have made peace through the Blood of his Cross; but wou''d our Death have avail''d to any such purpose? |
A55108 | Cursed is every one that continues not,& c.''T is denounc''d against no one but the Sinner himself? |
A55108 | Did He bear the stinging Reflections of a guilty Conscience, the horrors of a despairing damned wretch in Hell? |
A55108 | Did He lose all right to, and Interest in God''s Favour and Kindness? |
A55108 | I''m well aware of it; and what then? |
A55108 | If any one that comes after shall use the same Expresions( meaning, the same that Mr. Baxter uses) — I say( and who then dare gain- say it?) |
A55108 | If one Man sin against another, the Judge shall judge him; but if a man sin against the Lord, who shall intreat for him? |
A55108 | Is God unrighteous that taketh vengeance? |
A55108 | Nay, why are not all in Heaven( whom Christ did represent) as well as some there? |
A55108 | Now to what purpose have we all these Passages Transcrib''d by him? |
A55108 | Now will this Accuser say, That in this Sense Christ did sustain, and suffer in the person of Sinners? |
A55108 | Or is not this rather an unrighteous Doctrine, that wou''d reflect the Imputation of Injustice upon the Holy God? |
A55108 | Or shall we say, That He was our Representative, in his Obeying, as well as in his Suffering? |
A55108 | Or yet, that the Arrows of the Almighty do wound, do stick fast in any Soul? |
A55108 | Or, only the value, and not the same full Debt? |
A55108 | Or, with whom the Judgment of this grand Affair shall be entrusted? |
A55108 | So that Death( amongst Men) has the nature of a Punishment in it, but how then comes it to be inflicted, if it be not due? |
A55108 | Some but babes, while others are strong Men in Christ? |
A55108 | This Surety is a Punishment with a witness; but how can it be a righteous one if it be not due? |
A55108 | This therefore is the only Question that can lie betwixt us and our Accuser, Whether Christ was really a Sinner, or not? |
A55108 | Upon this Principle, what hurt can Sin, the grossest wickedness do us? |
A55108 | Was He every one of those very Men for whom He died? |
A55108 | Well, but how must this Design be carried on? |
A55108 | What has he to except against any of the Recited Clauses? |
A55108 | What shall we say? |
A55108 | What shall we then say to those numerous Texts, where we and our Sins are said to be forgiven? |
A55108 | Whence is it that any are expos''d to the fiery Darts of the wicked one? |
A55108 | Whence is it, that He gives up any to their own Hearts Lusts? |
A55108 | Why are not the Influences of the Divine Spirit equally diffus''d? |
A55108 | Why are some( yea, even of the truly sanctify''d) more freed from Sin and Sorrow, than others? |
A55108 | Why, do n''t you observe it, here''s left out a Change of Persons between Christ and us all along? |
A55108 | Yet again, According to this Notion, How can the Eternal Damnation of any Soul consist with Divine Justice? |
A55108 | and is it not in Law paid, if either the Principal or Surety pay it? |
A55108 | or can it be yet due, when''t is already paid? |
A55108 | with what design? |
A26980 | And are all these sects that oppose us, better agreed among themselves? |
A26980 | And can you not hear the Devil in these words of highest Pride and Arrogancy? |
A26980 | And dare you now stand up in their room and make your selves the heirs of their sin, and punishment, and justifie them in all their Malignity? |
A26980 | And do you reproach us with our mercies, if we be out of the Furnace but a little while, in one corner of the world? |
A26980 | And how prove you that we have not the Spirit? |
A26980 | And if we be not persecuted, What means the reproaches of you and all the Drunkards and Malignants about us? |
A26980 | And is there enow that are wiser and better then we to fill up our rooms, if we were out? |
A26980 | And what do they endure all this for but Gods honour and your salvation? |
A26980 | And what else do Quakers and all these sectst that are the enemies of the Ministry? |
A26980 | And what have they got by it? |
A26980 | And why so? |
A26980 | And will you throw stones at their head for endeavouring to save your souls? |
A26980 | And would not you do the like by them if you had power in your hands? |
A26980 | And would these men make all the people thieves and covetous, to take or desire that which never was their own? |
A26980 | But if they had their will, and were rid of the Ministry, alas what would the forlorn wretches do? |
A26980 | But really Sirs, do you think that these men would teach you better? |
A26980 | Can they be so blind as to think a painful Minister doth make it his design to seek himself, or to look after great matters in the world? |
A26980 | Do I need to prove this, which is so much of the substance of the old Testament and the New? |
A26980 | Do not Lawyers, Physitians,& c. live a far easier, and in the world a more honourable plentiful life? |
A26980 | Do not all preach one Gospel, and the same Essentials of the Christian Faith? |
A26980 | Do not you feel these flie in your faces when you oppose the Ministers of Christ? |
A26980 | Do you not understand the meaning of these words against Christs Ministers? |
A26980 | Do you think so many souls would be converted if the Ministry were down? |
A26980 | Doth a thief or murderer sin against plainer light then you? |
A26980 | Doth not Paul pray that the Gospel may run and be glorified, and that we may be delivered from unreasonable wicked men? |
A26980 | For whom do we watch, but for them and others? |
A26980 | Have you already forgotten how the persecutots of a godly Ministry have sped within these sixteen years in England and Ireland? |
A26980 | Have you forgotten what God hath done here against the Papal enemies of the Gospel and Ministry, in 88. and the Powder- plot, and many other times? |
A26980 | How many millions of souls would these wretches sweep away to hell, if they had their will? |
A26980 | If he do not know, will you blame him for using the best that he can get? |
A26980 | If none, you may see what they are doing: if any, Who and where are they? |
A26980 | Is it any thing but what they had before? |
A26980 | Is it not horrible Pride if all these silly souls do think that they can do it better themselves? |
A26980 | Is it not malice or sacrilegious covetousness that frameth this accusation? |
A26980 | Is not this the loud language of their actions? |
A26980 | Is that their wages that you owe them? |
A26980 | Nay would they have them rob God, to whom for his service the Tithes were devoted? |
A26980 | Or to ruine his Kingdom, then to reject his Officers? |
A26980 | The Elders that Rule well are wor ● hy of double honour,& c.] with abundance more such passages as these? |
A26980 | Then they might damn themselves without disturbance, and go quietly to hell, and no body stop them, and say,[ Why do you so?] |
A26980 | This is soon said too: but where''s the proof? |
A26980 | Was it the friends or enemies of all the Prophets, Apostles and Ministers of Christ, that Scripture and all good writers do commend? |
A26980 | What I must Gods Ministers above all others be grudged food and raiment, and that of the Lords portion, which none of you pay for? |
A26980 | What difference between the calling, doctrine and lives of those martyred Ministers, and these that are now alive? |
A26980 | What greater service could all the world do for the Devil then to cast out the Ministers of Christ? |
A26980 | What if the Ministers were all cast out? |
A26980 | What readier way to ruine the Schools of Christ, then by casting out the Teachers that he hath appointed under him? |
A26980 | What work would heresies, and division, and prophanness make, if these banks were cut down? |
A26980 | What would you have more then is granted you? |
A26980 | Who doth not desire that all the Lords people were Prophets? |
A26980 | Who fights against Christs Officers and Army, but the General of the contrary Army? |
A26980 | Who should teach the ignorant, or rebuke the obstinate, explain the word of truth, and stop the mouthes of proud gain- sayers? |
A26980 | Whose are the Tithes? |
A26980 | Will you spit in their faces for seeking with all their might to keep you from Hell? |
A26980 | Would not the time, and labour, and cost that they are at in the Schools and Universities have fitted them for a more gainful trade? |
A26980 | Would we be Ministers for any lower ends? |
A26980 | [ Shall evil be recompenced for Good? |
A26980 | and oppose the same sort of Ministers that the Papists burned? |
A26980 | and what more would the Devil himself desire, to set up his Kingdom and suppress the Church? |
A26980 | are they ours or theirs? |
A26980 | or ever endeavoured? |
A26980 | where was there ever Church on earth that continued without a Minister? |
A26980 | would they have any to do Gods work in their stead, or none? |
A26975 | ( prefaced by John Fox) Written by men Commissioned by him? |
A26975 | And God hath gone before man, and hath instituted Government himself, by the Law of Nature and of Scripture, and hath not staid for man to do it? |
A26975 | And are Kings and Magistrates uncapable of Wisdom? |
A26975 | And are not others such? |
A26975 | And now what shall I gain by this Discourse? |
A26975 | And should we treat of such a subject as Concord and Toleration, with whom should it be? |
A26975 | And what heavy Charges of Simony, Filthiness, Heresie,& c. have even General Councils and Historians laid on the Popes and many Councils? |
A26975 | And where there is kept up a wise and holy Magistracy and Ministry, when and where did it ever go ill with such a people, by any publick desolation? |
A26975 | And who may call them so with less contradiction, than they that can at their pleasure make them seem such, and few dare contradict them? |
A26975 | And why may not Princes attain as much wisdom and honesty as their Counsellors and Judges? |
A26975 | Are the same Canons fit for Papists, Priests and Protestant Preachers? |
A26975 | Are we a Protestant Kingdom, and not a Christian Kingdom? |
A26975 | But how prove you that a Christian Kingdom is a Church? |
A26975 | But is not our first Reformation and our Canons and present Laws of Conformity, a sufficient means of Concord without any new Reformation? |
A26975 | But what is the difficulty in the way to Concord? |
A26975 | But what then doth? |
A26975 | Do I need to aggravate it? |
A26975 | Do you look for Kingdoms that consist only of the sincere? |
A26975 | Doth your Question mean de Re, or de Nomine? |
A26975 | Great is the advantage that Supreme Rulers have, to put the Name of Evil upon Good, and of Good on Evil, and to procure the Vulgar to say as they? |
A26975 | How came this General Episcopacy that was to gather and fix Churches to be so much ceased? |
A26975 | How can man be the Fountain of that which God hath instituted before him? |
A26975 | How commonly do such dispute the foresaid case, whether the Prince or People be the chief, without distinguishing Majority and Meliority? |
A26975 | How many Loads of Controversal Volumes are written by Papists against each other? |
A26975 | How many difficulties must be overcome, before one Parish can get a cure of such? |
A26975 | How oft do they falsly tell us that the People are the Fountain of Power? |
A26975 | How oft do they speak of their different Right, without distinguishing, separate or distinct from opposite? |
A26975 | How prove you that the Largeness of the Diocess altereth the Species of Episcopacy and Churches? |
A26975 | How vast is the difference between Governing one Kingdom, and Governing all the World? |
A26975 | If all that dwell in the Parish, are not all the Papists, Atheists, Hobbists, Deboisht and Sectaries of their Churches? |
A26975 | If only Communicants, do they know when they come to the Altar whether they are of their Flocks or Strangers? |
A26975 | If so, why did King Edward the sixth require Bucer to write for more, which he hath done in his Scripta Anglicana? |
A26975 | If the King make the Church of England, is it like if he be a Papist or Malignant, that he will chuse a Protestant and pious Church? |
A26975 | If they take me for as errant a Knave or Rogue as Judge Jeffreys or Mr. Long have pronounced me, what''s this to the common Cause of Truth and Peace? |
A26975 | If two can not agree, how will such agree others? |
A26975 | Is it a Superior? |
A26975 | Is not this a Christian Kingdom, while King and Subjects are baptized professed Christians? |
A26975 | Or that a Covetous, Drunken, Filthy, Licentious Patron will chuse a Man that will Zealously Preach against his Sins? |
A26975 | Rome was not all the Roman Empire: What right then had the Populus Romanus to Govern the Empire? |
A26975 | SHould not the Roman Church Policy in reason be owned for the advantage of Christianity against Infidels? |
A26975 | Shall the Throne of Iniquity have Fellowship with God, when they frame Mischief by a Law? |
A26975 | Shall we then leave all to the sober godly peaceable men? |
A26975 | That is, should not Men chuse a Leprosie to cure an Itch? |
A26975 | V. Whether the Errors of the Protestants do not so disparage them as to make the Roman Church more Honourable? |
A26975 | What Christian wisheth not that the Persians, Indians, Turks, Tartars,& c. were all Christian Kingdoms? |
A26975 | When did it ever go well with Judah or Israel when they had a foolish wicked King? |
A26975 | Whether an Universal Church- Government be of Apostolick Succession in the continued parts of their Office? |
A26975 | Whether it be they or the Bishop that must know them personally? |
A26975 | Whether the Divisions of other Christians render the Roman Government desireable for Concord? |
A26975 | Whether they know who are the Members of their Churches? |
A26975 | Who would wish that Pagans had still Reigned? |
A26975 | Why else do the Millennies hope for such a state of holy Government? |
A26975 | You may next ask, Who then must Make or Consecrate a Pope? |
A26975 | a due Reverence to Church Confederacies and Concord, and to the Christian Magistrates Power? |
A26975 | — His Revolt to a Foreign Jurisdiction, in two parts, Octavo? |
A26856 | ANd now oh Man, is Flesh all that thou art? |
A26856 | An Universal Council never was,''T was but one Empire that did make that name; Now that''s dissolv''d, how should it come to pass? |
A26856 | And if we knew which Powers to obey, Which be the Canons, which so needful are? |
A26856 | And is Church Unity no better known, And yet is necessary to Salvation: And to all those that Christ himself will own? |
A26856 | And is not this a doleful Bedlam- Case, When all a Rich Mans pleasure with him Dies? |
A26856 | And now what''s left? |
A26856 | And though he rage, and sober Men disdains, Who loves his Case, or longeth for his Chains? |
A26856 | And yet for Holiness, who hath more Zeal? |
A26856 | Baptism Christ made, what was thereto requir''d? |
A26856 | But God is Just and Holy: how can I, Defil''d with Sin and Guilt, stand in his sight? |
A26856 | But the false name of Councils- General, Is now a Cheat to serve the Roman- King, Where are those Councils? |
A26856 | But the time lost can never be recal''d, The works of Madness can not be undone; I have undone my self; is there no help? |
A26856 | But where is Dives Soul? |
A26856 | But where''s his Money, Honours, Lands& Treasures? |
A26856 | But will Christ to such Sinners Saviour be, Who long and wilfully contemn''d his Grace? |
A26856 | Can he look high who thinks himself so base? |
A26856 | Hath Mercy made Life sweet: And is it kind and meet, Thus to draw back from God, VVho doth Protect thee? |
A26856 | Hath any one the common Rule of all, Or will Turks, Papists, and all Kings agree? |
A26856 | How comes a Reasonable human Soul, Transform''d by such a Monstrous ugly change? |
A26856 | How many books in vain dost thou take down? |
A26856 | How sad doth Dives look? |
A26856 | How vile a thing is Man, if Flesh be he? |
A26856 | If Flesh be Man, how many Men are one, From Birth to Death, when as the Rivers flow? |
A26856 | If Health, Wealth, Pomp, or Pow''r, delude thy mind, Go to the greatest dying sick Mans Bed, Ask him what safety he in these doth find? |
A26856 | If that one Sun a Thousand Fold excel, This Earth in bigness, where we Sinners dwell;( And what''s one Sun to all the Heav''n beside?) |
A26856 | Is all the world save Rome, but the Popes Mule, And that his Crown''s Elective all do Note? |
A26856 | Is it deceitful Wealth, Got by Care, Fraud, or Stealth, Or short uncertain Health, VVhich thus befool Men? |
A26856 | Is it distracting Cares, Or Heart- tormenting Fears, Or pineing Grief and Tears, VVhich Man requireth? |
A26856 | Is it the Mothers VVomb, Or Sorrows which soon come, Or a dark Grave and Tomb VVhich is their Treasure? |
A26856 | Is not Gods Kingdom Glorious and wide? |
A26856 | Is''t Childrens Book and Rod, The Lab''rer''s heavy Load, Poverty under- trod The VVorld desireth? |
A26856 | Is''t the whole Church on Earth that he must rule, Why then hath not the whole a choosing Vote? |
A26856 | It s like, that all the Church consents, they''l say, Then he''s no Pope whom three 4th parts disclaim, How shall three parts then know whom to obey? |
A26856 | It s strange in Man, how these two twisted be, To be a Bruit, and a Malignant Devil? |
A26856 | LOrd is not Man, though lodg''d in Flesh and Blood, A noble Vital, intellectual Spirit? |
A26856 | Look then for his sharp Rod, Next to Correct thee? |
A26856 | MY Soul go boldly forth, Forsake this Sinful Earth, What hath it bin to thee But Pain and Sorrow, And thinkst thou it will be Better to Morrow? |
A26856 | Must they that give the Power which they use, Superiors, Equals, or Inferiors be? |
A26856 | Now the Mad Prodigal comes to himself, Perhaps the World doth him its Husks deny, Why, saith he, did I leave a Fathers House? |
A26856 | Or do the Serpents Lies, By the VVorlds Flatteries, And tempting Vanities, Still over- rule them? |
A26856 | Or do they in a Dream, Sleep out their Season? |
A26856 | Or is Decrepite Age VVorth Mans Enjoying? |
A26856 | Or is it it Youthful Rage, Or Childish Toying? |
A26856 | Parents these Undertakers do not ask, Will you these Vows and Promises perform? |
A26856 | Say what you will, Reason can prove it true, What is''t that drunken Reason can not do? |
A26856 | Should vital knowing Spirits cloath''d in Flesh, Mistake so Course, a Garment for the Man? |
A26856 | Such a true Council, when and where to call, Or can one third part Universal be? |
A26856 | Thou gav''st him sight, who hath put out his Eyes, Thou gav''st him knowledg, who hath made him mad? |
A26856 | VAin World, what is in thee? |
A26856 | VVhat if Foes should make hast, Thou wilt the sooner tast VVhat all Blest Souls enjoy, VVith Christ for ever? |
A26856 | VVho longs to be a Serpent for the Sting? |
A26856 | VVho the Toads hurtful Venom envieth, VVho''d have the Basalisks pernicious Breath? |
A26856 | What do poor mortals see Which should esteemed be, Worthy their Pleasure? |
A26856 | What fallows hence, but general Damnation? |
A26856 | What hath he taken hence of all his Gains? |
A26856 | What is it now but warmed moving Clay? |
A26856 | What is the time that''s gone, And what is that to come? |
A26856 | What tak''st thou for thy part, But Heav''nly pleasure? |
A26856 | What was it made of, but the Mothers Food? |
A26856 | What will it be e''re long but common Earth? |
A26856 | What''s Flesh but Water mixt with sensless Earth? |
A26856 | When Popes damn Popes,& Councils damn them all, And Popes damn Councils, what must Christians do? |
A26856 | When they each others Laws damn& recal, How shall we know whose Power then was true? |
A26856 | Where did Gods Art that curious Body form? |
A26856 | Where then should be thy Heart, But where''s thy Treasure? |
A26856 | Where was that Flesh one Year before thy birth? |
A26856 | Who envy wicked Men, their hurting Power, Who do believe their sad approaching hour? |
A26856 | Who must him choose, Which is the Pope, when there are two or three? |
A26856 | Who would be griev''d at prosperous sinners reign Who did foresee their everlasting pain? |
A26856 | Whom must we take for Pope? |
A26856 | Why art thou for Delay, Thou cam''st not here to stay? |
A26856 | Why is thy Being no more known, Why seeking knowledg readst thou not thy self? |
A26856 | Will any serve that will usurp the Name? |
A26856 | Wonder of Wonders? |
A26856 | knowst thou no deeper than thy Skin? |
A26856 | whence: who must them call? |
A26901 | 13. tell you, whether Nero or the Senate were the higher power? |
A26901 | And do your Leaders yet think that the Papists are pleased with that which will promote the Protestant cause? |
A26901 | And few of the young, the ignorant or licentious sorts will be your Auditors; And how will the work of Repentance then be carried on by you? |
A26901 | And he saith unto them, Whose is this Image and Superscription? |
A26901 | And how great an addition will that be to your load? |
A26901 | And if Satan can but get such an odious Character fastened on you, what mischievous advantage will he make of it? |
A26901 | And if you separated but from the individual offenders, should it not be done in a regular way? |
A26901 | And is this a Controversie in Divinity? |
A26901 | And must we only tell Heathens, that the Scriptures have their proper evidence, and not tell them what that evidence is? |
A26901 | And now Mr. Bagshaw citeth it with applause: Reader, who is in such a case as I? |
A26901 | And then how much hath Satan gained? |
A26901 | And what kind of preaching would this man make among Turks and Heathens that deny the Scriptures? |
A26901 | And what need Preachers to tell men this? |
A26901 | And would you have but one Minister in a County or two, to keep up all the Interest of Religion? |
A26901 | And yet going on to repeat the same things, which I had confuted? |
A26901 | And, whether the King had Authority to raise his Arms against theirs? |
A26901 | And, whether they can name me a Christian Writer in the world more infamously self- stigmatized with this vice? |
A26901 | But Iesus perceived their wickedness, and said, Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites? |
A26901 | But Iesus perceived their wickedness, and said, Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites? |
A26901 | But what? |
A26901 | Crisp, Canne, Iohnson, Blackwood, or any other tolerable Opinionist, will put his opinion into his Prayers? |
A26901 | Did Christ tell the tempting hypocrites, whether Caesar justly coined money in, or for Iudaea? |
A26901 | Did I ever lay that charge against all the Christians in the Parish Churches? |
A26901 | Doth Church- discipline require no better defence? |
A26901 | Doth his Cause and Glory need mens Lies? |
A26901 | Doth not that make them in this all one with an imposed prayer, as to fore- knowledge? |
A26901 | Even Martyn himself as well as Ithacius? |
A26901 | Had I seen what visible dangers are over us, of a condition yet worser than all this? |
A26901 | Hath Divinity therefore nothing to do in Law controversies? |
A26901 | If these things were but Hard to the man, why is he so proud as to disdain them? |
A26901 | Is it truth, that men must be thus cheated into with errours? |
A26901 | Is there many of them that ever defended half so much sin so obstinately, without confession, and yet so impotently without sence? |
A26901 | Is this his preaching? |
A26901 | Lord, who shall abide in thy Tabernacles, who shall dwell in thy holy hill? |
A26901 | Nay, that own not( as they think) the Diocesan Prelacy as such, but only Episcopacy in general, and Diocesans, as the Kings Officers? |
A26901 | Read over several debates, and see whether ever a cause so hotly contended for, had so little said for it? |
A26901 | Reader, Is there in the first any shadow of the truth at all? |
A26901 | Reader, do but hear, and judge whether any thing except his Amareduci can excuse such horrid deliberate untruths? |
A26901 | Receded from it, and yet not repented of: What a forgetful self- contradicter is this man? |
A26901 | Son of man, Can these bones live? |
A26901 | Tell us therefore what thinkest thou: Is it lawful to give tribute unto Caesar, or not? |
A26901 | Their Controversies were, whether the Parliament had Authority to raise their Arms against the Kings will, prohibition, and opposition? |
A26901 | Then went the Pharisees and took counsel, how they might entangle him in his talk — Is it lawful to give tribute to Caesar or not? |
A26901 | They call out for Valiantness in suffering themselves: And shall I be so cowardly as to fear their false reports? |
A26901 | They cry out against the fear of man: And shall I fear their impotent revilings? |
A26901 | What sin will you call it to father all these falshoods on[ the Glory of God, and the Cause of Christ? |
A26901 | When the Minister prayeth freely, I may in heart either joyn with him, neglect him, or dissent: And what hinders me from doing so at Common- Prayer? |
A26901 | Whether Fathering all this on God and Religion, make ● ● t the sin to be yet greater? |
A26901 | Whether ever you saw Books so answered as mine are by him? |
A26901 | Whether his Calumny, or false accusations of me, and of Calvin, Perkins, Hildersham, Preston,& c. be not an unchristian act? |
A26901 | Whether it be not rare to meet with so much audacious impudence in sinning? |
A26901 | Which Text is it that telleth you, that the Militia belonged to the Parliament, or what degree of power the Courts of Justice have? |
A26901 | Will you be seduced to think that Christ or Paul must decide all controversies of forms and degrees of power in Republicks? |
A26901 | Yea, could you wish at this day that the Christian and Protestant Religion were kept up by none but the unconformable Ministers in private? |
A26901 | Your glorying is not good: Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump? |
A26901 | nor no more repentance for above fourscore published Untruths than this? |
A26901 | what more effectual way could be devised, to make Church- discipline contemptible to the world? |
A26901 | yea, or all the Bishops either? |
A26935 | And can you tell how great a crime this is? |
A26935 | And do not the Consciences of the Damned grind and tear them for the contempt of Goodness, and setting against mercy, even mercy to themselves? |
A26935 | And do you not know that to deny any one of the three, yea to deny the perfection of any one of them, is to deny that there is any God? |
A26935 | And doth not the proper Goodness of a means consist in its aptitude to promote the End? |
A26935 | And have you not the like occasion to argue against his other perfections? |
A26935 | And is he not the first cause? |
A26935 | And is not that means the Best, which is aptest to the End? |
A26935 | And is there not necessarily an Imperfection in all that is not God? |
A26935 | And tell me, what if but the wills of all the poor, the pained, the dying,& c. were but reconciled to their suffering- state? |
A26935 | And that his Goodness( though not as to be measured by humane Interest) is equal to his Wisdom and his greatness? |
A26935 | And that they are none of them greater or less than other? |
A26935 | And what Grace or happiness can there be without the Love of God? |
A26935 | And yet that there are Toads, Serpents, Darkness, Death, Sickness, pains,& c. which therefore are no whit inconsistent with his Goodness? |
A26935 | Are not all effects from their causes? |
A26935 | Are you well acquainted with the nature and degrees of the future miseries which tempt you to think that God is cruel? |
A26935 | But God foreknoweth, e. g. Judas sin, Therefore it will certainly come to pass) And what of all this? |
A26935 | But can a Child of God be possibly guilty of so great a sin as this? |
A26935 | Could he give more goodness than he had to give? |
A26935 | Did it make it self? |
A26935 | Do not all men in the World confess Gods Goodness first or last? |
A26935 | Do you not know that Power, Wisdom and Goodness are Gods Three essential Principles of Operation, Virtues, or Properties? |
A26935 | Doth not the admirable harmony of all the world, and his wonderful work in every Creature, prove his incomprehensible Wisdom? |
A26935 | For who can expect that any man should be better than his Maker; and that he should have any Good, which denyeth God to be Good? |
A26935 | Hath God made a world that is better than himself? |
A26935 | I say after all this, have any of these persons cause to complain, that God dealeth not mercifully with them? |
A26935 | I say, this, be one that instead of praising God with the raptures of continual Joy, shall turn his accuser? |
A26935 | If God made man and all things, Did he not make them for himself, for the pleasure of his own will? |
A26935 | If he be better than all, is he not most beyond accusation or exception? |
A26935 | Is it any better than a denying that there is any God? |
A26935 | Is it necessary to ● his end, or to prove Gods Goodness that all Individuals, or species of Creatures must be of the highest rank or excellency? |
A26935 | Is it not a plain act of malice against God and us? |
A26935 | Is it not certain that there is a world, in which is abundance of Created Goodness? |
A26935 | Is not all the Goodness of the whole Creation communicated from God? |
A26935 | Is not that a contradiction? |
A26935 | Is not that best, that is best to the order, beauty, and usefulness of the universal frame? |
A26935 | Is the Goodness of a King to be judged of by the Interest of Murderers in the Goal? |
A26935 | Must be not needs in reason be the end of all, who is the Beginning and cause of all? |
A26935 | Must not God necessarily excell his works? |
A26935 | Must not he needs be better than all his works? |
A26935 | No Scripture or Reason telleth us whether Sun or Moon, Starrs and intermediate Aether, be inhabited or not? |
A26935 | O man into what distraction and confusion art thou faln, when thou departest from thy God and sinkest into that blind and wretched self? |
A26935 | Shall they, that will not accept of life and mercy offered them, accuse him as cruel that importuneth them to accept it? |
A26935 | Shall this person? |
A26935 | They are not all of one degree; What if much of them be still voluntary to the miserable souls? |
A26935 | What mind can be so black, as to deny all Created Goodness? |
A26935 | When as there could neither be any of these, nor any world or being, if there were no God? |
A26935 | Who can Love him whom he believeth to be bad, and so unlovely? |
A26935 | Who is wise? |
A26935 | Would you thus argue or quarrel against Gods Greatness and Wisdom, as you do against his Goodness? |
A26935 | and he shall understand these things; prudent? |
A26935 | must he needs make every worm a God? |
A26935 | or must he make any God, or equal to himself? |
A26935 | or rather a higher Demonstration of his Godness? |
A26935 | or rather must it not have that excellency with belongeth to it as a part of the whole, for the common end of all together? |
A26935 | or who else made it? |
A26935 | suspect, did I say? |
A26935 | that so men may hate him and fly from him as they do from Devils? |
A26935 | would that which pleaseth the will be matter of any complaint? |
A26948 | & c.] doth not the question deserve to be answered with the Rod? |
A26948 | ( How much more then to respect their lawful Bishops and Pastors?) |
A26948 | 2. Who knows not how fair a game the Papists have to play by our divisions? |
A26948 | And shall they use our hands to do their work? |
A26948 | And so can not obey them in Faith? |
A26948 | And what reverence is due to them, as Holy? |
A26948 | Are all religious and private Meetings forbidden by Rulers, unlawful Conventicles? |
A26948 | Building the Church is but an orderly joyning of the Materials, and what then is disjoyning but pulling down? |
A26948 | But First I will lay together some Propositions for decision of the Controversie; How far we are bound to obey Mens Precepts about Religion? |
A26948 | But what if I can not Communicate, but according to the Administration of the Common- Prayer- Book? |
A26948 | But what if I can not communicate, unless I conform to an imposed gesture, as kneeling? |
A26948 | But what if there be gross and scandalous Sinners are Members of the Church? |
A26948 | But what if they are sins committed in the open Assembly, even by the Minister himself in his Praying, Preaching, and other Administrations? |
A26948 | Can you name any? |
A26948 | Consider also what yielding in things lawful the Scripture recommendeth to us? |
A26948 | Do not you condemn a carnal state? |
A26948 | Do you not hate Superstition? |
A26948 | Especially in case we doubt of the lawfulness of obeying them? |
A26948 | For why should your Houses be dearer to you than the Church, which is the House of God? |
A26948 | Hath God spoke more against any Sin than Unpeaceableness? |
A26948 | How can you prove, that the Authority that made, or imposed the Liturgy, meant any other thing? |
A26948 | How doth the Holy Ghost set Bishops over the Church? |
A26948 | How far yielded Paul when he Circumcised Timothy? |
A26948 | How few separated Churches do now exist, that were in being an hundred years ago, can you name any? |
A26948 | How is the Holy Ghost given to Infants in Baptism? |
A26948 | Is it certain by the word of God, that all Infants baptized, and dying before actual sin, are undoutedly saved? |
A26948 | Is it lawful to bow at the name of Jesus? |
A26948 | Is it lawful to impose Forms on the Congregation in publick Worship? |
A26948 | Is it lawful to read the Apocrypha, or Homilies? |
A26948 | Is it not a Sin for our Clerks, to make themselves the mouth of the People? |
A26948 | Is it of the Apostle framing or not? |
A26948 | Is not Censoriousness and Rash Judging a Sin? |
A26948 | Many Doctrinal differences must be tolerated in a Church, and why, but for Unity and Peace? |
A26948 | Mark, Is it not more of the Women and Apprentices that are of this mind, than of old experienced Christians? |
A26948 | May the Communion Tables be turned Altarwise? |
A26948 | May the People bare a Vocal part in Worship, and do any more than say Amen? |
A26948 | May the name, Priests, Sacrifice and Altars, be lawfully used? |
A26948 | May we communicate with unworthy persons? |
A26948 | May we lawfully swear obedience, in all things lawful and honest, either to Usurpers, or to our lawful Pastors? |
A26948 | May, or must a Minister, silenced, or forbid to preach the Gospel, go on still to preach it against the Law? |
A26948 | No reason can be given, why a lawful thing should become unlawful? |
A26948 | Or your Souls, which are the Temples of the Holy Ghost? |
A26948 | Thus also it is that they put off Family- prayer, and ask,[ Where are they bound to pray in their Family Morning and Evening?] |
A26948 | What confusion will be brought into the Church if Pastors be not obeyed in things lawful? |
A26948 | What high Professors were the proudest overturners of all Government, and resisters and despisers of Ministry and Holy Order in the Churches? |
A26948 | What is Sacriledge? |
A26948 | What is the Use and Authority of the Creed? |
A26948 | What is the true meaning of Sponsors or Godfathers, and is it lawful to make use of them? |
A26948 | When the Church- men mean another thing, this is but to juggle with the World? |
A26948 | Whence is Persecution, but from thinking ill of others, and abhorring or not loving them? |
A26948 | Whether it shall have Rails, or no Rails? |
A26948 | Whether it shall stand on the East or West side of the Temple, or in the middle? |
A26948 | Whether the Laws of men do bind the Conscience? |
A26948 | Whether the Table shall be of Wood or Stone, Round or Long, or Square? |
A26948 | Whether we shall receive the Lord''s Supper at a Table, or in our Seats? |
A26948 | White, Willet,& c. yea, and the Martyrs too? |
A26948 | and do not you do so by those whom you causlesly separate from? |
A26948 | and is it lawful to come up to the Rails to Communicate? |
A26948 | and railed in? |
A26948 | and what is it to dissolve Churches, but to break their Association, to reduce them to the Individuals, to cut them into shreds? |
A26948 | and would you have all the Churches of Christ dissolved? |
A26948 | and would you have all the Churches of Christ to be dissolved? |
A26948 | as Cranmer, Ridley, Hooper himself, Farrar, Bradford, Fillpot, Sanders,& c. Could I separate from all these on the Reasons now in question? |
A26948 | or to be examined by him, in order to a Baptism or Lord''s Supper? |
A26948 | to such Men as Mr. Bolton, Whateley, Fenner, Dent, Crook, Dike, Stock, Smith, Dr. Preston, Sibbs, Stoughton, Taylor, and abundance other such? |
A26948 | whether all the Children of true Christians have inward sanctifying Grace? |
A27055 | And hence you may find that you are not Worldly Hypocrites? |
A27055 | And how worthily will they be undone, that by wilful refusal are deprived of freely offered Felicity? |
A27055 | And is it not a great mercy of God, that he hath herein called us to a life of happiness and present joy? |
A27055 | And most of all her life she was tormented with a frequent head- ach? |
A27055 | And shall that be your wilful choice? |
A27055 | And that Christ liveth and reigneth, who can thus still send a sanctifying Spirit into Believers Souls? |
A27055 | And that you prefer not any other pleasure in your esteem and choice and seeking? |
A27055 | And that your fears and sorrows are somewhat abated by the promises of God? |
A27055 | And though we cry, O miserable men, who shall deliver us? |
A27055 | And what a mercy is it, that under all her infirmities, you enjoyed her so long? |
A27055 | And what is it that with such glory and certainty is delivered to us from Heaven? |
A27055 | And what is the Doctrine and Laws of God, are they not also suited to our Trust and Joy? |
A27055 | And what is there in God''s Laws, but that which is our safety, and should be our joy? |
A27055 | And why should not you be as studious to please God and make sure of Heaven as she was? |
A27055 | But how are God''s Testimonies our Heritage for ever? |
A27055 | Can not you say that it is this Word that maketh you hope that there is for man a better life, and that you shall not perish like the Beasts? |
A27055 | Can not you say that you perceive a pleasing goodness in the Word of God, which maketh it welcome and acceptable to you? |
A27055 | Can you say that you take it for that in which you place and seek your joy, though you can not yet attain it? |
A27055 | Dare you under your hands make a Covenant for these to quit all your hopes of the life to come? |
A27055 | Doth it make us take Gods promise and the thing promised as our heritage? |
A27055 | Have you lived hitherto as thus resolved? |
A27055 | Hence also you may learn why all true Christians so much value the Testimonies or Word of God? |
A27055 | How God hath governed the World from the beginning, and how he hath redeemed us? |
A27055 | How God made Man and all the World, and what Laws he gave him? |
A27055 | How diligent we should be to confirm our belief of it, and how we should fetch our hope and comfort from it, in life and at our death? |
A27055 | How far they are their Joy? |
A27055 | How joyful should we be if we could but trust God, and love him, and obey him, and be free from sin, as much as the Law of God commandeth us? |
A27055 | How oft and tenderly she counselled them? |
A27055 | How oft hath she desired me to pray for them? |
A27055 | How sin came into the world, and death by sin? |
A27055 | How strictly we should obey it? |
A27055 | How they are called an Heritage for ever? |
A27055 | How they are so taken by Believers? |
A27055 | I may ask the Malignant that call all serious Godliness Hypocrisie, whether such a life as this doth savour of dissimulation? |
A27055 | I may ask the Papists, with what Face they can say as they use to do, That they never heard of a Protestant Saint? |
A27055 | I. I may again ask both Quakers and Scorners, Whether the Holy Spirit do not dwell and work in such among us, as our dear Friend now deceased was? |
A27055 | If Unbelief make you hope that there is no Hell, yet Hope of Heaven you can have none, unless you trust the Word of God? |
A27055 | If good Laws be the safety and honour of Kingdoms, are not God''s Laws so to all the World? |
A27055 | If you have chosen what end to live for and seek, what is it? |
A27055 | If you have not, what will you now choose and do? |
A27055 | Is it not a delightful thing to read that which no meer man could tell us? |
A27055 | It is a mark of the Citizens of the holy City, That a vile person is contemned in their eyes? |
A27055 | It is not Christ, and Christianity, and Scripture that you accuse? |
A27055 | Or they that were never serious in it, but scorn the keeping of it? |
A27055 | Quest But can all say, They are the Rejoycing of my heart? |
A27055 | Remember her humble, moderate, holy example; and think whether your Souls have not as much need of the greatest care and diligence as hers had? |
A27055 | We are beset with Temptations, and how should we overcome them, without God''s promise of better things than this World can give us? |
A27055 | We are dark and foolish, and should have erred to Damnation, without this sure and heavenly guide? |
A27055 | We have a life of service to God, which must be faithfully and chearfully done; and how should we so do it, without good perswasion of this revvard? |
A27055 | What Christ is, and what he hath done, and what he will do? |
A27055 | What Letters of serious holy Counsel she would write to them? |
A27055 | What a mercy is it that all her prayers for you are yet in force, and more of the answer of them may yet be sent you, if you reject it not? |
A27055 | What an ugly Dungeon were the World without them? |
A27055 | What is it for Believers to take God''s Testimonies for their Heritage? |
A27055 | What is it that you place your chiefest hopes in? |
A27055 | What is there in all the description which I have here truly given you, which is injurious or dangerous to Church or State, or any person? |
A27055 | What it is in God''s Testimonies which make them fit to be our Heritage, and our Joy? |
A27055 | What say you, Will you die in Hope or in Despair? |
A27055 | What will you take for your heritage, or your best, if not the future promised joyes, and what will you take for your security but Gods Word? |
A27055 | What wonder is it that Infinite Power, Wisdom and Love, should make some of his creatures blessed by communication? |
A27055 | Will it hurt any one that God and men are seriously loved? |
A27055 | Will you then have any portion, heritage and joy which will be worthy of a man, and shall go further with you than the Grave? |
A27055 | With what delight we should read it and meditate in it? |
A27055 | Yea, indeed hence we see, how much we should set by it, and use it, how dear it should be to us? |
A27055 | and Man in special when he hath made him capable of it? |
A27055 | and that God''s Kingdom and Righteousness is first sought? |
A27055 | and that God''s Testimonies are trusted and delighted in and obeyed? |
A27055 | and what a worse than bruitish thing were man? |
A27055 | if not, which is that you prefer, and which would you quit, if one must be hazarded or lost? |
A27055 | or have we any better? |
A27055 | shall health and wealth, and pleasure to the flesh, and honour among men, be taken for your heritage? |
A27055 | which hath the nearest and highest place in your hearts? |
A27055 | which seek you first, and make all other things give place to? |
A27055 | who would willingly be deprived of his heritage, or heart rejoycing? |
A26882 | 20. and yet none of them so much as displeased at Babylons sin, or the Churches suffering? |
A26882 | And all for saying, Wherefore smitest thou thy fellow? |
A26882 | And did not I expresly exclude it: And yet is this Reverend man thus puzled at this as a dangerous Doctrine? |
A26882 | And he will not deny the ordinary use of the word as without sorrow? |
A26882 | And if both you and we were mistaken, I am confident you will not justify all that we suffer by, and say we are the only blameable Cause? |
A26882 | And if it be not the Name, but my sense of it, do you find where he proveth any wrong sense that I express, or doth he give a better? |
A26882 | And is it unlawful, because in it? |
A26882 | And shall we persuade Protestants to leave them all? |
A26882 | And when did all the Protestants, or Nonconformists chuse him to represent them? |
A26882 | And why did your private Letter own it his, conjunct with Fame? |
A26882 | And will it excuse your ungodliness, that you can lay the blame on them that dipossest you? |
A26882 | And yet is there no danger from Names? |
A26882 | Are Accidents parts, because Inherent?] |
A26882 | Are all things duly belonging to it, parts of it? |
A26882 | Are not your Quality, Quantities, Immanent Acts, Passions,& c. inherent? |
A26882 | As if every such mistake were worthy of all the punishment undergone? |
A26882 | At once the other extream, most study to get them out; and shall we also call all men on pain of hazarding their Souls to forsake them? |
A26882 | But do your Brethren in Prison enjoy Publick Worship? |
A26882 | But what shall ten parts of the Kingdom do, that must have the Old Translation or none? |
A26882 | But whence came those wrong Suppositions of the most? |
A26882 | Did Christ or his Apostles ever forbear the Synagogues for the sake of these long Lyturgies? |
A26882 | Did Christ speak one word against them as Forms or Lyturgies? |
A26882 | Did he want Zeal or Knowledge? |
A26882 | Did the Parliament forbid one side only this Commemoration? |
A26882 | Do good men take it for a priviledge to hurt the Church uncontradicted? |
A26882 | Do you believe that Dr. Owens Name was not known with them before? |
A26882 | Do you think he hath forgotten the ● ase of England? |
A26882 | Doth he attempt in one syllable to blame any thing but the word? |
A26882 | Doth this speak only of the English Lyturgy, which is not 200 years old, think you? |
A26882 | Doth[ in] turn Accidents into parts? |
A26882 | Had they not been good in themselves, what cloak could they have made for so great evil? |
A26882 | Had you rather all that Worship God in Parish Churches, were persuaded that it is Idolatry, than Mr. Ralphson should be confuted by name? |
A26882 | Have not weak Ministers as bad faults as a weak Translation? |
A26882 | Have they Possession of better that have none at all? |
A26882 | Have you proved this? |
A26882 | He was displeased with it, when he died for it: and is his will changed since to favour it? |
A26882 | I thought you had known how usual it is to speak to the second person, in answering Books many hundred years old? |
A26882 | If it be so heinous to confute it, why did you divulge it? |
A26882 | If the work be faulty, why do you not joyn with me to save men from it? |
A26882 | If we could as charitably judge of a godly man that differs from us, as of our selves, and most esteemed Partners, how much sin should we avoid? |
A26882 | If you can not bear these, sure you are less patient at the words[ Wrath and Anger of God]& c. what is it that you would have? |
A26882 | Intendest thou to kill me, as thou killedst the Aegyptian? |
A26882 | Is a defensive confutation of Errour, dealing severely? |
A26882 | Is not Kneeting, putting off the Hat, Methods, Translations, Meeter, Tunes,& c. in the Worship of God? |
A26882 | Is not a Man named openly, till his Name be Printed? |
A26882 | Is not this partiality? |
A26882 | Is the sense[ Godly sorrow worketh Godly sorrow?] |
A26882 | Is this no Consutation of you? |
A26882 | It was hard measure that the striving Israelite offered to Moses, that said, Who made thee a Prince, and a Iudge over us? |
A26882 | May the Argument use a term which the answerer may not repeat? |
A26882 | Must you not first prove the Old so bad, as that no- Church Worship is better? |
A26882 | O that I could have fore- known, that I might have confuted his Arguments without his Name, and displeased no body? |
A26882 | Or, will you be without all, because you had once Possession of better? |
A26882 | Perhaps you''l say, It''s a vain wish of an impossibility? |
A26882 | Was there no publication of Names till 224 years ago, when Printing was invented? |
A26882 | What Heresy or sin almost is not controverted? |
A26882 | What work would this Argument make? |
A26882 | What''s become then of your saying, We had Possession? |
A26882 | When I excluded his misliked sense? |
A26882 | Where hath God given any men power to prescribe& impost Forms for others, or commandea others to obey them?] |
A26882 | Who knoweth not that the Religion of the Parish- Churches is like to be the National Religion? |
A26882 | Will not your Reason prove, that we must also separate from you? |
A26882 | You''l say, that''s but metaphorically spoken? |
A26882 | ▪ Will you rather worship no where? |
A27042 | 4. Who is it but your selves that hath brought you under Gods displeasure? |
A27042 | 5. Who wounded Conscience, and hath raised all your doubts and fears? |
A27042 | 6. Who is it but your selves that hath brought you so neer the gulf of misery? |
A27042 | And may I not freely tell you, that God should have the precedencie? |
A27042 | And must not Magistrates as well govern by their lives, as by their Laws? |
A27042 | And now I beseech you all consider; is it not better to Remember your sins on earth, then in hell? |
A27042 | Are death and Judgement matters of less moment? |
A27042 | Are those men likely to take care of the happiness of so many thousands, that will still be so careless of themselves? |
A27042 | Are your sins so small, so venial, so few, that you can find no employment on them for your memories? |
A27042 | Consider the loathsome nature of your sins, and how then can you choose but loath your selves? |
A27042 | Did not he make the Law that doth command it; professing that none shall see his face without it? |
A27042 | Do they loath themselves for all their sins, who loath those that will not do as they? |
A27042 | Do they loath themselves that are readier to justifie all their sins, or at least extenuate them, then humbly confess them? |
A27042 | Do you loath your selves for all this, as being vile in your own eyes, and each man say, What a wretch was I? |
A27042 | Enquire then, whether there be none among you that live a sensual careless life; cloathed with the best, and faring deliciously every day? |
A27042 | For your souls sake enquire now, Is it thus with you? |
A27042 | How carefully would you help the Labourers that are sent to guid men in the holy path? |
A27042 | How confident should I be, that I could convert the most, if this were the Conversion? |
A27042 | How little need should I have had to press it with all this importunity? |
A27042 | How much further think you is it possible, for wicked souls to go in sinning? |
A27042 | How severely would you deal with those, that by making a mock of Godliness, do hinder the salvation of the peoples souls? |
A27042 | If brutish objects be your employment and delight, do I need to tell you what you make your selves? |
A27042 | Is God and Heaven less worth then these? |
A27042 | Is it not the God of Heaven himself that they make a scorn of? |
A27042 | Is not Holiness his image? |
A27042 | Is there none among you that spend your precious time in vanities, that is allowed you to prepare for life eternal? |
A27042 | Is this your duty now, or is it not? |
A27042 | Lest when he plagueth and condemneth you he say, Why persecuted you me? |
A27042 | O that that this Honourable Assembly could know it in some measure, as it shall be shortly known? |
A27042 | O then what Laws would you make against sin? |
A27042 | Or can you expect to be obeyed by others, when you will not obey the God of Heaven and Earth your selves? |
A27042 | Or is the offending of the Eternal God, so slight and safe a thing, as not to need your consideration? |
A27042 | Or shall I think it were uncharitableness not to hope for it? |
A27042 | Or would you have the people to be better then your selves? |
A27042 | Shall I think it were presumption for me to hope for so high a reward for so short a labour? |
A27042 | Shall the thorns and bryers be set in battail against the consuming fire and prevail? |
A27042 | Surely God made not his Laws for nought; nor doth he make such a stir by his Word, and Messengers, and Providences against an harmless thing? |
A27042 | The question is not, whether Bishops or no? |
A27042 | The suffering to the sound in faith is as nothing: for what is the foaming rage of mad men to be regarded? |
A27042 | We have all seen the evils of Liberty to be wanton in Religion: Is it not worse to have Liberty, to deride Religion? |
A27042 | Will you make Laws which you would not have men obey? |
A27042 | You can easily loath an enemy; and who hath been a greater enemy to any of you, then your selves? |
A27042 | and What is it that God would have us do? |
A27042 | and What shall we wish we had done at last? |
A27042 | and endangered your eternall peace? |
A27042 | and how they will look back on all at last? |
A27042 | and to thrust his service into corners, and give him but the odious leavings of the flesh?] |
A27042 | and what judgement it is that they will all be of, in the controversie between the flesh and spirit, at the later end? |
A27042 | and what will be the fruit and end of all their lusts and vanities? |
A27042 | and whether an holy or a sensual life will be sweetest to a dying man? |
A27042 | and whether enow to use it? |
A27042 | before your Physitian, then before your Judge? |
A27042 | but whether Discipline or none? |
A27042 | for your cure, then for your torment? |
A27042 | or have you thus returned with self- loathing to the Lord, and firmly engaged your souls to him at your enterance into a holy life? |
A27042 | to forget thy God, thy soul, thy happiness? |
A27042 | to serve thy flesh? |
A27042 | was it not your sinfull selves? |
A27042 | what a monster of rebellion and ingratitude, to do all this against the Lord of love and mercy? |
A27042 | what an unreasonable self- hating wretch, to do all this against my self? |
A27042 | what have they left but a sting behind them? |
A27042 | why then was fasting, and sack cloth and ashes, the badg of such in ancient times? |
A26929 | 1.6, And who maketh the Need? |
A26929 | And O how seasonable, and how joyful will the Churches Resurrection be after such low and sad distress? |
A26929 | And could I but hope that they should be as able, and holy, and diligent, as I desire, how little should I partake with you in this daies sorrows? |
A26929 | And doth not our dejectedness and want of Joy declare the sinful weakness of our faith? |
A26929 | And how quickly will this NOW doctrine 3 be gone? |
A26929 | And how short a trouble do they avoid, by running into everlasting trouble? |
A26929 | And if it be but for a[ Now] that you must have sorrows, how reasonable is it that those sorrows be moderated and mixt with joy? |
A26929 | And if the Cross hath born such happy fruit, what reason have we to be so much against it? |
A26929 | And what a multitude of Souls will then be comforted? |
A26929 | And when the Church is so low, almost like Christ on the Cross and the Grave, will not a Resurrection be a joyful change? |
A26929 | And when the Son of Man cometh, shall he find faith on the Earth? |
A26929 | And will not a firm belief of all this, rejoyce the Soul under all disappointments and sufferings on Earth? |
A26929 | Behold the Lord God will help me, who is he that shall condemn me? |
A26929 | But are you as ingenious in expounding them aright? |
A26929 | Can sin and suffering be perfectly separated? |
A26929 | Can you expect to keep your sickness, and yet to be wholly freed from the pain? |
A26929 | Cease ye from Man whose Breath is in his Nostrils? |
A26929 | Do you not judge of them rather by your present sense, than by their use and tendency? |
A26929 | Do you not see that carnal pleasure is far more dangerous than all your sorrows? |
A26929 | For what is our hope, or joy, or Crown of rejoycing? |
A26929 | For wherein is he to be accounted of? |
A26929 | God doth cast them down into destruction: How are they brought into desolation as in a moment? |
A26929 | He hath triumphed over Satan; Death and Hell: He hath conquered sin, and what is there left to depose him from his Dominion? |
A26929 | How easie is it to see these bubbles vanishing, and to foresee the sad and speedy period of all their cruelties and triumphs? |
A26929 | How much is mankind beholden to the Cross? |
A26929 | How small a thing should it seem to us, to be judged of man, who must stand or fall to the final sentence of the Almighty God? |
A26929 | How then shall we know whether our sorrows tend to worse or unto better? |
A26929 | If not, why do you long for their temptations? |
A26929 | Is he not much fitter to dispose of you, than you or any mortals are? |
A26929 | Is it God or you? |
A26929 | Is it one that you can reasonably suspect, of any want of power, wisdom or goodness? |
A26929 | Learn then how to behave your selves in the absence of your Lord, till his return: If you ask me, How? |
A26929 | Look on the ungodly that prosper in the world, and tell me whether you would be in their condition? |
A26929 | Mary,& c. shortened? |
A26929 | My tears have been my meat day and night, while they continually say unto me, where is thy God? |
A26929 | Not under temptation, or any of the tempters power? |
A26929 | Not under the darkness of ignorance, error, or unbelief? |
A26929 | Not under the pains of a languid, diseased, corruptible Body? |
A26929 | O how deservedly are ungodly men forsaken of God: For how short a pleasure do they forsake him, and the everlasting pleasures? |
A26929 | Or at the trouble of your Physick while you continue your disease? |
A26929 | Say then, O distrustful trembling Christian, Why art thou cast down O my Soul, and why art thou thus disquieted within me? |
A26929 | Tell me then who it is that you suffer by; that hath the principal disposing hand in all? |
A26929 | Therefore thus saith the Lord God unto them, behold I, I will judge between the fat Cattel and the lean? |
A26929 | Though unbelieving Scoffers shall say, where is the promise of his coming? |
A26929 | What is the worst that man can do, or the most that God will here inflict, to the Reprobates endless hellish torments? |
A26929 | What saith your own experience, and how hath God dealt with you in the time that is past? |
A26929 | When David went weeping up mount Olivet, he was in a safer case, than when he was gazing on Bathsheba from his battlements? |
A26929 | When it crieth out on the Cross, My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
A26929 | Who maketh you dull and sloathful, and sensual? |
A26929 | Who maketh you proud and unbelieving, and uncharitable? |
A26929 | Who turneth your hearts to earthly things, and deprives you of the sweetness of things spiritual and heavenly? |
A26929 | Why then do you complain so much against the signs& products of it? |
A26929 | Will not Christ appearing for its deliverance be a welcome sight? |
A26929 | With what shame& sorrow do I now look back upon the cold and lifeless Sermons which I preached? |
A26929 | Wo to the Shepherds of Israel that feed themselves; should not the Shepherds feed the Flocks? |
A26929 | You will not do so by the bitterness of a Medicine, or the working of a Purge or Vomit? |
A26929 | Your Fathers where are they? |
A26929 | Your sorrows shall be no longer than you make them necessary, and will you grudge at your own benefit? |
A26929 | and of that particular sin, usurpation of Dominion, and Treason against Caesar, which his heart and life were as contrary to, as light to darkness? |
A26929 | and the prophets, do they live for ever? |
A26929 | and to live in that air whose corruption causeth such, epidemical mortalities? |
A26929 | and upon those years neglect of the duty of private instructing of your families, before we set upon it orderly and constantly? |
A26929 | and will he be favourable no more? |
A26929 | are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his Coming? |
A26929 | doth his pr ● mise fail for evermore? |
A26929 | hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
A26929 | hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies? |
A26929 | is his Mercy cle ● n gone for ever? |
A26929 | ubi sunt vaticinia tua? |
A26929 | what a multitude of sorrows will there be ended? |
A26929 | — And as for you, O my Flocks, behold I judge between Cattel and Cattel, between the Rams and the Hee- Goats? |
A26939 | And how many neglect themselves when Ministers have done their best? |
A26939 | And if Christ made his Servants no better than the world, who would believe, that he is the Saviour of the World? |
A26939 | And is it not a gainful loss, which is rewarded in this Life an hundred fold, and in the world to Come with Life Eternal? |
A26939 | And is the Devil a better Master than Christ? |
A26939 | And little know we when a spark is kindled how it will end? |
A26939 | And may you leave it for such a use as is forbidden both your Son and You? |
A26939 | And no one is made for himself alone: You feel that Religious exercises do you good: But what good is it that you do to others? |
A26939 | And shall we not be judged by that Law? |
A26939 | And that Obligation to do it, is as essential to their Office as Authority? |
A26939 | And what a blessing have wise and godly and peacemaking Christian Princes been in divers ages to the world? |
A26939 | And what else do his Laws Command us? |
A26939 | And what is Judging but Justifying or Condemning? |
A26939 | And will you leave it to be the fuel of lust, and sin? |
A26939 | Are you more bound to your Son than to your Self? |
A26939 | But What is that Good that we must do? |
A26939 | But are we not undera law of Grace, and doth not that Law command us obedience and the improvement of our Talents in doing good? |
A26939 | But to hurt many, even whole Parishes, Cities, Churches, Kingdoms, how much more grievous will it prove? |
A26939 | But what can any others do for such? |
A26939 | By letting loose one passion, or carnal affection? |
A26939 | By venturing once on secret sin: Yea, by one rash sinful word? |
A26939 | Could nothing be done to get some Bibles, Catechisms, and practical books printed in their own tongues and given among them? |
A26939 | Did God give it you to maintain idleness and sin? |
A26939 | Did you ever well study that great prediction of Christ? |
A26939 | Do you believe that all shall be Judged according to their Works? |
A26939 | Do your best to procure faithful and just Rulers? |
A26939 | Even the contempt of the peoples Souls, and of the blood of Christ that purchased them? |
A26939 | Five parts of six of the World at this day are Heathens and Infidels: And what''s the Cause? |
A26939 | Hath not Mr. Goodwin justly reprehended and lamented the neglect, yea and resistence of this work in Barbados? |
A26939 | Have you not long tried him, and have you not endeavour''d to cure him of his Idleness, wickedness or lust? |
A26939 | How little Conscience do many Lords and Ladies make of an Idle hour or life? |
A26939 | How much holy blood have Roman and Spanish Inquisitors, and French and Irish Murderers, and most other Popish Rulers to Answer for? |
A26939 | How much more if they are drawn and set in an unlawful interest and way? |
A26939 | How sad use did Satan make of mens zeal for Orthodox words, when the Nestorian, Eutychian and Monothelite Controversies were in agitation? |
A26939 | If Magistrates and Ministers took care for no longer than their own lives, what would become of the State or Church? |
A26939 | If it be not done, what ground have you to presume it will be done when you are dead? |
A26939 | If you can trust Christ, sure you will think this profitable Usury: Is not a Cup of cold Water well paid for, when Christ performs his promise? |
A26939 | Is it not possible to do more than hath been done, to Convert the Blacks that are our own slaves or servants to the Christian faith? |
A26939 | Is it not possible to send some able zealous Chaplains to those Factories which are in the Countries of Infidels and Heathens? |
A26939 | Is not Baptism our Christening? |
A26939 | Is not saving Church, and State, Souls and Bodies, better worth resolution and labour, than destroying them? |
A26939 | Is not this to sell Souls for a little mony, as Judas did his Lord? |
A26939 | Love maketh anothers wants, sufferings, and sorrows to be our own: And who is not willing to help himself? |
A26939 | Malignity abhorreth serious piety, and will such promote it? |
A26939 | Might not better Teachers be sent thither for that use? |
A26939 | Might not more be dove for the Natives in our Plantations? |
A26939 | Might not something be done in other Plantations as well as in New- England, towards the Conversion of the Natives there? |
A26939 | One, and the worst, is Malignity, which is an Enmity to Spiritual good: For who will promote that which he is against? |
A26939 | Or how many wayes Satan hath to improve it? |
A26939 | Should not all this awaken us to do Good with greater diligence than they do evil? |
A26939 | Stewards must give account of all: What would you wish were the matter of your true account, if death or judgment were to morrow? |
A26939 | Such as thirst for the Conversion of sinners, and the enlargment of the Church of Christ, and would labour skilfully and diligently therein? |
A26939 | This is past doubt: And how doth that man use it for God, who leaveth it to one that is liker to use it for the Devil in a fleshly unprofitable Life? |
A26939 | V. But what is it that a man should do, that would do good to all or many? |
A26939 | Wha ● live we for, or what should we desire to live for, but to do good? |
A26939 | What a doleful life would the persidious Soul- betrayers live, if they knew what a guilt they have to answer for? |
A26939 | What a name hath excellent Alexander Severus left behind him? |
A26939 | What account can such a Steward give? |
A26939 | What can private men do in this? |
A26939 | What else is it to be devoted to God our Creator and Redeemer? |
A26939 | What grievous mischief may even well meaning men do, by one mistaken practice or rash act? |
A26939 | What now remaineth, but that we all set our selves to such a fruitful Course of life? |
A26939 | What qualifications are necessary hereto? |
A26939 | What the better were man for a Tongue, or hands or feet, if he should never use them? |
A26939 | Whether Armenians, Greeks, and Mofcovites might not be helpt? |
A26939 | Whether our Factories might not be made more useful to promote the Gospel, by Chaplains and Factors? |
A26939 | Will he give his Servants a better reward? |
A26939 | Would that excuse you if you put a Sword into a mad mans hand, to say, I can not help it if he use it ill? |
A26939 | Would you commit your Children to the care of a Mad man or a Knave, because he may possibly come to his Wits, or become honest? |
A26939 | Would you not wish you had done all the good you could? |
A26939 | and how? |
A26939 | and shall his work be done with greater zeal and resolution? |
A26939 | and the like elsewhere? |
A26939 | and to promote Love and Piety more earnestly than they do malignity and iniquity? |
A26939 | by the fierce promoting of one error? |
A26939 | how dismal is their success? |
A26939 | how many Millions are neglected by both? |
A26939 | how quickly may it be done, and how ordinarily is it done? |
A26939 | the best are hardly to be trusted far, as being lyable to miscarry by infirmity, how little then is to be hoped for from the wicked? |
A26939 | to tread down his Family and Spiritual worship, as if it were by his own Authority and Commission? |
A26939 | what plagues may they be to the people and themselves? |
A46661 | And do we not know that we must give an account of every idle word? |
A46661 | And may I but so Die, how harmless, how welcome will Death be? |
A46661 | And would not somthing like this in us, be desirable? |
A46661 | Are all those comforts of Christians, that follow hard after him, worth nothing? |
A46661 | But who knoweth yet but that this one Narrative of his Holy exemplary Life and Death, may do as much as more numerous or Voluminous writings? |
A46661 | But, doth Satan use to imploy those weapons but against those that he is in some fear of losing? |
A46661 | Can Christ forget the purchase of his own blood, the price of his soul, those whom he hath so intimately indeared to himself? |
A46661 | Can a mother forget her sucking child? |
A46661 | Can you gather from thence that the Lord doth not love you? |
A46661 | Canst thou not see so much till thou canst see no more, not because of its shortness, but because of thy darkness? |
A46661 | Christ smiles, and I can not chose but smile: can you find in your heart, to stop me who am now going to the compleat and eternal injoyment of Christ? |
A46661 | Come and behold a dying man more chearful than you ever saw any healthful man in the midst of his sweetest enjoyments? |
A46661 | Did Saints in former times use their tongues to no better purpose? |
A46661 | Did we never experience what this meaneth? |
A46661 | Did you never say, that these sermons upon hardness of heart, softned yours? |
A46661 | Do vve see any Loveliness or Beauty in Christ Jesus? |
A46661 | Doth God use to do thus, with his creatures? |
A46661 | Doth he not punish us less than we deserve? |
A46661 | Doth not the very word Love carry in it at the first hearing abundance of alluring violence? |
A46661 | Doth not this speak aloud our hearts to be very empty of grace, and that we have little sense of those spiritual and eternal concerns upon us? |
A46661 | Had he more reason to love us than we have to love one another? |
A46661 | Hast thou felt such meltings of loving- grief? |
A46661 | Hast thou not smelt the savour of his precious ointments, for which the virgins love him? |
A46661 | Hast thou not tasted, hast thou not known, that his love is better than wine? |
A46661 | Here you see a natural mans condition; How darest thou then lye down in security? |
A46661 | How can he chuse but think all Creature- comforts but small, compared with one look of love from Christ? |
A46661 | How can the love of God dwell in that man, who liveth without God in the world? |
A46661 | How can this yoak be uneasLy? |
A46661 | How many pathetical Letters did he send to them? |
A46661 | I think that Learned man wrote not foolishly, who maintaineth that studies tend to long life? |
A46661 | If Christ have my warmest love, why is it thus with me? |
A46661 | If God have my heart, why am I so thoughtful about the world? |
A46661 | Is it true, O my soul, doth God deal familiarly with man, and are his humble, zealous, and constant love, praise, and service too good for God? |
A46661 | Is not Christ better than ten children? |
A46661 | Is not all the world a shadow, compared with one quarter of an hours injoyment of him, even on this side of Glory in some of his own Ordinances? |
A46661 | Is not his loving- kindness amiable? |
A46661 | Is not that a blessed state, when a man can lift up his head with joy, when others tremble with fear, and sink with sorrow? |
A46661 | Is there no excellency in his sweetness pity, and patience? |
A46661 | Is there not Mercy and Truth in all his Dispensations? |
A46661 | Is there not enough in God, and the Holy Scriptures, to bear up our spirits under any afflictions, let them be never so great? |
A46661 | Is there nothing in communion with God? |
A46661 | Is this like those that understand the language of Canaan? |
A46661 | It is Christ hath commanded, and shall not we obey? |
A46661 | Let not your soul sink under afflictions, for what reason have you to be discomfited under them? |
A46661 | Now, were this deeply rooted in our hearts, how would contention, anger, wrath and heart- burning and all things of this nature cease? |
A46661 | O how sweet and gratious hast thou been unto me? |
A46661 | O what do Christians mean that they do no more labour to get their sences spiritually exercised? |
A46661 | O why should any of you be so sad, when I am so glad? |
A46661 | O, saith he, Is there any thing here, more desirable than the injoyment of Christ? |
A46661 | O, when shall this dear, precious, pure, eternal love of His, over- power our souls? |
A46661 | O, why do men and women jest, and dally in the great matters of Eternity? |
A46661 | O, why do they not make Religion the very business of their lives? |
A46661 | O, why is the Soul, Christ and Glory thus dispised? |
A46661 | O, why me Lord, why me? |
A46661 | Seems it a small matter, that the great Jehovah should deal thus familiarly with his Worm; and wilt thou pass this over, as a common mercy? |
A46661 | Shall not the love of Christ constrain us? |
A46661 | Shall we be so unkind to him who hath been so kind to us, as to stand it out with him in so equal a command? |
A46661 | Shall we by continual sorrow add affliction to affliction, and so become our own Tormentors? |
A46661 | Shall we quarrel with our Maker, and call the wise Righteous Judge to our Bar? |
A46661 | Shall we then give our selves up to be carried away with the grieving passions? |
A46661 | Should we talk thus, if we believed that we should hear of this again at the day of judgement? |
A46661 | They that have interest in Christ, what need they be moved and discomfited with any worldly trouble? |
A46661 | VVhat wouldst thou have more? |
A46661 | Was ever any under Heaven more beholding to free grace than I? |
A46661 | What else did his own words to a dear friend signifie, but an extraordinary sense of the freeness, fulness, and duration of that love? |
A46661 | What else meant his high expressions? |
A46661 | What if the day of Judgmennt were come, as it will most certainly come shortly? |
A46661 | What is there in a life of divine love that we need be afraid of? |
A46661 | What is there is this command that is grievous? |
A46661 | What reason to be loath to take it on? |
A46661 | What then shall I call these motions of your mind? |
A46661 | What then shall we think of them? |
A46661 | Where is the sinner, that could be contented to hear the Lord roaring out of Zion, whilest he is roaring in the Tavern? |
A46661 | Where''s our love to God and souls all this while, where''s our sense of the pretiousness of time, of the greatness of our account? |
A46661 | Which of them all could in the midst of their jollity say, This is the pleasure, that shall last for ever? |
A46661 | Which of them would be glad to hear the trumpet sound, and to hear that voice, Arise you dead and come to judgment? |
A46661 | Whom have you known that by longer living, hath got more holy readiness to die? |
A46661 | Why do not our hearts even leap for joy, why do not our souls triumph in these discoveries of love? |
A46661 | Why may you not then say with the Psasmist, Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
A46661 | Why me Lord, why me, and pass by thousands& look upon such a wretch as me, O, what shall I say unto thee, O thou preserver of men? |
A46661 | Why should we not then cheerfully submit to him in this one command, love one another? |
A46661 | Would it not more rejoyce me, than Josephs wagons did old Jacob? |
A46661 | Would you keep me from my Crown? |
A46661 | and how ready to improve providences and visits that he might set them home upon them? |
A46661 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
A46661 | but I hope better things of you; did I not hope, why should I not mourn in secret for you, as one cast out among the dead? |
A46661 | is not his loving- kindness better than life? |
A46661 | what Pathetical expressions did he use, what vehement expostulations, how frequent, how particular in his applications, to them? |
A26963 | Aliud, how prove you it to be there, rather than elsewhere? |
A26963 | An Atome of Earth or Water, is not annihilated; and why should we suspect, that a Spiritual Substance is? |
A26963 | And What''s a Contradiction, if this be not, to say, I do that which I can not do, or I can do that which I have no power to do? |
A26963 | And as to the incapacity of misery which you talk of, why should you think it more hereafter than here? |
A26963 | And do you think, that his love and goodness hath no answerable effect? |
A26963 | And do you think, that this doth not more advance Souls than abase them? |
A26963 | And how far their Authority extendeth? |
A26963 | And if they be two, why are they not separable? |
A26963 | And if you feign God to be partible, is it not more honour and joy to be a part of God, who is joy it self, than to be a created Soul? |
A26963 | And is it many, or one concentred Soul? |
A26963 | And what happiness then can we hope for, more than a deliverance from the present calamity? |
A26963 | And whom do they believe? |
A26963 | And why doth the Church believe? |
A26963 | And why should we fear Perfection? |
A26963 | And yet what is more certain than that there is Substance, Entity, and God? |
A26963 | Are all men that can not define, therefore void of all knowledg? |
A26963 | But do you know nothing but by Definitions? |
A26963 | But if the world have but one soul, what mean you by its concentring in the Carcass? |
A26963 | But what is such a mental Spirit? |
A26963 | But what mean you by[ the active Principles concentration in its own body]? |
A26963 | But what''s your proof? |
A26963 | But you would know what''s meant by a spirit, whether all that is not evident to sense? |
A26963 | Can Apes and Monkeys do all this? |
A26963 | Can he not separate them when he will? |
A26963 | Can not God make a Spirit? |
A26963 | Do they not shew his glory? |
A26963 | Do you believe, that each one hath now one individual Soul, or not? |
A26963 | Do you know what material signifieth? |
A26963 | Do you really believe, that there is a God? |
A26963 | Do you think any dust, or drop, any Atome of Earth or Water, loseth any thing of it self, by its union with the rest? |
A26963 | Do you think, that any Atome loseth its individuation? |
A26963 | Do you think, that passive matter doth as much manifest Gods Perfection, and honour the Efficient, as vital and Intellectual Spirits? |
A26963 | Doth God give them Laws to know and keep as moral free- agents? |
A26963 | Doth acting, without Power to act, cause the Power? |
A26963 | Doth not God know every dust, and every drop from the rest? |
A26963 | Doth not all the world difference Virtue and Vice, moral good and evil? |
A26963 | For before you can believe that Jesus is the Christ, and his Word true, how many impossibilities have you to believe? |
A26963 | Hath he not imprinted his Perfections in some measure, in his Works? |
A26963 | How many Score Volumes have told it us? |
A26963 | If God made as many substantial individual Souls, as men, is there any thing in Nature or Scripture, which threatneth the loss of Individuation? |
A26963 | If it be a pure Spirit, I would then know, what is meant by Spirit? |
A26963 | If it be, is it a pure Spirit, or meerly material? |
A26963 | If not here, why should you think that their misery hereafter will be ever the less, or more tolerable for your conceit, that they are parts of God? |
A26963 | If not, how can we lose that which we never had? |
A26963 | If separable, why not separated? |
A26963 | If therefore all men have but one Soul, why is it not you that are in pain or joy, when any, or all others are so? |
A26963 | If to part of the world, if each Vortex, Sun, Star,& c. have a distinct individuate superior Soul, why not men also inferiors? |
A26963 | If you mean, That it''s but an accident, that''s disprov''d before; what accident is it? |
A26963 | Is any Substance lost? |
A26963 | Is it a real Being? |
A26963 | Is it because they believe? |
A26963 | Is it not Earth and Water still? |
A26963 | Is it only the difference of an ▪ Instrument in Tune, and out of Tune? |
A26963 | Is it really different from the Body? |
A26963 | Is it themselves? |
A26963 | Is it therefore a real Being, really different from the Body, and able to be without it? |
A26963 | Is not the Haecceity, as they call it, continued? |
A26963 | Is not this a just progress? |
A26963 | Is the common light and sense of Nature no Evidence? |
A26963 | Is the simple Nature changed? |
A26963 | Is the universal Soul there fallen asleep, or imprisoned in a Grave, or what is it? |
A26963 | Is there not in the Creature a communicative disposition to cause their like? |
A26963 | Is this a Priviledg to boast of? |
A26963 | That you Act vitally, understand and will? |
A26963 | Therefore Belief is first, and is not caused by that which followeth it? |
A26963 | These are now my doubts; but are they the fruits of Diligence? |
A26963 | Those Conceptions are the cause of words and actions: and is there no cause of those Conceptions? |
A26963 | What happiness then can we hope for more than deliverance from the present calamity; or what misery are we capable of, more than is common to all? |
A26963 | What if I said,[ The Chandler made a Candle of Tallow, and then by another kindled it]? |
A26963 | What need you the Power, if you can act without it? |
A26963 | What should hinder it? |
A26963 | What''s here wanting to a Definition? |
A26963 | When the dust of the Carcass is scattered, is the Soul concentred in every atome, or but in one? |
A26963 | When will you shew us an Ape or a Monkey, that was ever brought to the Acts or Habits before mentioned of Men? |
A26963 | Whereas were the Soul such as repesented, who could rob it of its Endowments? |
A26963 | Who can trust the Honesty of such men, as multitudes of Popes, Prelates, and Priests have been? |
A26963 | Why are you not answerable for the Crimes of every Thief, if all b ● ● one? |
A26963 | Why did the knees prevent me? |
A26963 | Why do not Beasts speak as well as Men? |
A26963 | Why should you think he would not? |
A26963 | Will they stick at a Lye, that stick not at Blood, or any wickedness? |
A26963 | Will this make a Captive bear his Captivity, or a Malefactor his Death? |
A26963 | Yea, of those that were born deaf and dumb? |
A26963 | You add, how easie it would have been to you to believe as the Church believeth ▪ and not to have immerged your self in these difficulties? |
A26963 | You add,[ How shall I know the difference between the highest degree of materials, and lowest of immaterials? |
A26963 | You ask, Is it able to be without it? |
A26963 | and am I thus rewarded for not believing at a common rate? |
A26963 | and whether or no all things invisible, and imperceptable to Sense, are accounted such? |
A26963 | and yet knew God and his Law, and how to name the Creatures, and how to dress and keep the Garden? |
A26963 | or is it not? |
A26963 | or what misery are we eapable of, more than what is common to all? |
A26963 | or why the breasts, that I should suck? |
A26963 | or[ a man made an house of Bricks, and cemented them with Mortar,& c.]? |
A26963 | why did I not give up the ghost when I came out of the belly? |
A26963 | will you thence prove, That he made a Candle burning without fire, or the House without Mortar? |
A27059 | 15. may have somewhat to this sense;[ And wherefore one? |
A27059 | Am I not fittest to tell you what I include? |
A27059 | And I may ask you, Are you not herein a man singular even to admiration? |
A27059 | And are not those infidels guilty of their fore- fathers sin, in the sense before- mentioned? |
A27059 | And how can he cause the subjects of his Kingdom to suffer so much without their own desert? |
A27059 | And if I had that as theirs first, I must by the same reason have more of theirs: And who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
A27059 | And if he might leave it to a serpent necessarily to beget a serpent, why might he not leave it to the will of man to do it freely? |
A27059 | And if man had chosen such a generation, could his off- spring( if capable) have charged God with cruelty? |
A27059 | And if the first act of sin were an act of nature, why not also the first act of generation? |
A27059 | And is all this no punishment? |
A27059 | And now Sir, was this a task worthy so solemn an invitation before God, and Conscience, and the World? |
A27059 | And then I would know whether there be any reason why God doth all this against infants, but because he will do it? |
A27059 | And unless he distinguish of common nature, and the persons nature, what sense hath it? |
A27059 | And what now shall the poor people do? |
A27059 | And who dare say that he doth it unjustly, because we are not consenters? |
A27059 | And who would not endure much misery as a man, rather than be a toad or serpent? |
A27059 | And yet will you plead thus, as if it were against singularity? |
A27059 | Are not all Protestants, Papists, Christians, learned Heathens, agreed of the Rule that I gave? |
A27059 | Are you in good sadness desirous to know whom I mean? |
A27059 | But did you not see that I before expresly excepted all matters necessary to Salvation from humane trust? |
A27059 | But what mean you to bring in the intimation, that thus[ the great truths of God will depend on humane suffrages, even whether God shall be God?] |
A27059 | But when Placaeus said the like, or less, with what a heap of authority doth Rivet( well) overwhelm him? |
A27059 | But[ wherefore doth a living man complain? |
A27059 | Can they hope to be wiser than all these Teachers, to discern which of them is in the right? |
A27059 | Do they think that the Church meaneth only Adam''s sin, by our[ fore- Fathers]? |
A27059 | For shall not the Judge of all the World do righteously? |
A27059 | For why else should not natural pravity adhere to the substance which he received from the Virgin? |
A27059 | How early do they shew an aversness to the work and ends for which they were created? |
A27059 | How little do the precepts of Parents, or Teachers, and all the means of grace themselves, to conquer it in the most? |
A27059 | I also intreat you to tell me, whether you differ from me in the rule of counsel which I there gave the ignorant people, or not? |
A27059 | If my diligence produced never so much more, are you bound to take any more notice of them than you did of all these? |
A27059 | If there be such a thing as actual sin, how doth that act make us sinners? |
A27059 | Is it formaliter? |
A27059 | Is this fit doctrine for a Doctor and Master of a Literate Society? |
A27059 | It is further objected,[ Moreover, how did we sin in Adam actually, who were never actually in him?] |
A27059 | It''s objected,[ How could that act be voluntary as to us, which was long past before that we had any will?] |
A27059 | Martyr,& c. And why? |
A27059 | May not God''s pleasure bring on us a reputative guilt of Adam''s sin, and not of our neerer Parents? |
A27059 | Or do they think that they pray for the dead, in Purgatory, Hell, or Heaven? |
A27059 | Or that by[ not- remembring,] they mean[ not- pardoning, and not- punishing]? |
A27059 | Or what punishment is the present death of children, to harlots and unnatural persons, that desire to be rid of them? |
A27059 | Our question extendeth not to the degree of infants punishment, whether they shall have more or less? |
A27059 | Quis enim non magis filiorum salutem, quam suam curet? |
A27059 | Sed& si benedictio patrum semini quoque eorum destinabatur, sine ullo adhuc merito ejus, cur non& reatus patrum in filios quoque redundaret? |
A27059 | Should Mr. Ainsworth''s Church of Separatists have judged of all his critical expositions by the major vote? |
A27059 | Si hoc ut jam diximus, constituatur, quaeret quispiam, quid discriminis sit inter peccatum originis,& illud quod a proximis parentibus contrabitur? |
A27059 | They shall say to thee, Wherefore hath the Lord pronounced all this great evil against us? |
A27059 | Vtrum etiam alis pecata primi parentis, vel proximorum parentum traducantur in posteros? |
A27059 | What is their remedy? |
A27059 | What of that? |
A27059 | What punishment to Parents is the everlasting loss or suffering of the children? |
A27059 | What sort of men in the World are more faulty in tying up mens Faith too much to men, than the Papists are? |
A27059 | Whether Infants have Original Sin? |
A27059 | Whether Posterity be guilty of Death, by reason of the Actual sins of their immediate Parents? |
A27059 | Whether you do well to number Artificial, Logical Definitions controverted by the greatest Divines, with[ the great truths of God?] |
A27059 | Why did not our Parents propagate us free from the guilt of Adam''s sin? |
A27059 | Why is causaliter distinguished from formaliter? |
A27059 | Why might not God leave such a thing to his free will, as well as his own salvation or damnation? |
A27059 | Why then should a sinner beget a sinner, and corrupted Parents have a corrupted issue? |
A27059 | Why turn you a Logical case of Defining, into a Theological de re? |
A27059 | Will he destroy the righteous with the wicked? |
A27059 | Will you allow this plea to them, that use it against the texts that speak for[ Christ''s dying for all]: when yet they have as fair pretence? |
A27059 | Would you have thought this a cruelty, or injustice? |
A27059 | [ Christ is the Head of the Church, and Saviour of the Body]: and how doth he save them? |
A27059 | [ Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die, saith the Lord God?] |
A27059 | [ How then can man be justified with God? |
A27059 | [ What is man that he should be clean, and he that is born of a woman that he should be righteous?] |
A27059 | a man for the punishment of his sin? |
A27059 | and shall words be taken improperly by us at our pleasure, because they are so sometimes where we may prove it? |
A27059 | deny its properest signification, without a proved necessity? |
A27059 | how shall ye escape the damnation of hell? |
A27059 | is there no remedy? |
A27059 | or any more than the good Angels might be supposed to consent to such a thing? |
A27059 | or how can he be clean that is born of a woman?] |
A27059 | or of none but Adam''s sin? |
A27059 | or on what ground should it be presupposed that we would all consent to live and die with him, any more than with the Angels that fell? |
A27059 | or what is our iniquity? |
A27059 | or what is our sin? |
A27059 | that he died for none but sinners: for what need had the innocent of a satisfaction to Justice, and of a Sacrifice, and Ransome, and Redemption? |
A27059 | what must the Church expect from the too great number of ignorant and ungodly Teachers, when it must be thus used by the Learned and the Godly? |
A27059 | whether pain of loss only, or of sense also, or how far? |
A86280 | 36 But he demands, How the Church came to dispose of the places of greatest influence, and trust to such as hated Arminianism as the shadow of death? |
A86280 | And is not all this stark false, if their very Religion be Rebellion? |
A86280 | And secondly, what find you in that latter passage, which argueth me to be guilty of such bloody desires as I stand accused for in your Letter? |
A86280 | And to what purpose all this pains? |
A86280 | And what Ground can we find for so great a confidence? |
A86280 | But what makes this unto appeals? |
A86280 | But what makes this unto the purpose? |
A86280 | Call you me this the taking of an Oath, or the prosessing in it of a good affection to the English discipline? |
A86280 | Call you these holy breathings the holy breathings after Christ which you so applaud? |
A86280 | Can you do this, and yet with confidence declare that it is 20. years since you saw that Book? |
A86280 | Doth not the State truly affirm, that there was never any Law made against the life of a Papist quatenus, a Papist only? |
A86280 | For I would fain know by what Authority those Questions and Answers were added to the end of that Bible? |
A86280 | For whom speaks Poynet in this place, for M. Peirce or Mr. Hickman? |
A86280 | Fourthly, Whether Abraham brought it into the Land of Canaan with him, or found it spoken by the Natives at his coming thither? |
A86280 | Hath God ▪ less regard unto a Nation then a man? |
A86280 | His reproaches of my being condemned, for I know not what, by most, if not by all sorts of persons? |
A86280 | How so? |
A86280 | How so? |
A86280 | How so? |
A86280 | How so? |
A86280 | How so? |
A86280 | I was trained up when I was a child to kiss the Rod, and I can do it, I thank God, now I am a man, Cur nescire pudens pravae quam discere mallem? |
A86280 | If not, why do you thus insinuate by this(& c,) that you suppress some other charges which you have against me? |
A86280 | If they were your Fathers in God, why did you not look upon them with such reverence as becometh children? |
A86280 | If your superiors in the Lord, why did you not yield them that subjection which was due unto them? |
A86280 | Now who seeth not, that the people having no right to debate, must therefore have had the right to resolve, or else were to be assembled for nothing? |
A86280 | Quid verba audiam, cum facta videam? |
A86280 | What comes after next? |
A86280 | Wherein Gods name, may ▪ such an unstudied man as I find that definition? |
A86280 | Would you be satisfied in this? |
A86280 | o ● being ranked in order and degree above you, would you not have them keep that distance which belongs to their places? |
A26887 | & c. Doth not the Certain Historical Tradition of the world suffice for this without a supernatural power? |
A26887 | 2? |
A26887 | And can you believe that Revelation that made him Pope or Infallible, before you believe any Revelation? |
A26887 | And do you think we can give you one only Medium of it in a word? |
A26887 | And how ignorant and wicked is many a Priest? |
A26887 | And if Popes and General Councils distinct are deceitful, how shall we be sure that two false parties when they meet do make one true one? |
A26887 | And is the Pope and these 42. of equal historical credit to all the Christian world? |
A26887 | And must have all others believe only because they believed before them? |
A26887 | And must we quit all that Certainty, to take the same things only on trust from your Pope and his Council? |
A26887 | And now judge whose faith is more Certain the Protestants or the Papists? |
A26887 | And shall we not believe a General Council in matter of present fact, and yet must believe them what is Gods word? |
A26887 | And so is it not a humane faith? |
A26887 | And then where is our faith? |
A26887 | And v. 12. he saith[ How are we sure that God saith what we believe? |
A26887 | And what cogent Evidence bringeth them to all this? |
A26887 | And what is the Pope and 42. or two hundred Prelates( most of Italy) to such Historical Evidence as this? |
A26887 | And where hath the Pope or Council given us a Grammar or Lexicon to know the true sense of words by, for the future? |
A26887 | And who can be Certain of Gods word by an Authority which is it self so uncertain? |
A26887 | And( mark Reader) can any man be sure that he speaks true as Pope or Christs Vicar, that never knew that he was Pope or Christs Vicar? |
A26887 | As to pretend that God hath given them a judicial power, to tell us whether the Statutes of England are true or spurious? |
A26887 | Because millions deny the perception of all mens Senses and Intellects thereby, are not things sensible demonstrable or evident? |
A26887 | But how know we which are Approved? |
A26887 | But if it be by their own Authority, who will take a self- made faith, of men that Believe only because they Believe? |
A26887 | Can no man be be certainer of the Creed than of that Priests words? |
A26887 | Can you make me know that I do not believe, when I know that I do? |
A26887 | Do you believe it only by the Iudicial decrees of later Popes and Councils? |
A26887 | Else why will he be his Scholar? |
A26887 | Had they any power out of their own dominions? |
A26887 | Hath the Church a twofold foundation for faith? |
A26887 | Hath the Pope power to judge in utramque partem, either way, or only one way? |
A26887 | Have we no more or other Certainty of our Creed than of all these Councils, so variously and doubtfully delivered? |
A26887 | Have we not the Sacramental Covenant of Grace, the Creed, Lords Prayer and Decalogue surely delivered before any Pope or Council judged of them? |
A26887 | How do the people know whether the Pope and Council determine any thing at all but on the Priests credit? |
A26887 | How know I that they are true? |
A26887 | How know I that this Doctrine and Book is the same, which was delivered by the Apostles to the Churches? |
A26887 | How know I that this Doctrine and these words are of God,( or a Divine Revelation)? |
A26887 | How know I the meaning of the words? |
A26887 | How know I the words and Bible? |
A26887 | How know we whether the Records of them be truest in Crab, in Surius, in Nicolinus, in Binnius or in none of them? |
A26887 | How many Councils are Controverted? |
A26887 | How then shall the sense of your Councils themselves be certainly known? |
A26887 | How then shall we be all sure, what they said or determined? |
A26887 | If all; then one of our Bishops may have it when he will: If not, no man can be sure of Gods word for want of being sure who is a true Pope? |
A26887 | If it be, former Popes and Councils that they believe, tell us whom and why the first believed? |
A26887 | If so, must we believe him if he be for the Negative? |
A26887 | If you say that soul- concernments must have more certainty than bodily? |
A26887 | In this Question, How to know that a Revelation is of God? |
A26887 | Is Montanus and other such Condemned? |
A26887 | Is it by the Decree of other Councils? |
A26887 | Is it the great Essentials of Religion? |
A26887 | Is not the faith of almost all your vulgar Papists, resolved into the Priests affirmation? |
A26887 | Is our faith uncertain because we take it not on such a mans credit? |
A26887 | Is this now a Divine Revelation or not? |
A26887 | It is but few persons in the world that ever saw and consulted with a Pope and a General Council? |
A26887 | It never saith to the world[ You must know by the Judgement of Peter, or the Pope and a General Council what is the word of God] Did Christ forget it? |
A26887 | May he judge that there is a God or no God, a Christ or no Christ, a Heaven or no Heaven, a Scripture or none, at his pleasure? |
A26887 | Most confess that the Pope himself may err? |
A26887 | Must I not know that[ He that believeth shall be saved] is truly translated out of the Original, till the Pope determine it? |
A26887 | Must I not receive the Creed, Lords- Prayer, or Decalogue by all other Evidence till his word cometh in? |
A26887 | Non nisi quia sic tenet Ecclesia? |
A26887 | O that you could lay by partiality and base selfish respects but for one day or hour? |
A26887 | Only because the Church so holdeth?] |
A26887 | Or Constantine the Great professed Christianity? |
A26887 | Or Iustin wrote his Apologie? |
A26887 | Or Origen was a professed Christian? |
A26887 | Or are you sure they are none? |
A26887 | Or can any man believe that Christ hath an Infallible Vicar before he believe in Christ himself, and that he is Infallible? |
A26887 | Scripture it self never mentioneth this Method or Evidence: And would it be silent of the only way of Certainty? |
A26887 | Take you that Certainty: we will have none of it: Or is he only to Iudge truly, and then only to be believed? |
A26887 | Then I must throw away Certainty for uncertainty? |
A26887 | This, his blind supposition called me to premise; that you may see how far Papists and we are or are not agreed that all Gods Revelations are true? |
A26887 | Till the Council of Nice, for above 300. years the world was without a General Council: And were they without faith? |
A26887 | To see all this difference and darkness, and not vouchsafe to speak a few words, or write one Infallible Commentary to end them? |
A26887 | Was it not the Romane Emperours that called the Councils? |
A26887 | We must believe that thus every wicked Pope and the Prelates of the major vote in his packt Councils have this Inspiration? |
A26887 | We thank them for notthing: Can not we know that there is a God, and a Christ, till the Pope judge it? |
A26887 | Were not all the Patriarchs only in one Empire? |
A26887 | What Certainty then can they give us? |
A26887 | What Certainty we have what is a real Revelation of God? |
A26887 | What Certainty we have what is a real Revelation of God? |
A26887 | What Unity in faith may be expected? |
A26887 | What are the Revelations of God about which our Controversies lie? |
A26887 | What do you make a Pope to be but the Vicar of Christ? |
A26887 | What if the Question among us were whether ever Paul was at Rome? |
A26887 | What is it that your Pope and Councils are to determine? |
A26887 | What matter of Fact is? |
A26887 | What need Lucas Brugensis, Alba, and so many others search after this with so much industry if the Pope have determined it? |
A26887 | What need any other proof than your oft mentioned denial of Bread in the Eucharist? |
A26887 | What then shall we believe? |
A26887 | What wanted that at Basil? |
A26887 | What was Caranzas''s fault that he is blamed for? |
A26887 | When in a Council the major part carry it by vote( perhaps by one or a few) How shall we be sure that all the minor part were deceived? |
A26887 | Where are all the Translators differences reconciled by the decision of Pope or Council? |
A26887 | Where have they determined which are the right among all the various Readings? |
A26887 | Where have they determined, which are the true Copies of the Hebrew and Greek Text? |
A26887 | Where the Nature and Conditions of Objective and Subjective, Sensible and Intelligible Certainty are opened? |
A26887 | Where then is your Certainty? |
A26887 | Whether ever there were such Kings or Parliaments as made them? |
A26887 | Whether it be true that the Papists grant us, that all Divine Revelations are true? |
A26887 | Whether there can be a Demonstrative knowledge of Morals? |
A26887 | Which of the various Copies of Canons are true which are given us oft by the same Author? |
A26887 | Who knoweth what alterations the Index expurgatorius( not infallible) maketh in the books? |
A26887 | Why will not an implicite belief in Christ go as far as yours? |
A26887 | You destroy or greatly discredit the Grand Evidence of the Christian faith, even Miracles: How then can your faith be the most Certain? |
A26887 | and why may not the major part of the Church be sure as well as he? |
A26887 | any further extended? |
A26887 | or whether ever God said true to man? |
A69536 | And are not the Souls of such as you call humorous, peevish, or wilful, worth more than some of that which you call your Liberty? |
A69536 | And did the fear of bringing Persecution on others hinder them? |
A69536 | And did they forbear for fear of bringing Persecution on Dissenters? |
A69536 | And hath the Protestant Religion been secured and advantaged by our usage? |
A69536 | And if so, is it no subordinate obedience that is due to Parents and other Superiors? |
A69536 | And if the Question be, Whether this be formal Obedience, or only material? |
A69536 | And if to save such an one you would not so much as deny any of your liberty for him, what would you do for him at all? |
A69536 | And is not this a Natural Common Duty? |
A69536 | And must we not labour hard, and suffer much, for to win such Souls? |
A69536 | And must you have Lordships, great maintenance, reverence, honour, and obedience, for needless preaching? |
A69536 | And should not the Soul of a Sinner be as compassionately saved by us as his Body, as far as we are able, and at as dear a rate? |
A69536 | And that when the Fire consumed the Churches, and when in many Parishes the tenth part of the People have no Church to go to? |
A69536 | And we are commanded to pray, Forgive our enemies, persecutors, and slanderers, and turn their hearts: And must we pray, and not endeavour? |
A69536 | And we would ask them, Whether they live not themselves in the practice of the contrary? |
A69536 | And whether so to do would deserve honour and preferment, and to do otherwise be a Crime that deserveth silencing, and ruine? |
A69536 | Are not Souls more worth than Bodies? |
A69536 | Are they not worth more than a Pipe of Tobacco, or a Cup of Sack, or a Stage- play, or a needless Ceremony; which you account part of your Liberty? |
A69536 | Are they pleased with well- doing, and with that which promoteth the Protestant interest, and mans salvation? |
A69536 | Are they willing that so many of the English Non- conformists shall have leave to preach Christ''s Gospel freely, as never had any hand in the Wars? |
A69536 | Are things lawful none of the[ All things?] |
A69536 | At what Age he would have Mankind begin the practice of this Principle? |
A69536 | Can Christians be of your Religion? |
A69536 | Did not Christ come to seek and save them? |
A69536 | Did not Mr. Eaton, when he wrote that the Oath of Allegiance and the Covenant bind not, know that most of us were against his judgement? |
A69536 | Did not Mr. Nye write to prove it lawful to hear the Parish Ministers? |
A69536 | Do not all Sects, even Quakers, meet at the Place and Time which their Leaders do appoint them? |
A69536 | Do they not command their own Servants and Children things or circumstances antecedently indifferent? |
A69536 | Do they not hear the words which the Leader chuseth for their Ears? |
A69536 | Do you not thus reproach Christ, that set a higher price on Souls, when you value them not at the price of a Cup of Drink? |
A69536 | Do you think that the Devil and the Papists had rather we were silenced, or not? |
A69536 | Doth he believe the immortality of Souls who will say so? |
A69536 | Doth not God beneficently love his Enemies; even the sinful, the humorous, the proud, and the peevish? |
A69536 | Doth not God welcome such Prodigals when they return, Luke 16. and call, invite, and intreat them to return? |
A69536 | Doth not the Law of Nature oblige us to love our Neighbour as our selves? |
A69536 | Doth not this doleful Doctrine tell Men consequently, that they should seek to save the Soul of no Sinner in the World? |
A69536 | Hast thou faith? |
A69536 | Hath not this Reason( to keep others from Persecution) prevailed with us far enough and long enough? |
A69536 | If a Man be against one Schoolmaster only over a thousand Schools, shall he be reproached because he is willing to teach one? |
A69536 | If it be that we Preach worse than others, or Preach Sedition, or unsound Doctrine, why are not we accused of it, and judged upon proof? |
A69536 | If not, doth this Religion of yours much commend it self to the Nature of Mankind? |
A69536 | If the Question be, whether any Ruler have power to Command a thing which would be no Duty, but indifferent, if he did not Command it? |
A69536 | If you say that our preaching is needless, Is not your own then as needless, if you preach the same Gospel? |
A69536 | Is a King in each Kingdom as unreasonable a thing as a Papal Monarch, or a King of Kings, and of all the Earth? |
A69536 | Is a Parish a Multitude of such Churches? |
A69536 | Is not Love the fulfilling of the Law, and the End of the Gospel, and Faith working by Love, the Sum of Christian Religion? |
A69536 | Is not that Man perfectly holy? |
A69536 | Is not this such Carnal Policy, as if not repented of, will perish with the Masters of it? |
A69536 | Is silencing us our suffering most, or the Peoples? |
A69536 | Is there not joy in Heaven for their Repentance? |
A69536 | Must we tempt men to think that we are Seekers, Quakers, Separatists, Anabaptists, lest we expose them to Persecution? |
A69536 | Nor any thing but keeping them from preaching the Doctrine of Salvation? |
A69536 | Or is he that writeth this fit to report us of the other mind, unfit for subjection, or Humane Society? |
A69536 | Shall we have no pity on Mens guilty Souls? |
A69536 | Should not every thing be valued according to its worth? |
A69536 | That is, whether Duty be Sin, whether Life be Death, and Light be Darkness? |
A69536 | WHether things antecedently lawful do therefore become unlawful, because commanded by Lawful Authority? |
A69536 | Was it for matter of War that near two Thousand Ministers were ejected, or silenced, 1662? |
A69536 | We protest against the persecution of sober godly Christians, on the account of such differences; and are we then guilty of what we deprecate? |
A69536 | What Moralities, what Untruths, Injustice, and Unmercifulness is it pregnant with? |
A69536 | Whether their way of Exposition, or ours, tend more to promote Perjury and Equivocation; and which more secureth Truth and Honesty? |
A69536 | Whether there be need of much Learning, Conscience, or Honesty, to stretch the words from their ordinary sense, more than to do otherwise? |
A69536 | Whether we owe not that honour to our Law- makers, as to suppose that they are able, and willing, to speak intelligibly? |
A69536 | Who is it that hath not as great sin as some humorous, or peevish stumbling at some lawful thing? |
A69536 | Why should Men be feigned so mad, as to argue at this rate? |
A69536 | Why should no other penalty serve in this case, but silencing us? |
A69536 | Would not punishing the innocent, as Drunkards or Whoremongers are punished, satisfie you? |
A69536 | Would they have us either by speech or silence draw men to believe, that we are of all mens minds whom we would save from Persecution? |
A69536 | Would you deny none of these to save many Souls? |
A69536 | Would you have God care no more for your soul, and value it at no higher a rate? |
A69536 | Would you have it believed that they are purchased by his Blood? |
A69536 | Would you not deny your Liberty in a Cup of Drink, or a Pipe of Tobacco, to save the Life of one that in humour would destroy himself? |
A69536 | [ Children obey your Parents in all things, for this is well- pleasing to the Lord: Servants obey in all things your Masters according to the Flesh? |
A69536 | and Mr. Tombes write to prove it lawful both to hear and to communicate with them? |
A69536 | and all this on pretense of good? |
A69536 | and must we not in compassion speak for peace, but only say as Christ, Father forgive them, for they know not what they do? |
A69536 | or for something else? |
A69536 | or his House, who would set it on fire? |
A69536 | or to four persons in a Village, than to thousands in Cities? |
A69536 | or who is it that hath no pride, no peevishness, no humorousness, or at least that hath no vitious Principle at all? |
A69536 | what work will selfishness and fleshly interest make? |
A69536 | yea to cherish the sin of many, lest some should suffer? |
A26909 | 2. and 3. which are Covenants to them? |
A26909 | 23. ordain Elders in every Church? |
A26909 | And if these be not worth the disputing with, it seems, that you differ from them more than Separatists do: and then were not all these Schismaticks? |
A26909 | And is it Edifying to read such a discourse, that saith and unsaith by self- contradiction? |
A26909 | And is not Agreement a humane Contract? |
A26909 | And is not his consent then necessary? |
A26909 | And what a Trade for the Booksellers? |
A26909 | And what shall they do where the Prince equally tolerateth both, and it''s hard to know which is the more numerous? |
A26909 | And whether they are Friends to Mankind? |
A26909 | And who denyeth this? |
A26909 | And why can not they? |
A26909 | And why may there not be distinct Politick Bodies, or Compound in one whole as well as natural? |
A26909 | And why then should their own Books be so valued? |
A26909 | Are all that dwell in the Parish or Diocess your Church members? |
A26909 | Are not the Takers of it obliged? |
A26909 | As Whole and Parts? |
A26909 | Baptism delivereth men possession of Pardon, Grace and right to Glory; and can men have this against their wills? |
A26909 | But hath God commanded or instituted no Covenant but Baptism? |
A26909 | But in what sence is Episcopacie one? |
A26909 | But is it true that humane Contracts make not a Church? |
A26909 | But is not humane Covenanting a cause of single Church Relation as well as of universal? |
A26909 | But is not the Inference true? |
A26909 | Can the wit of man imagine how it is possible without consent, for a man to be made the Pastor of any Flock? |
A26909 | Could any then come otherwise in? |
A26909 | Did he think these things need no proof at all? |
A26909 | Did not all Churches hold and practise this after, and was it none of Gods Institution? |
A26909 | Do not men owe duty to their Pastors which they owe to no others? |
A26909 | Do the Free- holders of Belford- shire choose Knights for Middlesex; or the Citizens of Oxford choose Officers in London? |
A26909 | Do the Men of one Colledge, School, Corporation, owe no more duty to that than to all others? |
A26909 | Do you Swear Canonical obedience as much to the Bishop of Paris, or Ha ● ● nia,& c. as to your Ordinary? |
A26909 | Do you yet see no Priviledges that one hath Proper, and not common to all? |
A26909 | Do your Bishops in Convocation make Canon Laws for all the World? |
A26909 | Have they all things common? |
A26909 | How are your Parish or Diocesan Church members known to your selves or any others? |
A26909 | How far are the Vniversal Church and Particular Churches distinct? |
A26909 | How few in England separate not from the Church as far as this disobedience amounts to? |
A26909 | How many Ages in above 23 Duplicates or Schisms, was the World uncertain which was the true Pope? |
A26909 | If a man come from a Countrey Village and be made by Covenant a Citizen of London, how prove you that he renounceth King or Kingdom? |
A26909 | If it be every transient Communicant, have you a proper Pastoral care of every Travellers Soul that so communicates with you? |
A26909 | If many Students may make one Colledge, why may not many Colledges make one University? |
A26909 | If not, put them not on it: Why are you angry with them for going from you? |
A26909 | If not, why are all the Nonconformists cast out that offer to officiate and Communicate on such terms as are common to all sound Churches? |
A26909 | If one from York or Cornwall come into your Pulpit without consent, do People stand as much related to him as to you? |
A26909 | If so, God requireth us not to take any of you for our Bishops or Pastors: Who then requireth it? |
A26909 | If so, what a case was the East in by the difference between Chrysost ● ● e and his Competitors? |
A26909 | If the Exercise must be in particular Churches, must not men Consent to their Relations and Duties? |
A26909 | If those that heard not a Sermon in many years differed not from your Congregation, why do you preach? |
A26909 | Is every Christian bound on pain of Damnation to 〈 ◊ 〉 all these, and then to c ● amine and ● idge Bishops and Priests accordingly? |
A26909 | Is every Priest the Vniversal Church, or an essential part of it? |
A26909 | Is it a sin to Promise Duty? |
A26909 | Is it all difference in the Integrals or Accid ● nts? |
A26909 | Is it all 〈 ◊ 〉 of Love, or all Vncharitableness to one another? |
A26909 | Is it any renuntiation of Baptism to promise at Ordination to obey the Arch- Bishop and Bishop, and to take the Oath of Canonical Obedience? |
A26909 | Is it called Divine only as made by God, or as commanded by God and made by Man, or as mutual? |
A26909 | Is it enough that it be of Men? |
A26909 | Is it not still exacted? |
A26909 | Is this separating from the Catholick Church? |
A26909 | Must the World at last learn that Whole and Parts are not distinct? |
A26909 | No man then is out of the Church that is not out of the Baptismal Covenant, either by not taking it, or by renouncing some Essential part of it? |
A26909 | Or that did not implicitely trust all the Priests that he ordained? |
A26909 | Quo reneam nodo,& c. How should one deal with such slippery men? |
A26909 | Reader, doth not this man here confess that there are particular Churches? |
A26909 | Then the Baptized are still in Communion with the Church, till their baptism be nullified: And hath he proved us Apostates? |
A26909 | They that fellowed the Bi ● hop, or they that separated from him and kept to the C ● hedral? |
A26909 | V ● i Episcopus ibi Ecclesia: Who were the Separatists? |
A26909 | Was he then a Schismatick? |
A26909 | What if the Alexandrians, when 〈 ◊ 〉 was banis ● ed by Constantine himself, were half for him, and half against him? |
A26909 | What the meaning of this great, Decantate Word[ Separate] is, must anon be enquired: But, may not Churches be distinct and not culpably separate? |
A26909 | What, I say, if the People now mistooke who had the best Title? |
A26909 | Whether he separated from himself or his Church? |
A26909 | Whether there he be a Subject to Dr. Stilling sleet as his Pastor, and bound to obey him? |
A26909 | Whether these men are for the Unity of England? |
A26909 | Who ever ordained a man against his will? |
A26909 | Who would have thought that we are more for the Liturgy than he? |
A26909 | Why are we ruined for not covenanting as aforesaid? |
A26909 | Why doth the Canon suspend those that receive them to Communion from another Parish that hath no Preacher? |
A26909 | Will any Divine Covenant serve? |
A26909 | against humane Church Forms? |
A26909 | and France, about the Archbishops of Rh ● ● ● s, when he was put out that deposed 〈 ◊ 〉 4. and when an Infant was put in, and oft besides? |
A26909 | and can any wonder if Rulers should think the Punishment of M ● r ● ● rers is not worse than we deserve? |
A26909 | and doth he not Preach Christians into the hatred of each other? |
A26909 | and then, are not you a Schismatick if you communicate with them? |
A26909 | are not Covenants imposed on all that will be Ministers in the act of Uniformity? |
A26909 | are not multitudes kept out and cast out for not making these Covenants? |
A26909 | as in Zeno''s and Anastasius Reign,& c. And what shall they do when many Chnrches in one City are of divers Tongues, as well as Customs? |
A26909 | if yea, then is it against Baptism to promise to do our duty? |
A26909 | is it all difference in the Essentials of Christianity? |
A26909 | or for any man to have Title against his will, to the proper oversight and pastoral care of any one Pastor, or the priviledges of any Church? |
A26909 | or if they mistake one or more mens Commission, do they therefore separate from the Catholick Church? |
A26909 | or is the damning dangerous Engine made since?) |
A26909 | or must it not be only the Baptismal Covenant? |
A26909 | or when the 〈 ◊ 〉 were put down, where they had been? |
A26909 | or whether many out of his Diocess( thousands) may not as Lawfully dwell half the Year in London as he? |
A26909 | perswaded the continuance of it, did the universal Church separate from it self and Christ? |
A26909 | sure now they should be Christians? |
A26909 | 〈 ◊ 〉 and I ● natius and hundreds others? |
A69538 | 1, Your Spirits are Christs own: And may you not trust him with his own? |
A69538 | 15. and will he not receive his friends? |
A69538 | 16 And wilt thou disown and refuse the soul that thou hast sealed?] |
A69538 | 9, Consider, How nearly thou art related to him in this state of Grace: Thou art his Child; and hath he not the bowels of a Father? |
A69538 | After so many receptions in the way of Grace, dost thou yet doubt of his Receiving thee? |
A69538 | And by what gift could he better testifie his love? |
A69538 | And for whom doth he provide this Heavenly Building not made with hands, but for Believers? |
A69538 | And how much more would it please his enmity, to have power to torment our Souls? |
A69538 | And may we not comfortably go to him that loveth us? |
A69538 | And may we not trust him in his undertaken office, that would trust a Physician or any other in his office, if we judge him faithful? |
A69538 | And shall he not then dwell with God for ever? |
A69538 | And will he now forget his love, and sufferings, and himself forsake thee after this? |
A69538 | And will he now take from thee the Kingdom which he hath given thee? |
A69538 | And will you do this about so great a matter as the everlasting state of your immortal Souls? |
A69538 | And wilt thou deny to receive me to that glory, who pray but for what thou hast prayed to thy Father? |
A69538 | Are you provided, certainly provided whither to go, and who shall Receive you when your Stewardship is ended, and you must needs go hence? |
A69538 | As he came down in flesh to be a Suitor to thee, so he caused thee to let go all for him; and will he now forsake thee? |
A69538 | But how much More of Christ is there in our suffering for his Cause and Truth? |
A69538 | Can that Love now thrust me out of Heaven, that lately fetch''d me from the gates of Hell, and placed me among thy Saints? |
A69538 | Can that love which washed me, and took we home, when I lay wallowing in my Blood, reject me, when it hath so far recovered me? |
A69538 | Christ teacheth us our duty by the parable of the Steward, that asketh himself before- hand, What he shall do when he must be no longer Steward? |
A69538 | Consider, if Christ should not receive thy spirit, how unspeakably deplorable thy case will be? |
A69538 | Did he himself on the Cross, commend his spirit into his Father''s hands, and will he not receive thy spirit when thou at death commendest it to him? |
A69538 | Did you see how they are treated at their removal from the flesh? |
A69538 | Do we labour earnestly to come thither, and yet lament that she is there? |
A69538 | Do you ask, What the Soul is? |
A69538 | Had you not a lifes time to put these questions? |
A69538 | Hast thou made sure of that? |
A69538 | Have you houses, and lands, and offices, and honours, and friends that are very pleasing to you? |
A69538 | Have you not as much need to be oft and earnest in prayer as they? |
A69538 | Have you not as much need to pray as those that you hate and reproach for praying? |
A69538 | How glad was he when God gave him leave but to touch the goods, and children, and body of Job? |
A69538 | How ready is he to receive us to perdition, if Christ refuse us, and receive us not to Salvation? |
A69538 | How sad is it to observe that those that have most need of Prayer, have least mind to Pray, as being least sensible of their needs? |
A69538 | How would you receive your Son, or Husband, the next day after some bloody Fight, where he had escaped with the Victory? |
A69538 | I know thou wilt be ready to say, that thou art unworthy,[ Will he receive so unworthy a Soul as mine?] |
A69538 | If such Sermons and Discourses as foretel it are troublesom to thee, what then will that sad Experience be? |
A69538 | If the ungodly go to Heaven, what use is Hell for? |
A69538 | If thou do well, shalt thou not be accepted? |
A69538 | If we can suffer with her, should we not rejoyce also with her? |
A69538 | If you ask, What that is? |
A69538 | Is the World worth all thy Care and Labour, and shall less be called too much ado, when it is for thy precious Soul? |
A69538 | Is thy Soul no more worth than Honour, or Wealth, or foolish Mirth? |
A69538 | Is thy Soul so base, as not to be worth the care and labour of a Holy Life? |
A69538 | It you ask me, How may so happy a Preparation be made? |
A69538 | Must we not be uncloathed, before the garments of Glory can be put on? |
A69538 | O but my sins are great and many; and will Christ ever receive so ignorant, so earthly and impure a Soul as mine? |
A69538 | Or send his Word and Ministers to promote it, if they may come to heaven unsanctified? |
A69538 | Or will he justifie us, and yet not receive us? |
A69538 | Or your Child, or Friend, that arrived safely after a long and a dangerous Voyage? |
A69538 | Should Angels attend us as ministring Spirits, if we had not Spirits fit to minister to God? |
A69538 | Should I care whether I Live at liberty or in prison, when I am ready to die, and have matters of infinite moment before me, to take me up? |
A69538 | Should Ministers be appointed to preach, and pray, and labour for us, if we had not Souls to save or lose? |
A69538 | Should such store of Mercies be provided for us? |
A69538 | Should we be called the Spouse and the Members of Christ? |
A69538 | Then thou wilt think, O whither am I going? |
A69538 | Thou art his Spouse, betrothed to him the very day when thou consentedst to his Covenant; and where then shouldst thou live but with him? |
A69538 | Thou hast dwelt in me here by faith; and shall I not now dwell with thee? |
A69538 | To what use doth Christ send the Holy- Ghost to sanctifie his Elect? |
A69538 | Were it not for our immortal Souls, would God ever honour us with such Relations to him, as to be his Children? |
A69538 | What his Receiving them is? |
A69538 | What must I endure? |
A69538 | What need Christ then to have shed his blood, or become a sacrifice for sin? |
A69538 | What remaineth now, but that all we that furvive, especially you that are her Children, do follow her as she followed Christ? |
A69538 | What sayst thou? |
A69538 | What would you need most if the day were come? |
A69538 | Why art thou wroth? |
A69538 | Why then should you not comfortably trust him with your Souls? |
A69538 | Will Christ receive it? |
A69538 | Will he deprive thee of thy Birth- right, who himself begot thee of the incorruptible Seed? |
A69538 | Will he not justifie those at last, whom he hath here justified? |
A69538 | Will you not knock till the door is shut? |
A69538 | Will you now be wordlings, and sensualists, and ungodly, and undo your selves, and then cry[ Lord Jesus receive my Spirit] at the last? |
A69538 | Will you say, that you hope well, and you must venture? |
A69538 | Wilt thou receive Christ now, or not? |
A69538 | Wilt thou take up this Resolution, and make this Covenant with God this day? |
A69538 | Would he be at so much cost upon us? |
A69538 | Would the Spirit of God himself dwell in us, and quicken and beautifie us with his Grace? |
A69538 | Would you not run and meet him, and with joy embrace him, if he had been many years absent, and were now come home? |
A69538 | Yet the door of grace is open: But how speedily will it be shut? |
A69538 | [ Depart from me ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the Devil and his Angels]? |
A69538 | and in following him in a mortified self- denying life, then in following him in the path that he hath trodden upon earth? |
A69538 | and is answerable to thine Omnipotency, Omniscience, and other Attributes? |
A69538 | and should you not long ago have got them satisfactorily resolved? |
A69538 | and who is the God of Love? |
A69538 | and why is thy countenance faln? |
A69538 | and yet canst thou exclude thine own, and shut them out that cry unto thee? |
A69538 | or cast into the burning lake? |
A69538 | receive an unholy Spirit? |
A69538 | why should we doubt whether he will receive us? |
A69538 | will Love refuse us when we fly unto him? |
A26986 | ( Si Papa infinitas animas in infernum traheret, tamen nemo debet ei dicere, quid facis? |
A26986 | 3.16, 17? |
A26986 | ? |
A26986 | And are the bowels of the Lord dried up? |
A26986 | And they Worshipped the Beast, saying, Who is like unto the Beast? |
A26986 | And why so I pray? |
A26986 | And why so? |
A26986 | Are any of these things vacated, not to be heeded, attended to? |
A26986 | Are not all Attempts of such a Nature worthy to be scorned, derided at, as acts of the greatest Folly, and desperate Madness? |
A26986 | Are not the rules of Christ prosecuted, till they( appearing to be persons of a reprobate mind) are rejected out of their fellowship? |
A26986 | Are not the same Laws, delivered to the Apostles, recorded in the Scriptures? |
A26986 | Are not these last, as much the charge, Law of Christ to his people, as the former? |
A26986 | Are they come to a Perfect man, unto the measure of the Stature of the fulness of Christ? |
A26986 | Are they gathered, constituted of visibly prophane persons? |
A26986 | Are they not at all concern''d in them? |
A26986 | But what was the issue? |
A26986 | But what''s the Issue? |
A26986 | But why here but two Candlesticks? |
A26986 | Can he depart from it? |
A26986 | Can their corrupt Doctrines be charged as the Doctrines of the Churches? |
A26986 | Can they be charged with walking contrary to their principles in this matter? |
A26986 | Can they pull the Stars out of the Firmament? |
A26986 | Denyes the Father, and that supreme? |
A26986 | Do any principles owned by them, any practices found amongst them declare as much? |
A26986 | Do they admit persons of so black a character into their Communion? |
A26986 | Do they justify, plead for, any Pollutions amongst them? |
A26986 | Do they not all of them, with full consent, proclaim their abhorrency of such a Foundation? |
A26986 | Doth he come in his Fathers, or in his own Name; What''s his message that he brings? |
A26986 | Doth this destroy his Saint- ship? |
A26986 | For, who told them that they deny the Power? |
A26986 | Hath he forgotten to be gracious? |
A26986 | Have Saints no further need of edification, building up? |
A26986 | Have the Laws of CHRIST, by their being written, lost their Authority? |
A26986 | He had then Power, Authority, to confirm, remove, abolish as he pleased; and none could say unto him in this matter, What dost thou? |
A26986 | How doth he discover his unwillingness to leave them? |
A26986 | How doth he seem to hover over them? |
A26986 | How is Jehovah by word, providential Dispensations crying aloud to them, to be zealous, Repent, return? |
A26986 | How little respect have some to the great Commandment of Christ, to Love one another, who yet would be accounted his Disciples? |
A26986 | How should they feed her? |
A26986 | I''d ask, doth not the Lord sometimes withdraw his presence from particular Saints? |
A26986 | If any such spots are found amongst them, do they tollerate, indulge them? |
A26986 | If he were the Rock when he denied Christ( as he did dreadfully) and at last fell asleep, What became of the Rock, Foundation of the Church? |
A26986 | If the Pope should carry an infinite number of Souls headlong to Hell, none ought to say to him, what doest thou? |
A26986 | In what sense it''s affirm''d concerning this Kingdom, and the things appertaining to it, that it can not be shaken, moved? |
A26986 | Is God unfaithful? |
A26986 | Is he not faithful? |
A26986 | Is he upon a new discovery of the Fathers will, pouring contempt upon what hath been Revealed by Christ? |
A26986 | Is it lawful to omit that Duty, in our Closets, retirements; because we enjoy not God in it? |
A26986 | Is it not the avowed principles of all the Churches, that such as these, are not fit matter for any Church of Christ? |
A26986 | Is it not the duty of Saints to praise the Lord; and to praise him in the wayes he hath appointed? |
A26986 | Is it thus with her now? |
A26986 | Is it, because they are gathered by the authority of man, driven together by penal Sanctions? |
A26986 | Is not Prayer, Prayer, because we have not his sensible presence with us? |
A26986 | Is not her Church- state perioded? |
A26986 | Is not his Covenant- Relation with his People in a Gospel- Day, as strong, efficacious, as in the times of the Law? |
A26986 | Is she not the apostatick Synagogue? |
A26986 | Is the Worship of the Churches, such a Worship? |
A26986 | Is there any greater Prophet than Christ risen up? |
A26986 | Is there any greater, superiour to Christ? |
A26986 | Is there any thing like it owned by, or to be found, amongst the present Churches? |
A26986 | Is this end terminated? |
A26986 | Is this the case of the present Churches? |
A26986 | Is this the manner of Husbands( poor mortals, of weak love, finite bowels) to those, whom they take as Brides to themselves? |
A26986 | Is this the matter constitutive of the present Churches? |
A26986 | Pull it from the place God hath Ordained for it? |
A26986 | Received ye the Spirit by the Works of the Law, or by the hearing of Faith? |
A26986 | Shall he do so till he deliver up the Mediatory- Kingdom to the Father? |
A26986 | Some add, that he gave the World, this Poetick desperate farewel; Animula Vagula, blandula, Hospes, comesqùe corporis, Quae nunc abibis in loca? |
A26986 | Stop the Sun in its Course? |
A26986 | The Church is built upon a Rock; who then is able to evert, overturn it? |
A26986 | The Question is upon what accounts this Ministration is called, The Ministration of the Spirit? |
A26986 | Turn it into blackness, darkness? |
A26986 | Upon what account it''s called the Body of Christ? |
A26986 | Wants he Will, or Power to accomplish what he hath promised? |
A26986 | Was that a true Church? |
A26986 | We have also a more sure word of Prophesie( more sure than what? |
A26986 | Were all the rest of the Churches, that had not this Master- Builder, false Churches? |
A26986 | What Child of God, but at one time, or other, finds cause to complain of his departure from him? |
A26986 | What Commandments? |
A26986 | What agreement hath the Temple of God with Idols? |
A26986 | What are the Laws he Rules them by, gives forth for the tryal of their Faith, Love, Obedience? |
A26986 | What can supersede it? |
A26986 | What compare is there, betwixt Spirit, and Letter; that which hath life in it, and that which hath none? |
A26986 | What languishing, dying Churches have we? |
A26986 | What little attendment to his Voice amongst many? |
A26986 | What may we think of the Church at Antioch? |
A26986 | What more derogatory to Christ, impious, wicked, can be Asserted? |
A26986 | What more evidently, notoriously false, can be suggested, or fixed on? |
A26986 | What more frivolous can be asserted? |
A26986 | What of the Persons, things of Antichrist have been thus removed, destroyed; Are they not all in their splendour, height, glory at this day? |
A26986 | What then? |
A26986 | What then? |
A26986 | What we are to understand by the Church? |
A26986 | What we are to understand by this Kingdom? |
A26986 | What winds, blasts, storms, what ragings of Waves, Seas, can over- whelm, destroy it? |
A26986 | What''s meant by Commandment? |
A26986 | What? |
A26986 | Whence is it that they have liberty to tread the Lords Court, and Worship before the footstool of his Throne in Peace? |
A26986 | Who are his Subjects? |
A26986 | Who dare aver it? |
A26986 | Who dare aver it? |
A26986 | Who hath Power, Authority over his Kingdom? |
A26986 | Who hath the confidence, impudence, thus to charge any one of them? |
A26986 | Who hath the forehead to aver it? |
A26986 | Who shall feed her there? |
A26986 | Who that pretends in sobriety to Christianity, hath the forehead to avouch, affirm it? |
A26986 | Who, or what are they? |
A26986 | Why are they gathered in the Will of Man? |
A26986 | Why are they not dispersed, scattered? |
A26986 | Why have not their Adversaries ruin''d, destroyed them? |
A26986 | Will he not make good his Word? |
A26986 | Yet who''l despise a day of small things? |
A26986 | did any of the Churches themselves? |
A26986 | in the Womb then, and not to be brought forth for hundreds of years after? |
A26986 | the Spirit of Prophesie, not only in the Priests, but in the Prophets) were these of the Essence of the Church? |
A26986 | their walking together in the fellowship of the Gospel, in the practice of all the Institutions of Christ? |
A26986 | was their Church- state dissolved because of their want of them? |
A26986 | where is the Christian simplicity, amity? |
A26986 | who''l affirm it? |
A26986 | who''l affirm it? |
A26986 | yea, whence is it, That the Devil with all his power, policy, hath not been able to ruin, destroy the Churches of Christ? |
A26986 | — Are all these Scriptures( with many more) of no use to the Saints? |
A26986 | — disputing, and perswading the things concerning The Kingdom of God — But when divers spake evil of that way: — What way? |
A26952 | 12. and shall redeemed Sinners make light of them? |
A26952 | 29. then they cry out, Sirs, what shall I do to be saved? |
A26952 | 4 Will you for the time to come, make Conscience of daily and earnest Prayer to God, that you may have a part in Christ and Salvation? |
A26952 | 6. trembling and astonished, Paul cries out, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? |
A26952 | And if so, what wonder if they perish by their contempt? |
A26952 | And is not Christ worth the seeking? |
A26952 | Are all that hear me this day certain they shall be saved? |
A26952 | Are you no more near or dear to your selves, than to make light of your own happiness or misery? |
A26952 | Are you resolved to let them go? |
A26952 | Are you turned your own Enemies? |
A26952 | As a Man, what art thou but a worm to God? |
A26952 | But when hear we such Questions? |
A26952 | But when we speak to Blocks and dead Men, how should we be regarded? |
A26952 | Can you do it better when sin hath more hardned it, and God may have given thee over to thy self? |
A26952 | Can you escape without a Christ? |
A26952 | Can you find fault if you miss of the Salvation which you slighted? |
A26952 | Consider 4. Who is it that sends this weighty Message to you? |
A26952 | Do not some of your consciences by this time smite you, and say, I am the Man that have made light of my Salvation? |
A26952 | Do not the negligent studies of some speak it out? |
A26952 | Do not these make light of Christ and Salvation? |
A26952 | Do not those then make light of Christ and Salvation, that shun the mention of his name, unless it be in a vain or sinful use? |
A26952 | Do not those then make light of Christ and Salvation, that think of them so seldom and coldly in comparison of other things? |
A26952 | Do you mean to set as light by Christ and Salvation as hitherto you have done? |
A26952 | Do you not see by this time what a case that Soul is in that maketh light of Christ and Salvation? |
A26952 | Do you think that Christ shed his blood to save them that continue to make light of it? |
A26952 | Doth it not behove you beforehand to think of these things? |
A26952 | Doth not that Soul make light of all these, that thinks his ease more worth than they? |
A26952 | Doth not the carelesness of some mens private endeavours discover it? |
A26952 | Doth not the continued neglect of those things wherein the Interest of Christ consisteth, discover it? |
A26952 | Doth not the covetous and worldly lives of too many discover it, losing advantages for mens souls, for a little gain to themselves? |
A26952 | Doth not their dead and drousie Preaching declare it? |
A26952 | For as to their own Glory, it is but a smoak: what matter is it whether you live poor or rich, unless it were a greater matter to dye rich than it is? |
A26952 | God will judge impartially; why should not we do so? |
A26952 | Have you found a better friend, a greater and surer happiness than this? |
A26952 | Have you gone to them and told them the doubtfulness of your case, and asked their help in the judging of your condition? |
A26952 | Have you no body to enquire of that might help you in such a Work? |
A26952 | How great was the evil and misery that he delivered us from? |
A26952 | How seriously do they talk of the World? |
A26952 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation? |
A26952 | How shall we escape, if we neglect so great Salvation? |
A26952 | How will these despisers of Christ and Salvation be able one day to look him in the face, and to give an account of these neglects? |
A26952 | How will ye escape the Damnation of Hell? |
A26952 | How would their hearts melt before the Power of the Gospel? |
A26952 | If not, when you know''t is the will of Christ, and he hath told you, such shall not enter into his Kingdom, do not you make light of him? |
A26952 | If thou canst make thine own Heart willing, why is it not done now? |
A26952 | If you will not be perswaded to this much, how can you say that you make not light of Christ and Salvation? |
A26952 | If you will not, are not you slighters of Christ, and Salvation, that will not be perswaded soberly to think on them? |
A26952 | In the Name of God Brethren, I beseech you to consider how you will then bear his Anger which you now make light of? |
A26952 | Is Dives then any better than Lazarus? |
A26952 | Is Self- love lost? |
A26952 | Is it not God himself? |
A26952 | Is it not your own? |
A26952 | Is not everlasting Salvation worth more than all this? |
A26952 | Is that a Man or a Corps that is not affected with matters of this moment? |
A26952 | Is that a Man, or a Clod of Clay, that can rise and lie down without being deeply affected with his everlasting Estate? |
A26952 | It is no less than Miracles of love and mercy that he hath shewed to us; and yet shall we slight them after all? |
A26952 | Oh Sirs, If men made not light of these things, what workings would there be in the hearts of all our hearers? |
A26952 | Or will you shew that you are slighters of Christ by neglecting them? |
A26952 | Shall the God of Heaven speak, and Men make light of it? |
A26952 | Some Men understand not the very sense of the Words of the Gospel, when they hear it, and how can they be taken with that which they understand not? |
A26952 | That can be readier to sleep than to tremble, when he heareth how he must stand at the Bar of God? |
A26952 | That provide outward necessaries so carefully for their Families, but do so little to the saving of their Souls? |
A26952 | They must have their pleasure, whatsoever becomes of Christ and Salvation: As if they could live without Christ better than without these? |
A26952 | What are these things you set so much by, as to prefer them before Christ and the saving of your Souls? |
A26952 | What barbarous, yea devilish, yea worse then devilish Ingratitude is this? |
A26952 | What do you think when you repeat the Creed, and mention Christ''s Judgment and everlasting Life? |
A26952 | What say you? |
A26952 | What say you? |
A26952 | What then is he that sets light by Christ? |
A26952 | What think you now friends of this business? |
A26952 | What this Sin of making light of the Gospel is? |
A26952 | What will this babler say? |
A26952 | What wonder if for all that we can say or do, our hearers still set light by Christ and their own Salvation; when the Apostles hearers did the same? |
A26952 | When they are once pricked in their hearts for sin and misery, then they cry out, Men and Brethren, what shall we do? |
A26952 | Whose Salvation is it that you make light of? |
A26952 | Why Sirs, If you had every one a Kingdom in your hopes, what were it in comparison of the everlasting Kingdom? |
A26952 | Why Sirs, do you not care whether you be saved or damned? |
A26952 | Why will you not judge now, as you know you shall judge then? |
A26952 | Will he then be worth ten thousand Worlds, and is he not now worth your highest Estimation, and dearest Affection? |
A26952 | Will you do all this with delight, not as your toyl, but as your pleasure? |
A26952 | Will you do these things? |
A26952 | Will you for the time to come esteem more of the Officers of Christ, whom he he hath purposely appointed to guide you to Salvation? |
A26952 | Will you for the time to come make Christ and Salvation the chiefest matter of your care and study? |
A26952 | Will you for the time to come, resolvedly cast away your known sins at the command of Christ? |
A26952 | Will you resolve to stick to Christ, and make sure this work of Salvation, tho''it cost you all that you have in the World? |
A26952 | Will you therefore attend to the publick preaching of this Word? |
A26952 | Will you use hereafter to go to your Ministers privately, and sollicite them for advice? |
A26952 | Would they read and think of these things as they do? |
A26952 | Would they then hear us as they do? |
A26952 | You hear Brethren what will not serve the turn; Will you now hear what persons you must be if you would not be condemned as slighters of Christ? |
A26952 | You know well enough that Death levels all: What matter is it at Judgment, whether you be to answer for the life of a rich man, or a poor man? |
A26952 | You may say all that other men do of him; What Gospel passages had Balaam? |
A26952 | and how they will shortly leave you? |
A26952 | and to be the same men after all this? |
A26952 | and to save them that value a Cup of Drink or a Lust before his Salvation? |
A26952 | and what all things in this World are in comparison of your Salvation? |
A26952 | and what is it that you neglect? |
A26952 | and what mind you will be then of; and how you will esteem them? |
A26952 | and will you make use of them for that end? |
A26952 | and will you obey the Word of God in their Mouths? |
A26952 | believe that God will shortly judge you, and yet make no more preparation for it? |
A26952 | can not men be saved without so much ado? |
A26952 | do not they make light of the Doctrin they preach, that do it as if they were half asleep, and feel not what they speak themselves? |
A26952 | how little do they when they are out of the Pulpit for the saving of mens Souls? |
A26952 | how slightly do they reprove Sin? |
A26952 | or will a despised Christ save you then? |
A26952 | shall it appear in any good uses that God calls you to be liberal in, according to your Abilities? |
A26952 | shall the poor find that you set more by Christ than this World? |
A26952 | that ask of his Service as Judas of the Oyntment; What need this wast? |
A26952 | that can follow his worldly Business, and make nothing of the great business of Salvation or Damnation; and that when they know it is hard at hand? |
A26952 | the Devils never had a Saviour offered them, but thou hast, and dost thou yet make light of him? |
A26952 | the good procured for us? |
A26952 | they are asleep, and dream that they are happy; but when they awake, what a change will they find? |
A26952 | what astonishment at the consideration of their misery? |
A26952 | what do they for Souls? |
A26952 | what is it that you run after? |
A26952 | what resolution would be raised in them upon the discovery of their duty? |
A26952 | what sorrow would be wrought in the discovery of their sin? |
A26952 | what unspeakable Joy at the glad Tidings of Salvation by the Blood of Christ? |
A26952 | will you promise me now and then to make it your business to withdraw your selves from the World, and set your selves to such considerations as these? |
A26952 | will you read it daily? |
A26952 | will you resolve to obey it whatever it may cost you? |
A26960 | & dream that it is but some Accident in God? |
A26960 | 2dly, What if the Question be, whether God be most wise? |
A26960 | And can none know certainly but those( who be they) that know in such perfection? |
A26960 | And for the first is it not strange that you should number this with contradictions? |
A26960 | And how can it be Good to Obey Deceit and Lyes? |
A26960 | And is not all this then made sure? |
A26960 | And shall I there begin to make my trial of it? |
A26960 | And shall no man know any thing certainly till he knoweth all things? |
A26960 | And shall not this assurance hold me fast against all the snarlings and pratlings of the doating drunken world? |
A26960 | And what do you think amiss in that? |
A26960 | And when the Devil is the Father of Lies, what blasphemy is it to charge them on God? |
A26960 | And will you say therefore that there is no Sanctification or Glorification? |
A26960 | And you were born too late, to teach either God or the World, in what sense to use words so many hundred years ago? |
A26960 | Are we not all called the Children of Adam? |
A26960 | But this is partly coordinate( as the end) and partly subordinate( as an effect) and therefore not contrary to the necessity of a Redeemer? |
A26960 | But you say, that this Law of Grace is the Law of Nature? |
A26960 | But you would have his goodness and mercy to be a sufficient satisfaction to his Justice? |
A26960 | By this it will be apparent, that the Question must be in the upshot, whether there be a God or no God? |
A26960 | Can I know none of these till I can answer all the Objections of the Somatists against the Soul? |
A26960 | Can not I be sure of this till I can answer Aristotles Objections of the worlds Eternity, and all the rest which every Atheist will alleadge? |
A26960 | Can not I know it, till I can answer them who say, that[ He that can not make an infinite world is not infinite in power? |
A26960 | Did not your Great Grandfather beget you in causa, while he begat him who begat him, who begat you immediately? |
A26960 | Do not learners that would know, begin at the Elements and Foundation? |
A26960 | Do we not begin in Grammar with our Letters, Syllables, Words, and chief rules? |
A26960 | Do you deny him to be God himself? |
A26960 | Do you deny the being of Gods eternal wisdome or word? |
A26960 | Do you not think your self, that the greatest demonstrations of the Divine Love, are fittest to breed Love in us to God? |
A26960 | Do you say that they are not under the meer Law of Innocency made with Adam, but under the Law of grace, which after was given him? |
A26960 | Doth it follow that I must be as uncertain whether the person himself must come or not? |
A26960 | Doth not Christianity then introduce these evils, which giveth pardon to all the penitent? |
A26960 | Eighthly, And will Lawyers, Statesmen, Physicians, Philosophers, make this consent of all mankind, the test of all their certainties? |
A26960 | Even Christ is called The son of David? |
A26960 | Fifthly, What if I be disputing whether a Tree be wood? |
A26960 | Fifthly, What if the Questions Whether man be a rational Creature? |
A26960 | First, It is strange that men should be left Remediless, if Christ, and not onely their Repentance be the Remedy? |
A26960 | First, Look to all Learning, Arts and Sciences? |
A26960 | First, What if the Question be whether there be a God? |
A26960 | First, Whether here be any more than All set together say? |
A26960 | First; What need God send a Prophet or an Angel to tell the world that which they all knew certainly before? |
A26960 | For my part it can not come into my understanding, why else men should think that God is pleased or appeased by the Creatures death? |
A26960 | Fourthly, What can you think of all those that gave up their lives for the Christian saith and hopes? |
A26960 | How far the sayings of some are true or false,[ that the Scripture is the onely means of faith or saving knowledge of God?] |
A26960 | If I were uncertain whether this promise extended to every hair of my head, so that none of them should perish? |
A26960 | If but some, First, Would not your wit quarrel still with God for damning all the rest? |
A26960 | If this order be supposed, what contradiction is here? |
A26960 | If you have, First, Is it with the Author? |
A26960 | Is it All or but some? |
A26960 | Is not causa causae, causa cavsati? |
A26960 | Is there not a mediate as well as an immediate Generation and Progeny? |
A26960 | Lord wilt thou at this thime restore the Kingdome to Israel? |
A26960 | Must I be as uncertain whether man have an immaterial( or incorporeal) soul? |
A26960 | Must I be obliged to know the thoughts of every man in China, Tartary, Japan, or the Antipodes? |
A26960 | Must I be uncertain of that which did? |
A26960 | Must I be uncertain therefore whether any thing shall work for my good? |
A26960 | Nay tell me if you can what mercy your doctrine giveth to all the world, which ours giveth them not? |
A26960 | Nay would not you the easilier believe in Christ your self if you had but such an Angel to confirm you? |
A26960 | No: but take your steel and strike the flint, and adde the combustible fuel, and that which is in a stone can set a City on fire? |
A26960 | No? |
A26960 | Now I go my way to him that sent me, and none of you asketh me whither goest thou? |
A26960 | Or a Divine subsistence? |
A26960 | Or if deceit can be perceived, how can it be mans Duty to Believe it, seeing mans Intellect is naturally made for Truth, and abhorreth falshood? |
A26960 | Or were uncertain whether the Spirit did determine the Speakers tongue or pen about every such Appurtenance? |
A26960 | Secondly, And is there any thing since which should make it more offensive to you? |
A26960 | Secondly, And must it be the greater part or the lesser? |
A26960 | Secondly, And that I feel a divine afflatus in the Reception? |
A26960 | Secondly, Eternity is a thing incomprehensible, which quite swalloweth up my understanding; and many little things be said against it? |
A26960 | Secondly, Or with the terms and conditions of life? |
A26960 | Secondly, We all confess the universal necessity of Repentance? |
A26960 | Secondly, What if I read a promise in the Scripture that God will never fail me nor forsake me? |
A26960 | Secondly, What number is it that you put the question of, and whose Repentance you assert? |
A26960 | Secondly, Whether in all this there be any Contradiction? |
A26960 | Shall we say that a wheel can not possibly turn round, because no one part first giveth place to the other to succeed it? |
A26960 | Sixthly, Having said this, she looked behind her and saw Jesus, not knowing him, who said Woman why weepest thou? |
A26960 | Sixthly, What if we dispute whether all the Kings officers are to be obeyed? |
A26960 | The work of the Father and of Omnipotency in Creation is wonderfully; will you therefore say that there is no world? |
A26960 | Thirdly, How doth it follow that the Remedy was not Universal, when Redemption by Christ was universal? |
A26960 | Thirdly, What if I be uncertain whether the vegetative faculties or soul in man, be material or immateterial? |
A26960 | Thirdly, What if the Question be, Whether God be perfectly good? |
A26960 | This all sound Christians are agreed in; And can this offend you? |
A26960 | This onely would I learn of you: Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law, or by the hearing of Faith? |
A26960 | Were all these larvati vel palliati by assed by price or fleshly interest? |
A26960 | What if one be uncertain which are the Parts, and which but the Appurtetenances of the Gospel in some things which salvation is not laid on? |
A26960 | What''s this to the invalidating of any of the rest? |
A26960 | Whether Interest make the Judgment of Divines in the Cause of faith more suspicious or contemptible than other mens? |
A26960 | Whether Light and Heat be bodies? |
A26960 | Whether any concurrence of moral evidence, at least such as Gospel Revelation hath, do truly amount to natural or certain evidence? |
A26960 | Whether ever they made Laws with the Kings? |
A26960 | Whether the Notitiae Communes are the only certainties in Religion? |
A26960 | Whether the aforesaid Common notices do make up all the Religion of the Catholick Church? |
A26960 | Who is a good Linguist, Lawyer, Physician,& c. that hath had but little leisure for his studies? |
A26960 | Yea, and sufficient in their kind? |
A26960 | and Abraham called the Father of all the Jews? |
A26960 | and I can not tell whether the leaves, their ribs, or stalkes be truly wood or not? |
A26960 | and all that Campanella hath said de sensu rerum? |
A26960 | and all the Objections of Chambre for the reason of beasts? |
A26960 | and all the Objections of Hobs against free will? |
A26960 | and it be a doubt to me, whether a Prelate or an Apparator be the Kings Officers? |
A26960 | and proceeded not from Divine Revelation in the beginning, when God had new made the Covenant of Grace? |
A26960 | and so was delivered down by Tradition? |
A26960 | and so whether there be any thing or nothing? |
A26960 | and whether the intellectual powers be such or not? |
A26960 | but will preserve me in safety to his Kingdome? |
A26960 | can I therefore be assured of no others? |
A26960 | must I therefore be uncertain of all the rest? |
A26960 | or Substances? |
A26960 | or whether sufferings for Christ shall do it? |
A26960 | or would you know on what number or where to find satisfaction? |
A26960 | the Creator of all? |
A26960 | when the Gospel hath all the Divine attestations and evidences which I have opened in my Treatise, and you are not able to confute them? |
A26960 | whether bruits have reason? |
A26960 | whether he have any free will? |
A26960 | whether plants and stones have sense? |
A26960 | whether they penetrate other bodies? |
A26960 | whom seekest thou? |
A26960 | would you be ruled by one that you will not believe is your Ruler? |
A26960 | would you be taught by one that you will not believe or take for your Teacher? |
A27007 | 20. saith, They were the Nations that were in the Earth: Were all the dead wicked raised, dwellers on Earth in the Thousand years? |
A27007 | 3. for the Thousand years duration of the Kingdom? |
A27007 | And do not you maintain that the Seven Churches are Seven States of the Church Universal? |
A27007 | And doth all Time end before all temporary creatures end? |
A27007 | And doth the New Earth at once hold all the Saints that were alive, and all the wicked alive, and all the wicked dead from Cain''s time? |
A27007 | And how oft doth Scripture make him the Final Object under the finis ultimatè ultimus, as he is to be glorified? |
A27007 | And how scap''t their new bodies? |
A27007 | And is a Thousand years better than everlasting? |
A27007 | And is that the New Earth wherein dwelleth Righteousness, that hath so many wicked? |
A27007 | And is the Thousand years the end, and not the Glorious Kingdom of fruition? |
A27007 | And may not others be next to Christ? |
A27007 | And of the Bodies of all the living wicked? |
A27007 | And of their Souls that lived then in wickedness? |
A27007 | And what Creature is this? |
A27007 | And will Christ''s Incarnate Humanity spiritualized be for ever useless? |
A27007 | And would there be room for them all so near the holy City? |
A27007 | And yet must your Chronology and all its consequents be taken for granted Truths? |
A27007 | Are these dead raised men invisible bodies, or only as Devils invisible spirits, or in bodies invisible? |
A27007 | Are they not his Ministers? |
A27007 | But Saints must sit with him, you say: And may not he sit down before them? |
A27007 | But a Law is nothing but the notification of the Rulers will to the Subject: And will not God make it our Duty to love and praise him? |
A27007 | But can you prove that the Humane Nature was, or shall ever be united to the Deity, without its Relation of Mediator? |
A27007 | But do you honour or dishonour the Glorious Kingdom, to feign it to have such an end? |
A27007 | But why call you it two Kingdoms? |
A27007 | Can not God govern us by a perfect Law of Nature and Intuition? |
A27007 | Can you prove that Scripture meaneth this as two States, and that at 1000 years distance? |
A27007 | Christ went to receive a Kingdom; and did he receive none till his return at the Resurrection? |
A27007 | Did not God make the Pagan Empire his footstool, and subdue Sin and Satan, till the day of Judgment? |
A27007 | Do they scape out of the fire also as the Saints do? |
A27007 | Do you not believe that God hath Creatures of divers ranks, some above others in excellency and causality? |
A27007 | Do you think that God worketh by any second Causes( though he be himself never the further from the Effect, nor less in the Causality?) |
A27007 | Doth he not enlighten, warm and quicken earthly Creatures by the Sun? |
A27007 | Doth he not subdue them in every sanctisied Soul? |
A27007 | Doth not Christ say, It is his will that we shall be with him to see his Glory? |
A27007 | Doth not Scripture set him above Angels? |
A27007 | Doth not this leave us to fear that those in the New Heaven also may fall away as the Angels did? |
A27007 | Doth the New Paradise World hear, Behold I come quickly hold fast,& c after Christ is come? |
A27007 | Essential to what? |
A27007 | For will there not( after the Seventy five years preparation) be as good people found on Earth, as those that died before? |
A27007 | How can it be delivered up before it is in being? |
A27007 | How can it else be any Kingdom of Christ? |
A27007 | If Grace can not now be lost, will not Christ then keep his Paradise Saints? |
A27007 | If by known Devils, and condemned wicked ones of all Ages raised, they will be drawn from Christ, after a Thousand years Miracles? |
A27007 | If de Nomine only, take your liberty to call it One, or Two, or Three: If de Re, are not these real differences? |
A27007 | If his Humanity cease, shall Angels cease too? |
A27007 | If it be the Anima Mundi, is it not the Common Nature of all things? |
A27007 | If it be the Natura Mentalis in genere, is it not as much an Angelical Nature as a Humane? |
A27007 | If not, what can you mean but Extinction or Annihilation? |
A27007 | If the first, Is he not subduing them now? |
A27007 | If they had bodies, where will there be room on Earth for all the wicked since Cain till the end, to dwell there all at once? |
A27007 | If they were on Earth, were they raised before, or in, or after the burning? |
A27007 | If we be not the bighest creatures, why should we think that we have not need of higher? |
A27007 | If we see not all things put under him, do we see nothing so put? |
A27007 | If yet they do not, may it not be at Judgment, and in the Kingdom of Glory? |
A27007 | If, in another World, how come they after to be dwellers in the New Paradise Earth? |
A27007 | Is all our promised Comfort in Communion with the Angels, Saints, and Christ''s Humanity objectively confined to a Thousand years? |
A27007 | Is he in all this no Object? |
A27007 | Is he not the Great Son of Man before and after? |
A27007 | Is it in the time of[ 1000 years?] |
A27007 | Is it in[ the highest Noontide Glory?] |
A27007 | Is it in[ the subduing of all Enemies] Mean you in fieri, or in facto esse? |
A27007 | Is it not proper speech to say, that a General giveth up his Office, and yet remaineth an honoured, rewarded Subject Ruler?] |
A27007 | Is it not the Eternal Word in our Nature, Mediator, that is the Son of Man, and Christ our Lord? |
A27007 | Is it that Christ as a Creature shall cease? |
A27007 | Is it the word[ distinct?] |
A27007 | Is it[ the Son''s being subject in that very sense?] |
A27007 | Is not all Time in Eternity? |
A27007 | Is not that you plead for[ of the Humane Nature as united to the Eternal Word?] |
A27007 | Is not the New City and Earth after a Thousand years experience, worse than weak Christians are now? |
A27007 | Is the Humane Nature turned into the Divine, and a Creature made the Godhead it self? |
A27007 | Is the Humane Nature, and a World of Creatures essential to God? |
A27007 | Is the New World in no better a state? |
A27007 | Is the Question de Nomine, or de Re? |
A27007 | Is the delivering up to the Father, the specifying form? |
A27007 | Is the difference in the word[ The Great Son of Man?] |
A27007 | Is the time the species of the Kingdom? |
A27007 | Is there any Scripture that saith, that Christ had two Humane Natures? |
A27007 | Is there no Glory to Eternity but what is from Eternity? |
A27007 | Is this Christ''s Gospel or yours? |
A27007 | Is this Elucidation, or an informing way of an Instructor? |
A27007 | Is this God''s Word? |
A27007 | Is this to expound Prophecy? |
A27007 | Is your proof, Then cometh the end? |
A27007 | It is a Supreme Oeconomy; and was not that before and after Supreme? |
A27007 | King of Kings is a Title fit for a great Kingdom,& c. What then? |
A27007 | Must he stay till every Saint be with him? |
A27007 | New and Old, and all things are in the Divine Immensity: How then doth that make the difference? |
A27007 | Or if the New Earth fall away, did not the holy City consist most of Hypocrites? |
A27007 | Or must it be none of the particulars, but all connext? |
A27007 | Or shall they be advanced so far above Christ as a Creature, as to Reign under God for ever when Christ is deposed or extinct? |
A27007 | Or that he shall have no power under the Deity? |
A27007 | Peter tells us of the burning of the Earth, but not of the ending of it: How come you to know so much more than he ever intimated or seemed to know? |
A27007 | Shall an Intelligent Head and Members live together, and neither know, nor love, nor rejoice in each other? |
A27007 | Shall he be subject as God, or as Man? |
A27007 | Shall it not be an Object, if a Medium? |
A27007 | Shall the Saints praises of the Lamb, that Redeemed them, cease then for ever? |
A27007 | Shall we see God, and not know his Will? |
A27007 | Sure then it is of Divine Institution that such there be: And who claimeth it but the Pope and Councils? |
A27007 | Talents,& c. how endless would be the dispute? |
A27007 | That Orb then must be a Spirit: And what Spirit before Christ the First and Last? |
A27007 | That lasting but one day( a Thousand years) it should end in being spewed out for ever? |
A27007 | That''s but to beg the Question, which is, whether there be any middle distinct Kingdom? |
A27007 | The spiritual heavenly Bodies will be apparent for ever; shall they not know and be known even as face to face? |
A27007 | This is your way of arguing by Allegories? |
A27007 | To say that Heaven and Earth have so unhappy an end, doth it not tempt men to Manicheising, to think that an ill God made this world? |
A27007 | V. Shall the whole Heavenly City, Society and Chore, be dissolved for ever? |
A27007 | VVe doubt not of his Judgment or Kingdom: But what word is here for a middle Kingdom? |
A27007 | VVhy obtrude you gross things unproved? |
A27007 | What Creature shall be over Christ? |
A27007 | What Word of God have you for your Opinion, that there shall never more be an Earth, or a Church on Earth? |
A27007 | What became of their Bodies in the Conflagration? |
A27007 | What becometh of the bodies of all the wicked that are found alive at the Conflagration? |
A27007 | What else should all your Book have been, but your clearing of this one Text? |
A27007 | What is it then that you would have? |
A27007 | When Judgment puts all things under him, what need a Thousand years do it? |
A27007 | When the Text saith, Satan deceived them to gather them to Battle; why turn you[ Battle] to[ drawing the City to defection?] |
A27007 | Where were all these Dead Raised men when the Earth was on fire? |
A27007 | Which of these words specifie the middle Kingdom from the former and the latter? |
A27007 | Who shall have it then? |
A27007 | Why may you not grant it to Christ, as well as to any other? |
A27007 | Why say you that the Laodicean Apostasie is no greater a wonder than Adams and the Angels? |
A27007 | Why then think you that those alive shall be set so far below the rest, as to have but an earthly generating life, when the rest are in Heaven? |
A27007 | Will he live for nothing? |
A27007 | Will it be greater than the Glory after the Thousand years? |
A27007 | Will their punishment all the Thousand years be so easie as to allow them to cover the Earth& sight against the Saints? |
A27007 | Will you say with Aristotle, It is the first or highest Orb? |
A27007 | and govern Men by Angels, and Subjects by Princes, and Beasts by Men? |
A27007 | and is that the Glory of it? |
A27007 | and will it no more convince them? |
A27007 | when it is said, He is set down on it?] |
A49757 | ( did we make thee sick? |
A49757 | 20. where our Saviour doth silence the labourers murmuring about their wages with this, Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? |
A49757 | 27.4, 5. Who would set the briars and thorns against me in battel? |
A49757 | 8.33, 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect? |
A49757 | A believer may apply this to his comfort against any particular trouble: Art thou disgraced and reproached in thy name? |
A49757 | A drunkard is unfit for any employment, he is good for nothing: Who will venture his business with a drunken Servant? |
A49757 | All my bones may say, Lord, who is like to thee? |
A49757 | All they shall speak and say unto thee, Art thou also become weak as we? |
A49757 | And are there not means of his appointment? |
A49757 | And if we look through the whole course of our Age, what year, or week, or day can we name, wherein some have not died? |
A49757 | And is not that time much more precious which God hath given thee to save thy soul? |
A49757 | And is this thy valour and gallantry, to fight so stoutly to fulfil a base lust? |
A49757 | Art th ● u become like unto us? |
A49757 | Art thou called being a servant? |
A49757 | Ask the grave, O grave, where is thy victory? |
A49757 | Be not over- much wicked, neither be thou foolish; why shouldst thou die before thy time? |
A49757 | Behold, I am ● ile, what shall I answer thee? |
A49757 | Beloved, God hath a heavy hand, he gives a great blow; what is the greatest man in the world, when God can strike him to hell at a blow? |
A49757 | Beloved, do not you look upon your selves as parts and members of Jesus Christ? |
A49757 | Beloved, the rod speaks as well as strikes; and we should hear the rod, as well as feel the rod: now what doth the rod speak? |
A49757 | But how can a man dye daily? |
A49757 | But why ours? |
A49757 | Canst thou tell how many years eternity lasts? |
A49757 | Consider what persons they are who advise thee: Did ever any godly Minister or Christian give thee such counsel? |
A49757 | Consider, What may I do for God with my tongue, hands, feet, countenance? |
A49757 | Did I fear a great multitude, or did the contempt of families terrifie me? |
A49757 | Do not you account this a beastly sin, for people to go up and down a whoring? |
A49757 | Dost thou know how much wrath Omnipotencie can inflict? |
A49757 | Doth Job fear God for nought? |
A49757 | For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
A49757 | God there appoints Moses to go up to Mount Nebo, and die: and did not Moses( think ye) go up with a heavy heart? |
A49757 | How long will it be ere they believe me for all the signes which I have shewed among them? |
A49757 | How then must I live? |
A49757 | I am the Lord thy God, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt,& c. yet how often did the discontented Jews upbraid God with that mercie? |
A49757 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
A49757 | Is he not fearfully and wonderfully made by God, in whose book all his members are written? |
A49757 | Is it not because there is not a God in Israel, that ye go to enquire of Baalzebub the god of Ekron? |
A49757 | Is not, or may not his body be the Temple of the Holy Ghost, and an instrument to serve God and his generation? |
A49757 | Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth? |
A49757 | Is this the holy, loving, humble, patient, meek, and peaceable spirit, which is so precious and savoury to God and men? |
A49757 | It is God that justifieth; who is he that condemneth? |
A49757 | Labour to fill up your time: this is the way to fit you for eternity: but you will say, What is it to fill up our time? |
A49757 | Must I then be branded for a base Coward, in suffering every one to abuse me? |
A49757 | Now is it any honour to God to be called the God of Drunkards, or the God of Swearers, or the God of Whoremongers? |
A49757 | Now therefore what a terrible Majestie is God, who makes all these so terrible? |
A49757 | Now we have the same promises made to us, which they do now inherit: but how shall we come to inherit the same promises? |
A49757 | Now what a sad reckoning will here be, if he hath one nothing with these that will pass in his account? |
A49757 | O death, where is thy sting? |
A49757 | Of themselves: Therefore saith God, Who art thou? |
A49757 | Oh now if the face of a reconciled God in Christ do not shine, what a fearful condition doth the poor man lie in? |
A49757 | Oh poor man, what hast thou been doing all thy daies? |
A49757 | Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
A49757 | Remember the Parable of the ten Virgins, five whereof were wise, and five were foolish: Now why were those five called wise? |
A49757 | Secondly, but my Master is a wicked man, and then how can I honour him and obey him? |
A49757 | Shall David thus fast and pray for his sick enemies, and shall not we for our sick friends? |
A49757 | Sirs, are not these blessed and honourable terms? |
A49757 | Sirs, would you have sickness, and death, and the day of judgement finde you idle? |
A49757 | So Sirs, Is there not a God in England? |
A49757 | So when thou art tempted to any sin, remember thy sickness: consider, Wilt thou bring again upon thy self an Ague, Fever, Dropsie, Consumption& c? |
A49757 | Thirdly, Consider how thou dost hereby abuse thy own body: Is thy body a member of Christ, and thy hands and arms parts of Jesus Christ? |
A49757 | Well, where lyes the difference? |
A49757 | What are we? |
A49757 | What prating ● ellow is this, that by his ignorant talk ● ● rkens my Wisdom, and Justice, and Pro ● ● dence? |
A49757 | What shall we say to these things? |
A49757 | What then shall I do when God riseth up? |
A49757 | What, hath the Devil more care of Christs members, then Christ himself? |
A49757 | When Calvin was reproved for inordinate labour, he gives this savoury answer: What, saith he, would ye have my Lord finde me idle? |
A49757 | Wherefore hath the Lord brought us into this land? |
A49757 | Whose spirit came from thee? |
A49757 | Why should ye be stricken any more? |
A49757 | Will thou disanul my judgement? |
A49757 | and are there not Ministers and Christians to pray for you, who are in league with him, but must you seek to such who are in league with the Devil? |
A49757 | and canst thou pray better, and sanctifie Sabbaths better, and hear Sermons better? |
A49757 | and he taketh away, and who can hinder him? |
A49757 | and is thy discourse better, and thy life better? |
A49757 | and when he visiteth, what shall I answer him? |
A49757 | and will you bring a member of Christ to be healed by the Devil? |
A49757 | and wilt thou by maiming and wounding him, make him less serviceable? |
A49757 | and wilt thou by thy inhumane and merciless blows mar such a choice piece of Gods workmanship? |
A49757 | and wilt thou make a member of Christ a murderer? |
A49757 | are we the causes of thy aches and pains?) |
A49757 | but to Eternity they will go, and never stay to answer thee; for God taketh away, and who can hinder him? |
A49757 | canst thou fight with a Fever? |
A49757 | crying, Who is lord over us? |
A49757 | how many thousand of mens lives have been lost by drunken souldiers? |
A49757 | methinks I hear the wrath of God roaring against them; and the Lyon hath roared, who will not fear? |
A49757 | or art thou stronger then he? |
A49757 | or condemn thee? |
A49757 | or hath Christ need of the Devil to help or heal ever a member of his? |
A49757 | or his life with a drunken Physician? |
A49757 | or his soul with a drunken Minister? |
A49757 | or how much punishment sin deserves? |
A49757 | or how much torment a vessel of wrath can hold? |
A49757 | or out- run a Consumption? |
A49757 | or who can say unto him, What dost thou? |
A49757 | or wrestle with the Falling sickness? |
A49757 | therefore when thy heart is lifted up in the sense of thy bodily strength, consider, Hast thou an arm like God? |
A49757 | those Saints are possest of glory, yonder they live and raign; but how shall we do to come among them? |
A49757 | what a miserable case art thou in? |
A49757 | wherefore hast thou brought us out of the land of Egypt? |
A49757 | will you provide him a sumptuous feast, or a rich suit of cloaths, or offer him some place of preferment? |
A49757 | wilt thou make nothing of my judgement, which in wisdom and counsel I exercise in all my visitations? |
A49757 | yes that there is; and therefore it is added, What is your life? |
A27939 | 1 DO you that are in Council met,[ Speak and] determine what is just; And justly judge, ye sons of men,[ Indeed] according to your trust? |
A27939 | 1 HOw long wilt thou forget me, Lord? |
A27939 | 1 IN God I put my trust, Why then in scorn say ye, To God for help as silly birds, Unto your mountain flee? |
A27939 | 1 LOrd, in thy Tabernacle Who shall inhabit still? |
A27939 | 1 MY God, my God, O why Hast thou forsaken me? |
A27939 | 1 O God, why hast thou cast us off? |
A27939 | 1 O Mighty man in wickedness, Why boastest thou[ thy self] with pride? |
A27939 | 1 PRaise ye the Lord, to him give thanks; He''s good; his mercy is endless: 2 Who can describe his mighty acts? |
A27939 | 1 THe God of Love my Shepherd is, And he that doth me feed; While he is mine, and I am his, What can I want or need? |
A27939 | 1 THe King shall joyful be, Lord, in thy strength alone: How greatly shall his heart rejoice In thy salvation? |
A27939 | 1 THe Lord himself my shepherd is, Who doth me feed and[ safely] keep; What can I want that''s truly good, While I am[ one of] his own sheep? |
A27939 | 1 THe Lord my Light and Saviour is, Whom[ therefore] shall I need to dread? |
A27939 | 1 WHy do the rebel Nations rage, And[ People] hatch a vain design? |
A27939 | 10 Even he that seem''d to cast us off, And wilt not thou[ again] O God, Go forth before our warlike hosts, When they[ to fight] do march abroad? |
A27939 | 10 How long, Lord, shall the enemy Thee by reproach[ scorn and] prophane, And shall the adversaries thus Always blaspheme thy[ holy] name? |
A27939 | 10 It''s as a sword within my bones, When thus my foes do me upbraid; When in reproach, Where is thy God,[ To me] I hear it daily said? |
A27939 | 10 Who is he that is King Of Glory? |
A27939 | 10 Who will bring me into The City fortify''d? |
A27939 | 10 Why say the heathen, Where''s their God? |
A27939 | 10 Wilt thou shew wonders to the dead? |
A27939 | 11 And thus they say, How can it be That God all this doth[ note and] know; And that there is in the most high Knowledge of things[ done here] below? |
A27939 | 11 Even he that cast us off; And wilt not thou, O God, Again go forth before our Hosts, When ● hey do march abroad? |
A27939 | 11 Is thy love praised in the grave? |
A27939 | 11 It''s soon cut off, and we are gone, Who knows[ aright] thy powerful wrath? |
A27939 | 11 Pluck out and shew forth thy right hand, Why dost thou it[ so long] with- hold? |
A27939 | 11 Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
A27939 | 12 Are thy great works known in the dark? |
A27939 | 12 What man desireth length of life, And his own good doth[ wisely] seek? |
A27939 | 12 What shall I render to the Lord For all his[ bounteous] gifts to me? |
A27939 | 12 Who can his errors understand? |
A27939 | 13 For thou my soul hast freed From death so near at had; And wilt not thou uphold me now, And make my feet to stand? |
A27939 | 13 How long, Lord, shall we feel thy wrath? |
A27939 | 14 Lord why dost thou cast off my soul? |
A27939 | 16 But to the wicked man, God saith, My word of truth Should''st thou declare? |
A27939 | 16 Who will rise up for me against The wicked doer''s[ cruel] band? |
A27939 | 16 Why leap ye you high hills? |
A27939 | 17 But Lord, how long wilt thou look on? |
A27939 | 19 High is thy righteousness O God, And[ very] great things thou hast done; Lord, who may be compar''d with thee? |
A27939 | 19 Yea, even against the Lord himself They grudging spake prophanely thus: Can God here in this wilderness A furnish''d table spread for us? |
A27939 | 2 How long shall thoughts disturb my soul, And[ daily] grief my heart assail? |
A27939 | 2 How long will ye unjustly judge, And favour[ unjust] wicked men? |
A27939 | 2 I''le wisely walk in perfect way;[ O Lord] when wilt thou come to me? |
A27939 | 2 Lift up thy self, thou Judge of all, The proud do thou[ check and] reward: 3 How long shall wicked men triumph,[ Even they] that do not God regard? |
A27939 | 2 O sons of men, how long will ye[ The great] God''s glory vilifie? |
A27939 | 2 Thou, Lord, art all my strength, Why do I mourning go, As if I were cast off by thee, Oppressed by my foe? |
A27939 | 2 Why should the heathen people say To us, where is their[ mighty] God? |
A27939 | 20 If we the Lord''s name have forgot, Or[ any] help from Idols sought; 21 Would not God search this out, who knows The[ very] secrets of our thought? |
A27939 | 20 Indeed he smote the rock, and thence There flowed streams of waters great; And can he give his people bread, And provide flesh for them to eat? |
A27939 | 20 Shall the Throne of iniquity Have[ any] fellowship with thee? |
A27939 | 21 Do I not hate them all, O Lord, Who are thy[ hating] enemies? |
A27939 | 25 Whom have I in the heav''ns above[ To trust] but thee my God alone? |
A27939 | 3 How long will ye mischief devise? |
A27939 | 3 If by their violence Foundations be destroy''d, What can the grieved righteous do The ruins to avoid? |
A27939 | 3 If in strict Justice thou should''st mark, And charge[ on man] iniquity; Lord, who shall stand at thy just bar? |
A27939 | 3 Into God''s sacred mount Who''s he that shall ascend? |
A27939 | 3 Lord, what is man, that thou of him Dost so much[ mindful] notice take? |
A27939 | 3 My flowing tears have been to me As[ bitter] food both night and day, While with reproach continually,[ To me] where is thy God, they say? |
A27939 | 3 Say unto God, How- terrible In all thy[ mighty] works art thou? |
A27939 | 3 What shall be given and done to thee, False mouth, that causeth[ others] wrong? |
A27939 | 31 For who is God except the Lord? |
A27939 | 37 Who s''s word can stand, when God gain- says? |
A27939 | 39 Why should a man, chastis''d for sin, Who''s yet alive[ grudge and] complain? |
A27939 | 4 Have all these men of wicked works No[ wit or] knowledge left at all? |
A27939 | 4 Have all these men of wicked works No[ wit or] knowledge left at all? |
A27939 | 4 How shall we sing God''s sacred songs, Thus[ Captives] in a foreign land? |
A27939 | 4 Like Rams the mountains, and like Lambs The little hills skipt to and fro: 5 O Sea, what made thee thus to flee? |
A27939 | 4 Lord God of Hosts, how long wilt thou Thus in thy[ burning] anger smoak? |
A27939 | 4 Shall they still speak false and hard things, And[ their tongues] utter cruelty? |
A27939 | 4 Then say I, what is man, that thou Of him hast[ daily] mindful been? |
A27939 | 46 How long, Lord, shall it ever be That thou wilt hide thy self in ire? |
A27939 | 47 Remember how short is the time That I must here on earth remain; Wherefore hast thou all mortal men Made to live here as meerly vain? |
A27939 | 48 What man is he that liveth here, And fatal Death shall never see? |
A27939 | 49 The former loving kindnesses Which thou, O Lord, to him didst bear, Where are they now? |
A27939 | 5 How great, O Lord, are all thy works? |
A27939 | 5 How long, Lord,( O not evermore) Shall this thine anger[ towards us] last? |
A27939 | 5 In ill encourage they themselves, And commune how[ closely] to lay Their snares for to entrap the just, For who[ our plots] shall see, say they? |
A27939 | 5 Mine enemies speak and wish me ill, And say,[ How long] when will he dye? |
A27939 | 5 O Lord my God, how many are The wonders thou[ for us] hast wrought? |
A27939 | 5 O who is like to our great God? |
A27939 | 5 Shall thy displeasure last Against us without end? |
A27939 | 5 What hast thou wanted that is good, To satisfie[ thy just] desire? |
A27939 | 5 Why art thou so cast down, my soul,[ And why] so troubled and dismaid? |
A27939 | 5 Why art thou, O my soul, Cast down? |
A27939 | 6 For in the heav''ns themselves who may With thee, the only Lord, compare? |
A27939 | 6 The mighty Lord is on my side,[ Of men] I will not be afraid; Whatever mortal man can do,[ At it] why should I be dismay''d? |
A27939 | 6 This knowledge high''s above my reach,[ It is] too wonderful for me: 7 Whither shall I go from thy face? |
A27939 | 6 Wilt thou not us restore, And quicken us, that we Who are thy people, evermore In thee may joyful be? |
A27939 | 6 Ye mountains great, what was the cause That made you thus to skip like Rams? |
A27939 | 7 And now, O Lord, what wait I for? |
A27939 | 7 For ever will the Lord cast off? |
A27939 | 7 O God, how precious is thy love? |
A27939 | 7 Thall they escape so well In this their wicked path? |
A27939 | 7 Thou, and thou only, glorious God, Art he that all should[ greatly] fear; And who can stand before thy face, If[ once but] angry thou appear? |
A27939 | 8 For ever is his mercy gone? |
A27939 | 8 O thou that art the Lord of Hosts, What Lord like thee with strength is crown''d? |
A27939 | 8 Thou dost my wandrings tell, Let down thy bottle, Lord, And put in there each briny tear, Are they not on record? |
A27939 | 8 Who is this Glorious King? |
A27939 | 8 Ye brutish people understand,[ Ye fools] when will ye wiser grow? |
A27939 | 84 How many are thy Servant''s days? |
A27939 | 9 By what means may a young man best His life learn to amend? |
A27939 | 9 Can it be that his graciousness[ To us] the Lord forgotten hath? |
A27939 | 9 I said, what gain is in my blood, If to the[ feared] grave I go: Doth silent dust there speak thy praise? |
A27939 | 9 I''le say to God, My Rock, O why Am I[ of thee] forgotten so? |
A27939 | 9 In God and his salvation then My soul shall[ glad and] joyful be; 10 My very flesh and bones shall say, Lord, who[ or what] is like to thee? |
A27939 | 9 Shall he not hear who made the ear? |
A27939 | 9 Who is he that will bring me in The City[ strong and] fortify''d? |
A27939 | Against thy pasture- sheep why doth Thy[ heavy] anger smoak so sore? |
A27939 | Against thy peoples humble prayer Who do thy[ sacred] Name invoke? |
A27939 | And am not I grived with those That[ madly] up against thee rise? |
A27939 | And if premeditated, they must be some way imposed; How else shall the Congregations all joyn in the same? |
A27939 | And in his place of holiness Who shall accepted stand? |
A27939 | And shall thy wrath unreconcil''d Consume and burn us up as fire? |
A27939 | And that his tender mercies he Hath shut up now in[ endless] wrath? |
A27939 | And to all generations Wilt thou thy wrath extend? |
A27939 | And what''s the son of man, that thou[ So much] regard''st and visit''st him? |
A27939 | And who is he that from the grave Can his own life save and set free? |
A27939 | And who will into Edom''s Land My conquering Army guide? |
A27939 | And who will into Edom''s land[ Me and] my conquering armies guide? |
A27939 | And whom on earth do I desire[ And seek?] |
A27939 | And whom wilt thou receive to dwell In thy most holy hill? |
A27939 | And why with grief[ so much] opprest? |
A27939 | And[ will he] gracious be no more? |
A27939 | But are not the Psalms sufficiently by Translation and Metre, already fitted to the Churches use? |
A27939 | Doth death thy faithfulness declare? |
A27939 | Doth dust declare thy Majesty, Or yet thy[ grace and] truth doth praise? |
A27939 | Doth it thy[ truth and] mercy show? |
A27939 | Even near thy holy Altars they May make their safe abode; And why not I, seeing thou art My King and only God? |
A27939 | Fails his[ good] word[ for] evermore? |
A27939 | He that all knowledge teacheth man, What can[ from him] concealed be? |
A27939 | How great their sum? |
A27939 | How long shall cruel enemies[ By pow''r] thus over me prevail? |
A27939 | How long will ye love vanity, And seek and trust a[ flatt''ring] lie? |
A27939 | How long wilt thou displeasedly Thus hide thy[ pleased] face from me? |
A27939 | How low shall they triumph and boast, Who[ plot and] work iniquity? |
A27939 | Jordan, why didst thou backward go? |
A27939 | Learn and be wise, Will only ye The Rebels be, And God despise? |
A27939 | May they not as well scruple reading or saying them in Prose? |
A27939 | Nor[ all things] see, that form''d the eye? |
A27939 | Or is thy truth and righteousness Remembred and mention''d in The land of deep forgetfulness? |
A27939 | Or what''s the son of man, that thou Of him[ so much] account dost make? |
A27939 | Or[ whither] from thy spirit flee? |
A27939 | Or[ who] himself[ can] justifie? |
A27939 | Shall it be[ thus for] evermore? |
A27939 | Shall the dead rise and praise thee here? |
A27939 | Shall thy provoked jealousie Like fire thus always[ burn and] wa st? |
A27939 | The Lord is of my life the strength,[ Of man] why should I be afraid? |
A27939 | The workers of iniquity, Who will against them[ for me] stand? |
A27939 | What gain is in my blood, said I, If[ hasty] death destroy my days? |
A27939 | What is the sum of my desires? |
A27939 | What need any more help of yours? |
A27939 | What sweeter foretaste of the Heavenly Everlasting Praises? |
A27939 | Which in thy truth Thou unto David then didst swear? |
A27939 | Who but our God''s a rock and stay? |
A27939 | Who can all his due praise express? |
A27939 | Who can o''rethrow his[ potent] will? |
A27939 | Who is this? |
A27939 | Who may be liken''d to the Lord, Of all their sons that mighty are? |
A27939 | Who may this Monarch be? |
A27939 | Who''s like to thee in faithfulness, Which doth thy Throne encompass round? |
A27939 | Why art thou with distrustful thoughts Disquieted in me? |
A27939 | Why by my foes oppression Thus mourning do I[ daily] go? |
A27939 | Why do the Rebel- Nations rage, And hatch a vain design? |
A27939 | Why do the Rebel- Nations rage, And[ People] hatch a vain design? |
A27939 | Why from my roaring voice so far Help and salvation be? |
A27939 | Why is thy face against me bent? |
A27939 | Why so disquieted in me? |
A27939 | Ye little hills, wherefore was it, That you did skip like playing Lambs? |
A27939 | [ O] shall it thus[ for] ever be? |
A27939 | how dar''st thou take My Covenant in thy mouth? |
A27939 | what grieveth thee? |
A29932 | ''T is as high as Heaven, What canst thou do? |
A29932 | 16? |
A29932 | Alas, then what will become of the understandings of this Generation? |
A29932 | Alass, who doth not every Day both in thought, word and deed? |
A29932 | Am I a God at hand, saith the Lord, and not a God afar off? |
A29932 | And by what means they become thus superlatively happy? |
A29932 | And can it then be troubled? |
A29932 | And how may we know that we dwell in him? |
A29932 | And so did Moses, Wherefore cryest thou unto me? |
A29932 | And such a House as can keep him, and what he hath, dry? |
A29932 | And the Marriners to Jonas, What is thy occupation? |
A29932 | And what Man in the World could live a more unblameable life, than that young Ruler did? |
A29932 | And what goodness saw Paul in himself, when he said, I am a carnal Man sold under sin? |
A29932 | And what will ye do in the Day of Visitation, to whom will ye flee for help? |
A29932 | And who will be so arrogant as to think himself better, or better privileged, than those of whom the World was not worthy, or that Holy Apostle? |
A29932 | And who would not be at Home, that hath such a Home prepared for him, when once He is prepared for it? |
A29932 | And who, or where is he or she, that is not one of these? |
A29932 | Are they not all Ministering Spirits sent forth to Minister for them, who shall he Heirs of Salvation? |
A29932 | Are you Magistrates? |
A29932 | Art not thou it which hath dryed the Sea, the Waters of the great Deep, which hath made the depth of the Seas, and way for the ransomed to pass over? |
A29932 | Art thou it that hath cut off Rahab, and wounded the Dragon? |
A29932 | Because wisdom of the flesh is enmity against God, and because he is under the power of Satan? |
A29932 | But is all this, or any of this, in the power of meer natural Men; Such as you have been all this while perswading and advising to do? |
A29932 | But may we expect God will work Miracles now adayes? |
A29932 | But where shall wisdome be found, and where is the place of Understanding? |
A29932 | But you question whether Ministers may read in the Congregation prescribed Formes of Prayer imposed? |
A29932 | Can any hide himself in secret Places, that I shall not see him, saith the Lord, Do not I fill Heaven and Earth? |
A29932 | Can thine Heart endure, or can thine Hands be strong in the Days that I shall deal with Thee? |
A29932 | Canst thou by searching finde out God? |
A29932 | Canst thou by searching finde out the Almighty to perfection? |
A29932 | Do not I fill Heaven and Earth? |
A29932 | Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie, are we stronger than he, that we should not fear to provoke him? |
A29932 | Every Man''s House is the place of his rest? |
A29932 | Examine the cause of your Ejection; if it be so, Why am I thus? |
A29932 | Finally, How inexcusable Men are, that live in such an Age, wherein they have both these Laws; One to confirm the other? |
A29932 | For shall Man be holier than God, and hate corruption more than he? |
A29932 | God through Christ being your Habitation, your Light and Salvation, whom or what should you fear, while you live, and when you die? |
A29932 | Had you not rather enjoy me, and do you not finde more comfort in me, than in Ten Houses? |
A29932 | Hast thou not known? |
A29932 | Hast thou not seen thy Soul totally empty of Grace, yet indebted to God Ten Thousand Talents, whose Justice thou knowest will exact the utmost Mite? |
A29932 | Have we not all one Father, hath not one God created us? |
A29932 | How can this Man give us his Flesh to eat?) |
A29932 | How constantly did Moses stick to his Shepherds Hook, and yet a Man of great learning, excellent spirit, good education? |
A29932 | How far doth nature qualifie her self for grace when she reacheth forth her abilities as far as she can? |
A29932 | How fell they then into so foul sins? |
A29932 | How few have any care to keep the Commandments of God? |
A29932 | How great honour must it then be to sit at Christs Table, who is David''s Lord? |
A29932 | How many are there in whom we may see, as in him that fulfilled which our Saviour speaketh? |
A29932 | How many give that answer to his Prophets, pressing obedience, which those Jews did to Jeremy? |
A29932 | How many visible Members of the Church joyned a Covenant with God by Baptisme, and in fellowship with his People, have fearfully apostatized? |
A29932 | How may we know we have this love to God and Men? |
A29932 | How may we mannage our Faith, so as to maintain this life of joy and comforts? |
A29932 | How much better is thy Love than Wine, and the smell of thine Oyntments than all Spices? |
A29932 | How much more may it be said of the everlasting Lord God, that his Eyes are as sharp sighted as ever, nor is his Divine force abated? |
A29932 | How oft are Christians exhorted to hold fast every good spiritual thing that they have gotten? |
A29932 | How oft have you had this cast in your Dish by enemies, both to the form& power of godliness when you have perswaded them to embrace both? |
A29932 | How shall I know I have this poverty of Spirit? |
A29932 | How sweet are thy Words unto my Taste? |
A29932 | How we may know that we dwell in God? |
A29932 | I sought thee in a secret Cave, And ask''d if peace were there? |
A29932 | If God be ours, how shall not all these things be ours? |
A29932 | If at any time said I? |
A29932 | If the Query be, What may be counted needful? |
A29932 | If the Question be, where such an habitation can be found? |
A29932 | Is his hand shortned, that it can not redeem? |
A29932 | Is it not severally taught and held, that no Man can do any thing to help forward, or further his own conversion? |
A29932 | Is not this thy case, poor despondent Christian? |
A29932 | Is some Star( fled from the Sphere) Melted there, As we Sugar melt in Wine? |
A29932 | Is the mutability of Man''s will? |
A29932 | It is that which brings him into the Beggars case, Blessed are the poor in Spirit, for theirs is the,& c. When is a Man so? |
A29932 | Know you not that your Body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, which ye have of God? |
A29932 | Labour not to be rich — ▪ Wilt thou set thine Eyes upon that which is not? |
A29932 | Let them stretch forth the Curtains of thine Habitation; What Lamentation is made when these are harmed? |
A29932 | No Man repenteth of his wickedness, saying, What have I done? |
A29932 | Nor are there any such Seats, to rest both Souls and Bodies on, in taking repast in any House, as in this? |
A29932 | Nor how deep the Plow went? |
A29932 | Nor ought Nature to be laid over- low, Grace is Nature''s perction: what does it but repair the decayes of Nature? |
A29932 | Nor when God by his Word makes offer of his grace, can he perceive it? |
A29932 | Nor when he doth by God''s Word and Spirit, beginning to enlighten him in some measure to perceive it, is he able to imbrace it? |
A29932 | O how great is thy goodness which thou hast for them that fear thee? |
A29932 | O wretched Man that I am, who shall deliver me out of this dark and damned estate? |
A29932 | Or bring a Writ of Ejection to them? |
A29932 | Or have I no power to deliver? |
A29932 | Or if there was need, Why was it not sooner? |
A29932 | Or who is he that passeth Sentence, that they must avoid their House? |
A29932 | Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
A29932 | Say to thy self, Is this my portion? |
A29932 | Should you come into Houses full of dead Men, that had slain themselves, would not your Eyes affect your Hearts, could you forbear tears? |
A29932 | THe Question will be, what it is to make God our Habitation? |
A29932 | Tell me( said he) What hast thou in the House? |
A29932 | That there be Pastors and Ministers lawfully called, How shall they preach except they be sent? |
A29932 | The Lord grant that you may finde rest, my Daughter; Shall I not seek rest for thee? |
A29932 | The Lord is my Light and my Salvation, Whom shall I fear? |
A29932 | The Lord is the strength of my life, and of whom shall I be afraid? |
A29932 | The Prophet might have objected, and asked, but how shall the afflicted Jewes be able to live in the mean season, for Seventy Years together? |
A29932 | Thou that teachest another, teachest thou not thy self? |
A29932 | Two witnesses, if both accuse us at the last Day, how shall we escape condemnation? |
A29932 | Unto the wicked God saith, what hast thou to do to declare my statutes, seeing thou hatest instruction, and castest my words behind thee? |
A29932 | Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? |
A29932 | What a World of Papists are there, besides Hereticks that cut off themselves from the true Church? |
A29932 | What a deal of pains does the Apostle take to work Christians, to a charitable Toleration each of other? |
A29932 | What alone, was this Paul? |
A29932 | What are the abilities which Nature may, and must reach forth in the pursuit of saving grace? |
A29932 | What are these objects? |
A29932 | What comfort can that Man have, that hath Meat, Drink, and Cloaths, and Silver, and Gold, and Jewels; if with these he hath not a House to live in? |
A29932 | What fruit had ye then in those things, whereof ye are now ashamed? |
A29932 | What is an honest heart, and what makes it so? |
A29932 | What is that? |
A29932 | What is the lowest degree of true Humiliation? |
A29932 | What it is to make the Lord our Habitation? |
A29932 | What know you, but you may prevail, as he did? |
A29932 | What need was there of the repetition and renovation of this Law? |
A29932 | What shall we say to these things? |
A29932 | What was wanting in these Chapmen, that bid thus fairly for this House, and went without it? |
A29932 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
A29932 | Where almost shall we finde such a one as Joshua? |
A29932 | Where have we any that have any such mind to joyn themselves unto the Lord? |
A29932 | Where may we finde the Souls Rest, and what is the place of its repose? |
A29932 | Where such a People? |
A29932 | Wherefore do they spend Money for that which is not Bread, and their labour for that which satisfieth not? |
A29932 | Wherefore hidest thou thy face, and holdest me for thine Enemy? |
A29932 | Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, and bow my self before the High God? |
A29932 | Who almost of all the ancient Fathers, but held some gross Errour? |
A29932 | Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my House, that thou hast brought me hitherto? |
A29932 | Who is among you that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice of his Servant, that walketh in darkness, and hath no light? |
A29932 | Who is he that condemneth? |
A29932 | Who is like the Lord our God, who is most High, who humbleth himself to behold the things that are done in the Heaven and in the Earth? |
A29932 | Who is she that looketh forth as the Morning, fair as the Moon, clear as the Sun, and terrible as an Army with Banners? |
A29932 | Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect? |
A29932 | Whom have I in Heaven but thee? |
A29932 | Why did I not give up the Ghost, when I came out of the Belly? |
A29932 | Why dyed I not from the Womb? |
A29932 | Why have you dwelt so long upon this point? |
A29932 | Why should I think upon a Maid? |
A29932 | Why then should not one Baptized by a Mass Priest, be Rebaptized? |
A29932 | Will God hear his cryes when trouble cometh upon him? |
A29932 | Wilt thou have courage or strength enough to endure or withstand my Judgments? |
A29932 | Ye Hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the Skie, and how is it that ye can not discern this time? |
A29932 | Ye shall know others by their fruits, do Men gather Grapes of Thorns, or Figges of Thistles? |
A29932 | Yes, that we may rather than his promise should faile, Is my hand shortned at all? |
A29932 | Yet will they lean upon the Lord, and say, is not the Lord among us? |
A29932 | deeper than Hell, What canst thou know? |
A29932 | hast thou not heard that the everlasting God, the Lord the Creator, of the ends of the Earth fainteth not, neither is weary? |
A29932 | my Master? |
A29932 | or use any means to attain it? |
A29932 | wherefore do you lay out your labour for that which satisfyeth not? |
A26965 | & illis annuentibus rursus percontetur an tribuunt ei omnes testimonium quod dignus sit hoc magno& illustri munere praesidend ●? |
A26965 | * But a Papist will say, who shall be Judge? |
A26965 | 1. Who ever questioneth it, that is considerate, as to an indefinite charge in the Church universal? |
A26965 | 16, 17. and the dreadful third Commandment; and tremble when I thought of death and judgment? |
A26965 | 4 Whether the said Ecclesiastical Head must be One as the High Priest, or an Aristocracy of many, or a Synod of the whole Clergy? |
A26965 | 42,& c? |
A26965 | 7. Who is it that chooseth or authorizeth the National Priestly Head, that we may know when we have a lawful Chief Pastor, and when an Usurper? |
A26965 | A Bishop with- his Presbyters be over every particular Church( associated for personal Communion in holy doctrine, worship and Conversation?) |
A26965 | A Christian Kingdom what § 43? |
A26965 | A Papist King is to be obeyed in lawful things: what Protestant denieth that? |
A26965 | Am I not to have more care of it than of my estate or health of body? |
A26965 | An domum suam résque domesticas recte administraverit,& an vita ei peromnia honeste& laudate act a suerit? |
A26965 | An jura adversus homines servarit? |
A26965 | An quae ad pietatem erga Deum pertinent recte peregerit? |
A26965 | And are we sure they erred not that wrote this? |
A26965 | And can not the Sword be drawn without such as have no power of it? |
A26965 | And how is he able to say that no one man of them all is obliged by it to endeavour a lawful and necessary reformation? |
A26965 | And how ordinarily do many Gentlemen of the Church of England go from their own Parishes in London? |
A26965 | And if good Princes were but the tenth part as rare, as they thought that said[ In uno annulo]& c. what then would become of Religion in the World? |
A26965 | And if there must be a higher Bishop to deliver men from the injuries of a lower, who should deliver us from him, who may injure Kingdoms? |
A26965 | And if these Churches associate for meer concord and mutual help( and not for Governing Bishops?) |
A26965 | And if they know it not to be so why should they declare it to be so? |
A26965 | And if they will resolve the case into the question of fact, whether such different Ministers have usually different success? |
A26965 | And is it not a fleshly, proud and wordly mind( which is the work of the Devil) which is the importunate seeker? |
A26965 | And must we needs appeal to such? |
A26965 | And shall such Jesuits as Vasquez, such moderators as Erasmus, and Protestant Conformists, and Nonconformists, all thus speak for it, and yet no hope? |
A26965 | And so that under Heathen, Mahometan, Papist, Heretical Rulers, they must be all of their Religion, as to the external professing and practising part? |
A26965 | And then how knoweth every Minister in what sense every man in the three Kingdoms took it? |
A26965 | And was not the contention at the two Councils of Ephesus more stigmatized by Historians than this that Gregory so lamenteth? |
A26965 | And what is it that some men can not copiously and confidently talk for? |
A26965 | And what wretched Reasons be they that have hindred Englands unity and peace? |
A26965 | And where can the wit of man ever set bounds to such power of sinners? |
A26965 | And where is the proof that the Apostles did institute it? |
A26965 | And yet are you sure what they meant? |
A26965 | And yet must we despair of a cure of so odious a disease? |
A26965 | And yet not in the Calendar and other passages in our Liturgy? |
A26965 | Are all the Ministers in the world bound to be the Pastors of this Parish or Diocess? |
A26965 | Are all those Church- members that Ministers are authorized to preach to? |
A26965 | Are not these doleful Narratives and Characters of those Primitive Bishops( even in those happy daies of good Theodosius? |
A26965 | Are we sure this Mass Book meant not pleniluniam as we do properly? |
A26965 | Are you such your selves? |
A26965 | Are you sure that this Mass Book should be our rule herein of speaking or interpreting? |
A26965 | Because a man is a Licensed Physician without me, doth it follow that he is my Physician without my consent? |
A26965 | Bishop Vsher himself told one of us, that being asked by his Sovereign whether he found that ever Presbyters ordained Presbyters? |
A26965 | But can a man deny notorious truth in reverence to Bishops? |
A26965 | But how much more if every sinner must appeal to a Patriarch many hundred miles off? |
A26965 | But if All must not lay down their Ministry, why must a thousand or two thousand do it rather than all the rest? |
A26965 | But if the question be only whether a National Priestly Soveraignty be lawful? |
A26965 | But it is, Whether all the faults of the Translation may be Assented, Approved and Consented to? |
A26965 | But shall all men gather Churches, and teach Heresie, and do what they will? |
A26965 | But what''s that to the question? |
A26965 | But when they were asunder were they setled,& did they keep the Churches in concord by these Councils? |
A26965 | Did the the Convocation intend that we should not here understand[ The full moon] properly, nor as in all the rest of the Book? |
A26965 | Do they secure any of the ends of Governments? |
A26965 | Do you differ in nothing? |
A26965 | Doth not the ordainer here say, Take thou Authority to Preach the Word of God,& c. when thou art thereto lawfully called? |
A26965 | Else it were at the will of a man whether souls shall be saved or damned,( for how shall they believe unless they hear? |
A26965 | Even as the blessed Apostle Paul exhorteth and saith, What if some of them have fallen from Faith? |
A26965 | How many Councils have been against Images in Churches, and how many for them, condemning one anothers acts? |
A26965 | How shall we be sure that other mens sinning will absolve the two thousand innocent from their duty? |
A26965 | I know some will say, were all these Councils of Bishops such fools in comparison of you? |
A26965 | If in the first Instant it be confessedly the equal duty of all, how will the weakness and sin of one part change the obligation of all the rest? |
A26965 | If so, then why saith the Canon that the Convocation[ is the true Church of England by Representation] and those excommunicate that deny it? |
A26965 | If the Churches be somehow supplied by mens sin, will it follow that truth and righteousness in sounder blameless men will not mend their supply? |
A26965 | Is it not enough that I know why I am unwilling to keep him, who am no way more bound to him than to others, but by my own consent? |
A26965 | Is it to be supposed then, that these were better than Priests? |
A26965 | Is there any Christian that dare say, that Bishops or Princes are in all things to be obeyed, lest the people be made Judges? |
A26965 | May I give away the needfull helps to my salvation, because others have them, as if their salvation might satisfie me instead of my own? |
A26965 | Nay, what if on such necessity they should accept of favour from any Papists that would save them? |
A26965 | Nor whether they may not be lawfully used where there is no better? |
A26965 | Or whether God hath ordained such a National Church- form, only by the general Command of doing all things in Order and Unity and to Edification? |
A26965 | Or whether they meant that all men should be forced and taught to subscribe or declare assent to that which they never understood? |
A26965 | Or with what face could I do it? |
A26965 | Our question is what constituteth the relations between a Pastor and his Particular flock? |
A26965 | P. 55, 56 ▪ The question, Whether this or that Oath be lawful? |
A26965 | Praesules? |
A26965 | Qui vero inter reliquos princeps Episcopus est, percontetur Presbyteros& populum an ipse sit quem praeesse petant? |
A26965 | Saith that such great places use to make Bishops worse than they were before, All history tells us what striving there was for such places? |
A26965 | Shall the people have any judgment of discerning or not? |
A26965 | Some say, If we take in a few moderate men like you, what the better are we? |
A26965 | Surrogates,& c? |
A26965 | THE Question stated § 3,& c. Whether we are obliged by or to the Jewish National Polity? |
A26965 | The question is not whether these faulty Translations were not a good work, and a great mercy to the Church, till we had a better? |
A26965 | The question is, What obligation there is in this case? |
A26965 | The question is, may we swear or Covenant to obey them? |
A26965 | The question therefore is, whether such Oaths, as necessary to a Bishops consecration, be to be Approved and consented to? |
A26965 | The second, Whether it be not such an Errour to require the bond of a Covenant beside the Baptismal Covenant? |
A26965 | Then answer your own objection: What remedy shall they have if the Bishop wrong them? |
A26965 | They say no, themselves: And next, whether it be not certain, and confessed, that the Pastors have no other power, but the Magistrates only? |
A26965 | This were an easie way to introduce any Errour, by forbidding any but the defenders of it to Preach? |
A26965 | V. And to the question, Whether the King be the formal, or only the accidental Church- head? |
A26965 | What Covenanting is necessary to particular Church relation? |
A26965 | What a stir did Maximus make at Constantinople, Egypt, and with the Emperour to have got Gregories place at Constantinople? |
A26965 | What good will Oaths or Covenants taken with such Latitude or Equivocation do? |
A26965 | What if the Parish Priest could Baptize but one of many( or not all:) Must the rest be content to be unbaptized? |
A26965 | What is the case than that you suppose such supraordinations of power necessary for? |
A26965 | What then would become of me, if I undertook to justifie the Perjury of multitudes? |
A26965 | Whether a National Church- form be lawful, § 30,& c? |
A26965 | Whether all Reformation be out of the power of the King, or not to be desired by the people? |
A26965 | Whether all alteration of Church Government be unlawful? |
A26965 | Whether an excommunicate King may be murdered as no King,& c? |
A26965 | Whether it be a prudential desirable form § 38,& c? |
A26965 | Whether men be not bound by a Vow to that which is Lawful: much more to that Which is antecedently a duty? |
A26965 | Whether the King or he, is to be obeyed in Circumstances, or matters Ecclesiastical, if they differ, and make contrary Laws? |
A26965 | Whether the very Jewish Church Policy be established by Christ for the Christian Church, or be repealed? |
A26965 | Whether this be the usual or proper signification of such words? |
A26965 | Which is the Priestly- Head, or highest Governour of the Church of England, which is a constitutive part, as a King in a Kingdom? |
A26965 | Will you say, If the people be Judges, they may set up Usurpers, and put down the King? |
A26965 | Would you perswade us that our Convocation now borrowed their Direction from this Mass Book? |
A26965 | and how shall they hear without a Preacher?) |
A26965 | but must be cast out by others sin? |
A26965 | how then shall we have Communion with you when we differ in all the things here described? |
A26965 | or so many score thousands as are in many others? |
A26965 | or whether God''s general Rules( for Concord, Order, Edification) do bind the Churches prudentially to erect such a form? |
A26965 | or whether it be left indifferent which? |
A26965 | shall none be tolerated but the perfect? |
A26965 | shall their unbelief make void the saith of God? |
A26965 | whether we are bound to Love God once a year? |
A26965 | yea for all the poor of England? |
A26965 | § 1? |
A26965 | § 5,& c. The spirit maketh Ministrs, how? |
A26965 | § 5,& c. or by scripture to a National limitation of them? |
A27028 | 2. and 3. which are Covenants to them? |
A27028 | 23. ordain Elders in every Church? |
A27028 | Abraham''s Servant did it by putting his hand under his thigh: Was this a common Law, or Institution? |
A27028 | And did he bid them not judg each other for idolatry? |
A27028 | And doth not he do so, that calleth them Idolaters? |
A27028 | And if these be not worth the disputing with, it seems, that you differ from them more than Separatists do: and then were not all these Schismaticks? |
A27028 | And is it Edifying to read such a discourse, that saith and unsaith by self- contradiction? |
A27028 | And is not Agreement a humane Contract? |
A27028 | And is not his consent then necessary? |
A27028 | And is not separating the Materials, destroying the house? |
A27028 | And what a Trade for the Booksellers? |
A27028 | And what shall they do where the Prince equally tolerateth both, and it''s hard to know which is the more numerous? |
A27028 | And whether they are Friends to Mankind? |
A27028 | And who denyeth this? |
A27028 | And why can not they? |
A27028 | And why may there not be distinct Politick Bodies, or Compound in one whole as well as natural? |
A27028 | And why then should their own Books be so valued? |
A27028 | Another Instance is, the use of helps, or written Words; Whether one shall use Notes in Preaching, and read them, or not? |
A27028 | Are all that dwell in the Parish or Diocess your Church members? |
A27028 | Are not the Takers of it obliged? |
A27028 | As Whole and Parts? |
A27028 | Baptism delivereth men possession of Pardon, Grace and right to Glory; and can men have this against their wills? |
A27028 | But hath God commanded or instituted no Covenant but Baptism? |
A27028 | But in what sence is Episcopacie one? |
A27028 | But is it true that humane Contracts make not a Church? |
A27028 | But is not humane Covenanting a cause of single Church Relation as well as of universal? |
A27028 | But is not the Inference true? |
A27028 | But must they not give over all Religious Duty themselves, seeing their own defects more defile them than other mens? |
A27028 | Can the wit of man imagine how it is possible without consent, for a man to be made the Pastor of any Flock? |
A27028 | Could any then come otherwise in? |
A27028 | Did he think these things need no proof at all? |
A27028 | Did not all Churches hold and practise this after, and was it none of Gods Institution? |
A27028 | Do not men owe duty to their Pastors which they owe to no others? |
A27028 | Do the Free- holders of Bedford- shire choose Knights for Middlesex; or the Citizens of Oxford choose Officers in London? |
A27028 | Do the Men of one Colledge, School, Corporation, owe no more duty to that than to all others? |
A27028 | Do we owe no Love to any Christians, but such as is due to Idolaters? |
A27028 | Do you Swear Canonical obedience as much to the Bishop of Paris, or Haffnia,& c. as to your Ordinary? |
A27028 | Do you yet see no Priviledges that one hath Proper, and not common to all? |
A27028 | Do your Bishops in Convocation make Canon Laws for all the World? |
A27028 | Doth he not deny that Communion of the Saints, which is an Article of the Creed? |
A27028 | Doth he not directly rush into the Sin which, he condemneth adding to God''s Laws, and saying he forbids what he forbids not? |
A27028 | Doth not this directly destroy the Church by Dissolution? |
A27028 | Have they all things common? |
A27028 | How are your Parish or Diocesan Church members known to your selves or any others? |
A27028 | How dare you venture your souls to sit under Means that he says shall not profit you; and which is worse, lies under his curse? |
A27028 | How far are the Vniversal Church and Particular Churches distinct? |
A27028 | How few in England separate not from the Church as far as this disobedience amounts to? |
A27028 | How many Ages in above 23 Duplicates or Schisms, was the World uncertain which was the true Pope? |
A27028 | How many once in the separation, are returned back to the Vomit they once cast up, and wallow in the mire of a worldly worship? |
A27028 | How much more, if he make all, or near all the Church Idolaters to this day, and himself with the rest? |
A27028 | If a man come from a Countrey Village and be made by Covenant a Citizen of London, how prove you that he renounceth King or Kingdom? |
A27028 | If it be every transient Communicant, have you a proper Pastoral care of every Travellers Soul that so communicates with you? |
A27028 | If it be where Princes are Orthodox, do they make all the People Judges of their Princes Orthodoxness? |
A27028 | If many Students may make one Colledge, why may not many Colledges make one University? |
A27028 | If not, put them not on it: Why are you angry with them for going from you? |
A27028 | If not, why are all the Nonconformists cast out that offer to officiate and Communicate on such terms as are common to all sound Churches? |
A27028 | If one from York or Cornwall come into your Pulpit without consent, do People stand as much related to him as to you? |
A27028 | If so, God requireth us not to take any of you for our Bishops or Pastors: Who then requireth it? |
A27028 | If so, what a case was the East in by the difference between Chrysostome and his Competitors? |
A27028 | If the Exercise must be in particular Churches, must not men Consent to their Relations and Duties? |
A27028 | If those that heard not a Sermon in many years differed not from your Congregation, why do you preach? |
A27028 | Is every Christian bound on pain of Damnation to know all these, and then to examine and judge Bishops and Priests accordingly? |
A27028 | Is every Priest the Vniversal Church, or an essential part of it? |
A27028 | Is it a sin to Promise Duty? |
A27028 | Is it all difference in the Integrals or Accidents? |
A27028 | Is it all want of Love, or all Vncharitableness to one another? |
A27028 | Is it any renuntiation of Baptism to promise at Ordination to obey the Arch- Bishop and Bishop, and to take the Oath of Canonical Obedience? |
A27028 | Is it because we disown any Numerical Rulers? |
A27028 | Is it called Divine only as made by God, or as commanded by God and made by Man, or as mutual? |
A27028 | Is it enough that it be of Men? |
A27028 | Is it not a work of Satan to destroy Love, and to render almost all Christians odious? |
A27028 | Is it not still exacted? |
A27028 | Is it not worse falsly to father a Law on him? |
A27028 | Is not the fruit of the Spirit otherwise described? |
A27028 | Is not this Preaching men, into the hatred of each other? |
A27028 | Is scandal of no weight with you,& c.? |
A27028 | Is this separating from the Catholick Church? |
A27028 | Must the World at last learn that Whole and Parts are not distinct? |
A27028 | No, man then is out of the Church that is not out of the Baptismal Covenant, either by not taking it, or by renouncing some Essential part of it? |
A27028 | Or that did not implicitely trust all the Priests that he ordained? |
A27028 | Photius and Ignatius and hundreds others? |
A27028 | Quo teneam nodo,& c. How should one deal with such stippery men? |
A27028 | Reader, doth not this man here confess that there are particular Churches? |
A27028 | That Idolaters were acceptable to God, or approved of men? |
A27028 | Then the Baptized are still in Communion with the Church, till their baptism be nullified: And hath he proved us Apostates? |
A27028 | They that followed the Bishop, or they that separated from him and kept to the Ca ● ● ● ● hedral? |
A27028 | Vbi Episcopus ibi Ecclesia: Who were the Separatists? |
A27028 | Vnion and Communion, taking Communion for Actual Communication, or exercise of the duties of men in Union? |
A27028 | Was he then a Schismatick? |
A27028 | What if the Alexandrians, when Athanasius was banisned by, Constantine himself, were half for him, and half against him? |
A27028 | What the meaning of this great, Decantate Word[ Separate] is; must anon be enquired: But, may not Churches be distinct and not culpably separate? |
A27028 | What, I say, if the People now mistooke who had the best Title? |
A27028 | Whether he separated from himself or his Church? |
A27028 | Whether there he be a Subject to Dr. Stillingfleet as his Pastor, and bound to obey him? |
A27028 | Whether these men are for the Unity of England? |
A27028 | Who ever ordained a man against his will? |
A27028 | Who would have thought that we are more for the Liturgy than he? |
A27028 | Why are we ruined for not covenanting as aforesaid? |
A27028 | Why doth the Canon suspend those that receive them to Communion from another Parish that hath no Preacher? |
A27028 | Will any Divine Covenant serve? |
A27028 | against humane Church Forms? |
A27028 | and France, about the Archbishops of Rhemes, when he was put out that deposed Ludovicus 4. and when an Infant was put in, and oft besides? |
A27028 | and can any wonder if Rulers should think the Punishment of Murderers is not worse than we deserve? |
A27028 | and doth he not Preach Christians into the hatred of each other? |
A27028 | and tempt weak Christians into sinful Separations, Divisions, Slanders, Judgings, Murmurings, Envies, which are the fruits of the flesh? |
A27028 | and then, are not you a Schismatick if you communicate with them? |
A27028 | are not Covenants imposed on all that will be Ministers in the act of Uniformity? |
A27028 | are not multitudes kept out and cast out for not making these Covenants? |
A27028 | as in Zeno''s and Anastasius Reign,& c. And what shall they do when many Churches in one City are of divers Tongues, as well as Customs? |
A27028 | if yea, then is it against Baptism to promise to do our duty? |
A27028 | is it all difference in the Essentials of Christianity? |
A27028 | or Rom ▪ 15. or bid them receive Idolaters, as Christ received us? |
A27028 | or for any man to have Title against his will, to the proper oversight and pastoral care of any one Pastor, or the priviledges of any Church? |
A27028 | or if they mistake one or more mens Commission, do they therefore separate from the Catholick Church? |
A27028 | or is the damning dangerous Engine made since?) |
A27028 | or must it not be only the Baptismal Covenant? |
A27028 | or when the Chorepiscopi were put down, where they had been? |
A27028 | or whether many out of his Diocess( thousands) may not as Lawfully dwell half the Year in London as he? |
A27028 | perswaded the continuance of it, did the universal Church separate from it self and Christ? |
A27028 | sure now they should be Christians? |
A27028 | yea, fathering on him Laws more rigorous than the Jewish, as disowning Christ''s Church as Idolators and false Worshippers? |
A26897 | * Is it the Name of a Church that you fear, or the Thing? |
A26897 | 17,& c. — The Apostles were diligent and faithful in directing and exhorting, and rebuking: And why are they then so silent in point of admission? |
A26897 | 3. and of Cornelius, and the E ● much, and the Iailor, or the Samaritans, or any one person? |
A26897 | 8. Who hath required this at your hands? |
A26897 | 9 ▪ Do you not tremble to think what a charge you usurp, and what a dreadful account you undertake to give? |
A26897 | And alas how apt are such separated Assemblies to ● empt men to this miserable case? |
A26897 | And are not you forbid to Rule, when you are commanded to OBEY? |
A26897 | And are you able to Rule him aright? |
A26897 | And as Mr. Noyes ▪ saith, Shall Lads thus uncover their Father''s nakedness? |
A26897 | And be sensible of a Swearers or a Drunkards Sin, and not of so great a course of Sin of their own? |
A26897 | And do not we prepare such Entertainment for our Governours attempts in so good a Work? |
A26897 | And do you think his Children and Servants should rule it by Vote, and try their Lord and Ladies graces? |
A26897 | And have they the Ordaining, Admitting, Governing power by Vote or not? |
A26897 | And have you no Faults? |
A26897 | And how ordinarily doth it bring forth disobedience, murmuring, and disdain of those that were their Teachers? |
A26897 | And how without such clamour can the multitude be heard? |
A26897 | And if we may not initiate such a one, how shall we bring him to the Lords Table? |
A26897 | And of how many Churches they shall be composed? |
A26897 | And shall it be by your own act and guilt, lest it should be by other mens? |
A26897 | And shall men professing the fear of God, go against such a stream of Holy Precepts? |
A26897 | And shall we love it, when we have found it Evil? |
A26897 | And that from such Principles, and with such concomitant aggravating faults as those forementioned? |
A26897 | And the Covenant of Grace? |
A26897 | And the strength and upshot of all the Papists arguings, is[ Where was your Religion and Church before Luther?] |
A26897 | And under pretence of defending Truth, whether they be not the Nurseries of uncharitable Wars among the Servants of the Lord? |
A26897 | And what can we to hinder them more, than to bring the Churches and Holy Worship and Ways of God into doubt or contempt among them? |
A26897 | And what pretence had they then for Separation? |
A26897 | And when they think of turning, the Tempter asketh them, as the Papists use to do, Which Party will you turn to? |
A26897 | And where find we that the lesser part are to be Ruled by the greater? |
A26897 | And where hath God given the Major Vote the Government of the Minor? |
A26897 | And whether he shall be mutable or fixed? |
A26897 | And whether they shall have a President? |
A26897 | And who in those times did judge either the Churches Union to be Not- lawful, or Non- separation to be unlawful? |
A26897 | And who made you Rulers of the Church Universal? |
A26897 | And will you cast out your selves from the true Churches of Christ? |
A26897 | And would they separate from all the Publick Churches almost in the World? |
A26897 | Are not a company of Women with the Pastors a true Church, having all things Essential to it? |
A26897 | At,& c.] What need we more? |
A26897 | But are we not agreed in this? |
A26897 | But if it should succeed for any publick or common healing, how great would be my Ioy? |
A26897 | But your Bibles are all Man''s words: Do you think that Moses, the Prophets, or Christ were Englishmen? |
A26897 | But, being free, why should we desire to be bound, in Associations? |
A26897 | By what Word of God are the smaller number bound to take them for their Rulers that can but get the casting Voice? |
A26897 | Can you judge whether your Pastors understand the Gospel in the Language that the Holy Ghost hath given it in? |
A26897 | Could you possibly be so proud as to think your selves capable of this, if you had ever had true Humility, or knowledge of your selves? |
A26897 | Difference V. THE Fifth point of Difference is, about the first subject of the power of the Keys? |
A26897 | Do the Sheep Rule the Shepherd and themselves? |
A26897 | Do we make Laws against the Prophanation of the Holy Name of God, by Swearing and Cursing? |
A26897 | Do you know what the word Pastor signifyeth? |
A26897 | Do you not know how certainly this will turn Churches into Confusion, and the scorn of the World? |
A26897 | Do you not know that Baptism entereth into the Universal Church as such, and not into any particular Church without a further contract? |
A26897 | Do you not take every word in your Bibles on trust from English Conformists, or such men? |
A26897 | Do you think it is not lawful for a great Lord like Abraham, that hath a hundred or many hundred Servants, to make a Church of his Family? |
A26897 | Had the Iews Church no Forms? |
A26897 | How can we watch over men that live out of our reach? |
A26897 | How know we what their conversation is? |
A26897 | How oft is it brought forth by a proud over- valuing of mens own Opinions, Parts and Piety? |
A26897 | How the Godhead and Manhood are one Person? |
A26897 | How they will prove against an Infidel that Christ is the Son of God? |
A26897 | How will you confute them, and prove that you have any Gospel or Word of God? |
A26897 | I would know why you do not also your selves Baptize and Administer the Lord''s Supper? |
A26897 | If gross Ignorance deserve casting out, do not you deserve it that are so grosly ignorant, even in a Point so plain, and of such practical moment? |
A26897 | If it be not in our power to require a Years experience for more degrees of probability, why a Months experience?] |
A26897 | If you can rest in ● wrong judgment of the Usurping Majority, why not of the lawful Pastors? |
A26897 | If you will abuse the Letter of the Text, the Women must Govern: Are not they of the Church? |
A26897 | In other Ages it was the affliction of the Godly to be cast out of the Church by evil Governours: But now how many do cast out themselves? |
A26897 | In what Nature he made all things? |
A26897 | Is Ruling a work of ease? |
A26897 | Is Scripture our common Rule? |
A26897 | Is it Schism to separate from Heathens or Infidels, or from the Papal Church, or from Arrians? |
A26897 | Is it not Sacrilege to usurp a sacred Office? |
A26897 | Is it not dreadful to be accountable for the ill managing of it? |
A26897 | Is not Potestas Ministerialis Authority? |
A26897 | Is not the whole Bible a form of words for Instruction and Prayer and Praise? |
A26897 | Is one abused Text[ Tell, and hear the Church] ignorantly repeated, enough to blind you against all this Evidence? |
A26897 | Is there no Separation that is a Duty, because some Separation is a Sin? |
A26897 | Is there nothing but Honour in it? |
A26897 | Like Uzzah''s incense, and C ● rah''s sin? |
A26897 | May I give him personally the Sacrament, or Absolve him, or be familiar with him,& c? |
A26897 | Must he go against his Conscience in obedience to you? |
A26897 | Must you not leave your Trades for it, or be treacherous? |
A26897 | Note here the Unity of the Catholick Body, and who is the Center of the Church, and in what way it prospereth to perfection? |
A26897 | Or was any of the Scripture written or spoken in English by them, or by the Apostles? |
A26897 | Or will not one think that person not holy enough, nor that profession of conversion satisfactory, which another approveth? |
A26897 | Parker: Cum in causis& Personis Ecclesiasticis multae lites oriantur, jus appellationum necessariò concedendum quis neget? |
A26897 | Quale saedus sufficit ad formam Ecclesiae? |
A26897 | THE fourth Point of Difference is, Whether a particular Church hath Power in it self to Ordain and Impose hands on their chosen Pastors? |
A26897 | THE sixth Difference is, whether a Pastor of one Church, may do the work of a Pastor in other Churches when he hath their consent and call? |
A26897 | That''s as Teachers; but what''s that to Iudging? |
A26897 | The Papists say, It is a false Translation? |
A26897 | The Pastor being but one, and you, having the Major Vote, are you not his Rulers? |
A26897 | They think they are as well already, as turning to such a divided People can make them? |
A26897 | VVHat are the necessary terms of Communion of Christians as Members of the Universal Church? |
A26897 | What are the Terms of Communion between the Churches of several Kingdoms? |
A26897 | What are the Terms on which Neighbour Churches may hold Communion with one another? |
A26897 | What are the Terms on which Neighbour Churches, may hold Communion with one another? |
A26897 | What are the necessary Terms of Catholick Communion of Christians as Members of the Church Universal? |
A26897 | What are the necessary Terms of the Communion of Christians personally, in a particular Church? |
A26897 | What are the necessary terms of the Communion of Christians personally in a particular Church? |
A26897 | What are the terms of Communion between the Churches of several Kingdoms? |
A26897 | What are the terms of Communion between the Churches of several Kingdoms? |
A26897 | What are the terms on which Neighbour Churches may hold Communion with one another? |
A26897 | What bitter unchristian taunts and scorns, and reproachful words? |
A26897 | What farther need then of a Reconciliation in order to our Co ● … munion? |
A26897 | What if Twenty be of one Mind and Twenty one of another? |
A26897 | What if the Minister that must Baptize and give the Lord''s Supper be unsatisfied in your Iudgment? |
A26897 | What if the Synod conclude against the Truth, and the Church stand for it? |
A26897 | What is the Magistrates Power and Duty about Religion, and the Churches and Ministers of Christ? |
A26897 | What is the Magistrates Power and Duty about Religion, and the Churches and Ministers of Christ? |
A26897 | What the Soul is? |
A26897 | What the definition of Faith is? |
A26897 | What unconscionable Censures pass too often on one side or both? |
A26897 | When all the Church must try the Repentance or Conversion of a Sinner, must he open his Sin before you all? |
A26897 | Where did Men go to Voting in Scripture for Acts of Government? |
A26897 | Where find you that the worst Church had any good men that separated from it into a distinct Church in that place? |
A26897 | Whether Private men, may Preach in the Church? |
A26897 | Whether a Man may not be Ordained a Minister, sine titulo, without Relation to a particular Church, but to the World and the Church Universal? |
A26897 | Whether each be a part of Christ''s Person? |
A26897 | Whether he was Man before the World? |
A26897 | Whether it be a single Congregation, or divers Congregations? |
A26897 | Whether such may not be Ordained without popular Election? |
A26897 | Whether the Church may send them out as private men unordained, to Preach in the Parishes of England, or to the Heathens or Unbelievers? |
A26897 | Whether these Synods shall be held at certain stated times, or variously as occasions vary? |
A26897 | Who gave you Commission to Rule the Church? |
A26897 | Why rather to this, than all the rest?] |
A26897 | Why would you chuse Pastors that be not wi ● ● r to govern than your selves? |
A26897 | Will you all agree in your Tryals? |
A26897 | Will you choose a Non- Communion to escape it? |
A26897 | With what hearts do such dividing Brethren read all those passages of Scripture that speak of the Unity of the Catholick Church? |
A26897 | Would it not be as profitable for all Members to come about again at certain seasons? |
A26897 | Yet lest any think him too loose, I will add his last leaf of Rules[ How in a less pure Church Communion must be continued with a safe Conscience? |
A26897 | and evil speaking against the things that they understand not? |
A26897 | and of Iustification, and of Regeneration? |
A26897 | and that Scripture is true? |
A26897 | and whether they decide Doctrinal Controversies truly or erroneously? |
A26897 | and whether they rightly expound a thousand difficult Texts? |
A26897 | and why he will cleave rather to one of them than to another? |
A26897 | especially if an opportunity of Communion with other Churches were shut up? |
A26897 | in length or briefly? |
A26897 | nor no more humbly sensible of their own unworthiness? |
A26897 | what Factious Doctrine, for Parties and against Parties are usually managed in Publick and Private, where these Divisions once appear? |
A26897 | whether it be the substance of the Holy Ghost that is given in to the Faithful, or only his Effects? |
A26897 | whether written Notes? |
A26897 | yea, to escape a possibility of it? |
A26897 | — Is not here enough for our Agreement in this Point? |
A27014 | ( do you think we shall Preach for it?) |
A27014 | 1. Who is that long of? |
A27014 | A proud heart saith swellingly, Am I to be accounted herein a sinner? |
A27014 | Alas, when the Stone is set on rolling down the Hill, where will it stop? |
A27014 | And can that Congregation be out of your hearing, and not be locally separate, as every Parish- Church and Chappel is? |
A27014 | And can those Auditors be no Congregation? |
A27014 | And having mentioned this, What if I added yet this clause to my present Petition to you? |
A27014 | And how shall we know when we have all? |
A27014 | And is not a suspension of a Precept an uncommanding, though not a commanding of the contrary? |
A27014 | And may not prayer and consultation reconcile such a controversie? |
A27014 | And must not God be obeyed? |
A27014 | And really, Will Popery come in ever the more for our Preaching? |
A27014 | And then what if he do not use the Liturgie; doth that make a Separatist? |
A27014 | And what Word of God is it that we contradict? |
A27014 | And what great matter of injury or provocation should this seem to any peaceable man? |
A27014 | And what if forty Families do so? |
A27014 | And what of all this? |
A27014 | And where will they stop? |
A27014 | And whether the Apostles and Churches for many hundred years, required any more of those that were Baptized? |
A27014 | And whether their business be to shew themselves wiser than the Apostles, and the primitive Church? |
A27014 | And which is Christ''s Church which we oppose? |
A27014 | And who ever made a Parish and a Church Synonymal, Jure Divino? |
A27014 | And who liveth and sinneth not? |
A27014 | And why should we do it? |
A27014 | Any more than you, did I say? |
A27014 | Are you Separatists for not hearing them? |
A27014 | Are you the fuller, because some Nonconformists wants Bread? |
A27014 | Brethren, let me ask you, as before God: Why hath no more of this bin done while you were silenced? |
A27014 | Brethren, what harm will it do to you, if a Non- Conformist preach by you? |
A27014 | But doth not every Chappel, and every neighbor Parish then, and all the World besides your Auditory, sinfully separate from you? |
A27014 | But his next hath no bounds, and grieveth me to read it( O posterity, how will you know what to believe?) |
A27014 | But indeed we never desired to play the Bishops in other mens Diocess: If we pretended to govern you, would you take it for our Orthodoxness? |
A27014 | But is it not better to give an Alms to the bodies or souls, of some men, than of none at all? |
A27014 | But it seemeth that acknowledging you true Churches will not satisfie you, without( what?) |
A27014 | But must I therefore give over? |
A27014 | But this is spoken conjunctively with what followeth: And what''s that? |
A27014 | But what if I had leave without Conformity to preach in the next Parish- Church? |
A27014 | But who ever took every act of disobedience in a Circumstance, in a Family or Kingdom, to be a Schism from that Family or Kingdom? |
A27014 | But why may not many of us Ministers meet in one allowed place, for such Agreements in our Pastoral Government? |
A27014 | But would you be at more hearts- ease, to think that none of us are within five miles of you, nor teach any of the people the Gospel of Christ? |
A27014 | But, Brother, what good will our sufferings do you? |
A27014 | But, Sir, who made you a fitter Judge of the need of souls, than themselves and all others? |
A27014 | Can you spare your flesh or labour, when you think what impenitent souls must feel for ever; and what the Sanctified shall enjoy? |
A27014 | Come and impartially debate the case with us, Who have bin the great causes of Protestants divisions, Conformists or Non- Conformists? |
A27014 | Do not others prefer you before him? |
A27014 | Do not those, as aforesaid, that remove from one Parish Church to another, remove from true Churches? |
A27014 | Do not you and yours think so of our Non- Conformity? |
A27014 | Do you draw Churches to your selves out of our true Churches that were before you, and then charge your act on us? |
A27014 | Do you feel your self ever the more at liberty when we are in the Common- Jayls? |
A27014 | Either the censure is true or false: If true, should you not be as thankful as to one that would save you from the Plague? |
A27014 | Fifthly, Whether all the Volumns of General Councils, be not yet too little by that rule, the sence of many being still controverted? |
A27014 | Had this been Separation and Schism, or not? |
A27014 | Have those kept us from doing what we could till now? |
A27014 | Have we served God about twelve years without one bit of the Levites portion? |
A27014 | How many souls feed or famish, live or die, as we do our duty, or neglect it? |
A27014 | I know two Churches so near that the people may hear each other, and yet they are two, and therefore one is separate: And I pray, which of them is it? |
A27014 | If Ministers be judged by you unworthy to preach the Gospel, have they not reason to think you judge them unworthy to receive the Sacrament? |
A27014 | If nay, why then is it Schism to joyn with such men in other places? |
A27014 | If not, why are they such for not hearing you? |
A27014 | If some prefer him before you? |
A27014 | If their not hearing you is separation, why is not your not hearing of them so? |
A27014 | If yea, Would you not have necessary help to do it? |
A27014 | If yea, what Law of God or Man forbad it? |
A27014 | If you could have proved that any secret person ever refused such an offer, can you thence say to the Presbyterians that they refused it? |
A27014 | If you talk of the Toleration of any that are Intolerable, what have we to do with it any more than you? |
A27014 | Is a Vow and Dedication to Preach the Gospel, no reason to Preach it elsewhere, when its forbidden us in your Assemblies? |
A27014 | Is every difference in things unnecessary from the major part, a Schism from them? |
A27014 | Is it because we will not, or because you will not give us leave? |
A27014 | Is it for going out of their own Parishes? |
A27014 | Is it for going to a Nonconformist? |
A27014 | Is it for going to a private house? |
A27014 | Is it good in you, and evil in us to Preach the same Gospel? |
A27014 | Is it not you that forbid it us? |
A27014 | Is the alienation of Consecrated persons no Sacriledge? |
A27014 | Is the notorious need of many hundred thousand Souls no reason? |
A27014 | Is the relieving of many godly Christians, who are cast out of your communion, because they dare not Conform, no reason? |
A27014 | Is there not a wise man among you? |
A27014 | It is not your selves that you preach for, but the peoples Souls: And why may not Christs Gospel profit them from another as well as from you? |
A27014 | Must Abrahams and Lots Servants, separate them for a Well? |
A27014 | Must Paul and Barnabas part for different censures of another mans omission? |
A27014 | Must two Congregations be one, or else be Separatists? |
A27014 | Name the men that offered us a comprehension, and the men that refused it? |
A27014 | Nature teacheth men to relish their own food, and partly to feel what doth them good? |
A27014 | Say you so? |
A27014 | Seventhly, And who is it that must be still the Creed- makers or menders? |
A27014 | Shall mutable conveniencies be turned into immutable necessities? |
A27014 | Tell us what you mean by our Schism from the Church of England? |
A27014 | That such proud tyrannical overdoers, have bin the Churches undoers? |
A27014 | The King forbiddeth them: Is not that to uncommand them? |
A27014 | V. Whether the Declaration make the Non- conformists preaching more lawful, or their duty, than it was before? |
A27014 | Was it Josephs sin that the Ishmaelites and Egyptians were more merciful to him than his Brethren? |
A27014 | Were we not as capable of the more Noble and General applause as you, if we could have taken your way? |
A27014 | Were you all Separatists that used it not fifteen years ago? |
A27014 | What Church did they divide from? |
A27014 | What advantage then hath every foolish Superstitious Priest above God, and over all good Christians? |
A27014 | What harm wil it do you if we escape? |
A27014 | What if his followers think Conformity to be sin? |
A27014 | What if they call themselves a Church and exercise Discipline,( which without need I would not have them do,) What harm will this do to you or others? |
A27014 | What if they think their way best, as you think yours? |
A27014 | What now will you do better and more than others to prove that the Nation can not spare you? |
A27014 | What should the poor Nonconformists hear, if they thus Commented on the Clemency of the King? |
A27014 | What then? |
A27014 | When he confesseth that we have been still against such a toleration? |
A27014 | When were we against our own Preaching, as we had opportunity? |
A27014 | Where lyeth your Point of Schism or Separation? |
A27014 | Whether there be not much that would not almost as handsomly have served Celsus, Julian, Porphyry, Eunapius, or Symmachus against Christianity? |
A27014 | Whether to gather themselves into distinct and separate Congregations, is unlawful in the judgment of the Presbyterians themselves? |
A27014 | Who then I pray you hath done more for Toleration, you or we? |
A27014 | Who then is it long of? |
A27014 | Who would gainsay a man of such understanding? |
A27014 | Why come not you to the private Churches among you that have all this while been kept up? |
A27014 | Why else are we Baptized? |
A27014 | Will our Poverty be greater than you Conformists have made it? |
A27014 | Will sin do you less hurt than censure? |
A27014 | Will you expect none of it in others, when you know( if you know your selves) that you have much of it in your selves? |
A27014 | Will you say, It is their partial humour? |
A27014 | Would you not be found by Christ so doing? |
A27014 | Would you not convert Sinners from the errour of their way, when it is the saving of a soul from death, and covering a multitude of sins? |
A27014 | Would you not shine your selves as Stars in the Firmament? |
A27014 | Would you then have the people taught, reformed and saved, or not? |
A27014 | Yea further, Brethren, what if the Non- Conformable Minister do give the Sacrament to some, as you do to others? |
A27014 | You have with less noise endured Infidels and Papists enough within five miles of you? |
A27014 | [ And will you not account such Congregations as shall be gathered to your allowed places to be true Churches also?] |
A27014 | [ Do you not allow our Parochial Churches to be true Churches?] |
A27014 | and can not we do so till we die? |
A27014 | and which side is to be compared to the Murderers and Adulterers? |
A27014 | if many follow him? |
A27014 | or ever the less, if we renounce our Ministry? |
A27014 | or the Nonconformists, that have near ten years been deprived of all Ecclesiastical maintenance? |
A27014 | r. by not only, p. 70. l. 3. for[?] |
A27014 | were it Tolerationism& Schism to be unwilling to be hang''d or burnt? |
A27014 | who calleth any of this Separation? |
A27014 | with what stuff will such men carry them away? |
A67849 | 10. whom he calls greedy dogs, feeding themselves, that are ignorant, doth he only brand them for being ignorant of reading Scripture? |
A67849 | 14. and observed by † Cyprian, as he faithfully expounded the Scriptures)? |
A67849 | 21. a And yet where are any Canons established for punishing their absence from Sabbathday- meetings? |
A67849 | 303. n. 37,& c. The Martyrs being called into judgment, and ask''d of the Proconsul, Whether they had done their Collect, or celebrated the Lords day? |
A67849 | 9. why should it not keep holy the Lords Day, since the Apostolical Church kept its meetings on that day? |
A67849 | ? |
A67849 | And how is it, that thou fearest not, nor tremblest to hear of these things against such Oracles? |
A67849 | And what cause was unknown to the most? |
A67849 | And what if we say, that the Aegyptians would not suffer the Israelites, while they were their slaves, to be idle on the seventh day? |
A67849 | And when were such sort of meetings kept, but at that time whereon the congregations of the common people were made? |
A67849 | And who is to determine those dayes, but him, whose the day and night are? |
A67849 | Arbogastes being entertained at a feast by the King of France, and asked, Whether he knew b Ambrose? |
A67849 | Are these fruits beseeming so long a preaching of the holy Gospel? |
A67849 | As his custome was; who will he be that shall think the places dedicated for the Churches assemblies are not to be gone unto by Christians? |
A67849 | As sometimes Sisinnius being asked, why he would wash himself twice every day in the publick bath, being a Bishop? |
A67849 | But for what end were they instituted? |
A67849 | But how could the people be instructed in the Scripture read, without an interpretation? |
A67849 | But who will say, that the piety established by new Canons, for observing that solemnity, was not known to the former Christians? |
A67849 | But who will there be found desirous of Divine knowledge, that will not be weary of these fooleries? |
A67849 | But who, well in his wits, shall judge, that a day in this manner is to be dedicated to the Good and Great God? |
A67849 | Do you cry out of silent or unprofitable Ministers? |
A67849 | Dost thou not know that these dayes are Sisters? |
A67849 | First, Whether in the compass of every week, must the Church keep holy a certain day, by Gods institution? |
A67849 | For how often do we meet with this phrase in the beginning of their Treatises, Yesterday''s Sermon? |
A67849 | For whenas he requires the end, why should he not also prescribe the means directly conducing to that end? |
A67849 | For why should the Lord indulge a further liberty to the men of our age, in his service, than he granted them? |
A67849 | He asks his wife why she would go to the Prophet that day, since it was neither new moon nor Sabbath? |
A67849 | Here some make a question, whether the day of their second meeting was the eighth from the first, or after the eighth day? |
A67849 | How could men spend one day of seven in the serious reading and hearing of Gods Word, and not grow in the understanding of it? |
A67849 | If it be better in those mens judgment, to add of the profane to the sacred, than to take from the sacred and add to the profane? |
A67849 | If it had been the Christians duty to observe Sabbaths, why had the Catholicks imputed its observation as a fault to the Hereticks? |
A67849 | If on holy dayes we must abstain from lawful, and necessary labours, must we therefore attend upon unlawful, vain, and unhonest works? |
A67849 | If others perform not their duty, will you sin for company, and yet condemn them? |
A67849 | If well, why do you blame them? |
A67849 | If you think they do ill, why will you imitate them? |
A67849 | It is sometimes put for the place that''s set aside for the Church to meet in: comest thou in Dominicum without a sacrifice? |
A67849 | It was not therefore the purpose of the Reverend Fathers, to define, whether the Sabbath was simply observed of the Patriarchs, or not? |
A67849 | It''s considered, whether before the Babylonish captivity the interpretating of the Law was in use among the Jews on their Sabbath dayes? |
A67849 | Lastly, I''le only add this, What if those silly women believed it to be a work of charity by the example of Dorcas? |
A67849 | Moreover, who will deny that all who have given their name to Christ, are bound to relieve their necessities? |
A67849 | Secondly, Whether the Jewish Sabbath be abrogated? |
A67849 | Secondly, by what Authority that time is imposed upon the Church, Divine, or Humane? |
A67849 | Shall the licentiousness of evil manners be piety? |
A67849 | So when he answers the question, why he commanded not the Sabbath to be celebrated on another day? |
A67849 | Sometimes also for the Symboles of the Lords Supper; Numquid, saith Cyprian, Dominicum post coenam celebrare debemus? |
A67849 | The second Question which I have propounded follows; namely, Whether the Church must keep the whole Lords day holy? |
A67849 | These are those dances of the Angels,*( and what can be more blessed, than upon the earth to imitate the dance of Angels?) |
A67849 | Thirdly, What can be brought out of the books of the New Testament to confirm the keeping holy the first day in the week? |
A67849 | Thirdly, in what things the solemn sanctifying thereof consisteth? |
A67849 | V. Whether the bare reading of Scriptures in the Church- assembly be properly preaching? |
A67849 | Was that your Covenant with Christ, that you would serve him, if others did, or if none forbad you, or else not? |
A67849 | We, passing by this rather curious, than sound Disputation, Whether the Ordinance of the Lords day be an institution of God or his Apostles? |
A67849 | What if all the rest of the Town denied food or cloathing to the poor? |
A67849 | What is it that he hath sanctified it? |
A67849 | What needs more? |
A67849 | When therefore the Proconsul demands of them, Why Dominicum egissent,& c? |
A67849 | When we count the causes of this will, why should we not apply our minds with Gunther amnus to bewail the heynous violation of the Lords day? |
A67849 | Whence, of necessity piety must fail; and that being extinct, what other thing can men expect, but that a tempest of all evils should be ingruent? |
A67849 | Where there is a profitable publick Ministry, what a furtherance would this be to its success? |
A67849 | Whether a Reader of Scripture may deservedly, and properly in the Church of God be called a Preacher of them? |
A67849 | Whether any such was ever granted of him for the countrey mens sakes or no? |
A67849 | Whether the bare reading of Scripture in the Church assembly, be properly preaching? |
A67849 | Which things being well observed, with what face can the Papists alledge Chrysostom, for denying the people a liberty to sing in the Church? |
A67849 | Which, through the importunate impulse of a vehement and violent spirit, make a sound which signifies nothing certain? |
A67849 | Who doth not see, that in Theodorets opinion, from the beginning the Sabbath was set apart for the worship of God from other dayes? |
A67849 | Who will say the Sabbath is holy? |
A67849 | Why had they not also done the like in the Feast of the Passover, if it had been instituted by Apostolical authority? |
A67849 | With what eyes, saith he, lookest thou on the Lords Day, that despisest the Sabbath? |
A67849 | Would your obligation to feed and cloath them, think you, be the less or the greater? |
A67849 | Yet who will from that sanction compare the observation of that day, ordained of Constantine, and not of the Apostles, with the Lords day? |
A67849 | an occasion of Luxury be reckoned Religion? |
A67849 | and do you think that silence and unprofitableness in the Governour of a Family is no crime? |
A67849 | and how the reading of Scripture may be called preaching? |
A67849 | and that in celebrating the Lords day, all the Churches of Christ through the whole world should follow one and the same rule? |
A67849 | and who will say, that the Apostles do not command us to imitate them, when in holy records their example is represented unto us? |
A67849 | are not those examples partly of silly women, that exercise whorish tricks in the streets, and partly of them that bawl in the Theatres? |
A67849 | doest thou not think that God is invisibly present here, who measureth the motion of every man, and hath a consideration of the conscience? |
A67849 | doest thou not think, that the Angels do stand by this stupendous table, and with reverence compass it about? |
A67849 | how therefore wilt thou beg the pardon of thy sins? |
A67849 | how wilt thou receive the Lord into thy house, who dost so contemptuously offer him a prayer? |
A67849 | i. e. by what authority he did set upon these new things, and unheard of in former ages? |
A67849 | in the bowels of antiquity? |
A67849 | it is the same as if he should ask, Why they kept their meetings,( as the Proconsul himself expresseth it) or Dominicam Collectam egissent a? |
A67849 | or will affirm, that the Church at this day is not obliged to observe them? |
A67849 | that if thou reproach the one, thou offendest the other? |
A67849 | therefore doest thou discover a disordered mind, in clamours that signifie nothing certain? |
A67849 | what a sanctifying is this, that wants Well, without which, no action can be acceptable to God? |
A67849 | who can deny that the Gentiles as well as the Jews, were obliged by the instinct of nature, to worship God their great Creatour? |
A67849 | who sayes, What means that haste of his? |
A67849 | — Quis talia fando Temperat à lacrymis? |
A67849 | — — Who can forbear At telling such events to shed a tear? |
A26896 | 1. Who was it that deprived you of your Friend? |
A26896 | Ah foolish Heart, that hast thought of it[ Where is that place, that Cave or Desert, where I might soonest find thee, and fullest enjoy thee? |
A26896 | Ah my God, how justly mayest thou withhold that Love which I thus undervalue; and refuse that converse which I have first refused? |
A26896 | And are you grieved that your Friends are taken from your griefs? |
A26896 | And can God do any thing injuriously or amiss? |
A26896 | And can we know another better than our selves? |
A26896 | And have I not yet found so much Love and Goo ● ness in thee my dear and blessed God, as to be willing to converse alone with thee? |
A26896 | And how apt to give occasion of such mistakes and cutting censures? |
A26896 | And how apt to give occasion of such offence? |
A26896 | And how little Reason then have Christians to shun such sufferings by unlawful means, which turn to their so great advantage? |
A26896 | And is not Eternity long enough for you to enjoy your Friends in? |
A26896 | And is this the difference between the Love of man and of God? |
A26896 | And now those Prayers are answered in their deliverance: And do you now grieve at that which then you prayed for? |
A26896 | And which of us see not reason to be distrustful of our selves? |
A26896 | And worst of all, a place of sin? |
A26896 | And would you have them under these again? |
A26896 | And would you have your Friends to be as far from Rest as you? |
A26896 | And yet am I so loath to die? |
A26896 | Are they not men, and sinners? |
A26896 | Are you better than David that had an Achitophel? |
A26896 | Are you better than God? |
A26896 | Are you better then Iob, or David, or Christ? |
A26896 | Are you not groaning from day to day your selves? |
A26896 | Are you not prone to overvalue and overlove your Friends? |
A26896 | As Christ said to his Disciples, he ● e in the case of Believing, we may say to our selves in that and other 〈 ◊ 〉 ▪ Do we now Believe? |
A26896 | As not to fail them? |
A26896 | But can you say, you are alone, while you are with God? |
A26896 | But how is he with us? |
A26896 | But perhaps you will say, that this is not easily attained: How shall we know that he is our friend? |
A26896 | But the most desirable Society is no Solitude: Saith Hierom,[ Infinita cremi vas ● itas te terret? |
A26896 | CHristians, expect to be conformed to your Lord in this part of his Humiliation also: Are your friends yet fast and friendly to you? |
A26896 | Can Faith be any thing but Fancy and Presumption, without Thought and Knowledge? |
A26896 | Can I draw near to judgment? |
A26896 | Can I think of dying? |
A26896 | Can I think of everlasting joys in Heaven? |
A26896 | Can holy Walking be preserved and promoted without love? |
A26896 | Can love to God and Christ, and to the invisible State, be kindled, cherished, and continually advanced without Faith? |
A26896 | Can two walk together except they be agreed? |
A26896 | Can you so much miss them for one day, that must live with them to all Eternity? |
A26896 | Can you take pleasure in dwelling with the consuming fire? |
A26896 | Could I not Love, or Think, or Feel at all, methinks I were less dead than now? |
A26896 | Dare you think that there was wanting either Wisdom or Goodness, Iustice or Mercy in God''s disposal of your Friend? |
A26896 | Did not he that gave him you take him from you? |
A26896 | Did you improve your Friends while you had them? |
A26896 | Did you not often joyn in prayer with them, for deliverance from Malice, Calamities, troubles, imperfections, temptations and Sin? |
A26896 | Do we now pray with fervour, and pour out our Souls enlargedly to God? |
A26896 | Do we now rejoyce in the persuasions of the Love of God? |
A26896 | Do you converse with Father or Mother? |
A26896 | Do you mourn that they are taken hence? |
A26896 | Do you not seem to forget both where you are your selves, and where you must shortly and for ever live? |
A26896 | Do you set more by your own enjoying his company, then by enjoying God in perfect blessedness? |
A26896 | Do you so highly value your Friends for God, or for them, or for your selves, in the final consideration? |
A26896 | Do you think it is for the Hurt or the go ● d of your Friend, that he is removed hence? |
A26896 | Doth it not signifie more than the company of all Men in the world? |
A26896 | Doth the VVorld use your selves so well and kindly, as that you should be sorry that your Friends partake not of the Feast? |
A26896 | Hath my Night no Day? |
A26896 | Have any of them, or all, already failed you? |
A26896 | Have you done that for your nearest friend, which God hath done for him and you, and all men? |
A26896 | He answereth them[ Do ye now believe? |
A26896 | He is with us who is Almighty, sufficient to preserve us, conquerable by none? |
A26896 | How apt are we to censure one another, and to misinterpret the words and actions of our Friends? |
A26896 | How easily can Satan let fire on the Tinder which he findeth in the best and gentlest natures, if God permit him? |
A26896 | How excellent a Man was Gregory Nazianzene, and highly valued in the Church? |
A26896 | How highly was Athanasius esteemed? |
A26896 | How know you what great calamity might have befallen your Friend, if he had lived as long as you desired? |
A26896 | How know you what sin your Friend might have fallen into, if he had lived as long as you would have him? |
A26896 | How know you what unkindness to your self, your dearest friend might have been guilty of? |
A26896 | How little cause then have all the Churches enemies to triumph, that can never shut up a true believer from the presence of his God? |
A26896 | How patiently hath he born with me, since I thought he would never have put up more? |
A26896 | I had almost said[ Lord, let me never Love more till I can Love thee? |
A26896 | If God be God to thee, he is All in all to thee; and then should not his presence be instead of all? |
A26896 | If God can not content me, and be not enough for me, how is he then my God? |
A26896 | If it was for God, what reason of trouble have you, that God hath disposed of them, according to his wisdom and unerring Will? |
A26896 | If so, is not this the meerest Remedy for your Disease? |
A26896 | In many and wonderful preservations and deliverances? |
A26896 | In the conduct of his Wisdom, and in a Life of Mercies? |
A26896 | Is his presence nothing to you? |
A26896 | Is it a matter to be so much lamented that God hath prevented their greater miseries and wo? |
A26896 | Is it in the wilderness that thou walkest, or in the croud: in the Closet, or in the Church; where is it that I might soonest meet with God?] |
A26896 | Is the World a place of Rest or trouble to you? |
A26896 | Is this your case? |
A26896 | Less dead, if dead, than now I am alive? |
A26896 | Must unfaithfulness to you be made more hainous, than that unfaithfulness to him, which yet you daily see and slight? |
A26896 | Nor think more on any thing till I can more willingly think of thee?] |
A26896 | O how plainly hath he declared that he loveth me, in the strange condescention, the Sufferings, Death, and Intercession of his Son? |
A26896 | Or can I expect the translation of Henoch or the Chariot of Elias? |
A26896 | Or is their deliverance become your grief? |
A26896 | Or more obliged to me? |
A26896 | Or rather, are you not apter to see and aggravate the wrong that others do to you, than that which you have done to others? |
A26896 | Or what is it now, or like to be hereafter to your selves? |
A26896 | Or will you ever have Rest, if you can not have Rest in the Will of God? |
A26896 | Seneca could say[ Quid prodest totious regionis silentium, si affectus fremunt?] |
A26896 | Shall I have any more Comfort in present friends than in others? |
A26896 | Shall we be ignorant of the members of our Body? |
A26896 | Some will forsake God: what wonder then if they forsake you? |
A26896 | Thy Father loveth thy very moans and Tears: But how much more doth he love thy Thanks and Praise? |
A26896 | Was Christ forsaken in his extremity by his own Disciples, to teach us what to expect, or bear? |
A26896 | Was any friend so near to me as my self? |
A26896 | Was it not God? |
A26896 | Was it not his Lord and Owner that call''d him home? |
A26896 | Was it not to them a place of toil and trouble, of envy and vexation, of enmity and poison? |
A26896 | Was it so good and kind to them, as that you should lament their separation from it? |
A26896 | What Love appeareth in his precious Promises, and the glorious Provisions he hath made for me with himself to all eternity? |
A26896 | What Love hath he declared in the communications of his Spirit, and the operations of his Grace, and the near Relations into which he brought me? |
A26896 | What Love hath he declared in the course of his Providences? |
A26896 | What comfort can you think such Friends if they had survived, would have ● ound on Earth? |
A26896 | What good doth the silence of all the Country do thee, if thou have the noise of raging affections within?] |
A26896 | What person more generally esteemed and honoured for learning, piety and peaceableness then Melanchthon? |
A26896 | What pleasure is it to see the busles of a Bedlam world? |
A26896 | What was the World to your Friends while they did enjoy it? |
A26896 | When you are almost leaving the World your selves, would you not send your treasure before you to the place where you must abide? |
A26896 | Where should my goods be but in my own house? |
A26896 | Where would you have your Friends, but where you must be your sel ● es? |
A26896 | Who have more tender affections than Mothers to their children? |
A26896 | Who would not justifie them, if they can but prove, that God requireth them, and Religion o ● ligeth th ● m to forsake you f ● r your faults? |
A26896 | Why then should I so much regard, a converse of so short continuance? |
A26896 | Why, if they had staid here a thousand years, how little of that time should you have had their Company? |
A26896 | With how much labour and difficulty must you clime, if you will see the top of one of these Mountains? |
A26896 | With whom should I so desirously converse, as with him whom I must live with for ever? |
A26896 | With whom should a servant dwell but with his Master? |
A26896 | Would you not come down, and give place to him that is to follow you, when your part is played, and his is to begin? |
A26896 | Yea, you have not been innocent towards men your selves: Did you never wrong or fail another? |
A26896 | [ Behold, we have forsaken all, and followed thee; VVhat shall we have?] |
A26896 | [ Mine Enemies speak Evil of me: When shall he dye, and his name perish? |
A26896 | and Children but with thei ● Father? |
A26896 | and a Wife, but with her Husband? |
A26896 | and are your Friends more firm and unchangeable then theirs? |
A26896 | and come and own thy gasping worm? |
A26896 | and not be concerned in their felicity, with whom we are so nearly one? |
A26896 | and of everlasting pains in Hell, and yet not feel that my greatest business is with God? |
A26896 | and to give so dear as the hazard of their souls by wilful sin, to escape the honour, and safety, and commodity of Martyrdom? |
A26896 | at their home and your home, with their Father, and your Father; their God, and your God? |
A26896 | but if I continue thus to wait, wilt thou never find the time of Love? |
A26896 | especially if it had been long of him? |
A26896 | expect the time when they can not help you: Are they your comforters and delight, and is their company much of your solace upon earth? |
A26896 | nor banish him into such a place where he can not have his conversation in Heaven? |
A26896 | of successive cares and fears and griefs? |
A26896 | or conversing with the most dreadful enemy? |
A26896 | or did you only love them, while you made but little use of them for your Souls? |
A26896 | or how shall he be my Heaven and everlasting H ● ppiness? |
A26896 | or promise more concerning him? |
A26896 | or than Christ that had a Iudas? |
A26896 | or than Paul that had a Domas? |
A26896 | or who shall condemn us when it is he that justifieth us? |
A26896 | should you not then be more pleased that God hath them, and employeth them in his highest service, than displeased that you want them? |
A26896 | what a stir they make to prove or make themselves unhappy? |
A26896 | what wonder? |
A26896 | why could not you have yeilded in so small a matter?] |
A26896 | will you not give him leave to do as he list with his own? |
A26896 | wilt thou never dissipate these clouds, and shine upon this dead and darkened soul? |
A26896 | with Pastors and Teachers? |
A26896 | with Wives or Children? |
A26896 | yet am I no more desirous of the blessed day, when I shall b ● uncloathed of flesh and sin? |
A26918 | 6, 7, 8? |
A26918 | 7. for the Trinity, so others say of other Texts; And how shall we confute them without Historical Evidence? |
A26918 | After this how many Councils and how many Imperial Laws take care of the Lords dayes? |
A26918 | And O Christian what happy advantage in such controversies have you, in your holy sincerity and sweet experience? |
A26918 | And besides Origen( 〈 ◊ 〉 a Heretick) and Hierome, alas, how few of the Fathers were ● ble and diligent Examiners of such things? |
A26918 | And can you think Christ approved of that opinion, who had so oft before condemned the like, about their over rigid sabbatizing? |
A26918 | And how can any man know the Ceremonial Law to be Divine, by its proper evidence alone? |
A26918 | And how can any meer Positive institutions o ● the New Testament be known proprio lumine, by their own evidence to be Divine? |
A26918 | And how could men pretend such a Divine reproof for such a sin, if the day not been received before? |
A26918 | And how much doth the doctrine of Christianity depend on the history? |
A26918 | And how shall we disprove them but by Historical Evidence? |
A26918 | And how should there be a humane Law before there was a Christian Magistracie? |
A26918 | And is not Gods Service better work than these? |
A26918 | And it is utterly improbable that there would have been no dissenters? |
A26918 | And may not ignorant people be brought one day to endure to be taught as long? |
A26918 | And were it not for this dayes observation, alas, how different would the case be? |
A26918 | And were such Assemblies like to the primitive Churches? |
A26918 | And what can you gather from all this? |
A26918 | And what greater thing can man be bound to, than thus, to keep up the solemn acknowledgement and worship of God and our Redeemer in the world? |
A26918 | And what needs he more for confutation? |
A26918 | And what shew of Contradiction hath his 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 to this? |
A26918 | And what that can not determine we all con ● ess to be uncertain? |
A26918 | And what time have they to hear or learn? |
A26918 | And what writer have we of full reputation and credibility more ancient than Justin, from whom any testimony in this case might be sought? |
A26918 | And when God saith, Ask and it shall be given you, you say, How prove you that I am bound to ask? |
A26918 | And when he Circumcised Tim ● thy, purified himself, shaved his head, for his Vow,& c. Do you think that all these are duties to Believers? |
A26918 | And whether all that was of the Law of Nature was in the Decalogue? |
A26918 | And whether all that was of the Law of Nature was in the Decalogue? |
A26918 | And whether there have been any true Churches since then till our own dayes? |
A26918 | And why may it not be continued, whilest the great sense of the benefit should be continued? |
A26918 | And will those deceivers of the people also say this, who teach them that it is a tedious uncommanded thing, to serve God so long? |
A26918 | And yet, alas, what day hath more ryotting and excess, of meat, and drink, and wantonness, and sloth, and lust, than it? |
A26918 | Are not we men as well as you? |
A26918 | As if Christs Resurrection could not be the fundamental occasion, and yet Christs Law the obliging cause? |
A26918 | As the institution of Sacraments, Officers, Orders,& c. What is there in them that can infallibly prove it to us? |
A26918 | But O what a Carnal unthankful heart; doth this objection signifie? |
A26918 | But do not all Divines say that the Moral Law is of perpetual obligation? |
A26918 | But doth not this shew that you had rather there were no Command for it? |
A26918 | But how much earlier were all those Synods which Eusebius mentioned, which in the determination of Easter owned the Lords day? |
A26918 | But if you dare not say so, Why will you choose the worse, before the better? |
A26918 | But is this an Argument fit for the mouth of a Minister or any Christian, who knoweth how much the soul is more worth than the body? |
A26918 | But that''s nothing to the question, Whether all things in the ten words are of Natural Obligation? |
A26918 | But where is it proved, that the Law or the Decalogue are words of the same signification, or extent; any more, than the whole and a part are? |
A26918 | But who is it that must be present in all these exercises? |
A26918 | Dare you say, that playing is better than Praying, and a Piper or Dancing is better than praising God with Psalms? |
A26918 | Did no Christians in the world so neer to the Apostles daies make any scruple of superstition? |
A26918 | Do they not tell the world what enemies they are to God, who love a pair of Cards, or Dice, or Wanton Dalliance, better than his Word and Worship? |
A26918 | Do you cry out, What a weariness is this one day, when you would adde of your own such a multitude of more dayes, and more work? |
A26918 | Do you limit Dancers, and Players to any numbers? |
A26918 | Do you think that all this is established for us? |
A26918 | E. g. If the second Command say, Thou shalt perform all Gods instituted Worship: Or, Thou shalt Worship me, as I appoint thee? |
A26918 | For how is it a day separated to holy employments, if we spend it in the common business of the world? |
A26918 | For they yet knew not that it was abrogated; But must we do so too? |
A26918 | HOw should the Lords day be kept or used? |
A26918 | Had not he a Creating head here that out of these words could gather, that we celebrate the Lords day without a command Voluntarily? |
A26918 | Hath he done so much to deliver us from the strait Yoak, the heavy Burden, and the grievous Commandments? |
A26918 | Have not several Ages had as great improvers of nature as you? |
A26918 | Have ye not houses to eat and drink in? |
A26918 | How can any man know that the Scripture histories are Canonical? |
A26918 | How can that oblige which can not be known? |
A26918 | How did the Christians in the Primitive Churches? |
A26918 | How far then are we bound by the Decalogue? |
A26918 | How far then is the fourth Commandment Moral? |
A26918 | How many interruptions hinder my delight? |
A26918 | How many necessary intermissions are there, which confute this pretense of weariness? |
A26918 | How quickly is it gone? |
A26918 | How the Lords day should not be spent: Or, What is unlawful on it? |
A26918 | How then can that be called Accidental? |
A26918 | If Learning must be the improver, have there been none as learned? |
A26918 | If a sparrow fall not to the ground without Gods providence, did God choose that day He knew not why? |
A26918 | If any men need remission of Studies, and bodily Exercise it is Ministers themselves: And is it themselves that they plead for Sports and Dancing for? |
A26918 | If diligence or impartiality must be the improvers of nature, have there not been many as diligent, studious and impartial as your selves? |
A26918 | If grace must be the improver, are there, or have there been none as gracious? |
A26918 | If one would give you Money or Land, you would scarcely ask, How prove you that I am bound to take it? |
A26918 | If the Apostles, silently connived at such corruptions, how could we rest on their authority? |
A26918 | If the King should say to you ▪ Ask what you will, and I will give it you, you would not say, Where am I bound of God to ask? |
A26918 | If they did, which part is the sanctified part of the day? |
A26918 | If you hear but of a gainful Market ▪ you ask not, Where doth God make it my duty to go to it? |
A26918 | Is it a toile to love or count your money? |
A26918 | Is it any thing which you dare say is better? |
A26918 | Is it not made by the Holy Ghost, a mark not only of wicked men, but of men notoriously wicked, to be Lovers of pleasures more than of God? |
A26918 | Is not the Lords day a Sabbath? |
A26918 | Is this a proof to conclude a[ Certainty] from? |
A26918 | O that we knew what the Love of God is? |
A26918 | O what an advantage is it to know by experience what one talketh of? |
A26918 | Or did it fall out hap hazard or by chance? |
A26918 | Or shall we suffer the lo ● ● of many pounds rather than sti ● r to save them? |
A26918 | Or such Families governed Christianly and in the fear of God? |
A26918 | Or when the name of the Author is not notified to all Christians certainly, either by the spirit within us, or by the matter? |
A26918 | Or where is it proved, that none of the rest of the Law is written in Nature, but the Decalogue only? |
A26918 | Reader, is not here a strange kind of proof? |
A26918 | Shall I think a Week short enough for my worldly labours,) and one day( thus parcelled) too long to seek the face of God? |
A26918 | Shall we violate the outward rest of the day for the worth of 〈 ◊ 〉 Groat or two Pence( as the feeding of Hens or such like may be?) |
A26918 | So it must here be considered, who will know of the Action which you do? |
A26918 | To sanctifie it, is to spend it in holy exercises: How else should it be used as a Holy Day? |
A26918 | Try what answer they will give you, and whether they will not deride you more than at another time? |
A26918 | V. Whether the truest Antiquity be for the seventh day Sabbath as kept by the Churches of Christ? |
A26918 | V. Whether the truest Antiquity be for the seventh day Sabbath, as kept by the Churches of Christ? |
A26918 | Was eating leavened bread forbidden by the Law of Nature? |
A26918 | Was it not according to the course of Nature? |
A26918 | Was there no Countrey, nor no persons whose interest would not better suit with another day, or an uncertain day? |
A26918 | Was this a Heavenly Coversation? |
A26918 | Was this a help to holiness and Devotion? |
A26918 | Was this the way to train up youth in the Nurture and Admonition of the Lord? |
A26918 | Were any of the Authors I before cited either Antichristian or 1200 years after Christ? |
A26918 | What hearts have those men, that had rather be in an Ale- house, or a Play- house, or asleep, than to be in heart with God? |
A26918 | What man alive could tell without historical proof that the Canticles, or Esther, are Canonical? |
A26918 | What must be done in such cases as these? |
A26918 | What then shall we do? |
A26918 | What then would these poor people come to, if the Lords day it self must be alsoloitered or played away? |
A26918 | What time hath the Minister then to come and teach them( if we had such Ministers again as would be at the pains to do it?) |
A26918 | What, do you account your Love to God, and the Commemoration of his Love in Christ, a toile? |
A26918 | When doth the Lords day begin? |
A26918 | When you had rather be elsewhere, and say When will the Sermon and Prayer be done, that I may be at my Work or Play? |
A26918 | Whether every word in the Decalogue be of the Law of Nature? |
A26918 | Whether every word in the Decalogue be of the Law of Nature? |
A26918 | Whether the learning of Gods Word, or the Pleasures and Recreations of the flesh? |
A26918 | Whether the observation of the first day was not brought into this Island by Antichrist, about 408 or 409 years agoe? |
A26918 | Whether the seventh day Sabbath be part of the Law of Nature; or only a Positive Law? |
A26918 | Whether the seventh day Sabbath be part of the Law of Nature; or only a Positive Law? |
A26918 | Whether the seventh day Sabbath should be still kept by Christians, as of Divine obligation? |
A26918 | Whether the seventh day Sabbath should be still kept by Christians, as of Divine obligation? |
A26918 | Who is it that doth not presently fly to historical evidence? |
A26918 | Whoever heard else that God or man tyed several Countreys to one set day for the private depositing of their own moneys afterward to be distributed? |
A26918 | Why will you be weary of well doing, that you may do ill? |
A26918 | Why would you not name those Churches in East and West( which I never read or heard of) yea or that person, that was for the seventh day alone? |
A26918 | Without historical notice, how should we know that these Books were written by any of the same men that bear their names? |
A26918 | Without it we should not fully know whether de facto the Church and Ministry dyed, or almost dyed with the Apostles? |
A26918 | Would not a soul ▪ that loveth God rather say, Alas, how short is the Lords day? |
A26918 | Would they be companions of the vain in such like vanities? |
A26918 | Yea, as this man confesseth by their Approbation and Authority? |
A26918 | and Eternity more valuable than the pleasures of this little time? |
A26918 | and now shall we accuse him of bringing us under a toylesome task? |
A26918 | and of perpetual obligation? |
A26918 | and of perpetual obligation? |
A26918 | and what use they are like to make of it? |
A26918 | if it had not been because the Churches used to assemble on this day, and not to appear before God empty( as Dr. Hammond noteth on the Text?) |
A26918 | methinks should not for shame say that God hath tired them out, and made them too much work already? |
A26918 | on the first day: Was it not enough to tie them to the contribution, but he must tie them all to one set day to lay it by, or deposite it? |
A26918 | or at least their opinions? |
A26918 | or despise ye the Church of God? |
A26918 | or of such an addition to Divine institutions? |
A26918 | or to the Mortification of fleshly Lusts? |
A26918 | to feast your Body on the pleasantest Food? |
A26918 | to love and converse with your Friend? |
A26918 | to love and look upon your Corn and Cattle? |
A26918 | what houres were they which they thought thus separated? |
A26918 | which do you think it better to leave undone, if one of them must be left undone? |
A26918 | yea or Ecclesiastes, or the Proverbs, and not the Books of Wisdome and Ecclesiasticus? |
A69535 | & c. Dost thou believe? |
A69535 | & c. VVilt thou be baptized? |
A69535 | & c. have never mentioned any forms but the Lord''s Prayer, if they had appointed such, or desired such to be imposed, and observed? |
A69535 | & jejunits Parasceven? |
A69535 | 1 VVHat is your name? |
A69535 | 1. Who made those Sureties Guardians of the Infants that are neither Parents, nor Pro- parents, nor Owners of them? |
A69535 | 2. Who gave you that name? |
A69535 | 23. talketh not of Primitive practice: Ab initio non fuit sic; Was it so in the Apostles daies? |
A69535 | A Council or a popular custome? |
A69535 | Acts 3. or in those times? |
A69535 | Alas, is this the use that is made of all our experiences of the causes and progresse of our Calamities? |
A69535 | And are we contentious if we erre not with them? |
A69535 | And do you think this was the course of the Primitive times? |
A69535 | And is it fit then to compell them to it? |
A69535 | And is it ill in them? |
A69535 | And may we not all here see our duty? |
A69535 | And may we not thus mention orthodox Persons to men that profess they agree with us in Doctrinals, unless we digress to tell you who they be? |
A69535 | And must we judge all these penitent, and give them the Sacrament as such? |
A69535 | And must we prove the Antiquity of Liturgies by this, or try ours by it? |
A69535 | And that God will not even then pardon them upon such repentance, who dares say? |
A69535 | And where have there been lesse Heresies, Schisms, than in Scotland, where there was no such Liturgy to unite them? |
A69535 | And why will you in this contradict the later judgement of the Church, expressed in the translation allowed and imposed? |
A69535 | And would it not have been so with the prayers? |
A69535 | And yet, there, you think it not a taking too much upon us to keep away the scandalous, if they have their Appeals to you? |
A69535 | But are Godfathers no more than witnesses? |
A69535 | But if the living by this be kept from Conversion, and flattered into Hell, will they there call it Charity, that brought them thither? |
A69535 | But is it not more seasonable, that, in so great businesse, such warning go a considerable time before? |
A69535 | But really hath liberty to forbear the Liturgy produced such divisions as you mention? |
A69535 | But where hath God commanded or approved so blind& dangerous an act as this, under the name of Charity? |
A69535 | But who mean you by the Churches, that must present every Infant that Christ may accept them? |
A69535 | But with whom will it have these effects? |
A69535 | But, whether we must be all thus forced? |
A69535 | Can any thing be spoken plainer, than the Scripture speaks against this course? |
A69535 | Can there be any hurt or danger in the people''s being taught to understand the Church aright? |
A69535 | Commandment obligeth you no more to one day in seven, than equally( to all the dayes of your life)? |
A69535 | Did Christ sanctify all Corn or Bread, or Grapes or Wine to an holy use, when he administred the Lords Supper? |
A69535 | Did King James cause the Bible to be new translated to so little purpose? |
A69535 | Did ever August jure, vel injuria was to be esteemed a Believer? |
A69535 | Do they pray for his Regeneration, whom they account regenerate already? |
A69535 | Do we not read as much for Ceremonies, as the dissenters use to do against them? |
A69535 | Do you owe the King no more obedience? |
A69535 | Dost thou forsake? |
A69535 | Friend, why camest thou thither? |
A69535 | How many Sacraments hath Christ ordained? |
A69535 | How many think the Minister''s Absolution, and the Sacrament, will serve turn, with their unsound hypocritical repentance? |
A69535 | If Jordan and all other waters be not so far sanctified by Christ, as to be the matter of Baptism, what authority have we to baptise? |
A69535 | If not such humane Ordinances? |
A69535 | If this way be done in Hopkin''s, why not in David''s Pslams? |
A69535 | If we have not here neither, a judgment of discretion, for the conduct of our own actions, What do we with reason? |
A69535 | If you intend more, Why have you no more? |
A69535 | If you intended no more, What need you make a Catechism? |
A69535 | Is every Infant first in the promise of pardon? |
A69535 | Is it no positive error in the Papists account, that we profess[ to receive these Creatures of Bread and Wine?] |
A69535 | Is it not work enough for us& you to obey the Laws that he hath made? |
A69535 | Is not the Question as great, Who shall be the judge of the unfitness of Persons for the Lords Supper? |
A69535 | Is there no force in an argument drawn from the appearance of evil, the offence and the danger of abuses, when other words enow may serve turn? |
A69535 | It must then be the Minister, or the man himself; And must we absolve every man that saith he repenteth? |
A69535 | Must not such a falsification be amended? |
A69535 | Or, can you shew us a Text that saith( Whoever is Baptized, shall be Saved)? |
A69535 | Petitions of the Lords Prayer, and set the Preface and Conclusion unto each? |
A69535 | Quid de Graeca ecclesia dico? |
A69535 | Some make no restitution for the wrong which they say they repent of: And must we take all these for truly penitent? |
A69535 | The Churches Primitive practise forbids it to be left to the pleasure of Parents, whether there shall be other Sareties or no? |
A69535 | We have given you reason enough against the imposition of the usual Ceremonies; and would you draw forth those absolute ones to increase the burden? |
A69535 | What antient Copy hath( the Seventh day) in the end of the fourth Commandment, instead of the Sabbath day? |
A69535 | What did your Godfathers and Godmothers do for you in Baptism? |
A69535 | What if we were pleading for civil Concord among all that are loyal to the King, must we needs digress to tell you who are loyal? |
A69535 | What is it that you call the Church, that changeth, or may change these? |
A69535 | What is required of persons to be baptized? |
A69535 | What? |
A69535 | When shall we see such Reformation undertaken? |
A69535 | When the question is, who shall be excluded from the Communion of a particular Church? |
A69535 | When was Marriage thus consecrated? |
A69535 | Where hath Christ set you to make such Laws? |
A69535 | Whether usually the most studious laborious Ministers, be not the most invaletudinary and infirm? |
A69535 | Who ever called them so? |
A69535 | Who judged for the Baptizers in the Primitive Church, what persons they should baptize? |
A69535 | Why are we trusted in the Office? |
A69535 | Why can you so lightly put off both the practice, and Canons of the Church, in this more then in other such things? |
A69535 | Why then are Infants baptized, when by reason of their tender age they can not perform them? |
A69535 | all Children Saved whether they be Children of the Promise or no? |
A69535 | and is the same, and much more well in the Common Prayer? |
A69535 | and not, What God can do: Our great Question is, What Children they be that Baptism belongeth to? |
A69535 | and that what is here consentient to Antiquity, was in it? |
A69535 | and why should not we look Southward, when the Sun is in the South? |
A69535 | and, Whose judgment must we follow? |
A69535 | cur quodragin ● a inde diebus in omni exultatione decurrimus? |
A69535 | cur stationibus quartam& sextam, sabbati dicamus? |
A69535 | how small a matter till then, should it be to us to be judged of man? |
A69535 | if in Meetre, why not in Prose? |
A69535 | if in a Psalm, why not in a Letany?] |
A69535 | if the purer times of the Church have one Custome, and later times a contrary, which must we follow? |
A69535 | no Bread and Wine prepared? |
A69535 | no warning of any given? |
A69535 | or can we try our Liturgies by such as this? |
A69535 | or must we necessarily be contentious for not following both? |
A69535 | or rather may we not by the example of the Church that changeth them, be allowed to take such things to be matters of Liberty, and not necessity? |
A69535 | or why we are not tied rather to imitate the purer Ages than the more corrupt? |
A69535 | or would they have been altogether unmentioned, if they also had been there prescribed to, and used by, the Church, as the Psalmes were? |
A69535 | should you not have some care to avoid sin your selves, as well as to preserve others from it? |
A69535 | so that all the wicked men in the world can not chuse but understand us, to speak conditionally? |
A69535 | though we have proved the contrary to our cost? |
A69535 | what dolefull things doth this prognosticate you, that prisons or other penalties will not change mens Judgements? |
A69535 | who will have the gain of this? |
A69535 | why any more but reading of Scriptures? |
A69535 | will you phrase and modify your administrations upon such a supposition, that all men are such as they ought to be, and do what they ought to do? |
A76157 | 14. even multitudes both of men and women? |
A76157 | 41. but the Apostles that Baptized them, or judged them to be Baptized? |
A76157 | 5. Who would you have trusted with this Power? |
A76157 | A Diocesane Bishop is uncapable of doing it faithfully: Could one man Try, Approve and Confirm faithfully, all the Souls in 200 or 300 Churches? |
A76157 | All Judges, Justices, and other Officers in the Commonwealth, have but a Ministerial Rule as Officers: But is that no Rule? |
A76157 | And are the Pastour of Christs Church, the only slaves on earth? |
A76157 | And did not the Bishops Confirm the Baptized, without consulting another Power? |
A76157 | And do you grudg us such a Power as this? |
A76157 | And if all these are fit to be Church- members, then we must make a new kind of Churches? |
A76157 | And is there not need that they should be brought out into the open light, and see their way? |
A76157 | And shall any man have Christs great, and precious Benefits against his will, and without his Approbation? |
A76157 | And shall we all joyne to strengthen this potent Enemy? |
A76157 | And shall we deliberately choose to offer God the worst, the least, the lowest that''s possible to find acceptance? |
A76157 | And so in Practice, they love no differencing waies: But shall we so far gratifie the Devil and the flesh? |
A76157 | And the Eunuch said, See here is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized? |
A76157 | And we see that it is the custom of Hereticks to intrude: And who shall say to any of them, why do you so, if themselves are the only Judges? |
A76157 | And were it not for this, what blessed work would the Gospel make? |
A76157 | And what Magistrates were the Approvers for 300 years after Christ? |
A76157 | And what if I have no infallible Certainty? |
A76157 | And what if the People think a man unfit, whom the Pastour would Approve and Introduce? |
A76157 | And what will be his portion, that hath a male in his flock, and offereth the worst, yea the halt and blind to God? |
A76157 | And when the Church of Christ shall be turned into a den of thieves, or a sty of swine, what a great dishonour is it to the Lord? |
A76157 | And who could have continued our deformities and divisions, and frustrated such means as have been used for our cure? |
A76157 | And whose judgment is it, that we must follow, when we go against our own? |
A76157 | And why then may not those be Christians and Church- members, that never heard of the Name of Christ, as well as many of these? |
A76157 | And will any man, yea, will Paul, ascribe all this to those that did not so much as Profess the things signified, or the necessary Condition? |
A76157 | But at least your designe lookes as if you would keep the Children of all such unchristened; and what work would that make? |
A76157 | But fiat Justitia& ruat coelum: let us trust God with His owne Ordinances: we must do our duty, what ever come of it? |
A76157 | But hath not Baptism done all this already, seeing we are Baptized into the Name of the Holy Ghost? |
A76157 | But have we any certainty, that this Ordinance shall prove effectually confirming to us? |
A76157 | But how do the Churches of France, Holland, Geneva and Scotland, that have exercised Discipline upon all? |
A76157 | But if once we could but get men to stand in their own places, and to know themselves; how easily then would our message work? |
A76157 | But if they have tryed it, what kind of Discipline do they exercise? |
A76157 | But if we shall exercise the Discipline of Christ upon all in our ordinary Parishes, what work shall we make? |
A76157 | But if you have no fitter for this work and trust, will you cast it upon unfitter or on none? |
A76157 | But is a Ministerial Rule no Rule? |
A76157 | But this will encourage tbe Anabaptists and Congregational, in their Express Covenantings, by our coming so neer them? |
A76157 | But were there not more offenders then the incestuous man at Corinth? |
A76157 | But what if one part of the Congregation approve of the Person and Profession, and the other disallow it? |
A76157 | But what if the people would have the Pastour Baptize, Confirm, or introduce an open hereticke, or wicked person in his impenitency? |
A76157 | But what of that? |
A76157 | But what proofe is there in Scripture of such an Ordinance, or Practice? |
A76157 | But why should I go any further in this, when the main substance of my Dispute of Right to the Sacraments proves it? |
A76157 | Corinth had many offendours, whom Paul in that Epistle reprehendeth: but can you prove that any of them were obstinately Impenitent, after admonition? |
A76157 | Did not all the Apostles, and every Preacher of the Gospel Baptize those that they convetred, and judge of them whether they were Baptizable? |
A76157 | Do you find in most Parishes that Ministers are prone to overdo? |
A76157 | Do you know what the Ministry and this Power is? |
A76157 | Do you meane that it is by Gods Law, or the Laws of men, that Diocesan Bishops only may Confirm? |
A76157 | Do you not see how backward Ministers are to Church- Reformation, and Discipline in the exercise, when they have been most forward for the Power? |
A76157 | Do you think to use it but with few, when Impenitent, scandalous sinners are so many? |
A76157 | For what can a Minister do himself, if the Church assist him not? |
A76157 | Have they that talk thus, tried this course, or have they not? |
A76157 | His dictis interrogandus est, an haec credat, atque observare desideret? |
A76157 | How can weake professours be drawn to think well of that party, which they see do shun so needfull a Work of God? |
A76157 | How can you tell how many Paul cast out? |
A76157 | How dealt he with the woman taken in adultery? |
A76157 | How improbable a thing is this? |
A76157 | How little is yet done in it, for all our liberty, after all our Prayers, and petitions, and writing for it? |
A76157 | How shall they escape that neglect of so great salvation? |
A76157 | How the Holy Ghost is given before Faith, and after Faith, and how sealed in Baptism, and how not? |
A76157 | How was it known but by their Profession? |
A76157 | I know the Discipline is of excellent use, and is likely to have excellent effects: But upon whom? |
A76157 | I would know of my adversary, what he would do with the Son of a Believer that were unbaptized at 40. or 50. years of age? |
A76157 | If it be Independancy, how comes it to be approved by Prelates, and Presbyterians? |
A76157 | If it be Prelacie, how comes it to be found with Independants? |
A76157 | If it be thus, here, how much worse is it in most parts of the ● ● nd? |
A76157 | If the People are the Rulers, who are the Ruled? |
A76157 | If they are sure that they are washt with Christ''s Blood, how can they deny to wash them with that water, that is appointed to signifie and invest? |
A76157 | If you ask me what shall be done with the rest, seeing they were admitted irregularly, without any Profession of the Faith? |
A76157 | Is it not the use of the Lords Supper to Confirm us; and do not men there renew their Covenant and Profession? |
A76157 | Is not this a delusory teaching of the Church, to call unbelief by the name of Negative Faith, or Negative Consent? |
A76157 | It is a Power that hath Constantly been exercised by the Officers of Christ, and did not men smel out the Tyranny of it till now? |
A76157 | It is a great trust for a Physician to be trusted with your lives, and a School- master and Tutour with your Children? |
A76157 | It''s a very great question whether Adam in Innocency had the Spirit or not? |
A76157 | It''s granted that Heresie cuts off: But how doth Heresie cut off any otherwise then Meritorio ● sly? |
A76157 | Ministers can not in Conscience alwaies forbeare their Duty, but will set about it? |
A76157 | Must I be sent to another Nation to know that which I have made tryall of, and attained the certain knowledg of, at home? |
A76157 | Must we therefore refuse to agree in the practice of the aforesaid Confirmation? |
A76157 | Now shall we take up with such signes of Christianity, as we see and know are commonly used by Infidels, when we may have better? |
A76157 | Or a School master the Power of examining, and teaching your children? |
A76157 | Or if you are not certain that a Sermon shall profit you, will you not hear it? |
A76157 | Or shall the People therefore Rule these Rulers? |
A76157 | Or shall we be content that our Churches have as many diseases as will consist with life and being? |
A76157 | Or that Reading shall profit you, will you not read? |
A76157 | Or that the Lords Supper shall increase your Grace; will you not use it? |
A76157 | Or whether this Profession must be approved by the Pastour, of the Church, and known to them that must hold Communion with him? |
A76157 | Or who but Philip alone was judge of his Profession? |
A76157 | Or will you grudg a Physician the Power of judging of your disease, and the Remedy, to save your life? |
A76157 | Or will you have no Tutours or Physicians? |
A76157 | Shall we thus teach our people to esteem Christianity, as an unobservable thing, by no more observing it? |
A76157 | The Jews held that an heretical Isralite, had no communion with the Church of Israel: and why? |
A76157 | Thus farre we are agred: But what if we were not? |
A76157 | To which saith the Jesuite, What do I heare? |
A76157 | Were these sinnes but commonly reputed to be as odious as indeed they are, what a change would it make on millions of Souls? |
A76157 | What Charity can their Doctrine glory of? |
A76157 | What can be more plainly contrary to Scripture, then for the people by a Major Vote, to Rule those whom God commandeth to obey, as their Rulers? |
A76157 | What have we to do with the signe, when the thing that occasioned the use of it is ceased? |
A76157 | What if you have not a certainty that your Prayer shall be granted, will you not therefore pray? |
A76157 | What is the Tongue made for but to express the mind? |
A76157 | What mean you by Bishops? |
A76157 | What need is there then of any more? |
A76157 | What people did Philip advise with before he Baptized the Eunuch? |
A76157 | What will the Magistrate do, if he help us not in this case? |
A76157 | What would you have plainer? |
A76157 | When will you make us believe, that Paul at that time commanded them to do that which he would not have them do? |
A76157 | Where do you find that the Church in Scripture- times or after, was wo nt to Excommunicate Apostates? |
A76157 | Who doubts of that? |
A76157 | Who judged of Lidia''s Profession, and the Jaylours,( Acts 16) but the Apostles, or other Ministers of Christ? |
A76157 | Why choose you not better if you know where to find them? |
A76157 | Why should an Implicit Covenant and Profession be pleaded for? |
A76157 | Why should we choose Darkness rather then Light? |
A76157 | Why then should Ministers be forced to Give them against their Consciences? |
A76157 | Why then should a possibility of Ministers miscarriage, cause you to be more against this, then all the rest? |
A76157 | Why then should any be against an open Professing, and Covenanting with Christ? |
A76157 | Why then should the ears of men be abused by the ● ame, when there is nothing to answer it? |
A76157 | Will Baptism, in the judgment of a wise man, do all this for an Infidel, or one that Professeth not to be a Christian? |
A76157 | Will any good and peaceable man refuse to joyne with those that think it necessary to Adult Church- membership? |
A76157 | Would you grudg me the Power of threshing your corn? |
A76157 | You know Faith in Infants,( such as we call Faith) is not necessary to their Justification; and yet will you say, it is not necessary to the Adult? |
A76157 | and abundance more) and how can they oblige us more then them? |
A76157 | and lay this share, and thrust men headlong into Hell, that are running down- hill so fast already: and all under pretence of Charity and Compassion? |
A76157 | and why might we not hope, that all our people should be saved? |
A76157 | dost thou think I am a Christian? |
A76157 | much less if they hinder him? |
A76157 | would be Baptize him without a profession of actuall Faith of his own, or not? |
A26934 | 17. be that Then God shall be All in All as before the World began? |
A26934 | 25. contradict this? |
A26934 | 51. saith,[ We shall all be changed[ 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉] what could be spoken plainer? |
A26934 | 7. and all since? |
A26934 | A Jewish Dream: And how will they know that he is Elias? |
A26934 | After so many Millions of Miracles? |
A26934 | All things are still in God, and his Immensity: But if they have no Being in themselves there will be Nothing but God: But will they so continue? |
A26934 | And Heaven a more glorious state than the Air? |
A26934 | And a New Earth inhabited only by the righteous, better than one that is Laodicean, or that hath such Enemies of Saints as Gog and Magog? |
A26934 | And by what warrant shall we say that Christ will for millions quite change this his appointed way? |
A26934 | And did he not conquer Satan as a Tempter, and triumph even on the Cross? |
A26934 | And doth he not conquer the Dominion of sin in all his Members? |
A26934 | And doth his performance dispossess him of his promised Reward, when it was the condition of his Title to it? |
A26934 | And doth not Christ then make his Enemies his footstool by his Kingly Power? |
A26934 | And doth punishment end with your Thousand years? |
A26934 | And for Judgment in special, will Christ be a Thousand years in Exploration and Sentence? |
A26934 | And have those in the Air any more assurance that they shall not die, than Gods Love, and Will, and Promise, and their Union in Christ? |
A26934 | And how will they know that it is Christ? |
A26934 | And if I have seen between 24 and 76 so many Generations, in how short a time would Converted Jews be no Jews? |
A26934 | And if then we attain it, must it endure but a Thousand years? |
A26934 | And indeed is the whole understanding( and inferiour) Nature, Devils and Men, thus reconciled? |
A26934 | And is all this no Kingdom and Reign of Christ? |
A26934 | And is he not taking off the Curse, the fruit of sin? |
A26934 | And is it come to that? |
A26934 | And is not death Conquered to those on Earth that have the foresaid security to ascend and never to die? |
A26934 | And is not this treading down his Enemies? |
A26934 | And it is called Life Eternal which we shall possess: And shall Christ have less than we? |
A26934 | And must all that now possess it be robbed of their Habitations and Estates, to make room for our Jews? |
A26934 | And procure them free passage through Enemies Lands? |
A26934 | And shall Christ Preach to them in the Air, and his voice be heard throughout the World, a thousand times further than the Thunder? |
A26934 | And shall Preachers be sent to them in all Lands at once? |
A26934 | And shall all Jews on Earth, get together to Jerusalem? |
A26934 | And shall not Christ and his Kingdom then Exist? |
A26934 | And shall they quickly learn and speak all the Languages of the Countreys where the Jews are? |
A26934 | And their National Church honourably united to the Catholick? |
A26934 | And was he not always subject to him( in his Humanity?) |
A26934 | And where shall Elias preach to them? |
A26934 | And who can here find any limitation of this Kingdom to a Thousand years? |
A26934 | And who should then presume to assert it? |
A26934 | And who will furnish so many Thousand new inspired Preachers, with Money to carry them through all the VVorld? |
A26934 | And why must he be deposed? |
A26934 | And will God from Eternity to Eternity have no Created Being save for Seven Thousand years( or days?) |
A26934 | Are there any Divine Laws, or not? |
A26934 | Are they dying all the Thousand years? |
A26934 | As if our Rest must be so much shorter than Sin and Labour? |
A26934 | Bear with me you that talk so zealously for the Jews Conversion and Kingdom, while I ask you, How many in London have you converted in your lives? |
A26934 | But are Christ the Son of Man and his Saints miserable till the end of the Thousand years? |
A26934 | But if English, French, Spaniards,& c. may be still distinct, why may not Jews and Gentiles? |
A26934 | But the doubt is, whether Christ shall be ever the less Christ, or King? |
A26934 | But what is all this to you? |
A26934 | But where is the present Kingdom of Christ, more gloriously described than in the Prophecies which you call your self the Humble Reader of? |
A26934 | But why is not at least the Heavenly, or Airy Kingdom given up at first? |
A26934 | Can any but a Prophet that is inspired to Expound you, tell what you mean by abundance such passages? |
A26934 | Can it possibly mean any more than Of Him, and Through Him, and To Him are All Things? |
A26934 | Constantinople was then called not only New- Rome, but New- Sion: And how greatly did it excel Jerusalem in spaciousness, riches, power and glory? |
A26934 | Do you deny it? |
A26934 | Doth he not tread down greater Enemies than Turkish Swords, or Papal Inquisitions in every Soul that he converteth? |
A26934 | Doth it begin the Thousand years or not? |
A26934 | Doth the Succession begin Seventy five years before the Investiture? |
A26934 | For whom are All things, and by whom are All things? |
A26934 | Hath he trod down in you, no Pride, no Lust, no Errour, no Injustice? |
A26934 | Have you answered all them? |
A26934 | How could he make us Kings and Priests to God, if he were not King himself? |
A26934 | How frivolous is your reason from Gods being All in All? |
A26934 | How shall they believe on him of whom they have not heard? |
A26934 | How small and barren a spot was Judea,( like our Wales) in comparison of the Roman Christian Empire, in Europe, Asia, and Africa? |
A26934 | If Christ must be the Conqueror of Death, when will he Conquer, if not when Men die no more? |
A26934 | If all the Godly, they being I hope a Thousand to one Jew, why should it be called a Jewish Jerusalem or Monarchy? |
A26934 | If he preach at Stepney, shall they bear him at Westminster, at Tarmouth, at Norwich, and all over the Land, and over all the World at once? |
A26934 | If he preach in Spain, shall they hear him in Portugal? |
A26934 | If it be only for the Jews, can any but a Jew believe it? |
A26934 | If one Man can do so much why have many thousands done so little on the Jews to this day? |
A26934 | If the Infidel part of the Two Tribes be as many as such think, how much more numerous must all the Posterity of the Ten Tribes be? |
A26934 | If you mean that Execution will be that Thousand years, can you prove that the Damned shall suffer no longer? |
A26934 | If you say, God will raise up and send forth Ministers enough, that will be yet a greater Miracle: To give so many Skill, VVill and Zeal? |
A26934 | If you understand not your own words, how should others understand them? |
A26934 | Is he also ubiquitary? |
A26934 | Is he not mortifying them in us day by day? |
A26934 | Is it after he hath given up his Power and Kingdom? |
A26934 | Is it humility that so loudly challengeth all the Pastors and Doctors of the Churches to answer you? |
A26934 | Is not Eternity longer than a Thousand years? |
A26934 | Is not the Investiture Christs Glorious Appearance? |
A26934 | Is there any room then for any further dispute of it? |
A26934 | Is this Doctrine, or the other, more honourable to Christ, and more comfortable to Believers, and more evident in the Word of God? |
A26934 | Is this any Word of God? |
A26934 | Is this savouring the things of God, or of Men? |
A26934 | Is this the Paradise World of Righteousness? |
A26934 | It seems then it is but the Popes old Zeal, to recover the Holy Land: But what''s this to the Conversion of the Jews? |
A26934 | May not your case be much the same? |
A26934 | Must our Concord be held on such humane, loose and unsound terms? |
A26934 | None of them die after Christs first day of Judgment at his appearing? |
A26934 | Nor by what means the Jews shall be converted? |
A26934 | Nor how far Christs Kingdom ceaseth at the end of the Thousand years? |
A26934 | Nor how far the Princes and Nations among whom they live shall be converted with them? |
A26934 | Nor how long it will be in doing? |
A26934 | Nor how the Princes under whom they live will dismiss or use them? |
A26934 | Nor how they shall after all become a Laodicea, and fuel fit for the Conflagration? |
A26934 | Nor the Blessed any longer reign with Christ? |
A26934 | Nor whether Christ shall Reign on Earth visibly in his Humane Nature, or only by a holy Magistracy and Ministry? |
A26934 | Nor whether all or most of the Jews shall go dwell at the Old Jerusalem, or Judea, or stay in the several Countries where they live? |
A26934 | Nor whether that fire that burneth the Earth and Heaven, and that which burneth Gog and Magog, make one or two Conflagrations? |
A26934 | Not in its Paradise or Heavenly State? |
A26934 | Now when did this reign begin but at his Coming? |
A26934 | Of the New Earth; what is certain, and what uncertain? |
A26934 | Or enough cured of the love of Riches, to leave their Trades and Wealth behind them? |
A26934 | Or how? |
A26934 | Or if in Holland, or Rome, shall they hear him in England? |
A26934 | Or if their death shall endure no longer than the Thousand years? |
A26934 | Or must he stay long enough to go over all the Earth? |
A26934 | Or the Church ever the less his Kingdom at the End of a Thousand years? |
A26934 | Or were there no treading down of the Enemies of King Jesus? |
A26934 | Or where did the Apostle give any intimation of his reigning but at his Coming? |
A26934 | Seeing we ascribe to Christs Kingdom so much more than they that we oppose, why should they be thought to extol his Kingdom more than we? |
A26934 | Shall Christ in the Air be seen at once in Persia, Greece, Rome, Portugal, and all Nations where there be Jews? |
A26934 | Shall Preachers so quickly be made, when no Countrey have enough for their needful work at home? |
A26934 | Shall they have either of these? |
A26934 | Some say that Elias shall come and Convert them? |
A26934 | That the Off- spring of the scattered, cursed, sottish Enemies of Christ, shall be so much preferred before all the Godly through the World? |
A26934 | Then sure, this New Jerusalem must be setled in all Kingdoms, where the Godly dwell: And shall they every where be Lords? |
A26934 | There is not one word of God that confineth Christs Kingdom to a Thousand years; and what are you that you should presume to do it? |
A26934 | There were no Jews restrained from going thither that desired it: And would you have them forced, or sent thither with a Pass? |
A26934 | These are Christs Enemies, because they are ours; even the diseases which he came to cure? |
A26934 | This poor shift is answered above: Do you not say, Those alive are in the same Glorious Kingdom? |
A26934 | Thus is Gods Goodness and Severity glorified: And what word in that Chapter proper to the Jews is not fulfilled? |
A26934 | To cause them to speak with all the Languages of the Nations? |
A26934 | VViil their case be so long undecided? |
A26934 | Very good; who denyeth that God is or will be All in All? |
A26934 | Was not death Conquered to the Person of Christ, after his Resurrection, though he was at his Ascension to be taken up? |
A26934 | We see that God put Souls into Bodies in this World: And can you prove that he never did so before from all Eternity? |
A26934 | Were all the seven Vials poured out after the Resurrection? |
A26934 | Were they converted when Godfrey and others recovered it? |
A26934 | What Conversion the Twelve Tribes have already had? |
A26934 | What Conversion the Twelve Tribes have already had? |
A26934 | What an Empire would the Jews of England, Spain, Portugal, Turky,& c. make? |
A26934 | What could he do more? |
A26934 | What could they now desire for their return more than they then had? |
A26934 | What could you have said more strongly against your self? |
A26934 | What do you think those words do mean? |
A26934 | What greater liberty, or encouragement, or help? |
A26934 | What is meant by Giving up the Kingdom? |
A26934 | What is the Succession? |
A26934 | What is the difference between the Beginning of the Succession and the Glorious Investiture? |
A26934 | What outward honour can they expect more? |
A26934 | What words can we desire God to use more plain, that Men may not pervert? |
A26934 | When doth Christs Kingdom begin? |
A26934 | When we fight not against flesh and blood, but against Principalities and Powers, and spiritual wickedness in high places? |
A26934 | Whether it be true that Christ was eternally a Man, having an eternal Kingdom as Man; but not as the Son of Man after the Millennium? |
A26934 | Whether there be any Jerusalem Monarchy of Jews, or any further Conversion of them, more than of other Men, promised by God? |
A26934 | Whether there be any Jerusalem Monarchy of Jews, or any further Conversion of them, more than of other men promised by God? |
A26934 | Whether this Eternal Word, did first unite it self to the Prime Being of the Creation? |
A26934 | Whether we were in God before the World began, and how? |
A26934 | Who did the Godly desire should be in Power, rather their Bishops that came newly out of the Furnace of Tryal? |
A26934 | Will Christ now turn against his own uniting Design and Kingdom, and set up Moses again and his Policy? |
A26934 | Will the wicked so long be untryed and uncondemned, or the Faithful so long unjustified, or by Sentence judged to Salvation? |
A26934 | Will they be Rich enough to bear the charge of their Transplantation? |
A26934 | You deny Christ, if you deny him to be King: Will you not obey him as King, till the Trumpet sound, and he come to the final Judgment? |
A26934 | and especially in the Apocalypse( if it be not you only that understand it?) |
A26934 | and how shall they Preach unless they be sent? |
A26934 | and how shall they hear without a Preacher? |
A26934 | and is it not till the Resurrection?) |
A26934 | and that none are perfect till all are perfect? |
A26934 | or so much as one Cluverus alone, or James Calvert whom you promised me to answer? |
A26934 | or yet that some of them are damned in the beginning, and some not till the end of the Thousand years? |
A26934 | when on Earth they would not know him; but imputed his Miracles to Beelzebub? |
A26853 | & jejuniis Parasceven? |
A26853 | 14,& c.) have never- mentioned any Forms but the Lords Prayer, if they had appointed such, or desired such to be imposed, and observed? |
A26853 | 23. talketh not( of primitive practice) ab initio non fuit sic; was it so in the Apostles dayes? |
A26853 | 32. if not such humane Ordinances? |
A26853 | A Council, or a popular Custom? |
A26853 | Acts 3. or in those times? |
A26853 | And are we contentious if we erre not with them? |
A26853 | And do you think this was the course of the Primitive times? |
A26853 | And how injurious is it to the Publick Officers of Christ, the Bishops and Pastors of the Churches, to be called private men? |
A26853 | And if now the Ministers may Pray standing, why may not the People receive standing? |
A26853 | And is it fit then to compel them to it? |
A26853 | And is it indeed( a power too great and arbitrary) to have a judicium discretionis about our own Acts? |
A26853 | And may we not all here see our duty? |
A26853 | And may we not thus mention Orthodox persons to men that profess they agree with us in Doctrinals ▪ unless we digress to tell you who they be? |
A26853 | And must we absolve every man that saith he repenteth? |
A26853 | And must we ● udge all these penitent, and give them the Sacrament as such? |
A26853 | And that God will not even then pardon them upon such repentance, who dares say? |
A26853 | And the first question is not, who shall be judge? |
A26853 | And we beseech you, let the Scripture be judge, whether the Confessions and Prayers of the Servants of God have not been particular? |
A26853 | And what Lyturgy was imposed upon Constantine the Emperour? |
A26853 | And where have there been less Heresies, Schisms, then in Scotland, where there was no such Liturgie to unite them? |
A26853 | And whether it be a sign of the right and ingenuine spirit of Religion, to sub ● ect to such a ceremony? |
A26853 | And who knows not that a man may think well of his Superiours, that yet may question whether all that he teacheth or commandeth him, be lawful? |
A26853 | And whose judgement must we follow? |
A26853 | And why not the word[ Sabbath- day] be put for the[ Seventh- d ●] in the end: Must not ● uch a ● alsification be amended? |
A26853 | And why then should the Gift of Prayer( distinct from Reading) be cast out? |
A26853 | And why you forbear giving the truer sense of the Text? |
A26853 | And will not all this seem to tell you who are Orthodox? |
A26853 | But are Godfathers no more than Witnesses? |
A26853 | But how prove you that we would take it ill, to be our selves, or have those we speak of accounted ignorant in such things as these? |
A26853 | But if the living by this be kept from connversion, and flattered into Hell, will they there call it charity that brought them thither? |
A26853 | But if therefore you will have no more particulars, why do you use any Prayer but the Lords Prayer? |
A26853 | But is it not more seasonable that in so great business such warning go a considerable time before? |
A26853 | But really, hath liberty to forbear the Liturgie produced such divisions as you mention? |
A26853 | But who mean you by the Churches that must present every Infant that Christ may accept them? |
A26853 | But with whom will it have these effects? |
A26853 | Can there be any hurt or danger in the peoples being taught, to understand the Church aright? |
A26853 | Commandment, instead of the Sabbath- day? |
A26853 | Cur stationibus quartam& sextam, sabbati dicamus? |
A26853 | Did Christ sanctifie all Corn, or Bread, or Grapes, or Wine to an holy use, when he administred the Lords Supper? |
A26853 | Did not Christ know the propriety of Sacraments better than we? |
A26853 | Do they pray for his Regeneration, whom they account regenerate already? |
A26853 | Do we not read as much for Ceremonies, as the dissenters use to do against them? |
A26853 | Do you find this the way of the Saints in Scripture? |
A26853 | Do you owe the King no more obedience? |
A26853 | Friend, why camest thou hither? |
A26853 | How many Sacraments hath Christ ordained,& c? |
A26853 | How many think the Ministers absolution, and the Sacrament, will serve turn, with their unsound hypocritical repentance? |
A26853 | If Jordan and all other waters, be not so far sanctified by Christ, as to be the matter of Baptism, what Authority have we to baptize? |
A26853 | If by[ in the Church,] you mean[ not by the Church,] but by any part in the Church; how shall we know that they did well? |
A26853 | If in Metre, why not in Prose? |
A26853 | If it be the National Church of England, they are the Kings Subjects; and why may he not forbid a Ceremony which they command? |
A26853 | If the purer times of the Church have one custome, and latter times a contrary, which must we follow? |
A26853 | If there had been a stated Form before imposed on the Churches, what room could there be for this course? |
A26853 | If this may be done in Hopkins, why not in Davids Psalms? |
A26853 | Is every Infant first in the Promise of pardon? |
A26853 | Is it no positive Errour in the Papists account, that we profess[ To receive these Creatures of Bread and Wine?] |
A26853 | Is it not work enough for us and you, to obey the Laws that he hath made? |
A26853 | Is not the question as great, who shall be judge of the unfitness of persons for the Lord''s Supper? |
A26853 | Is this the use that is made of all our experiences of the causes and progress of our Calamities? |
A26853 | May Magistrates, or the Church rhus urge their commands? |
A26853 | Must none be tender Conscienced, that dare not venture to obey you in such things? |
A26853 | Rep. 1. Who made those Sureties Guardians of the Infants that are neither Parents, nor Pro- parents, not Owners of them? |
A26853 | Rep. What, all Children saved, whether they be Children of the Promise or no? |
A26853 | Should you not have some care to avoid sin your selves, as well as to preserve others from it? |
A26853 | So that all the wicked men in the world can not chuse but understand us to speak conditionally? |
A26853 | Some make no restitution for the wrong which they say they repent of: And must we take all those for truly penitent? |
A26853 | That those words[ with my body I thee worship] may be altered thus:[ with my body I thee honour?] |
A26853 | The Cross signifieth our not being ashamed to profess the Faith of Christ crucified,& c.] do you call that something[ that is decent?] |
A26853 | To your third Rule we adde; It is first considerable, what the thing is? |
A26853 | We have given you Reason enough against the Imposition of the usual Ceremonies; and would you draw forth those absolute ones to encrease the burden? |
A26853 | We hope you intend not to make any believe, that our turning the Adjective into an Adverb, was our Reformation? |
A26853 | What did your Godfathers and Godmothers do for you in Baptism? |
A26853 | What hurt is it to us, to use a Cross or other Ceremony, if it were not for fear of disobeying God? |
A26853 | What if we were pleading for civil co ● cord among all that a ● e loyal to the King, must we needs digress to tell you who are loyal? |
A26853 | What is it, that you call the Church that changeth, or may change these? |
A26853 | What is required of persons to be Baptized? |
A26853 | What then is the priviledge of the Seed of the Faithful, that they are Holy, and that the Covenant is made with them, and God will be their God? |
A26853 | What will not serve to justifie that which we have a mind to justifie, and to condemn that which we have a mind to condemn? |
A26853 | When the question is,[ Who shal be excluded from the Communion of a particular Church?] |
A26853 | When was Marriage thus consecrated? |
A26853 | Whether usually the most studious laborious Ministers, be not the most invaletudinary and infirm? |
A26853 | Who gave you that Name? |
A26853 | Why are we trusted in the Office? |
A26853 | Why can you so lightly put off, both the Practice and Canons of the Church in this, more than in other such things? |
A26853 | Why should it be called[ A bare pretence of Scruples?] |
A26853 | Why then are Infants baptized, when by reason of their tender age they can not perform them? |
A26853 | Will you call this a punishing them for their Fathers sakes, that God hath extended his Covenant to no more? |
A26853 | Will you phrase and modifie your administrations upon such a supposition, that all men are such as they ought to be, and do what they ought to do? |
A26853 | Would you have had us said[ from sudden and unprepared death?] |
A26853 | and deprive thousands of Souls of the Preaching of the Gospel, that consented not to their Pastor''s non- conformity? |
A26853 | and is it ill in them? |
A26853 | and is the same, and much more, well in the Common Prayer? |
A26853 | and not to be forced to baptize the Children of Heathens against our Consciences? |
A26853 | and the Edge of it be turned from those that fear sinning, to those that fear it not? |
A26853 | and then, how it is apprehended? |
A26853 | and why should we not look Southward when the Sun is in the South? |
A26853 | and yet there you think it not a taking too much upon us, to keep away the scandalous, if they have their Appeals to you? |
A26853 | but whether we must be all thus forced? |
A26853 | can any thing be spoken plainer then the Scripture speaks against this course? |
A26853 | cur quadraginta inde diebus in omni exulcatione deturrimus? |
A26853 | do you mean, Necessitate n ● turali,& irresistibili? |
A26853 | if in a Psalm, why not in a Letany?] |
A26853 | no Bread and Wine prepared? |
A26853 | no warning of any given? |
A26853 | or can we try our Lyturgy by such as this? |
A26853 | or excuse disorder on that pretence? |
A26853 | or must we necessarily be contentious for not following both? |
A26853 | or rather, may we not by the example of the Church that changeth them, be allowed to take such things to be matters of Liberty, and not Necessity? |
A26853 | or what Bishops or Synods, were then the makers of Lyturgies, when he himself made publick Prayers for himself and Auditory, and for his Soldiers? |
A26853 | or why should they command it if he forbid it? |
A26853 | or why we are not tyed rather to imitate the purer Ages then the more corrupt? |
A26853 | when there is no Sacrament by himself or us intended? |
A26853 | who are publick persons in the Church, if they be not? |
A26853 | who judged for the Baptizers in the primitive Church, what persons they should baptize? |
A26853 | who will have the gain of this? |
A26853 | why any more but reading of Scriptures? |
A26853 | why made he none for Postures, and Vestures, and Words, and Teaching Signs of this nature, if he would have had them? |
A27001 | 11, 14. that they that should ever after be called, might not expect a voice from Heaven to their ears, but might be called in Christs appointed way? |
A27001 | 2. and other Gnostick Hereticks in the Apostles daies, did deal by them, and the Church then as you do by us now? |
A27001 | 3. just as you do now against Magistrates and Ministers? |
A27001 | 4. and applied it? |
A27001 | And consequently of the need he hath of the Physician? |
A27001 | And do not these men justifie the bloudy opposers of them, and condemn Gods Saints afresh? |
A27001 | And do not these wretches justifie their murderers? |
A27001 | And do not we do so as well as they? |
A27001 | And do not you counsel men to the sin of Iudas or of Ananias and Sephira? |
A27001 | And do you well consider what fruits they here bring forth, and now likely they are to be shortly quite corrupted, if a speedy stop be not made? |
A27001 | And how much England yet feels it self beholden to Separation and Anabaptistry? |
A27001 | And if the Apostles and first Church Officers might take all, May not we take the Tenths, when they are thus Devoted? |
A27001 | And if you will stick to the English, you may finde the word[ Master] used oft enough: And if it be lawfull for another man why not for a Minister? |
A27001 | And is it not apparent pride in them to set up themselves so far above all the people of God on earth? |
A27001 | And is it possible that any man in this life, that is not mad with spiritual pride, can indeed believe that he hath no sin? |
A27001 | And is not God very patient that causeth not the earth to open and swallow you up quick as it did them? |
A27001 | And may not all the world command me on these terms as well as you? |
A27001 | And therefore seeing God calleth Ministers the Rulers of the Church, are they not so far Masters as the word Master signifieth a Guide or Teacher? |
A27001 | And this Informant further saith, that the said M. Coppinger asked him, What kinde of Opinions in Religion there were in Bristol? |
A27001 | And whether God do not visibly testifie against them from Heaven, in giving up their disciples to all kinde of abominations? |
A27001 | And whether it be not the Seperated and Anapaptists Churches that are emptied by the Quakers? |
A27001 | And why do you not plainly Teach, but ask Questions? |
A27001 | And why else are they oft called Teachers? |
A27001 | And why so? |
A27001 | Are all Dogs and Serpents with you that have not that Infallible Spirit? |
A27001 | Are not the Ministers whom these men despise, of the same calling and practice as those were that suffered death in the Flames in Q. Maries daies? |
A27001 | Are you not then on their side and possest with the same Spirit? |
A27001 | Ask them, Whether the Butcheries of the Waldenses, and the Irish murders were done by a true Church? |
A27001 | But I pray you if an hourglasse be unlawful, tell us whether a Clock be lawful, or a Diall, or a Watch? |
A27001 | But have you not bewraied your deceitfulnesse in refusing to consent that I should come and answer your Questions? |
A27001 | But your Prater told me, it was a limiting of the Spirit of God; As if I can not limit my self and not limit the Spirit? |
A27001 | Can he have so little knowledge of himself? |
A27001 | Can that man that hath one spark of grace believe that he hath no sin? |
A27001 | Dare you cast out the holy worship of Christ as false worship, and seek to draw people into the contempt of it? |
A27001 | Dare you damn those Churches and millions of Saints that Christ hath bought with his precious bloud? |
A27001 | Dare you meet the Messengers of Christ in the face, and tell them they are Liars and deceivers? |
A27001 | Dare you say to Christ, we will not be beholden to thee for thy bloud to wash us any more, or to thy Intercession to pard on us any more? |
A27001 | Did the Apostles stint the Spirit because they appointed their meetings on the Lords Day, and did not stay two or three daies together? |
A27001 | Did they not preach in Pulpits, and take Tythes or money for preaching as their due maintenance, and the other things that the Quakers accuse us for? |
A27001 | Do not you receive meat and drink, to sustain your lives? |
A27001 | Do not you shew by this, that you are children of the Darkenesse, and the Works of darknesse you are carrying on? |
A27001 | Do you ask this as Learners? |
A27001 | Do you beleeve the Scriptures to be true or not? |
A27001 | Greetings in the market- place when did I desire? |
A27001 | Hath Scripture told you at what place you shall meet, or at what hour? |
A27001 | Have you not seen a Sheet of Paper Published by M. Prin, Containing an Oath of a Citizen of Bristol taken before the Magistrates of that Citie? |
A27001 | Have you soberly read what I have there wrote already? |
A27001 | Have you well considered into what your Societies were resolved in Germany and other parts? |
A27001 | I also therefore demand of you, Whether he that hath seen God do not abhor himself( as Iob did) in dust and ashes? |
A27001 | I can witnesse it of most of my acquaintance that are such? |
A27001 | I have shewed you in my other Book, where it commandeth allowing sufficient Maintenance? |
A27001 | IF you further ask me, Why the Papists are so diligent in these kinde of works? |
A27001 | If You ask me, how I know that it is Papists who thus seduce them? |
A27001 | If all have it, why may not I have it? |
A27001 | If all have sufficient light within them, what need there any converting grace? |
A27001 | If all have sufficient light within them, what need you go up and down to teach or perswade them? |
A27001 | If the world have sufficient light, what need they your teaching, or discourse, or conviction? |
A27001 | If we say that we have no sinne we deceive our selves, and the truth is not in us? |
A27001 | Is all your hearing and praying come to this? |
A27001 | Is it like to be Gods way which so ordinarily leadeth to end endeth in such desperate evils? |
A27001 | Is it needless light that you bring then, or is i ● hellish darknesse? |
A27001 | Is it not a most sottish trick of you to go up and down prating and commanding, and yet refuse to shew your Commission from God? |
A27001 | Is it not damnable Hypocrisie in these wretches, to prate so much of Scripture, and call for Scripture, while they thus deny it to be Gods Word? |
A27001 | Is it not lawfull to take and use that which is so Dedicated? |
A27001 | Is it not part of their present businesse to do your work, and cry down Infant- Baptism? |
A27001 | Is it not then the same Spirit by which you and all these were or are acted? |
A27001 | Is it the Ministers or the Quakers that watch for the good of souls, and have the rule over them? |
A27001 | Is it therefore lawfull to call Perer so, or any faithfull Servants of Christ? |
A27001 | Is it your Ministry or ours that they bend their force against? |
A27001 | Is this agreeable to your practise who damn men that despise not and reject not Christs most upright and faithful Ministers? |
A27001 | It is a most certain thing that God allowed the Priests the Tythes, and much more, when he thus cried out against them, Dare you deny that? |
A27001 | Judge therefore whether your Lying Spirit be the Spirit of God or the meet authour of Reformation, or whether indeed you are perfect without sin? |
A27001 | Know you not that it was then the common practice of the Church to reade, expound, and apply the Scriptures, as Ezra did? |
A27001 | Know you not that there is Doctrine, Reason, and Use in all the Sermons and Epistles of the Apostles? |
A27001 | Moreover, were they not the same sort of Ministers which the late Bishops silenced, suspended, and otherwise troubled, and which you revile at? |
A27001 | O ● had Con ● lius sufficient light within him before Peter preached to him? |
A27001 | One of the Queres which they here put to me is[ What expresse Scripture I have for Infant Baptism? |
A27001 | Only to your Query, I will adde this Query to your Founders the Anabaptists: Whether by this time they do not feel Gods plagues upon their party? |
A27001 | Or as Teachers? |
A27001 | Or can he have any taste of that Spirit of Christ in himself that doth not even feel that their proud and railing language is of the devil? |
A27001 | Or did Christ give him needlesly a light from heaven, and by Ananias his doctrine? |
A27001 | Or did Christ send them a needlesse light by his Apostles? |
A27001 | Or do you ask it for matter to feed your prating and slandring? |
A27001 | Or had all the world sufficient light within them before Christ sent abroad his Apostles to preach the Gospel to them? |
A27001 | Or is it now sufficient to all that never heard the Gospel; If so, Is not the Gospel a vain and needlesse thing? |
A27001 | Or to be called Rabbi? |
A27001 | Prove this of us if you can? |
A27001 | Shall I freely tell you whence all this comes? |
A27001 | Shew where it condemneth the Tenth part any more then the ninth, or the eleventh, or twelfth? |
A27001 | Speak plainly and let us know whether you are indeed Papists or Pagans? |
A27001 | Such as Bradford, Hooper, Latimer, Ridly, Cranmer, Saunders, Philpot, and the rest; Were not these called Masters? |
A27001 | Tell me if you can? |
A27001 | That he doth love God in the highest degree that he is bound to do? |
A27001 | That he never hath a thought or word that is sinful, nor sinfully loseth one minute of his time? |
A27001 | They being used by the Church till the Apostles times, where do you finde that they did ever forbid or abolish that use? |
A27001 | Though Christ hath said, Iudge not that ye be not judged, and who art thou that judgest another mans Servant? |
A27001 | To your Question, What I think of these men? |
A27001 | Translating excludeth not the necessity of explicating; And who knows not that one English word hath many significations? |
A27001 | Was it not the same Ministers that thou you scorn''d whom ye now reproach with far greater bitternesse( if you do as those whom you pleade for do?) |
A27001 | Was it not the same Ordinances that you despised before Conversion, which you now much more desp ● se? |
A27001 | Was it sufficient before Christ preached the Gospel and sent his Apostles? |
A27001 | Was that light in Paul which perswaded him that he ought to do many things against the name of Jesus, sufficient to convert him to the Faith of Jesus? |
A27001 | Was there ever a Generation of men on whom the Image of the devil was more visible then on these? |
A27001 | What think you? |
A27001 | What was it that you feared? |
A27001 | What would you answer if a Iew or a Turk, or a Witch, should put this Question? |
A27001 | When you hate the Light because your Deeds are Evil? |
A27001 | Where doth any Scripture forbid paying or taking Tythes? |
A27001 | Whether I, or other Ministers do ask the people so much for preaching as the Quakers receive themselves? |
A27001 | Whether ever the earth bore men that did more proudly despise others in comparison of themselves? |
A27001 | Whether have you read any of those Books that are written long ago, to prove that Tythes are still of Divine Right? |
A27001 | Whether it be not the same Spirit which moveth in you and in the Papists? |
A27001 | Whether you mean it is sufficient to leave men without excuse,( That we maintain as well as you) or is every mans light sufficient to his salvation? |
A27001 | Why must you know this? |
A27001 | Why then do you not shew your Commission to teach? |
A27001 | Why would you send me Queries which you would not give me leave to answer by Speech? |
A27001 | Will not all this suffice you? |
A27001 | Will you give us leave to smell the Pope in your endeavours to disgrace the Scriptures, though your own Noses be stopt? |
A27001 | YOur first Query is,[ What''s the first Principle of the pure Religion?] |
A27001 | Yea, Whether they did not in the Primitive times, so Dedicate all? |
A27001 | Your 11th Query is,[ Whether we have seen Gods face?] |
A27001 | Your second Query is[ Whether they are a Church of Christ that beat and persecute them that witnesse forth the Truth in his Name? |
A27001 | [ Whether we have the same infallible Spirit as the holy men of God had that spoke forth the Scriptures?] |
A27001 | and Caused the French Massacre? |
A27001 | and Matthew, Mark, Luke and John be the Gospel, and whether there were any Gospel before them, and whether they be the light?] |
A27001 | and for you, in ignorance to run about with the Shell on your head, exclaiming to the world of the ignorance of your late Teachers? |
A27001 | and hath by flames and sword drawn out the bloud of so many hundred thousand true Christians? |
A27001 | and whether is it the Spirit of God or of the devil and Antichrist that the Quakers speak by? |
A27001 | and whether the true knowledge of God do not ever abase the soul, and make a man very mean in his own eyes? |
A27001 | and whether their language savour of the Spirit of the Lamb of God? |
A27001 | and whether they are yet resolved to wink on to destruction, or to stay till all turn Quakers, Ranters or infidels? |
A27001 | and why one is more unlawful then another? |
A27001 | and will they have in the end a better bargain of it to hearken to their Rulers or to the despisers of them? |
A27001 | is,[ What is the flaming Sword that keeps the Tree of life, and what the Cherubims?] |
A27001 | is,[ Whether Christ enlighteneth every one that cometh into the world?] |
A27001 | is,[ Whether do you own trembling and quaking which the Scripture witnesseth?] |
A27001 | is,[ Whether do you say you shall be free from the body of sin while you are on the earth, and whether shall any be perfect yea or nay?] |
A27001 | is,[ Whether the Bible be the Word of God? |
A27001 | is,[ Whether we own Revelations or no?] |
A27001 | or are you Christians that dare so affirm? |
A27001 | or whether it be lawful to observe by the Sun how the time passeth? |
A27001 | that he transgresseth no Law? |
A27001 | what? |
A65610 | ( except your necessary rest;) And that your time and wealth are but his talen ● s? |
A65610 | Alas, sirs, have you all this to do? |
A65610 | And are you ready with well grounded hope and peace, to wellcome death, and appear in judgement? |
A65610 | And bethink your selves whether a servant may say, I will do less work than my fellow servants, because I have more wages? |
A65610 | And hereby shew that your Repentance is hypocritical, and will not prove the pardon of your sin? |
A65610 | And is it not worse that you deal with God? |
A65610 | And therefore the common excuse of such twatlers is this: I hope that it is no harm: yea, but what good was it? |
A65610 | And to increase our pity, when they have done they ask,[ What harm is there in cards and dice, in stage- playes and Romances? |
A65610 | And when he saw him fit for an admonition, would wisely bestow it upon him? |
A65610 | And whether God have not only the leavings of your flesh? |
A65610 | And whether those things which should have none, and those which should have little, have not almost all? |
A65610 | And whether you may do less for God, because he giveth you more than others? |
A65610 | And why then in Baptism did you renounce them and vow to follow Christ? |
A65610 | And will you yet live so contrary to your prayers, to your consciences, and to reason it self? |
A65610 | And yet have you Time to spare on Vanity? |
A65610 | Are you regenerate and rènewed to the Heavenly nature? |
A65610 | Are you strong and stablished in grace? |
A65610 | Are your hearts in Heaven? |
A65610 | As if he had said Ho, Sir, it is time to get up; what not out of your b ● d yet, at this time of the day? |
A65610 | Believe it, O man and Woman, it is to do all that ever must be done, to prepare for an everlasting life? |
A65610 | But alas, how do the common sort of men bewray their monstrous folly in this behalf? |
A65610 | But if you say, Yea; I pray you then tell us how much Time Christ or any of his Apostles, did spend at cards, or dice, or stage- playes? |
A65610 | Did they waste so much of the day, in nothings, and need- nots as our slothful sensual Gentry do? |
A65610 | Did you ever find such a prayer in any Prayer book? |
A65610 | Do you believe that you must give an account of your Time? |
A65610 | Do you consider well the shortness and uncertainty of your Time? |
A65610 | Do you know who attendeth you while you are loitering away your Time? |
A65610 | Do you mark what dying men say of Time, and how they value it? |
A65610 | Do you really take Christ, and his Apostles and Saints, to be the fittest pattern for the spending of your time? |
A65610 | Do you sober ● y consider, what work you have for all your time? |
A65610 | Do you think if you neglect and lose your Time, that ever you should come again into this world, to spend it better? |
A65610 | Doth it not awaken and amaze thy soul, to think what it is to be for ever; I say, for ever, in Ioy or Misery? |
A65610 | Doth it not tell you what you have to do, and call upon you to dispatch it? |
A65610 | First, he calls him up( as it were) saying; How long wilt thou sleep, when wilt thou rise out of thy sleep? |
A65610 | For do we not plainly see, what a canker it is in a number of mens lives? |
A65610 | For do we not see, that in many places, whole dayes are cast away in the deep gulf of roving, and unprofitable runnagate- babling to no purpose? |
A65610 | For when wisdom laughes a man to scorn, whither shall he repair for succour? |
A65610 | Gentlemen and Ladies, I envy not your pleasures: I have my self a body with its proper appetites, which would be gratified, as well as you? |
A65610 | Give not all( ah, why should we give any of it?) |
A65610 | Had you not rather that it had been spent in fruitful holiness and good works, than in idleness and fleshly pleasures? |
A65610 | Have you deeply considered that everlasting condition is, which all your Time is given you to prepare for? |
A65610 | Have you made sure of pardon and salvation? |
A65610 | Have you no more useful Recreations? |
A65610 | Have you not a God to serve? |
A65610 | Have you not an outward calling to follow? |
A65610 | Have you not death and judgement to prepare for? |
A65610 | Have you not servants and children to instruct and educate( And O what a deal of labour do ● h their ignorance and obstinacy require? |
A65610 | How can it chuse but be a great hinderance to a mans estate to sleep in harvest, and to be in bed at such a time, when so much wealth is bestowing? |
A65610 | How can one have treasure in Heaven, that never laid up any there? |
A65610 | How can you chuse but tremble when you think how you spend your dai ● s? |
A65610 | How do you now wish that you had spent the Time which is already past? |
A65610 | How full of grace should his old age and sickness be, that would give his health to God, and his first years to the service of his soul? |
A65610 | How great acquaintance might he get in the palace of Wisdom, that would come to her at her first call, and enter so soon as the doors were set open? |
A65610 | How many false opinions have you to be untaught? |
A65610 | How many fervent prayers might he store up in heaven that would not fore- slow time, when he feels his desires earnest? |
A65610 | How many graces to be obtained? |
A65610 | How many have died suddenly? |
A65610 | How many pernicious customs to be changed? |
A65610 | How many powerful corruptions to be mortified? |
A65610 | How many temptations to be overcome? |
A65610 | How many weighty lessons to learn? |
A65610 | How many winter nights do men suffer themselves to be robbed of, by this childish babling? |
A65610 | How much thankfulness might he have, that would lift up his heart to God in the fruition of blessing? |
A65610 | How often and how earnestly are men exhorted to all good works by the continual voice of God, speaking unto them by his servants? |
A65610 | How ordinarily do good and bad then wish, that they had spent Time better, and cry out, O that it were to spend again? |
A65610 | How short is your abode in your present dwelling like to be, in comparison of your abode in dust and darkness? |
A65610 | How think you the miserable souls in Hell would value Time, if they were again sent hither, and tryed with it again on the terms as we are? |
A65610 | If not, you have not so much as a shadow of Repentance; and therefore can have no just conceit that you are forgiven? |
A65610 | If this be so, I am not reprehending you; But I beseech you consider, Have you ● o ● souls to regard as well as others? |
A65610 | If yea, then why will you do that for the Time to come, which you wish for the time past that you had never done? |
A65610 | If you do not your work well, shall you ever come again to mend it? |
A65610 | If you do not, why do you usurp the name of Christians: Is he a Christian who would not live like Christians? |
A65610 | If you do, what account will then be most comfortab ● y to you? |
A65610 | If you have no pains or sickness to admonish you, do you not know what a fragile thing is fl ● sh? |
A65610 | If you idle away this life, will God ever give you another here? |
A65610 | Is it easie to get a solid faith? |
A65610 | Is it not lawful to use such and such recreations?] |
A65610 | Is it nothing to order and govern your hearts? |
A65610 | Is the Devil idle while you are idle? |
A65610 | Is the work that you were made for hitherto well done? |
A65610 | Is your Recreation but as the Mowers whe ● ting of his sythe? |
A65610 | Look back on all your Time that is past, and tell me whether it made not haste? |
A65610 | Must you stay on earth so short a time, and have you any of this little time to spare? |
A65610 | Now what a miserable loss is it when a man is robbed of his time, and of his heart both at once? |
A65610 | O what a heart hath that stupified sinner, that can ● idle away that little Time, which is allotted him to prepare for his everlasting state? |
A65610 | O what a large encrease of grace would this care bring? |
A65610 | Sometimes, if men see their servants standing idle and unbusied, they can ask them with a kind of indignation, What, can you find nothing to do? |
A65610 | Tell me, or tell your consciences, How would you form such a prayer to God for your recovery if you were now sick? |
A65610 | That knoweth he shall have but this hastly life to win or lose eternal Glory in, and can play it away as if he had nothing to do with it? |
A65610 | The worth of Time, is for the work that is to be done in Time? |
A65610 | Then for idle thoughts; who makes question of them almost? |
A65610 | They let pass all good opportunities, and care not for any occasion for the soul, and how can their soul thrive? |
A65610 | What great grace would affliction bring, if a man would settle himself to humiliation, and gage his heart in time of affliction? |
A65610 | What maketh you so loth to dye, if Time be no more worth than to cast away unprofitably? |
A65610 | What not at Christmas? |
A65610 | While many are hourly crouding into another world, will conscience permit you to be idle? |
A65610 | Whilst the Jayler had Paul in his keeping ▪ he came to ask that needful ● uestion, What shall I do to be saved? |
A65610 | Why should that time be vi ● ified now, which will seem so precious then? |
A65610 | Why stand you all the day idle? |
A65610 | Will not graves and bones, and dust instruct you? |
A65610 | Will not the tolling of the Bell instruct you? |
A65610 | Will you take it for a satisfactory answer? |
A65610 | Would they feast it away, and play it away as you do now; and then say, Are not playes and cards and feasting lawful? |
A65610 | Would you say, Lord give me a little more Time to play at cards and dice in? |
A65610 | Yea so much of it as you daily waste, in idleness, play and vain curiosity? |
A65610 | a certainty of the pardon of all our sins, and of our title to e ● ernal happiness? |
A65610 | a contentedness with our condition? |
A65610 | a faithful conscience? |
A65610 | a fervent desire and love to God? |
A65610 | a fitness and ability for every duty? |
A65610 | a hatred of all sin? |
A65610 | a longing after the coming of Christ? |
A65610 | a love to holiness? |
A65610 | a love to our neighbour as our selves? |
A65610 | a publick spirit, wholly devoted to the common good? |
A65610 | a quieting confidence and trust? |
A65610 | a readiness and joyful willingness to die? |
A65610 | a tender heart? |
A65610 | a true love to our enemies? |
A65610 | a well guided zeal? |
A65610 | an absolute resignation, self- denyal and obedience? |
A65610 | and Heaven and Hell were indifferent to him? |
A65610 | and are they not lawful?] |
A65610 | and his word and will to learn and do? |
A65610 | and how all this time must be accounted for? |
A65610 | and how many sweet and chearful Psalms might a Christian sing, if he would turn all his mirth into a Psalm; and offer it up to God? |
A65610 | and in the labours of a lawful bodily employment? |
A65610 | and is your daily coversation there? |
A65610 | and on how important a business you come into the world? |
A65610 | and preserving fear? |
A65610 | and that he giveth you not an hours time in vain, but appointeth you work for every hour? |
A65610 | and that you must look back from Eternity on the Time wh ● ch you now spend? |
A65610 | and then to be exercised, and strengthened, and preserved? |
A65610 | and yet can you have while to sl ● g, and game, and play and fool away your Time? |
A65610 | asking whether the World were so empty of occasions, and our selves so perfectly well, as that we can find nothing to do? |
A65610 | doth not this waste and pour forth time over- lavishly? |
A65610 | how comfortably might he weep over Christ, and how plenti ● ully, that would take the tide of tears, and turn all pensiveness to this use? |
A65610 | how many sottishly? |
A65610 | how should his souls thrive, that would be thus husbandly? |
A65610 | in Heaven or Hell? |
A65610 | no oftner, nor no longer than is necessary to fit you for those Labours and duties, which must be the great and daily business of your lives? |
A65610 | one of these will certainly and shortly be thy portion, whatever unbelief may say against it? |
A65610 | or how much in furnishing their bodies, their attendants, their habitations with matter of splendour and vain glory? |
A65610 | or that taketh not Christ for his Master and Example? |
A65610 | or were but insignificant words? |
A65610 | or, what if that should come to pass? |
A65610 | suppose they were all unquestionably lawful, Have you no greater matter that while to do? |
A65610 | suppose you had seventy years to live, how soon will they be gone? |
A65610 | that will exercise your bodies and minds more profitably, or at least with less expence of Time? |
A65610 | to all? |
A65610 | to enemies? |
A65610 | to equals? |
A65610 | to inferiours? |
A65610 | to neighbours? |
A65610 | to superiours? |
A65610 | where is one, that hath enjoyned himself to some constancy in praying, reading, and the fore- named duties? |
A65610 | which as the flower fa ● leth, doth hasten to corruption and to dust? |
A65610 | who marks these exhortations? |
A65610 | your passions? |
A65610 | your thoughts? |
A65610 | your tongues? |
A26869 | 52. they fall a striving among themselves against Christs words, saying,[ How can this man give us his flesh to eat?] |
A26869 | 8 ▪ Wilt thou also disannul my Judgments, wilt thou condemn me, that thou maist be righteous? |
A26869 | Al ● s, how little do the wisest men know of the use and ends of many a Creature, over their heads, and under their feet, which their eyes behold? |
A26869 | And as Pharaoh, Who is the Lord? |
A26869 | And can you set him his bounds, and say, Thus far God can go, and no further? |
A26869 | And dare you be so bold with the highest Majesty? |
A26869 | And doth God send any Messenger with a lie? |
A26869 | And have said as unbelievingly, How can this be? |
A26869 | And is it not more reasonable to believe one God, then so many? |
A26869 | And must God unlock to us the Reasons, Ends ▪ and Uses, of his Truths and Works, before we will believe that such things are? |
A26869 | And shall every yong lazy Student in Theology, or every dull, unlearned Professor, think to see through all Scripture difficulties so easily? |
A26869 | And so to move as it is supposed to do? |
A26869 | And then what ground is there for any further exceptions or objections? |
A26869 | And then what will you have to say for your unbelief and Arrogancy, but to confess your folly and sit down in shame? |
A26869 | And then why might it not be first created alone? |
A26869 | And then, what need of all this ado? |
A26869 | And to believe that God is a perfect incomprehensible, superin- tellectual Being, then to believe, that the s ● nseless Earth is a god? |
A26869 | And what greater madness can you be guilty of, then such a conceit? |
A26869 | And why is it unlikely? |
A26869 | And why should not any man do it daily if there be no ill in it? |
A26869 | And will you give no more credit to God then to such a one? |
A26869 | And will you therefore say, that there is no such thing as fire, or light, or air or wind? |
A26869 | And ● s it not as easie to cause the Sun to stand still as to move? |
A26869 | Answ And what, must God do none but like ● y things? |
A26869 | Are not Philosophers yet unresolved, whether light be not a substance? |
A26869 | Are they greater works then those which he hath certainly done, that you speak of so incredulously? |
A26869 | Are they not as great works which we every day see, in the Being and Course of Sun, Moon and other Creatures, as any of these? |
A26869 | Are you sure there can be no way of reconciliation, but you must know it? |
A26869 | As if it were he that knew not what he said, and not you that did not understand him? |
A26869 | Because it is too hard for God? |
A26869 | Bu ● what if we could not tell how this evil did firs ● come? |
A26869 | But I hope you are satisfied in the things you see; and may not they shame your incredulity of the things you do not see? |
A26869 | But if you do not see through these difficulties; should ● ou not humbly confess it, and not quarrel with those that tell you so? |
A26869 | But who is he that hath posed God? |
A26869 | But why do you not acquie ● ce in these confirmed verities? |
A26869 | But why should it seem improbable, that the first Infinite Being should create a Finite Being? |
A26869 | But would you not have men satisfyed of the reasonableness of what they believe? |
A26869 | Can he enter the second time into his mothers womb, and be born?] |
A26869 | Can not God do it, unless such worms can tell how he should do it? |
A26869 | Can s ● ch breathing lumps of earth, such walking dust, such bags of filth, be fit to enter a dispute with God? |
A26869 | Can you answer all that Christ and his Servants say for it? |
A26869 | Consider, Whether by this sinful Ar ● ogancy you do not equal your understandings with Gods? |
A26869 | Consider, Whether in this case you joyn not impudency and inhumane ingratitude to your Arrogancy? |
A26869 | Did God that is good? |
A26869 | Do you see a greater Work, and think it unlikely, that the same power should do a lesser? |
A26869 | Do you see so much of the World that was m ● d ● by a word, and do you ask,[ How can these things be?] |
A26869 | Doth God inable a( reature to do that which he can not do himself, without that Creature? |
A26869 | Doth not every Study that you fall upon, and every days business that you are engaged in, most plainly discover the weakness of your understandings? |
A26869 | Doth the Infant know how he is formed in the Womb? |
A26869 | Even like Nicodemus[ How can these things be?] |
A26869 | Every little childe will be asking you, not onely what is this? |
A26869 | For I would ask any of them whether there be indeed any sin, or bad me ● in the world, or not? |
A26869 | For to say, How can it be? |
A26869 | For who hath known the minde of the Lord, or who hath been his Counsellor? |
A26869 | God needs not you to be the Defenders of his Truth: He is able to vindicate it himself against all the enemies in the World? |
A26869 | Have you read how God posed Job in point of power and knowledge? |
A26869 | He will needs be first resolved,[ How they can be so?] |
A26869 | How can both be true? |
A26869 | How can these agree together? |
A26869 | How can this be? |
A26869 | How know you when the Angels fell to be Devils? |
A26869 | How plain is that to a man of knowledge, which to the ignorant seems impossible? |
A26869 | How then can these things be? |
A26869 | How then can these things be? |
A26869 | How ● an these things be? |
A26869 | I seriously profess, that it oft am ● ● eth me, to think that we should know so muc ● of God, his Will, and Ways, as we do? |
A26869 | If any new difficulty arise in their way, they are in the case of Nicodemus, saying,[ How can these things be?] |
A26869 | If it were your self, or such as you, that had been the doer of such works, you might well say,[ How can these things be?] |
A26869 | If you understand all things already, what need you to learn any more? |
A26869 | If you will not believe him, but assent onely to that which is evident of it self without his word, then how are you his Scholars? |
A26869 | Is it a lik ● ly thing that a Virgin should conceive and have a child? |
A26869 | Is it a likely thing that a Serpent should speak to Eve? |
A26869 | Is it ever the more difficult to God, because it is impossible to such as we? |
A26869 | Is it not a contradiction to say that there are three per ● ons, and but one God? |
A26869 | Is it not as easie for God to cause conception by the Holy Ghost immediately, as medidiately by man? |
A26869 | Is it not as easie to him, to cause light without a Sun, as to make the Sun it self, with its light? |
A26869 | Is it not as easie with him to do all ● his, as for you to move a finger, and much more? |
A26869 | Is it not as hard to make the Sun and Heavens of one of these, as to make one of these of nothing? |
A26869 | Is it not more reasonable to ● el ● ev ●, th ● ● God made a Stone, or Earth o ● no ● ● ing, then to believe that it made it self? |
A26869 | Is it not more ● easonable to conclude, That this one Perfect Eternal God made all things, then that every Stone did make it self? |
A26869 | Is it ● likely thing that the Red- Sea should 〈 … 〉 for the Israelites to pass through? |
A26869 | Is not the Wisdom, and the Will of God, the most satisfying Reason in the World? |
A26869 | Is this a likely matter, say th ● ● that such and such things should be? |
A26869 | It''s one thing to ask whether this be possible? |
A26869 | Let their writings bear witness, wherein they do indeed resolve them: and do you call them to a tryal, and see whether they are able or not? |
A26869 | Must you have proper Reasonings and Intentions in God? |
A26869 | Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
A26869 | Nicodemus answered and said unto him; How can these things be? |
A26869 | Or is ● e fit to be tolerated in any Society, that thinks there is no evil? |
A26869 | Or that Jonas should live without ayre in the belly of a Whale? |
A26869 | Or that 〈 … 〉 should stand still in Joshuahs time: and not 〈 … 〉 be over tu ● ned by it? |
A26869 | Or the subtilty of the Serpent be a reason of the Temptation? |
A26869 | Or was it possible they should be false, and they not know them? |
A26869 | Or ● ot be digested in his belly as other food is? |
A26869 | Shall the Infinite God have no Word or Work, but what may be comprehended by such as we? |
A26869 | Shall we deny that which we see and hear, and feel, because we know not how or whence it came? |
A26869 | Shall we therefore say, that there is no such thing? |
A26869 | Should a Flea dispute with a Learned man and say[ How can these things be] How much less should we s ● dispute with God? |
A26869 | So that instead of a chearful following our Guide, we are crying out at every turning,[ How can these things be?] |
A26869 | That Earth, or Water, or Air, were from Eternity? |
A26869 | That[ From that time many of his Disciples went back, and walked no more with him;] insomuch, as he asketh the twelve, whether they would go also? |
A26869 | Therefore if I finde contradictions in the Scriptures, may I not rationally argue that they are not the Word of God? |
A26869 | Though Eve was perfect as to her natural powers, and capacity, yet not as to her actual knowledge? |
A26869 | Thus much God can do, and no more? |
A26869 | W ● ● l a Student in Law give over all his study, upon e ● ery occurring difficulty, or seeming contradiction in the Laws? |
A26869 | What I doth his Creature know his infinite power? |
A26869 | What abundance of seeming contradictions in Scripture do rise up in the eyes of an Ignorant Infidel? |
A26869 | What can shew a man his error, but the contrary truth? |
A26869 | What folly is this? |
A26869 | What if you can not answer all that is brought by the Devil and Cavillers, against the Truth? |
A26869 | What if you know not what an Angel or Spirit is? |
A26869 | What if you know not what is beyond the visible Creatures out of sight? |
A26869 | What is that work that should be difficult to him, that by his Word or Will did make all the Worlds? |
A26869 | What madness were it to dream that this exceeds the power of God? |
A26869 | What may we then call our selves, in comparison with the Lord, but even nothing and less then nothing, and lighter then vanity? |
A26869 | What then? |
A26869 | Why are you not yet absolnte masters in all Sciences and Arts? |
A26869 | Why do you not lay together the evidences on both sides, and consider which of the two is the clearer case? |
A26869 | Why else do you learn no faster, and know no more? |
A26869 | Why then should the Divine Trinity of subsistences seem a contradiction? |
A26869 | Why then should we unbelievingly ask, How these things can be? |
A26869 | Will sitting still in Christs School, help you to learning? |
A26869 | Will you allow your own children or Scholars to do so by you? |
A26869 | Will you believe God no further then you see a Cogent Evidence in the thing asserted, which shews that he can not deceive you therein if he would? |
A26869 | Will you say, That a horse can not carry you on his back, because a flie can not? |
A26869 | Yea why are you so defective in all? |
A26869 | [ I know that thou canst do every thing, and that no thought can be withholden from thee, who is he that hideth counsel without knowledge? |
A26869 | [ Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
A26869 | [ Shall mortal man be more just then God? |
A26869 | and another, Whether it were done? |
A26869 | and because, that the manner of it is beyond your reach? |
A26869 | and should nothing contend with immensity and Eternity? |
A26869 | and to say ▪[ How can these things be?] |
A26869 | at least, what mortal eye can do it? |
A26869 | because we can not know all, shall we know nothing, or deny all? |
A26869 | but also, why is this so or so? |
A26869 | do you look that he should teach you, when you will not take pains to learn what he teacheth? |
A26869 | doth it follow that there is none? |
A26869 | doth it follow, that there is nothing beyond our sight? |
A26869 | is as much as to say, How can God do it? |
A26869 | or any Teacher that knoweth not what he teacheth? |
A26869 | or did he himself? |
A26869 | or else will he suspect the Truth which he should learn? |
A26869 | or t ● e Works of Infinite power to be tryed by thee? |
A26869 | or will he seal untruths, or senseless absurdities, with such unquestionable miracles? |
A26869 | or will you have a cause of the first cause, or an end of the ultimate end of all? |
A26869 | or, That the Sun or Moon, or any Creature made it self, and the rest? |
A26869 | or, what is that? |
A26869 | shall a man be more pure then his Maker? |
A26869 | shall men believe that which is unreasonable? |
A26869 | shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
A26869 | they will not believe it is true, or that it can be, till they know themselves, How it can be? |
A26869 | when once Christ hath given sufficient proof of his Doctrine, must it be questioned again, because it is wonderful? |
A26869 | when you read of any miracle or unusual work? |
A26869 | whether long before? |
A26869 | yea, how little know they of the use and ends of many a part of their own bodies? |
A26869 | ● f the Sun had used to stand still, would you not have taken it for as incredible a matter that it should move? |
A27008 | ( And are all the Anabaptists Graceless that are yet Unmartyred? |
A27008 | ( the Law which they were under?) |
A27008 | 1. Who is it that this man converseth with whose confident reports he published? |
A27008 | 36, 37. and receive Children in Christs name, and as belonging to Christ, if none do visibly belong to him? |
A27008 | Abuse not your selves and others: we are first to agree Whether Infants may be Church members, and under the Covenant of Grace with their Parents? |
A27008 | All Promises of Pardon to the Adult are conditional, and some means for certain Title is prescribed? |
A27008 | And by what means is it? |
A27008 | And did Paul flee like a Hireling when he went from places of less liberty to other more commodious places to Preach? |
A27008 | And do you think that Paul mentioneth that as a great and comfortable priviledge of Believers, which belongs to Heathens equally with them? |
A27008 | And do you think then that they befriend Christ or his Church, who turn the Sacrament of our Union into the occasion of our great Division? |
A27008 | And how proveth he that I was lowdly called to suffer? |
A27008 | And how will men answer the non- performance hereof any more than their not Praying for them, or not feeding or Cloathing them? |
A27008 | And if I give an hundred pounds to one man, when I owed him no more than others, doth that make him for the future become my Charge?) |
A27008 | And if Infants be not added to the Church, are they not excluded from Salvation? |
A27008 | And if so, alas, will he put no bounds to this sin, while he thinks that he cryeth down our sin? |
A27008 | And is that a safe way of Repenting? |
A27008 | And is your impatient and general Invectives, and your self- justifying, an infallible proof of your great Wisdome? |
A27008 | And no one can know who any of these be? |
A27008 | And what Law shall Infants then be judged by? |
A27008 | And whether he did so from the beginning of the world, or after his Incarnation? |
A27008 | And who can say in all the world, that any Child of his hath any part in such a Promise? |
A27008 | And why should I suspect such incapacity? |
A27008 | And why? |
A27008 | And yet what other than this feigned Antinomian Justification do the Anabaptists allow to any Infants in the world? |
A27008 | Answer, I am more willing to do it than not, but I am not able: I do believe( according to the measure of the aforesaid evidence) that it is a Truth? |
A27008 | Are his Reporters infected with his Disease? |
A27008 | Are they Justified or not Justified? |
A27008 | Are this mans Citations to be credited? |
A27008 | Ask any Impartial man whether you write like one that knoweth himself? |
A27008 | But de facto, doth he deny the latter? |
A27008 | But how shall other mens Experiences be known to me, but by Report or Fame? |
A27008 | But if you will say that it is conditional, what is that Condition? |
A27008 | But let the question be whether I did well to believe it? |
A27008 | But should I not yet disbelieve it? |
A27008 | But the last Question is, Have I not wronged their Cause by wronging the Persons, in believing Fame, that ever any of them Baptized naked? |
A27008 | But what if I be foolish, and you be wise? |
A27008 | But, Reader, what''s all this to the Question, Whether our Infants are in Covenant with Christ, or Visible Members of his Church? |
A27008 | But, Sir, I am not so much as a Hireling? |
A27008 | By what Law am I condemned to such a Drudgery? |
A27008 | Can he prove that I said[ All Baptized naked?] |
A27008 | Can not you suffer fools gladly, seeing you your selves are wise? |
A27008 | Christ is the Owner? |
A27008 | Dare you not own the Contraries, and yet continue your accusation of my words? |
A27008 | Did I begin with Mr. D. or he with me? |
A27008 | Did Paul sin for not scourging and imprisoning himself? |
A27008 | Did you hear his case, or do you judge before you hear it? |
A27008 | Do I need to answer my own words, before any Charge against them be proved, or proof once attempted? |
A27008 | Do any Nations under Heaven level all Children, as if the Parents communicated neither good or evil to them? |
A27008 | Do you mean that you doubt whether ever the Anabaptists will have Power enough to effect it? |
A27008 | Either it is a Mercy or no Mercy to be in Christs Family or Church? |
A27008 | Ergo I should not Preach in the Parish Churches? |
A27008 | Ergo R. B. should not Preach in the Summer in the Country? |
A27008 | Ergo he sinned in avoiding suffering oft before? |
A27008 | Ergo we must make our own Cross, and take up that instead of Christs? |
A27008 | From my Arguments, which take in the whole Party? |
A27008 | Had he done it truly and fully, had that been any Argument against them? |
A27008 | Have I said any thing offensive to him, besides the detecting of his marvellous audacity in strange heaps of untruths in matters of Fact? |
A27008 | Have all the Anabaptists and Separatists lived all this while in sin, that lived out of Prison? |
A27008 | Have they no need of Pardon, and a Saviour? |
A27008 | Have they not Right of Inheritance and Honour; even of Crowns, Lordships, and Lands? |
A27008 | He saith, it is my scope and design? |
A27008 | How prove you that it was a flight? |
A27008 | How prove you that it was from my Charge? |
A27008 | I would I knew which of these two you judge your selves to be? |
A27008 | If I did not,( as I know I did not) to say I did were to lie; and is it worthy his writing a Book to tempt a man to lie? |
A27008 | If I had, is that any thing to the question in hand? |
A27008 | If by any, by what? |
A27008 | If by none, how know you it? |
A27008 | If not to all, to whom, or to how many? |
A27008 | If so, is it to all, or to some only? |
A27008 | If they Baptize not next naked in one linnen Shift, I never heard it denyed till now? |
A27008 | If they are under no Covenant of Promise that giveth them title to life, how can they have title by it, or be judged by it? |
A27008 | If they be not so much as visible Members, who can say that they are invisible ones? |
A27008 | If this be all one with him, are we not so to judge of his other Expositions? |
A27008 | Is it Ergo R. B. did ill to come out of the Goal when he was put in? |
A27008 | Is it a slander of Mr. Tombes his citing Vossius, or of Vossius cited by him, to say that some Baptized naked in former times? |
A27008 | Is it not a meer Diversion? |
A27008 | Is it then no slander of Mr. Danvers to say, and stiffly defend it, that the ancient Churches ordinarily did so? |
A27008 | Is it to more than twenty in the world? |
A27008 | Is there no means for the certain pardon of our Infants? |
A27008 | Is yours so? |
A27008 | Just thus the Quakers dreadfully adj ● re me to repent of all that''s against their way; and must I therefore do it? |
A27008 | Must not the perusal of the full words decide the Case? |
A27008 | Nay do you not do worse than deprive us of our hopes, even lay such grounds as destroy and exclude them, by a sentence of damnation? |
A27008 | Not that I remember? |
A27008 | O how far will partiality blind men? |
A27008 | Or do you mean, that till we are Martyred we are not capable of your good Opinion? |
A27008 | Or have more Anabaptists than Poedobaptists been Martyred in our times?) |
A27008 | Or is it only your Prognostick on supposition of my Tryal? |
A27008 | Or is it, Ergo I should have bound heavy burdens for my self? |
A27008 | Or is it, that I should not ● ave made such for others? |
A27008 | Or is the Promise of their Salvation without any Condition? |
A27008 | Or shall the same man take me as injurious for believing the same of some of them for a very little time? |
A27008 | Or that he did ill not to put himself in again? |
A27008 | Or that it was the Cross of Christ that I avoided? |
A27008 | Or whether CHRIST, the Saviour of the World, hath shut all Mankind out of his Visible Kingdom, and Covenant- Rights and Hopes,''till they come to Age? |
A27008 | Or why more of yours than of theirs, if I have nothing from you but confident Gnerals, which they can say as well as you? |
A27008 | Or, Ergo, Christ sinned in avoiding the Cross so oft before? |
A27008 | Or, Ergo, R. B. must go into a Prison that he may give over Preaching the Gospel? |
A27008 | Otherwise how could you and such others bring your Consciences to wrest and wrangle against such abundance of plain Scripture Texts? |
A27008 | Shall not all that are judged, be judged by Gods Law? |
A27008 | Shew us where in Scripture we may find it? |
A27008 | The next Text speaketh of Pauls Preaching till midnight? |
A27008 | The next Text tells us that we must take up our Cross and follow Christ,& c. And what thence? |
A27008 | There is no Scripture president for Baptizing any Kings; must none therefore be Baptized? |
A27008 | This Convenant is Vniversal to the Adult, as offered on the condition of Believing acceptance: And is there no Promise, no Covenant for Infants? |
A27008 | This is a strange Promise, and is no mutual Covenant? |
A27008 | This is too unsatisfactory an answering of Books, to Beseech us to repent of them? |
A27008 | This were to make it run unto a Fleshly Line indeed? |
A27008 | Was it not enough for me to lay down the Contraries to my Doctrines, and leave the Reader to choose which he seeth best? |
A27008 | Was this no injury? |
A27008 | Were all the Circumcised Israelites, and all the holy seed till Christ, at once both in the Church, and in Satans Kingdom? |
A27008 | Were it but this one, what could be plainer? |
A27008 | Were we agreed against Infants Covenant- Right, when should we ever be agreed at what Age it is that they are to be received? |
A27008 | What a sin is it to rob Christ of so great a part of his Church? |
A27008 | What a sin is it to teach men to be thus unnatural, and cruel to their Off- spring? |
A27008 | What a sin so far to confound the state of Christians and Pagans, as to their Childrens blessing? |
A27008 | What a sin so to deny the Gospel Grace and Promise, and to hide so much of the Love of God? |
A27008 | What a sin so to enlarge and honour the Devils Kingdom, as to give him all mankind visibly, till they come to age? |
A27008 | What a sin thus to change and take from the Word, yea from the very Covenant of God? |
A27008 | What a sin to deprive so many millions of Covenant- pardon, Grace and Life, by hindering the acceptance and consent? |
A27008 | What a sin to vilifie so great Mercy, as if it were none, and to preach such ingratitude? |
A27008 | What doth he but recite some scrap of my words? |
A27008 | What kin are they to the Text? |
A27008 | What more should I answer? |
A27008 | What reason then to suppose that Christ obliterateth even Natures Laws? |
A27008 | What thence? |
A27008 | What thence? |
A27008 | Whether Mr. Tombes denyed it when I wrote it? |
A27008 | Whether ever any Anabaptist that then was acquainted with me, yea or any one person denyed it to my hearing or knowledge? |
A27008 | Why doth he Print this confident Report if not to be believed? |
A27008 | Why so? |
A27008 | Will not the presence of thousands of witnesses secure a man from the forgery of any unnamed Slanderer? |
A27008 | Would you not take it for a Mercy if you believed that God in Scripture gave it, to all the Seed of the Faithful dedicated to him? |
A27008 | Yea thus do the Infidels themselves now use me, and must I therefore yield? |
A27008 | You here call us to Repent of a Position as Absurd and Heretical? |
A27008 | You say, that It is now a common question whether ever I will die a Martyr? |
A27008 | and his lamentable injury thereby to the Church of Christ? |
A27008 | and is it not the common light of Nature, which teacheth all men so to esteem them? |
A27008 | and may not a Family be Sanctified by dedication to God? |
A27008 | and what guilt against Christ, and of furthering Infidelity, should I have incurred, under the pretense of promoting the purity of his Kingdom? |
A27008 | and what is one Syllable? |
A27008 | and when a Childs Profession were Valid? |
A27008 | and why may they not as well be Christs Subjects as the Kings? |
A27008 | are not Infants members of other Societies? |
A27008 | are not Infants the Kings Subjects? |
A27008 | are they not members of Families? |
A27008 | are they not members of all the Kingdoms in the world? |
A27008 | by any or none? |
A27008 | if it be, why should we think that the Saviour of the world procureth it to no Infants? |
A27008 | if none, why do you value it? |
A27008 | much less the owner of the Sheep? |
A27008 | or are they left remediless as the Devils? |
A27008 | or more to Christians Children than others? |
A27008 | or that Pagans have not as much of it as Christians? |
A27008 | or that have had maintenance and quietness, while R. B. hath been laid in the common Goal, and hunted by one sort, and reviled by the other? |
A27008 | pray doth he not disprove himself? |
A27008 | they attempting what they did against me too late, just when they and their Co- partners were a pulling down themselves and others? |
A27008 | when he tells men of my writing for Popery, Conformity,& c. can his yea or my nay go for proof with any that is in doubt which of us saith true? |
A27068 | 24.45, 46. Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his Lord hath made ruler over his houshold, to give them meat in due sea ● ● n? |
A27068 | All human actions have their faults: must we therefore do nothing, or converse with no men? |
A27068 | All this is setled by Law, and all Ministers subscribe to it: And is not this enough to the essence of a Pastors office? |
A27068 | And I pray you what alters the case, as to the Parish- Churches? |
A27068 | And are all sinners therefore for hearing him? |
A27068 | And doth not the Law and Church lay more of this on the Incumbents, than the Diocesans( who are not U ● iquitaries)? |
A27068 | And doth not this say as much as I am pleading for? |
A27068 | And doth separating from the whole visible church- communion agree with the prophecies and precepts of union? |
A27068 | And doth that satisfie you? |
A27068 | And have men reason to be confident that our preaching will be more sounder than our writing? |
A27068 | And is it not enough? |
A27068 | And is it not exposing christianity to the scorn of infidels, so to say? |
A27068 | And is it not then a sin to be my hearer? |
A27068 | And now wherein is our Rule, false and theirs true? |
A27068 | And on whom doth the Law most impose it? |
A27068 | And that watch for their Souls as those that must give account? |
A27068 | And what doth the Diocesan in it, more than any one of the rest? |
A27068 | And what if it be dependent on the Diocesan, as governour( tho not as destroyer)? |
A27068 | And what law forbids Incumbents to promulgate Christs commands, and charge men to obey them? |
A27068 | And what then, if your Schism prove a Sin? |
A27068 | And what''s London to all England? |
A27068 | And when you cut off your self from all, saving a shred, are you a Member of the undivided Body of Christ? |
A27068 | And who doth most of that work? |
A27068 | And who doth this most in all the Churches? |
A27068 | And who most doth this work among us? |
A27068 | And why can such a Law any more bind me to judg of Church- constitutions by the Lawmakers words, rather than by Gods Word? |
A27068 | And why must the Parish Church and Pastor needs be Independent? |
A27068 | And yet not if a Pastor or a ruling Majority of people injoin it, or unless we leave all to confusion? |
A27068 | Are not Churches formally relative societies; what maketh them such, but thoughts and wills of men expressed? |
A27068 | Are not your private Churches more unquestionably Excommunicate,& c. by the Canon, and yet you separate not from them? |
A27068 | Ask the parishes who those be? |
A27068 | Before them that never knew them, nor could do? |
A27068 | But 1. why do the same men accuse me for perswading men to avoid sufferings, as they think, by ill means? |
A27068 | But Christ had twelve Apostles, and 70, or 72 other Teachers, and many more Disciples; Were these no Church, nor matter for a Church? |
A27068 | But here our Disputants think they expose me to derision: What? |
A27068 | But none of the things are indeed Worship, which you say men may command? |
A27068 | But the great doubt is, who hath the Power of Government, and who actually governs,( not by the sword) but with the Ministerial Pastoral Government? |
A27068 | But what if a man be in doubt, whether such Obedience be not his Duty: Is it not the safer side much more if he verily think it his Duty? |
A27068 | But what is the false Rule? |
A27068 | But what words be they in the Covenant that we violate? |
A27068 | But whether the Law be on their side, or against them? |
A27068 | Can I think that he will not preach as ill as he writeth in this book? |
A27068 | Can he do as Ignatius''s Bishops, that must take notice of all the Church, even Servants and Maids? |
A27068 | Can there be a higher exercise of the Keys? |
A27068 | Can you see but on one side? |
A27068 | Confirmation another? |
A27068 | Could he have leave constantly to teach there, if he had there used to cry down their ordinary worship? |
A27068 | Did he not ord ● narily joyn in the Synagogues in their worsh ● p? |
A27068 | Did he the whole office of a pastor: What if the Bishop had forbid him to sing ● salms? |
A27068 | Did not Gods Law make it unlawful to them, or to us before? |
A27068 | Do Diocesans teach from house to house, from Southwark to Christ- Church, from N ● wark to Alesbury or Tame? |
A27068 | Do I intimate that one and the same Congregation, may be two Churches of different species? |
A27068 | Do not men use to deliberate more, and study what to write, than what to preach? |
A27068 | Do the fl ● cks see more the Incumbents example, or the Diocesans? |
A27068 | Do you think a Lay Civilian by Excommunicating, can prove or make a man a member of any Church against his will? |
A27068 | Doth it follow, that I must separate from it? |
A27068 | Doth that make him guilty of all? |
A27068 | Doth the Diocesan or the Incumbent more walk as a known example before the Parish flock, for their imitation? |
A27068 | Doth the Law and Church lay more of this on Diocesans ▪ or parish Pastors? |
A27068 | Doth their esteeming you a Member, prove that you are so? |
A27068 | England is one Kingdom; If there be one or many faults in its Laws or officers, may we therefore obey none that are faultless? |
A27068 | Had the Ceremonious Pharisees no ill forms nor ceremonies in their Worship? |
A27068 | Have they de facto, nulled Christs Power, Law ▪ or Offices and Churches? |
A27068 | He had no oth ● r Church? |
A27068 | He that is not in the Church, how comes he to be cast out? |
A27068 | How many private Meetings in London, never sing a Psalm for fear of being discovered? |
A27068 | How oft have I answered this, without any reply? |
A27068 | If the Law had said, All Schools in England shall be essentially subject to Diocesans, must we therefore have had no more Schools? |
A27068 | Is Speaking no part nor accident of worship, because speaking is used in common things? |
A27068 | Is commanded obedience become a sin? |
A27068 | Is eating and drinking no part of the Sacrament, because we use them as natural acts for our daily sustenance? |
A27068 | Is it a sin to have confederacy or Communion with their Churches? |
A27068 | Is it any more destructive of its Essence, than to be governed by a Classis or Council? |
A27068 | Is it only the law? |
A27068 | Is it that Lincoln shire, Leicester- shire, Northamton- shire, Buckingham- shire, be at peace among themselves, from Gainsborough to Oxford- shire? |
A27068 | Is it that they have Steeples and Bells, or that they have Tythes? |
A27068 | Is it the Diocesan or the Incumbent that the law requireth to preach to, and warn every man,& c.? |
A27068 | Is it the Diocesan or the Incumbent? |
A27068 | Is love to God no worship, because love is a natural act? |
A27068 | Is not Baptisme( according to the Liturgy) a symbol of incorporation into the Church of England? |
A27068 | Is not the Church State more concerned in the whole congregation ▪ than in an absent Bishop? |
A27068 | Is not this the next step( and a temptation) to utter infidelity? |
A27068 | Is not this true? |
A27068 | Is praying no act of Religion, because we may pray to men? |
A27068 | Is this done more by the Diocesans, or by the Incumbents? |
A27068 | Is this our running from Popery? |
A27068 | It is their example that sak to them thword of God, that the Apostle sets before them: And who be those? |
A27068 | It''s liker he had been none for resisting John, of the two: Were all degraded that obeyed the Apostles? |
A27068 | Must all forbear Communion till they are so good Lawyers? |
A27068 | Must we needs be sure which of these is in the right? |
A27068 | Must we needs say therefore that they omit all Worship? |
A27068 | Name me, if you can, any thing essential, which all Ministers promise not at Ordination? |
A27068 | No Elders that rule well? |
A27068 | No wonder; those may be true churches, that are not compleat in integrity or degree; will you separate from all churches that are not so compleat? |
A27068 | Nor of what number, power, or interest these men are of( against whom I have oft written)? |
A27068 | Now at last I come closer to my question: Have you no Church Rulers among you? |
A27068 | Now the question is, how any of these subordinate rules are just or false? |
A27068 | Nulled it by a Nullity of pretended Authority, and overcome his Power without Power? |
A27068 | On whom doth the law impose most preaching? |
A27068 | Or if the School- master subscribe to them, is it a sin to be his Scholar? |
A27068 | Or if there be any fault in any one of all these books, is every one guilty of them that cometh to the churches? |
A27068 | Or to go to any negligent person of his Flock with the same charge? |
A27068 | Or who can make an unknown man his pattern? |
A27068 | Q. VVhat? |
A27068 | Shall we sin if the Law impose a Translation, Psalm Book, or reverent gesture, unless we separate? |
A27068 | That they make us to be no true Ministers or Churches? |
A27068 | The Diocesan in all the Parishes of his Diocesse, or the Incumbents? |
A27068 | The Laws are the Rule of National Justice; may a Judg, Justice, Officer or subject use none of them, because some are faulty? |
A27068 | They may bind him over to answer his contumacy at the Bar of God; and what of this is denied by the Church, to belong to the Incumbents Office? |
A27068 | Those ● ld Nonconformists that did so, are no presidents to 〈 ◊ 〉; If they halted and were lame, must we be so? |
A27068 | VVho can observe his example whom he never saw nor know? |
A27068 | Was all the wonderful works of redemption wrought for no visible society after one or two hundred years, in which a few persecuted ones were visible? |
A27068 | Was this church like a grain of Mustard seed in its growth? |
A27068 | What difference but conceit and consent? |
A27068 | What if Rebaptizing prove a Sin? |
A27068 | What if a Law said, All people shall worship God, not because the Scripture commandeth it, but because the State commands it? |
A27068 | What if all this be true? |
A27068 | What if it be poor men or women that can not buy all these books? |
A27068 | What if the Covenant descri ● ed by your Client,( to obey none but Christ, in matters belonging to Worship) prove a Sin? |
A27068 | What if the Law should say, The Pastoral Office is not of Divine Right, but humane, must the office therefore be renounced? |
A27068 | What is meant by[ among themselves?] |
A27068 | What is meant by[ changing it, de facto?] |
A27068 | What is the Reason? |
A27068 | What is this to the Text? |
A27068 | What? |
A27068 | Where hath the Gospel extensively much prospered where Princes and Rulers were not Christians? |
A27068 | Whether I and such other do well or ill in that communion we hold with the Parish Churches? |
A27068 | Whether there be not a sort of Diocesan Prelacy, which nulleth them? |
A27068 | Who Laboureth among them most in the several parishes, publickly and privately? |
A27068 | Who are most among them? |
A27068 | Who doth the Law most require it of? |
A27068 | Who doth the law appoint to warn every one in the Church, from house to house, and night and day,& c.? |
A27068 | Who is it that preacheth most for the Conversion of the rest, Atheists, Sadduces, Infidels, Hereticks, Bruitists, and impious ones? |
A27068 | Who most admonisheth them? |
A27068 | Whom doth the Law require to do more in feeding and guiding the flock? |
A27068 | Why may it not suffice to know Christs Law, and to profess to obey it, and to do nothing against it willingly? |
A27068 | Will you have no Communion with Presbyterians? |
A27068 | Would not almost all rather turn Papists, than believe this? |
A27068 | Would this make it unlawful to worship God? |
A27068 | Yea, how many seldom read a Chapter, but only preach and pray, and sometime administer the Sacrament? |
A27068 | Yea, is it not the great thing that we accuse the superconformists for? |
A27068 | [ Is he not by Communion in the Sacarment of Baptisme made a member? |
A27068 | and are we indeed of the same mind? |
A27068 | and how shall they have time to study them, or capacity to understand them, when we can hardly get them to learn a Catechism and anderstand it? |
A27068 | and is it the Diocesan or they that use it by baptizing? |
A27068 | and shall we now justifie them and say as they( tho not on the same Reason, but for a far smaller difference)? |
A27068 | and what if they can not read? |
A27068 | and whether had he then lived, he should have separated from all the Churches on earth? |
A27068 | and who else is capable of doing this in Parishes that have multitudes of ungodly persons? |
A27068 | are they all guilty of all these, and such others? |
A27068 | nor no Independents, whose Churches having many Pastors and Elders, no one exerciseth( no nor hath) more than part of the power? |
A27068 | or is it not rather that neighbour Christians that see each other, so live in peace? |
A27068 | or is it the Incumbents? |
A27068 | or on parish Priests? |
A27068 | or to go to any Drunkard, Fornicator, Railer, and to tell him from God of h ● s sin and danger, and exhort and command him to repent and amend? |
A27068 | part, to receive all the offerings of the Communicants, and all the tythes and first fruits,& c. Who doth this most? |
A27068 | receiving the Lords Supper another symbol? |
A27068 | that is a stranger to them? |
A27068 | that never saw them, or the Incumbent that layeth out all his Study and Time on them? |
A27068 | that never seeth the most, nor ever preacheth to one Flock of many? |
A27068 | was this communion more lawful or laudable than with honest parish Ministers in the Liturgy? |
A27068 | what greater omission or defect is there in many Parish- Churches? |
A27068 | whom shall they get to read them all? |
A27068 | — How comes it to pass, that the Church hath power of excommunicating any Person, but by vertue of Incorporation, which she hath by the same Law? |
A27068 | — Is he not by Communion in the Sacrament of baptism made a Member? |
A64984 | & c. Is it not rebellion against him then to be refusers? |
A64984 | And amongst those who are civilized and outwardly reformed, are there none among you, who are secretly wicked? |
A64984 | And chuse poverty when you may have Jewels to enrich you? |
A64984 | And did we think that these extraordinary motions and affections in one so ancient did presage his near approaching death? |
A64984 | And do you not then need to repent? |
A64984 | And eternal misery, when by repentance you may attain everlasting happiness? |
A64984 | And hath not God left off calling you now by his mouth? |
A64984 | And have not you also a course that should be finished with joy, as well as we? |
A64984 | And is he gone ● ndeed? |
A64984 | And is it not base ingratitude to deny Christ, Angels and Ministers this joy, by refusing obstinately to be saved? |
A64984 | And is not this loss the greatest to such? |
A64984 | And shall your restoration or your preservation, be but a reservation unto more dreadful destruction? |
A64984 | And that when he went ● way, he was going and was so near unto his long ● ome? |
A64984 | And what do you think now to do? |
A64984 | And what have we that we have not received? |
A64984 | And what is our building, but to bring home Souls? |
A64984 | And what moveth you to all this? |
A64984 | And whence and on what account he m ● expect it? |
A64984 | And who is it that will have the worst of this at last? |
A64984 | And will not Gods invitations, Gods promises, and none of the rich Gospel priveledges move you to repent? |
A64984 | And will you lose, will you wilfully lose all this? |
A64984 | And will you not allow us the joy of your Salvation? |
A64984 | And yet what a name hath he left behind him even in that Church, whose Prelates thus dispised him? |
A64984 | Are none saved but Puritans and Precisians? |
A64984 | Are there no hypocrites among you, painted Sepulchres, rotten at heart, whatever your outward show and profession of Religion is? |
A64984 | Are there no intemperate persons, no drunkards? |
A64984 | Are there no profane persons among you, no swearers? |
A64984 | Are there no unclean persons, no adulterers? |
A64984 | Are there no unrighteous persons, none that are fraudulent in their dealings? |
A64984 | Are there not many grosly ignorant persons with you, notwithstanding all his Catechizing and instructions? |
A64984 | Are there not many openly vicious persons, notwithstanding all his reproofs and admonitions? |
A64984 | Are there not too many among you who mind your Bodies, but neglect your Souls? |
A64984 | Are you at a point with the flattering world, and fleshly lusts? |
A64984 | Are you resolved to fill up the measure of your sin, with your days; and will you deafen your ears against all Gods calls unto the last? |
A64984 | Are you resolved to finish your course as you have begun it? |
A64984 | Are you sure to live till you are grown men, and grown women? |
A64984 | Are you too young to repent, when you are not too young to sin? |
A64984 | Are you willing, if I tell you, to do your part? |
A64984 | Because God doth not speedily execute his vengeance upon you, shall your hearts be fully set in you to do evil? |
A64984 | Besides, are you sure to repent, should your life be continued? |
A64984 | But doth God allow you to procrastinate your Repentance? |
A64984 | But if it be by Preaching that you hope to be instructed, converted and saved, what Preaching is it? |
A64984 | But you will say, is there no hope? |
A64984 | Can any one hear and believe this, that hath the heart of a man, and not be awakened presently to make hast? |
A64984 | Can you be content that God should banish you from his presence for ever, and punish you amongst Devils in Hell? |
A64984 | Can you dwell with devouring fire? |
A64984 | Can you endure to be tormented and that to eternity, and that with extremity of torments? |
A64984 | Can you inhabit everlasting burnings? |
A64984 | Can you think to live here always? |
A64984 | Christ rejoiceth in it, and all good men that know it rejoyce in it, and shall not the Minister of it then rejoyce? |
A64984 | Could you wish that he were alive again? |
A64984 | Dare you appear before God without his Spirit, and image, and without the wedding garment of sincere holiness, and so without a part in Christ? |
A64984 | Dare you die in an unholy unpardoned state? |
A64984 | Dare you go out of the World more foolishly than the unjust steward out of his stewardship, before you have provided another habitation? |
A64984 | Did a damned wretch cry, Send Lazarus to warn my brethren, that they come not to this place of torments? |
A64984 | Did we think that the Lord would so soon gather him and receive him to himself, and say to him, pray no more for this people? |
A64984 | Did we think that the last Sermon which he Preached before his last ● ourney, would be the last Sermon which we should have and hear from him? |
A64984 | Do n''t you feel your strength to decay? |
A64984 | Do not your Silver hairs mind you of the loosing of the silver cord? |
A64984 | Do they perswade you to any thing dishonest or to your hurt? |
A64984 | Do they think that God is in their debt? |
A64984 | Do you ever hope to be saved, or not? |
A64984 | Do you look for better than such as you have lost? |
A64984 | Do you love other mens Souls more than your own? |
A64984 | Do you not see now, how much you are concerned, that you further our joyful finishing of our course? |
A64984 | Doth God give you a dispensation to sin, so long as you are so young? |
A64984 | Doth not God call for your first fruits? |
A64984 | Fire from Heaven declared the wrath of God against Sodom and Gomorrah: and will you yet have a more dreadful fire? |
A64984 | First, Are there not many unconverted persons, whom your Minister after all his Soul- travel and pains in Preaching hath left unconverted? |
A64984 | First, What a loss is it to lose the blessing and fruit of a holy Ministry? |
A64984 | God will not condemn us for your sins? |
A64984 | Hath not God work enough for you to do although you begin never so young? |
A64984 | Have not others of you escaped great perils and dangers, and been wonderfully preserved when your lives were in great jeopardy? |
A64984 | Have you no Harbingers and forerunners of death with you? |
A64984 | Have you not original sin and actual sin to repent of? |
A64984 | He is not worthy to be called a man, that will deny any joy or good to his neighbour, which doth no hurt to himself or others? |
A64984 | He lately Preached to us of praying without ceasing, and did we think he would so soon cease to pray himself? |
A64984 | If it be a duty to repent hereafter, is it not now as much your duty? |
A64984 | If it be difficult to repent when your sins are fewer, will not the difficulty encrease when your sins are encreased and grown more numerous? |
A64984 | If it be difficult to repent when your sins are lesser, will not the difficulty greaten when your sins are greatned and grown more heinous? |
A64984 | If it be good to repent at all, is it not good to repent whilst you are young? |
A64984 | If without it, what reason have you for such hopes, when God hath made this his ordinary means? |
A64984 | If yea, do you hope to be saved without Preaching, or by it? |
A64984 | Is Repentance in your own power? |
A64984 | Is it desirable to continue Children of the Devil, when you may be made the Children of God? |
A64984 | Is it good to have God your enemy, when you may be reconciled? |
A64984 | Is it good to keep wounds in your consciences when you may have them healed? |
A64984 | Is it not easier to repent when you have less sin and more time, than when you shall have less time and more sin? |
A64984 | Is not a twig more easily bended, than a grown Tree? |
A64984 | Is not our hedg in danger of falling, when so many stakes are pluckt up? |
A64984 | Is not the Bishop of Winchester and London, Gardiner and Boner now dead, as well as the Martyrs whom they burnt? |
A64984 | Is there any Repentance in Heaven for their labours or sufferings for Christ on Earth? |
A64984 | Is there not a Register in your bosomes of sins committed in your childhood, together with your more late and more aggiavated youthful transgressions? |
A64984 | Moreover, can there be a more fit, a more reasonable time for your Repentance, than whilst you are young? |
A64984 | No more hear his voice? |
A64984 | O how dear will impenitent sinners pay for all the tears and groans which now they do constrain from their compassionate Teachers? |
A64984 | O ● who would not be ambitious of being so kep ● from Honour? |
A64984 | On ● saith, I will never hear him more: and another saith, shall I be Catechized like a Boy? |
A64984 | Or can your last Repentance, if it were easily attainable, be so pleasing and acceptable unto God, as Repentance in your youth? |
A64984 | Or is smaller and weaker remedies like to cure you, that to the last despised greater? |
A64984 | Or rather shall not Gods patience and goodness lead you to Repentance? |
A64984 | Or who hath given to God that it may be repaid him? |
A64984 | Or will you defer again this work of Repentance until a fitter season? |
A64984 | Our blessings go, and our curse continue? |
A64984 | Our builders go, and our destroyers remain? |
A64984 | Pity your Wise who is like to be left a Widow, and what a sorrowful Widow is she like to be? |
A64984 | Shall our Ministers go, and our sins stay? |
A64984 | Shall our glory depart, and our shame abide? |
A64984 | Shall the Devil, and the flesh, and the World ravish your Virgin- affections, and then will you repent? |
A64984 | Shall the Physician mourn over his dying patient, and ● hall the patient think it nothing to him? |
A64984 | Shall the threatnings of a weak man have more force with you, than the threatnings of the great and glorious Iehovah who made Heaven and Earth? |
A64984 | Shall we no more see his face? |
A64984 | Shall you not receive according to what you have done in the body? |
A64984 | Sinners, what do you resolve upon? |
A64984 | That being so ripe for Heaven, he would not be long out of Heaven, in the Suburbs of which he seem''d to be, when he was in his Devotions? |
A64984 | Thirdly, And why do you take on you to be Christians, and no more regard the interest of the Church of Christ? |
A64984 | Thou fool, this night shall they require thy Soul, and then whose are the things that thou hast provided? |
A64984 | To save a life this year, this month, this day, that may be gone on sadder terms the next, and certainly will ere long be gone? |
A64984 | Watch to prevent sin, so far as you have ● ower; say not with Cain, Am I my brothers ● eeper? |
A64984 | Wh ● joy it is that is here meant? |
A64984 | Wha ● wr ● stlings at the Throne of grace? |
A64984 | What fears di ● there then arise in your hearts? |
A64984 | What is their Ministry but the seeking of your Salvation? |
A64984 | What sweeter food or business for our minds, than such things as these? |
A64984 | What, do you grieve that your Minister is so highly promoted? |
A64984 | When he went forth ● f my doors, did I think he would never set foot ● ithin them again? |
A64984 | Whence and on what accounts may we expect this Ioy? |
A64984 | Will he appear in the Pulpit and Preach to us no more? |
A64984 | Will he pray amongst us, and pray for us, no more? |
A64984 | Will it not be very hard to remove long contracted hardness? |
A64984 | Will not God call you to an account for all your sins? |
A64984 | Will not long custom in sin added to your natural propensity, add to the difficulty of your repentance? |
A64984 | Will not sin be more easily mortified whilst it is more weak, than when by long continuance it hath gathered more strength? |
A64984 | Will not your Repentance now be with the less difficulty? |
A64984 | Will not your reward ● e the greater, if you add further work to what you have done already? |
A64984 | Will you chuse to dishonour God, and damn your own Souls rather than to repent of your sins? |
A64984 | Will you mourn for him, as if he were lost or annihilated? |
A64984 | Will you prefer raggs before robes to cover you? |
A64984 | Will you pursue your lusts to the burning lake? |
A64984 | Will you return evil for good? |
A64984 | Will you slight pardoning mercy, and chuse rather to abide under guilt? |
A64984 | Will your Hell be no more ● ainful than our compassion? |
A64984 | Would not you argue and ● ead with them, to forbear the laying such ● ● olent hands upon themselves? |
A64984 | Would you have more particular counsel how to finish your course with joy? |
A64984 | You have one foot in the grave, and don''t you sometimes think of Death? |
A64984 | Your course will soon be finished: shall it be with joy, or the beginning of everlasting misery? |
A64984 | and our houses of tumbling, when so many pillars are thrown down? |
A64984 | have the best of Physicians, and be yet unhealed? |
A64984 | none who are covetous, under the reigning power of that sin which is inconsistent with the power of godliness? |
A64984 | that a great storm is near when he houseth so many of his servants? |
A64984 | that he was come now very nigh to the end of his race? |
A64984 | what gain is it to save an estate a little while, that at death must certainly be forsaken? |
A64984 | who is sufficient for these things? |
A64984 | who make provision for your flesh, but neglect your Salvation? |
A64984 | will a dead nurse give warm and vital milk? |
A64984 | will you hold fast sin still? |
A64984 | ● s your unconverted, unpardoned, miserable ● ate, and your danger of Damnation, more ● o us than to you? |
A26976 | All doth not demonstrate to me, which some call demonstration; I perceive you note not at all what is my doubt, and how can you then solve it? |
A26976 | An Atome of Earth or Water, is not annihilated; and why should we suspect, that a Spiritual Substance is? |
A26976 | And I am not sure that God can not make material atomes so continued a matter as that no Creature can discerp them: is it any contradiction? |
A26976 | And as to the incapacity of misery which you talk of, why should you think it more hereafter than here? |
A26976 | And do you think that Life and Immateriality are Synonyma''s? |
A26976 | And do you think, that his love and goodness hath no answerable effect? |
A26976 | And do you think, that this doth not more advance Souls than abase them? |
A26976 | And how can I tell that God that can make many out of one, can not make many into one, and unite and divide them as well as Matter? |
A26976 | And how far their Authority extendeth? |
A26976 | And if he can, how know I that he doth not? |
A26976 | And if so, will you yet say, that[ this is a distinction which distinguisheth nothing?] |
A26976 | And if the Parts were 20 or 100 Miles a sunder, is it still one undivided Soul? |
A26976 | And if they be two, why are they not separable? |
A26976 | And if they may be all in one point, and so be all one, may they not be divided again? |
A26976 | And if you feign God to be partible, is it not more honour and joy to be a part of God, who is joy it self, than to be a created Soul? |
A26976 | And is Subtilty the difference? |
A26976 | And is it many, or one concentred Soul? |
A26976 | And is not the form the notifying difference? |
A26976 | And is this the necessary Form of a Spirit? |
A26976 | And the rather, because to avoid offending you, I will now pass by any further Answer to your Queries, Whether Adam''s Soul was a Legion? |
A26976 | And then would that one have many unifying Spirits, or but one? |
A26976 | And those that I excuse do but call it Materia metaphysica: And what''s the meaning of Materia Logica? |
A26976 | And what Bodies did all the Souls that have ever since been in the World animate, when there was no human Body but Adam''s and Eve''s? |
A26976 | And what happiness then can we hope for, more than a deliverance from the present calamity? |
A26976 | And what if another think just so of them,( or not so grosly) and yet call them Matter, will the word undoe him? |
A26976 | And what''s a Contradiction, if this be not, to say, I do that which I can not do, or I can do that which I have no power to do? |
A26976 | And when do you think they were all made? |
A26976 | And when in your Writings shall I find satisfaction, into how much space one Spirit may be extended, and into how little it may be contracted? |
A26976 | And whom do they believe? |
A26976 | And why doth the Church believe? |
A26976 | And why should we fear Perfection? |
A26976 | And will you judg of our Religion by its enemies? |
A26976 | And yet what is more certain than that there is Substance, Entity, and God? |
A26976 | Are all men that can not define, therefore void of all knowledg? |
A26976 | Are they not as fleshly, and worldly, and false, and perjured, and malicious, and hurtful, and pernicious to others and themselves? |
A26976 | But I think there are subordinate particular Moving Principles besides the Universal? |
A26976 | But are not all these as gaeat difficulties to the Pope and his Prelates, as they are to us? |
A26976 | But can you excuse your self from what you call a Mischief, when you intimate that Substantia purissima may be material? |
A26976 | But did you take this for any shew of a proof? |
A26976 | But do you know nothing but by Definitions? |
A26976 | But do you verily believe that Penetrability or Subtilty is a sufficient, efficient, or Formal Cause of Vitality, Perception, Appetite? |
A26976 | But how? |
A26976 | But if the world have but one soul, what mean you by its concentring in the Carcass? |
A26976 | But is not that a Monad and Atome which is one and indivisible? |
A26976 | But now these Hypocrites, obscure it to themselves and other unbelievers, and tempt men to say, Are not Christans as bad as Heathens? |
A26976 | But what is such a mental Spirit? |
A26976 | But what mean you by[ the active Principles concentration in its own body]? |
A26976 | But what''s your proof? |
A26976 | But you would know what''s meant by a spirit, whether all that is not evident to sense? |
A26976 | Can Apes and Monkeys do all this? |
A26976 | Can he not separate them when he will? |
A26976 | Can not God make a Spirit? |
A26976 | Can not he make many Stars into one? |
A26976 | Can you conjecture what Animal''s they were before they were men''s? |
A26976 | Could any of us have said more whom you contradict? |
A26976 | Did you think that there is no Perception but sensitive or Intellectual? |
A26976 | Do not you by that intimation do more to assert the Materiality of Spirits than ever I did? |
A26976 | Do they not shew his glory? |
A26976 | Do you believe, that each one hath now one individual Soul, or not? |
A26976 | Do you know what material signifieth? |
A26976 | Do you not here make Spirits material? |
A26976 | Do you not take Cartesius materia subtilis, if not globuli aetherei, to be invisible,& not alwaies appearing in Candles or Fire- sticks? |
A26976 | Do you really believe, that there is a God? |
A26976 | Do you take the word[ Penetrable] actively, or passively, or both? |
A26976 | Do you think any dust, or drop, any Atome of Earth or Water, loseth any thing of it self, by its union with the rest? |
A26976 | Do you think that only the Anima Mundi animateth all Animals? |
A26976 | Do you think, that any Atome loseth its individuation? |
A26976 | Do you think, that passive matter doth as much manifest Gods Perfection, and honour the Efficient, as vital and Intellectual Spirits? |
A26976 | Doth God give them Laws to know and keep as moral free- agents? |
A26976 | Doth acting, without Power to act, cause the Power? |
A26976 | Doth he fundamentally err that saith Corpus humanum organicum is not forma hominis? |
A26976 | Doth not God know every dust, and every drop from the rest? |
A26976 | Doth not all the world difference Virtue and Vice, moral good and evil? |
A26976 | Even who before twice told us that we know not the intimate essence of things, but the Attributes? |
A26976 | For before you can believe that Jesus is the Christ, and his Word true, how many impossibilities have you to believe? |
A26976 | Hath he not imprinted his Perfections in some measure, in his Works? |
A26976 | How can a Principle of Motion spring from Matter? |
A26976 | How come they to be Male and Female? |
A26976 | How many Score Volumes have told it us? |
A26976 | I ask before, can all the Created Spirits in Heaven and Earth be in the same Atom of matter? |
A26976 | I meddle not for you, nor against you: What''s this to me? |
A26976 | If Aliud, how prove you it to be there, rather than elsewhere? |
A26976 | If God made as many substantial individual Souls, as men, is there any thing in Nature or Scripture, which thteatneth the loss of Individuation? |
A26976 | If Spirits be unified as the Bodies which they animate, can not God make many Bodies into one? |
A26976 | If an Atom be matter, is it Discerpible or not? |
A26976 | If it be a pure Spirit, I would then know, what is meant by Spirit? |
A26976 | If it be, is it a pure Spirit, or meerly material? |
A26976 | If it be, why should you think that it is never separated? |
A26976 | If it can subsist without a Body, who can say that it doth not? |
A26976 | If not here, why should you think that their misery hereafter will be ever the less, or more tolerable for your conceit, that they are parts of God? |
A26976 | If not what body is it that you can imagine so ready to receive it without any interposition? |
A26976 | If not, how can we lose that which we never had? |
A26976 | If not, how is this the Form of Matter? |
A26976 | If separable, why not separated? |
A26976 | If so, Are they one Soul there, or innumerable in one man? |
A26976 | If so, are they then absent from all other place? |
A26976 | If therefore all men have but one Soul, why is it not you that are in pain or joy, when any, or all others are so? |
A26976 | If to part of the world, 〈 ◊ 〉 each Vortex, Sun, Star,& c. have a dist ● ● ● individuate superior Soul, why not 〈 ◊ 〉 so inferiors? |
A26976 | If you mean, That it''s but an accident, that''s disprov''d before; what accident is it? |
A26976 | Is Substantia purissima material? |
A26976 | Is Subtilty and Crassitude the difference between Spiritual Substance and Material in their Consistency? |
A26976 | Is an Angel only in a Candle or hot Iron,& c. Is motion, yea motion of sulphureous particles their vehicle? |
A26976 | Is an Atom Matter? |
A26976 | Is any Substance lost? |
A26976 | Is any thing annihilated when the Candle goeth out? |
A26976 | Is it a real Being? |
A26976 | Is it because they believe? |
A26976 | Is it not Earth and Water still? |
A26976 | Is it only the difference of an Instrument in Tune, and out of Tune? |
A26976 | Is it really different from the Body? |
A26976 | Is it separable from a Body or not? |
A26976 | Is it themselves? |
A26976 | Is it therefore a real Being, really different from the Body, and able to be without it? |
A26976 | Is not the Haecceity, as they call it, continued? |
A26976 | Is not this a just progress? |
A26976 | Is the common light and sense of Nature no Evidence? |
A26976 | Is the simple Nature changed? |
A26976 | Is the universal Soul there fallen asleep, or imprisoned in a Grave, or what is it? |
A26976 | Is there not in the Creature a communicative disposition to cause their like? |
A26976 | Is this a Priviledg to boast of? |
A26976 | May not one be ignorant where he can not chuse? |
A26976 | Or by an extrinsick Agent only; Did you think that you had answered these? |
A26976 | Or that Life and Penetrable and Indiscerpible, are Synonyma''s? |
A26976 | Or that the Form of a Spirit is a Compound of such and so many Heterogeneals? |
A26976 | Or that the puritas vel subtilitas materiae is not forma ● gnis vel solis, but only the materiae dispositio? |
A26976 | Quoad notationem nominis distinct from use ▪ doth not materia and substantia signify the same fundamental conceptus? |
A26976 | That you Act vitall, understand and will? |
A26976 | There is Oneness in Matter( in Atoms at least) and doth Penetrability make Subtilty? |
A26976 | Therefore Belief is first, and is not caused by that which followeth it? |
A26976 | These are now my doubts; but are they the fruits of Diligence? |
A26976 | Those Conceptions are the cause of words and actions: and is there no cause of those Conceptions? |
A26976 | To which I said,[ Do you not here make Spirits material?] |
A26976 | To your question, Is it material or immaterial?] |
A26976 | What a jumble is here, when the true definition of a Spirit is obvious? |
A26976 | What abundance of Authors could I name you, yea, have I oft named, besides Dr. Crakenthorp? |
A26976 | What dry Philosophy is this of Fire? |
A26976 | What happiness then can we hope for more than deliverance from the present calamity; or what misery are we capable of, more than is common to all? |
A26976 | What if I said,[ The Chandler made a Candle of Tallow, and then by another kindled it]? |
A26976 | What is it now but the aptitude of the Name that we speak of? |
A26976 | What need you the Power, if you can act without it? |
A26976 | What should hinder it? |
A26976 | What''s here wanting to a Definition? |
A26976 | What''s the matter? |
A26976 | When I still tell you that it is only analogically that Souls may be called Fire, did you fairly to pretend the contrary? |
A26976 | When the dust of the Carcass is scattered, is the Soul concentred in every atome, or but in one? |
A26976 | When will you shew us an Ape or a Monkey, that was ever brought to the Acts or Habits before mentioned of Men? |
A26976 | Whereas were the Soul such as represented, who could rob it of its Endowments? |
A26976 | Who can trust the Honesty of such men, as multitudes of Popes, Prelates, and Priests have been? |
A26976 | Why are you not answerable for the Crimes of every Thief, if all be one? |
A26976 | Why did the knees prevent me? |
A26976 | Why do not Beasts speak as well as Men? |
A26976 | Why do they not try the same triek about all the difficulties in Philosophy, Astronomy, Physick, History,& c? |
A26976 | Why should you think he would not? |
A26976 | Will they stick at a Lye, that stick not at Blood, or any wickedness? |
A26976 | Will this make a Captive bear his Captivity, or a Malefactor his Death? |
A26976 | Yea, of those that were born deaf and dumb? |
A26976 | Yet you say before,[ What can be more plain?] |
A26976 | You add, how easie it would have been to you to believe as the Church believeth, and not to have immerged your self in these difficulties? |
A26976 | You add,[ How shall I know the difference between the highest degree of materials, and lowest of immaterials? |
A26976 | You ask what are the Formae quae se multiplicant? |
A26976 | You ask, Is it able to be without it? |
A26976 | and am I thus rewarded for not believing at a common rate? |
A26976 | and if he can, how you know that he doth not? |
A26976 | and so of Intellection and Volition? |
A26976 | and whether or no all things invisible, and imperceptable to Sense, are accounted such? |
A26976 | and yet knew God and his Law, and how to name the Creatures, and how to dress and keep the Garden? |
A26976 | is not the heat divided with the Iron? |
A26976 | or is every Spirit ubiquitary? |
A26976 | or is it not? |
A26976 | or is it not? |
A26976 | or what misery are we eapable of, more than what is common to all? |
A26976 | or what? |
A26976 | or why the breasts, that I should suck? |
A26976 | or[ a man made an house of Bricks, and cemented them with Mortar,& c.]? |
A26976 | was that number of Souls expanded or contracted? |
A26976 | what a change by Venery? |
A26976 | what becomes of the many Souls in the Chast? |
A26976 | where and when did I say any such thing? |
A26976 | whether I omit it: But is a bare Negative Essential to a just definition here? |
A26976 | which else was Adam''s Soul? |
A26976 | why did I not give up the ghost when I came out of the belly? |
A26976 | will you thence prove, That he made a Candle burning without fire, or the House without Mortar? |
A42198 | 1. and thou that sa ● … 〈 ◊ 〉 a m ● … n 〈 ◊ 〉 not 〈 ◊ 〉, 〈 ◊ 〉 thou ● … teal? |
A42198 | 1. i. e. makes them that are given to it mo ● … k and ab ● … se one another; and what then thereupon fol ● … owes? |
A42198 | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,& c. And Abimelech''s speech is for this, What have I offended thee, that thou hast brought on me, and on my Kingdom a great sin? |
A42198 | 22. what worse thing had our Saviour to say of those wicked Jews that would have murdered him then this, Ye are of your Father the Devil? |
A42198 | 23. what immediately sollows? |
A42198 | 3. and then what follows? |
A42198 | 4 Again, In regard of our Goods; what a waste and dilapidation does this sin often make of great Estates? |
A42198 | 5? |
A42198 | A bywo ● … d and common talk, more than they thi ● … k( excep ● … t ● … eir Ears glow very 〈 ◊ 〉) in every ones mouth? |
A42198 | A ● … d 〈 ◊ 〉 love ye your Goods? |
A42198 | Abundance of Idlen ● … ss; why was Egisthus an Adulterer? |
A42198 | Ag ● … in, in regard of our good Name, what a wrong and injury do we to that? |
A42198 | And how just is the Drunkard the Devils Child in this property, in rejoyeing in evil, and at the perversion if he can work it of any? |
A42198 | And indeed who are they that could even eat the Godly with Salt, but they that are still drinking the Sack with the Sugar? |
A42198 | And therefore is it not better to drain that overflowing that overflows our selves, than that which overflows our Ground? |
A42198 | And theresore Basil being asked, what might be a Sovereign Remedy of Lu ● …? |
A42198 | And they drank win ● …, i. e. healthed and c ● … roused it ap ● … ce: and what th ● … n sollow ● …? |
A42198 | And they that are enemies to all good men, are not they therefore called the seed of the Serpent? |
A42198 | And wh ● … t 〈 ◊ 〉 addes he? |
A42198 | And what does the A ● … ostle make to u ● … her in Chambering and Wantonness, but Rioting and Drunkenness? |
A42198 | And what is that which ushers in, and m ● … kes way for all those abominable 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A42198 | And what is this but hastened homicid? |
A42198 | And what presently addes he? |
A42198 | And who are they that thus do? |
A42198 | And who but the Drunkards were they that made Songs, spightsul Songs of good David? |
A42198 | And why think they it strange that B ● … lievers run not with them, to the same Sensuality? |
A42198 | And yet if the Apostle James his godly Heart had not taken it for a great sin, would he in such strange precise manner have forbid it? |
A42198 | Are Whoredom and Adultery such grievous sins, and such Judgments also attending them? |
A42198 | Augustine and Ambrose his, Ego non sum ego, that have Recovered? |
A42198 | Ay ● … but m ● … y not some Drunk ● … ds ● … ven 〈 ◊ 〉 Drunkards turn and repent? |
A42198 | Aye, that is to be fea ● … d too well; and would ye leave a 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 ● … pon th ● … m? |
A42198 | B ● … t how far more Incongruous and unfitting, that the Sons and Daughters of God should Marry with the Sons and Daughters of B ● … lial? |
A42198 | Be not you of them that draw back unto Perdition; I often think of that word, Will ye also go away? |
A42198 | But what is this, to be a son or daughter of Belial? |
A42198 | Come say the Drunkards, let us enjoy the good things that are present; and then what go they on unto? |
A42198 | D ● … es 〈 ◊ 〉 the 〈 ◊ 〉 of God 〈 ◊ 〉 th ● … s ● … y 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 g ● … ven to Aaron? |
A42198 | D ● … sire ye therefore to find Com ● … ort in a Married estate? |
A42198 | Do not Healths and whole ones, and putting the cup to the Nose, and down the Throat or down the Neck, look for it, and will you not do me right? |
A42198 | Does not the Spirit of God that knowes well enough their Spirits, bring the habituated Drunkards in, saying thus? |
A42198 | Experience shews it, for how brave, and fine, and gallant people, do those in that condition think themselves to be? |
A42198 | Fourthly, Are Drunkards the very Children of the Devil? |
A42198 | How can I commit this great wickedness, and sin against God? |
A42198 | How many are overgrown with this Disease and do not know it? |
A42198 | Is it not better to have a little ground drowned among us, than our selves? |
A42198 | Is not the Glass often- times thou drinkest in born up with a couple, and sometimes with a cluster of Snakes or Serpents? |
A42198 | Is the Drunkard,( he or she) no other than a very Son or Daughter of Belial, a very Child of the Devil? |
A42198 | Know ye not that your bodies are the members of C ● … rist? |
A42198 | Love ye th ● … m? |
A42198 | Not a Venial sin, a pidling peccadillo, but a grand sin; And how can I commit this great wickedness and sin against God? |
A42198 | Not accused of riot; And what immediately followes? |
A42198 | Now the D ● … unkard how just the Fat ● … er; Son is he in this respect? |
A42198 | Now the Spirit of the World is but an unfit thing to judge of the things of God by: what can blind men judge of Colours? |
A42198 | Now w ● … o such an impure, unclean, dirty, ● … asty sinner, as the Drunk ● … rd? |
A42198 | Of Correction: will God, with whom there is no bolstering out with closeness, be the Judge of all Who ● … mongers and Adulterers? |
A42198 | Or d ● … sire ye Faithfulness in Consort or Yoak- fellow, forsaking all others to keep onely to your selves, so long as you both shall Live? |
A42198 | Or if they seem not altogether to Neglect it, yet who more irreverent performers of it when they come to Church? |
A42198 | Q ● … amdiu, Quamdiu? |
A42198 | Secondly, Are Drunkards the very Children of the Devil? |
A42198 | Secondly, Of I ● … struction: Will God be the Judge,& c? |
A42198 | So Swearing, vain ordinary swearing, what Fault is it counted? |
A42198 | So for Drunkenness, Know ye not th ● … t our bodi ● … s are Temples,& c? |
A42198 | So marvellous, That is Saul among the Prophets, was no such marvel, as is such and such a Drunkard now among the Saints? |
A42198 | Then how great reason have we to be dehorted from this Vice, which makes us no other than the very Children of the Devil? |
A42198 | Then wha ● … profits it any to eat and wipe their mouths, and say, they have done no wickedness? |
A42198 | They ● … at and drank; and what then? |
A42198 | Think what s ● … llowship hath the Cup of the S ● … n of God wi ● … h the Cup of the Sons of B ● … lial? |
A42198 | Thirdly, Are Drunkards the very Children of the Devil? |
A42198 | Thus Joseph, wh ● … n his Mistress tempted him to lie with her, How can ● …, says he, commit this great wickedness, and so sin against God? |
A42198 | To Morr ● … w, an ● … to Morrow, why n ● … t now, why not this hour should there be an end of my uncle ● … nness? |
A42198 | To contemn Everlasting Joy and Sweetness ● … or a meer Now, a Moment of painted pleasure? |
A42198 | VVhat have I Offended thee, that thou hast brought on me, and on my Kingdom a great sin? |
A42198 | VVho 〈 ◊ 〉 therefore that desires the blessing of C ● … ldren, and blessed Children, which is more? |
A42198 | Were it not an odious thing if the Drunkard should come and lay his filthy stomach in the Temple of God? |
A42198 | What but a very god does the Glutton and the Drunk ● … rd m ● … ke their bellies? |
A42198 | What greater Un- ingenuousness than to despise a Paradice of all Delights, for one forbidden Apple? |
A42198 | What peals and ch ● … nges of Oaths does he ring, in the eares of God and man? |
A42198 | What profits the Adulterer to wait for the twi- light? |
A42198 | What voll ● … s of Oath ● …, thumping Oaths does he then discharge and let fly against the face of Heaven? |
A42198 | What worse thing had the Apostle Paul to call that wicked Elimas by, one full of all mischief and Enemy of all Righteousness, than this? |
A42198 | Where almo ● … t is the p ● … rty who is noted for one of these vices, that is not noted sor the other als ● …? |
A42198 | Where the p ● … rty th ● … t is 〈 ◊ 〉 for a m ● … n of lu ● … t, but he is no ● … ed for a m ● … n of drink too? |
A42198 | Which bites Health out of his body, for who within a while have commonly less Health, than they that still are drinking Healths? |
A42198 | Who cou ● … d well endure it that Christs very picture should be so di ● … honourably paint ● … d? |
A42198 | Who greater Profaners therefore of Gods Sabbaths and Neglecters of his Worship than these kind of men? |
A42198 | Why did the Knees 〈 ◊ 〉 them, or the Breast that they should 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A42198 | Why died they not in the Womb, or why did not they give up the Ghost when they came out of the B ● … lly? |
A42198 | Will his Name and Religion be better thought of? |
A42198 | Will the Lord get Honour by this Action? |
A42198 | Will this be a Conviction or an hardning to the Enemy? |
A42198 | Will this be a stumbling- block and an O ● … fence to others, or does it tend to Edi ● … ie, Confirm and Build up others? |
A42198 | Will this draw and sweeten the Spiri ● … s of Men to Religion, or comfort them in it? |
A42198 | [ 48], 154,[ 1] p. Printed for Francis Smith..., London:[ 1675?] |
A42198 | and drink or a Challenge; do not these and many such tempting provocations witness this? |
A42198 | and pluck the good meat out of his mouth, and the good drink from his Nose, as knowing they are too good to be so vainly abused by him? |
A42198 | and therefore David, what art or trick did he use, the likeliest as in his Judgement to make Uriah go and lie with his wife? |
A42198 | and therefore though such an one should 〈 ◊ 〉 to pun ● … sh 〈 ◊ 〉, 〈 ◊ 〉 h ● … pe he should 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A42198 | and what no Mettal, no Manhood? |
A42198 | and yet what more common in prosessed Harlotry than this? |
A42198 | at the three Taverns; So for their Satanship and utter Enemi ● … ship to all good men, is not that of the second of Wisdom for it? |
A42198 | brave, brisk, fl ● … sh, gallant,& c. and what then? |
A42198 | but ● … ither they sh ● … ll carry that wo ● … k of darkness in such darkness and concealment, th ● … t who shall know them? |
A42198 | how is he in this 〈 ◊ 〉 the image of God, and not rat ● … er the image of an Ass, a blo ● … kish Ass? |
A42198 | is this to care how to please the Wise? |
A42198 | thou th ● … t sor 〈 ◊ 〉 s ● … ttest 〈 ◊ 〉 by the heels, 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 through 〈 ◊ 〉 trip up thy own he ● … ls? |
A42198 | thou th ● … t 〈 ◊ 〉 anoth ● … r, 〈 ◊ 〉 thou 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A42198 | wh ● … t n ● … stiness in his very outwards? |
A42198 | when ● … ll I a ● … e? |
A42198 | will not a wise Father do this? |
A42198 | will not the Devil also, think you, contend for his Brats, and not lose one of them, but Hosse and be gone? |
A42198 | ● … hom shall he teach knowled ● …? |
A42198 | ● … n that when Paul Preached 〈 ◊ 〉 an ● … 〈 ◊ 〉 Resurrection, w ● … o are they that 〈 ◊ 〉 h ● … m? |
A42198 | ● … nd alter Rioting and Drunk ● … nness, what sollows present ● … y but 〈 ◊ 〉 and 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A42198 | 〈 ◊ 〉 Egisthus quare sit 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A42198 | 〈 ◊ 〉 I then take the Members of 〈 ◊ 〉 a ● … d m ● … ke them the m ● … mbers of an 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A65821 | ( and if they do not, they shall never be saved; for none are saved, but they inherit the Kingdom of God) Who are they? |
A65821 | ( saith the Apostle) don''t you? |
A65821 | 1, Hath God cast off his people? |
A65821 | 9,) that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? |
A65821 | Ai, but( my Brethren) what are seven thousand to a whole Kingdom? |
A65821 | And I pray you scoffers, is it not as easie a thing to conceive how God should burn the world, as drown the world? |
A65821 | And did they believe? |
A65821 | And he laid hold on the Dragon that old Serpent, which is the Devil and Satan, and bound him: Where? |
A65821 | And if you say why do I give you this notice? |
A65821 | And is it not so now? |
A65821 | And then again God tells us of the Resurrection of our bodies; How is it possible it should be so? |
A65821 | And were not you desperately blind and foolish, you would do so too? |
A65821 | And what''s here meant by Spirit? |
A65821 | And what''s the prison? |
A65821 | And when you were hungry, and had no bread, did God ever rain bread down from heaven to you? |
A65821 | Are you blind? |
A65821 | Are you weak? |
A65821 | Are you yet in your sins? |
A65821 | As God said of the old world: Here is a wicked people, What shall I do with them? |
A65821 | Being put to death in the flesh: Who put to death? |
A65821 | But did not you hear it read, and had it preached to you? |
A65821 | But did they do so? |
A65821 | But for thee to go on in sin, and reject pardon when offered: What canst thou say for thy self? |
A65821 | But for thee to live in a wicked ungodly way, and take no thought for eternity: what wilt thou do sinner, when death comes and awakens thee? |
A65821 | But one Elijah in a whole Ten Tribes? |
A65821 | But was God loth to drown them? |
A65821 | But what became of the whole Nation? |
A65821 | But what did they do with it? |
A65821 | But what did they do? |
A65821 | But why, you poor sinners, why do not you believe that God is in good earnest now? |
A65821 | But( pray) what became of the other Tribes that were under the tutilage and government of the Posterity of David? |
A65821 | But, saith he, if you are ignorant of this one thing; you are wilfully ignorant: VVhat is that? |
A65821 | By which Spirit? |
A65821 | By whom? |
A65821 | Did God ever bring ten Plagues upon your enemies to deliver you from them? |
A65821 | Did God ever in a danger that you have been in, make a Sea for you to pass through, and your life saved? |
A65821 | Did not God drown them all? |
A65821 | Disobedient to whom? |
A65821 | Do you think that they do n''t deserve your thoughts? |
A65821 | Does God give thee abundance of the glory of the earth? |
A65821 | Every human body hath his Tenant: What''s that? |
A65821 | First, What are these Prisoners? |
A65821 | For what reason do I think that by Spirit is here meant the Holy Ghost? |
A65821 | Fourthly, What''s the Crime( having discoursed of the Prison)? |
A65821 | Fourthly, What''s the cause of their commitment? |
A65821 | Had not you a Bible? |
A65821 | Hast thou a mind to have Grace? |
A65821 | Hast thou a mind to have the Spirit of Grace and Supplication? |
A65821 | Have you no time to think of them? |
A65821 | Here is a talk of his coming, but here is no Christ come; when will this Trumpet sound? |
A65821 | Here now was some ground for them to plead, and yet though God did this; did he love Israel so, that he would not destroy them? |
A65821 | How does Baptism save us? |
A65821 | How few do repent upon their seeming profession of repentance, and believing? |
A65821 | How few of you have been a hammering upon this Ark? |
A65821 | How few reform their lives? |
A65821 | How long? |
A65821 | How wilt thou do it? |
A65821 | I will not let them go, saith Pharaoh; why who is your God, that I should obey him? |
A65821 | I''le tell thee, thou scoffer, and walker after thy lusts, Dost thou not know that God once drowned the world? |
A65821 | If any should enquire why, or who call''d me to interpose these few rude lines? |
A65821 | If you ask where he had Money to do all this, he lived frugally himself? |
A65821 | In the opening of it, there are these things I shall speak to; First, What are these Prisoners? |
A65821 | In whom? |
A65821 | Is it the office of Charity to further mens delusion and damnation? |
A65821 | Is there not a merciful God that would forgive and forget all that is past, if you would even now to day fully, without any hesitation, return to him? |
A65821 | Look in the glass of the Christian Church, and then tell me, how many among us are like to be saved? |
A65821 | Nay, when thou hast provoked him to wrath more than the Devil, dost thou think he will spare thee, and not an Angel? |
A65821 | No, No, you will believe none? |
A65821 | No? |
A65821 | No? |
A65821 | None of them? |
A65821 | Now, Secondly, Thou hast deserv''d it, sinner; thy crime deserves it: What is the crime? |
A65821 | O sinners, What will you do? |
A65821 | Put to death in the flesh, What''s that? |
A65821 | Put to death in the flesh, by whom? |
A65821 | Put to death in the flesh, by whom? |
A65821 | Say you so? |
A65821 | Secondly, How are these Prisoners carried away to their Prison? |
A65821 | Secondly, What is it to be quickned by the Spirit? |
A65821 | Sirs, This, this is the case of multitudes of our neighbours; and what would you have a Minister to do in such a case? |
A65821 | Sirs, tell us as Christians, or at least as men, what faith, and reason, and humane love command us to do in such a case? |
A65821 | So here Christ died as to the flesh, but he was made alive: that is, he was raised from the dead: Raised, How was he raised? |
A65821 | So then the rich man is in hell; how so? |
A65821 | That you believe not God that speaks by his Son, and by his Prophets? |
A65821 | The Question will be, What is the reason that men will not believe? |
A65821 | Thirdly, What is this preaching? |
A65821 | Thirdly, What''s this prison? |
A65821 | Thou art his Creature? |
A65821 | To whom? |
A65821 | To whom? |
A65821 | Turn ye, turn ye, why will you die? |
A65821 | VVell, and thus they argue, saying, Where is the promise of his coming? |
A65821 | VVhat do they scoff at? |
A65821 | VVhat if God appeareth upon a Mount, and speaks signally, will you believe now? |
A65821 | VVhy do these men scoff at it? |
A65821 | VVhy, do you think there are any such here, that are of such a mind? |
A65821 | VVhy, what are they? |
A65821 | VVill you believe by a Christ? |
A65821 | We will begin at the First: First, What it is to be put to death in the flesh? |
A65821 | Well now, say you, What shall we do? |
A65821 | Well, But what shall we say of our selves? |
A65821 | Well, but is it just for God to damn me thus eternally in a prison, because I will not repent of my sin? |
A65821 | Well, but whether must I go? |
A65821 | Well, what became of these Ten Tribes? |
A65821 | Well; but say you, Did Christ by his Spirit preach to them after they went to Hell? |
A65821 | Were they damned for that? |
A65821 | Wh ● ●''s the Crime? |
A65821 | What Spirit is here? |
A65821 | What a whole Kingdom of ten Tribes, and but seven thousand saved? |
A65821 | What a whole world drowned, and but eight saved? |
A65821 | What a wonderful blessing was this, for the great God to marry himself to a people? |
A65821 | What are they to compare to those many hundred thousands that are in England? |
A65821 | What are they? |
A65821 | What are, Fourthly, These Spirits that are in prison? |
A65821 | What became of them? |
A65821 | What can you say? |
A65821 | What did he Preach? |
A65821 | What did these people do? |
A65821 | What does death do? |
A65821 | What does the Apostle understand hereby? |
A65821 | What had God done for this people? |
A65821 | What had they said in his ears? |
A65821 | What have they done with the Prophets of the Lord? |
A65821 | What if God may have seven thousand in England to keep Covenant with God? |
A65821 | What if God speaks by a Moses, will you believe? |
A65821 | What if God speaks by a Noah, will you believe? |
A65821 | What if twenty thousand? |
A65821 | What immediately? |
A65821 | What is it damns me then? |
A65821 | What is the reason of all this? |
A65821 | What is the reason of it, why wo nt you believe? |
A65821 | What is the reason that you do not believe? |
A65821 | What man that really was in his wits, and did believe a Hell, would venture upon those sins that will certainly bring him thither? |
A65821 | What now became of this People? |
A65821 | What then? |
A65821 | What then? |
A65821 | What was dead? |
A65821 | What was it then? |
A65821 | What was made alive? |
A65821 | What will you do? |
A65821 | What would you have God say more to encourage penitent sinners? |
A65821 | What''s that prison? |
A65821 | What''s the meaning of quickned? |
A65821 | What, but a remnant in the time of Christ? |
A65821 | What, but eight persons believe, in a whole world? |
A65821 | What, but one Elijah? |
A65821 | What, that great Kingdom of Judah cut off, and but a few of them saved? |
A65821 | What, will none lay down a ransome for me? |
A65821 | What,( I pray) was the old World? |
A65821 | What? |
A65821 | When God brought Israel out of Egypt, did God ever work such Miracles for you, as he did for them? |
A65821 | When you are in Prison, if it be for debt, How can you get out? |
A65821 | When you were thirsty, did God ever bring water out of a Rock to quench your thirst? |
A65821 | When? |
A65821 | Which were they? |
A65821 | Who can speak too plainly or too earnestly to such? |
A65821 | Who went? |
A65821 | Why I did not believe my sin would bring me there? |
A65821 | Why should he not( notwithstanding all his goodness) damn such a rebel as thou art, as well as damn an Angel? |
A65821 | Why were no more saved? |
A65821 | Why what did the rest do? |
A65821 | Why what did the rest do? |
A65821 | Why what were their sins? |
A65821 | Why, What are your poor bodies( for which you labour so much), in a compare to your souls? |
A65821 | Why, but how many of this Kingdom did so? |
A65821 | Why, did Christ the Son of God preach to the old world before he came in the flesh? |
A65821 | Why, did not Ministers tell you so? |
A65821 | Why, did not Moses and the Prophets tell thee so? |
A65821 | Why, did the Spirit appear in visible shape? |
A65821 | Why, if God spared not an Angel, dost thou think he will spare a man or woman? |
A65821 | Why, say you, Why is Hell call''d a prison( for these poor spirits to be laid in)? |
A65821 | Why, what do they do? |
A65821 | Why, what is there in Hell that answers to these Racks, Presses, Irons, Chains? |
A65821 | Why, what was the benefit that the old World had? |
A65821 | Why, what were the sins that they were guilty of, that Noah called them to repent of? |
A65821 | Why, will you promise that we shall grow richer by it? |
A65821 | Why? |
A65821 | Will you believe the Apostles? |
A65821 | Will you believe us that speak? |
A65821 | Will you believe? |
A65821 | Will you imitate the old world, or imitate Noah? |
A65821 | Will you not be made clean? |
A65821 | Would you have us let them quietly go to hell, for fear of displeasing them or others, or seeming to be unmannerly or uncivil with them? |
A65821 | Would you have us stand by in silence, and look on, while Satan thus leadeth thousands to perdition? |
A65821 | Would you have us whisper to men that must be awakened or undone for ever, whom thunder and lightening will not awake? |
A65821 | Yes, How? |
A65821 | a making this Ark? |
A65821 | and do you presume still? |
A65821 | and had not God bowels to them, as well as to you? |
A65821 | and had not they Children as well as you? |
A65821 | and they are sent of Christ to tell you so? |
A65821 | could you have thought you should live so long, and not be cut down like dead trees for the fire of Tophet? |
A65821 | for how few do believe what we preach? |
A65821 | hath not God said he will? |
A65821 | hath not Moses and the Prophets told you so? |
A65821 | how simply dost thou cheat thy self? |
A65821 | should not you find a father that would fall upon your neck, and kiss you, as well as the prodigal did? |
A65821 | should we flatter and smooth them up in an unholy life, what thanks would they give us for this ere long, when they find themselves in hell? |
A65821 | so sinners, you go on in sin, why do you so? |
A65821 | these that had the Oracles, Covenant, and Promises among them? |
A65821 | to perswade men to cease loving their lusts, which will else damn their souls? |
A65821 | were not they men and women as you? |
A65821 | what do you do? |
A65821 | when shall it once be? |
A65821 | who can believe this, when we can hardly live fifty or threescore years, How can we be alive for ever and ever? |
A65821 | why what is he? |
A65821 | would not his bosom be open to receive you? |
A26903 | ( But how rare is that?) |
A26903 | 7 Do you know the difference between a man and a Bruit? |
A26903 | And O that I knew how to make you sensible how dreadful a thing it is to die in an unholy state, and in the guilt of any unpardoned sin? |
A26903 | And Princes became wise and pious, whose Parents had been blind or impious? |
A26903 | And are not your abused Souls immortal? |
A26903 | And can any thing yet hinder you from pardon and Salvation, if you your selves were but truly willing? |
A26903 | And can you believe, that God would set you on that which would do you hurt, and that the Devil is your Friend, and would save you from him? |
A26903 | And can you give him too much Love and Obedience? |
A26903 | And can you think you shall become the shame of the Church, and the troublers of the Land, and that God will not trouble you for it? |
A26903 | And do you know the difference between certainty and uncertainty in so great a case? |
A26903 | And doth not this shew that you chuse and follow that which is worse, when your Consciences tell you it is worse? |
A26903 | And every year, day and hour of your lives hath its proper work: And how will you answer for it? |
A26903 | And greater love than to our dearest friend, he being infinitely good and Love it self? |
A26903 | And how are the Children like to be bred, that have such a Father? |
A26903 | And how doleful a case is it, that all the Care, and Love, and Labour of your Parents, Masters, and Teachers should be lost upon you? |
A26903 | And how hardly do they learn that, which they have no delight in? |
A26903 | And how many particular Cities& Towns are grown ignorant and malignant, which in former times were famous for Religion? |
A26903 | And how will you use, that which you have not? |
A26903 | And if you believe that there is a Governing God, do you not believe that he hath Governing Laws or notifications of his Will? |
A26903 | And is it a small thing to you, that you are all this while doing hurt to others? |
A26903 | And is it not a joy to you to be your Parents joy? |
A26903 | And is it not near, as well as sure? |
A26903 | And is not a lazy backwardness to Duty, better cured by spiritual health, than pleased with idleness and sleep? |
A26903 | And is not the itch of Lust better cured than scratch''d? |
A26903 | And is such Obedience to be refused? |
A26903 | And is there any hurt in all this? |
A26903 | And on the other side, when Piety hath successively as a River kept its course, what a blessing hath it proved? |
A26903 | And the Amalekites Children all destroyed, and the posterity of the Infidel Jews forsaken ▪ the Curse coming on them and on their Children? |
A26903 | And what is a forsaken soul, but a miserable Slave of Satan? |
A26903 | And what need have all of a Sanctifier, and of his holy word, and of all the holy means of Grace? |
A26903 | And what remedy is there for this? |
A26903 | And where then is the pleasure of Pride, and Appetite, and Lust? |
A26903 | And who is the gainer by all this? |
A26903 | And why choose you not now that which you know you shall deeply wish that you had chosen? |
A26903 | And will not God make a greater difference, who better knoweth it than man? |
A26903 | And will you not so much as consider of the reasons that should make you willing, when Heaven or Hell must be the consequence? |
A26903 | And would you wilfully and obstinately be the ruine of both? |
A26903 | And yet what to do with these self- suspenders we know not? |
A26903 | Are Infidels safe, because false hearted Christians perish? |
A26903 | Are they still Members of the Churches, or are they not? |
A26903 | Are you capable of no better things than these? |
A26903 | Are you not fully convinced, that there is a God of Infinite Power, Knowledge, and Goodness, who is the perfect Governour of all the World? |
A26903 | Are you not here mortal? |
A26903 | Are you not willing? |
A26903 | Are you so mad as to forget this? |
A26903 | At least, if you have no such wishes now, do you not think that you shall wish it at Death or Judgment? |
A26903 | Can he not be merciful, and yet be holy and just? |
A26903 | Can not you so long borrow the use of your reason, as to think seriously whither you must go next? |
A26903 | Can one that is in a house on fire, or falln into the Sea, make too much haste to be delivered? |
A26903 | Can one too soon be out of so dreadful a state? |
A26903 | Can you expect that he should love any man better than himself? |
A26903 | Can you give him any thing that he wants, or do you want what he hath to give? |
A26903 | Can you live an hour without him? |
A26903 | Dare you deliberately resolve or bargain to take your fleshly pleasures for your part, instead of all your hopes of Heaven? |
A26903 | Did any thing make you so bad as you are, but your own choice and doing? |
A26903 | Did he come to cherish sin, or to destroy it, and save us from it? |
A26903 | Did you ever hear a man so mad as to say, I am sure there is no Heaven or Hell for Souls? |
A26903 | Do not your Consciences now tell you, that you shall shortly wish, O that I had hated sinful pleasure? |
A26903 | Do you know what his service is? |
A26903 | Do you never think when the small Pox or a Feaver hath taken away one of your Companions, whither it is that his Soul is gone? |
A26903 | Do you not certainly know that you must die? |
A26903 | Do you not know that you are not Beasts but Men? |
A26903 | Do you not know what Flesh is, and what a Grave is? |
A26903 | Do you not think they are in a far safer and better case than you? |
A26903 | Do you not think what is within that skin? |
A26903 | Do you not think what it is to lye rotting in a Grave and turn to Earth? |
A26903 | Do you think you have lived as if you truly loved your selves, or as self destroyers? |
A26903 | Doth Christ from Heaven teach you an earthly or a heavenly choice and life? |
A26903 | Doth it not concern you? |
A26903 | Doth not God know his own mercy better than you do? |
A26903 | Doth not God threaten punishment to the third and fourth Generation of them that hate him, and to visit the iniquity of the Fathers on the Children? |
A26903 | Every day offereth you more and more mercies; and will you despise and lose them? |
A26903 | For a filthy Lust or fleshly Pleasure, to sell a God, a Saviour, a Comforter, a Soul, a Heaven, and all your hopes? |
A26903 | God hath made all this their great Duty for your good; and will you despise God and them, and wilfully for nothing reject it all? |
A26903 | Had a Serpent stung them, or a Bear devoured them, they had done but according to their Nature: But was it natural in you to further their damnation? |
A26903 | Hath God put any exception against you in his word? |
A26903 | Hath all my tender, natural Love so sad an issue? |
A26903 | Hath not Nature deeply taught all the World, to make a great difference between Virtue and Vice, between Moral good and evil? |
A26903 | Hath not Nature taught you to love your selves? |
A26903 | Have you no natural love to your Parents or your Country? |
A26903 | Have you reason, and can you live as if these were not worth the thinking on? |
A26903 | Have you your Wit for nothing but to taste the sweetness of Drink or Lust, which is as pleasant to a Dog or Swine as to you? |
A26903 | Here all stops: And must it stop at this? |
A26903 | How eagerly and prosperously do men study that which they strongly love? |
A26903 | How fast do Daies and Years roll on? |
A26903 | How many thousand die young, that promised themselves longer pleasure in sin, and Repentance after it? |
A26903 | How many years study doth it usually require? |
A26903 | How quickly may a Fever, a Pleurisie, an Impostume, or one of a thousand Accidents, turn your Bodies to corruption? |
A26903 | How quickly may a vein break, and cold seize on your head and lungs, and turn to an uncurable Consumption? |
A26903 | How swift is time? |
A26903 | How tenderly do most men bear a reproof, or to hear that they do amiss? |
A26903 | I further ask you, Have you not some secret purposes hereafter to repent? |
A26903 | If not, alas, how far are you from it? |
A26903 | If the good and bad do not greatly differ, what makes all mankind, even the sons of pride, to be so impatient of being called or accounted bad? |
A26903 | If there be a Heaven, is Drunkenness or Sobriety liker to be the way to it? |
A26903 | Is feeling, remediless feeling easier than believing God in time? |
A26903 | Is he worthy of the help of Grace, that will not use his natural Reason? |
A26903 | Is it God that needeth you, or you that need him? |
A26903 | Is it not for your own need, and your own good, that he requireth your service? |
A26903 | Is it not so to be out of the holy Covenant? |
A26903 | Is it therefore wise or safe to avoid him? |
A26903 | Is not Mercy and Salvation proclaimed and offered to you as freely as to them? |
A26903 | Is not an uncertain Hell to be more feared and avoided ▪ than the forsaking of these certain trifles and deceits? |
A26903 | Is not the feaverish and dropsie thirst after Drink, and Wealth, and Honour, better cured than pleased to the sinners death? |
A26903 | Is the King unmerciful if he make use of Jails and Gallows for Malefactors? |
A26903 | Is there nothing within you that grudgeth at your folly, and threateneth you for being wilfully besides your selves? |
A26903 | Is this a light matter to you? |
A26903 | May not you next think that the Devils may be saved? |
A26903 | Must I breed up a Child for Hell, and see him miserable for ever? |
A26903 | Must a seed of Serpents come after them? |
A26903 | Nor be indifferent whether you go to Heaven or Hell? |
A26903 | Now he is as you are, a slave of sin, and an heir of Hell: Was this it that you vowed him for to God in Baptism? |
A26903 | O how madly have we despised our Salvation? |
A26903 | O how quickly shall we all be at our race and Warfares end? |
A26903 | O that I had spent my short life in obeying and trusting God? |
A26903 | O that I were in the case of those that mortified the Flesh, and lived to God, and laid not up their Treasure on Earth, but in Heaven? |
A26903 | O what a doleful difference is there between that great part of the World now, and what it was 1400 or 1000 years ago? |
A26903 | O what a sight is it to see a man go merry and laughing towards damnation, and make a jeast of his own undoing? |
A26903 | O what a thing is a blind mind, and a dead and hardened heart? |
A26903 | O what need had mankind of a Saviour? |
A26903 | O what should a man do that pittieth blind and wilful sinners, to make them willing of their own recovery? |
A26903 | Or be kept without him from pain, misery, or death? |
A26903 | Or can you think that you need to fear being losers by him, and that your faithful Duty should be in vain? |
A26903 | Or should we live like Bruits that have none such? |
A26903 | Or so bad as not to believe it? |
A26903 | Should it be a hard thing to persuade a man in his wits to love himself, and to think what is good or hurtful to himself, especially for everlasting? |
A26903 | Surely you can not be willing to be damned? |
A26903 | To be called a wicked man, a lyar, a perjured man, a knave, how ill is it taken by all mankind? |
A26903 | To find them love you not only as their Children, but as Gods? |
A26903 | To see him at the brink of Hell, and will not believe it? |
A26903 | Was it to serve the Flesh, the World, and the Devil, against our God, our Saviour, and our sanctifier? |
A26903 | Were they for the fleshly or the spiritual life? |
A26903 | Were they for the love of pleasures more than God? |
A26903 | What a befooling thing is fleshly Lust? |
A26903 | What a change was in England by Queen Mary''s Reign? |
A26903 | What did Nature teach you to love more, than your selves and your Children? |
A26903 | What do you with Understandings if you will not use them? |
A26903 | What else do we study for, preach for, live for, long for, suffer for in our Work? |
A26903 | What good will you desire, if not everlasting Joy and Glory? |
A26903 | What haste makes Time? |
A26903 | What if God be a consuming fire to those that draw near him in unrepented heinous sin? |
A26903 | What if Princes, or Lords, or learned men, should be your tempters by words or example? |
A26903 | What if breaking your Vows and Covenant be damnable? |
A26903 | What if your Parents were bad, and bred you up amiss? |
A26903 | What if your old companions tempt you? |
A26903 | What shall I think of this at last? |
A26903 | What should your believing Friends do to save you? |
A26903 | What then shall we do with these self- murthering, ungodly men? |
A26903 | What will you use them for, if not for your own good, and to avoid misery? |
A26903 | What wisdom and diligence in Teachers? |
A26903 | Which do you think were the wiser and better men, and worthy to be believed and followed? |
A26903 | Which side doth the Scripture speak for? |
A26903 | Which side is Christ, and his Prophets, and Apostles on? |
A26903 | Which way went all the Saints whose names are now honoured? |
A26903 | Who but your selves keep you from lamenting your sin, and flying to Christ, and begging Mercy, and giving your selves to God? |
A26903 | Who ever was an able Lawyer, Physician, or Philosopher, without long and hard Study? |
A26903 | Who more hate the good and persecute them? |
A26903 | Who plot against us but home bred sinners? |
A26903 | Why are you Men if you will live like Dogs? |
A26903 | Why else do they so earnestly contend, that they may live under the Teachers which they count the best? |
A26903 | Will Hereticks teach men the Truth as well as the Orthodox; why then is there such a stir made against Hereticks in the World? |
A26903 | Will he suffer much for God or his Country, who will sell Heaven for nothing? |
A26903 | Will it be my comfort, or my torment? |
A26903 | Will not the fire burn you, or the Sea drown you, if you can but run into it drunk or winking? |
A26903 | Will you appear before the Judge of Souls, to give up your great account before you think of it, and how it must be done? |
A26903 | Will you bestow your thoughts all the day and year upon you know not what, nor why, and not one hour soberly think of such important things as these? |
A26903 | Will you go out of the World before you well think whither you must go? |
A26903 | Will you not say with Balaam, Let me die the death of the Righteous, and let my last end be like his? |
A26903 | Will your not believing it make void the Justice and the Law of God, and save you from that Hell, which only believing could have saved you from? |
A26903 | You would not have done as the mad Idolaters, that offered their Children in fire to Moloch: And will you offer them by sin to Satan and to Hell? |
A26903 | and a Souldier for Satan against Christ? |
A26903 | and all worse than cast away on filth and folly? |
A26903 | and how forlorn is your case? |
A26903 | and love to be accounted wise and good? |
A26903 | and refuse that which your Consciences tell you is best? |
A26903 | and that we owe this God more full, more absolute, exact Obedience, than can be due to any Prince on Earth? |
A26903 | and what hurt will you avoid, if not Hell fire? |
A26903 | how quickly will it come? |
A26903 | much more which they hate, and their very natures are against? |
A26903 | must I breed up a Child to become an Enemy to the Church of God, into which he was baptized? |
A26903 | that have reason given them to know, and love, and serve their Maker? |
A26903 | thinks a believing Father and Mother, have I brought thee into the World for this? |
A26903 | were it not for the name of a pompous Christian- Church, how plain an instance would Rome be of the same Degeneracy? |
A26903 | what heynous sin had he escaped; Had he made a Covenant with his eyes, as Iob did, what wounds had he prevented? |
A26903 | what is a man that liveth not in the use of Reason? |
A26903 | what men would one hours being in heaven make us, or one clear sight of it? |
A26964 | ''T is an hard question, whether all Children in England be regularly admitted( as you may expound the words) by Baptism into the Church, yea or not? |
A26964 | A little before the black Bartholomew, one of the foresaid in discourse enquired of me, what mine intentions were? |
A26964 | And are not Children in our days received by Baptism in the same way, and upon the same terms and conditions, as from the beginning? |
A26964 | And now why tarriest thou? |
A26964 | And why will you lay a charge upon these, of doing what in reason ye can not but be convinced they are not in a condition to perform? |
A26964 | But I forbear to bring in any new Objections, only give me leave to ask you this question, How you can fairly wave this dispute? |
A26964 | But I would gladly be informed how, and in what manner this evil Spirit fled? |
A26964 | But how? |
A26964 | But if you will thus incroach presumptuously from your own head and heart, why am I bound to give credit unto you? |
A26964 | But in the interim I wonder how the Bride and the Bridegroom could abide by it? |
A26964 | But in the interim, are not they guilty of Sacriledge? |
A26964 | But is nothing more expected from them? |
A26964 | But is the devil capable of smelling? |
A26964 | But is this a reason, say you, to break Communion with a Church, let any man judge? |
A26964 | But it is now more than high time to be serious; Has therefore a Spirit flesh and bones? |
A26964 | But now are the Condemned ever known to escape from the Hangman, after he has Noosed them in the Halter, and actually trussed them up? |
A26964 | But now is this their chief study and intendment? |
A26964 | But now shall their Babes upon this account be denyed their birth- right? |
A26964 | But now shall these be thought worthy to be the Embassadours of God, and the Representatives of Christ? |
A26964 | But now who are their under- shepherds? |
A26964 | But now who shall presume to tell, as to hic& nunc( when this and another Child is baptized) concerning the certain concurrence of both these? |
A26964 | But quo warranto? |
A26964 | But though the good man slept with his eyes open, how could two sparrows joyn by a Conspiracy against him to make him blind? |
A26964 | But what do you imagine, the Declaration binds the Minister only to say over those Prayers, and not to pray them, or pray in them? |
A26964 | But what is it not enough that we are removed ab Officio& Beneficio, unless also we be further persecuted and torn in pieces by the Secular Powers? |
A26964 | But whether? |
A26964 | But who is the man? |
A26964 | But why? |
A26964 | But why? |
A26964 | But you say, Can not we approve of the use of a Book, or approve of a Book, as lawful to be used, as well as assent and consent to the use of it? |
A26964 | But you say, Nothing of Apocrypha is appointed for Sundays; whoever laid this to your charge? |
A26964 | But you would know of me, whether nothing be undoubtedly certain by Scripture, but what we have an express Text for? |
A26964 | But, say you, Why, or how then can there be any publick Sanctions in the world? |
A26964 | Can these things be brought to pass, and effected, while God- children are down upon their knees, and ask their Godfathers blessing? |
A26964 | Could he not have gone and opened the window for a little while, and relieved himself with the fresh and sweet Air? |
A26964 | Death hath eased you of many of us already; and can not you quietly expect a little longer, and we shall all retire, and trouble you no more? |
A26964 | Did you ever confer with them in private about the greatness and momentousness of their Font- ingagements? |
A26964 | Did you ever in good earnest, either in the Pulpit; or out of the Pulpit, mind them of their duty? |
A26964 | Do you think it lawful and expedient to stile every one of that sort, dear brother? |
A26964 | For what is a Sacrament? |
A26964 | From whence? |
A26964 | Has a Spirit corporal parts, and bodily members? |
A26964 | Here you say, I am a man of Conscience, that is of no Conscience at all, of a tender Conscience, that is cauteriz''d: But why? |
A26964 | Honey and Milk are under your tongue; yet what is the reason of all this rancour and bitterness? |
A26964 | How can we know the Law- makers intended, or will admit of any such a Subaudi? |
A26964 | How does covetousness blind our eyes? |
A26964 | How does evil custom impose upon our reason and judgment? |
A26964 | How know you that the Church supposeth these words, Regularly admitted by Baptism? |
A26964 | How quickly might the said person reply upon you, to your shame and confusion, in this or the like manner? |
A26964 | How shall the Children of these, how scrupulous soever they be,( as you avouch they may) come to their Christendom? |
A26964 | I answer, Be it so; but withall, pray let us see what ponderous Reasons you can bring for it? |
A26964 | I answer, What is this to the matter before us? |
A26964 | I profess I am at my wits end here, as in several other places, to find what you drive at; how then shall I fence my self against you? |
A26964 | If he slept, how came it to pass that his eyes were open? |
A26964 | Is any man found guilty of a much less hainous Indictment, and yet discharged without giving Sureties for his behaviour? |
A26964 | Is it not, according to the Catechism, an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace? |
A26964 | Is not the sign of the Cross an outward and visible sign? |
A26964 | Is this as a Conjunction of equality, or onely of aliquality? |
A26964 | Now you would know of the scrupulous Non- conformist, whether this rule be given to the publick Officers of the Church, or to the private Christian? |
A26964 | Of whom? |
A26964 | Or can you express your hope before God, even sure and certain hope, of his resting in Christ, and eternal happiness? |
A26964 | Quis tale legendo Temperet a risu? |
A26964 | Shall a pitiful order of the Church in Comparison over- rule and obtain? |
A26964 | Shall it be heeded and observed by the Minister more than the Regia placita of heaven it self? |
A26964 | Shall not their Cattel, and their substance, and every beast of theirs be ours? |
A26964 | Shall they be denyed a priviledge so excellent and so desirable? |
A26964 | Shall this Christian assembly believe what is read unto them, or shall they not believe? |
A26964 | Shall we obey God or Man? |
A26964 | So vast a difference there is between being in Communion where faults are( for what Church is free from them?) |
A26964 | Then the young man said to the Angel, to what use is the heart, the liver, and Gall of the fish? |
A26964 | These are a swarming multitude; and yet shall all these undoubtedly be saved? |
A26964 | Though they are young, do they not make a number in computation? |
A26964 | Well, he comes, and on the contrary sees their Children strong and well; ought he now to baptize them according to the private or publick form? |
A26964 | What as the Parables of our Saviour do? |
A26964 | What can be said more, if the most Holy Martyr, or confessour, if Stephen again were carried to his Burial? |
A26964 | What must a 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉, our utter ruine and destruction be the Epilogue? |
A26964 | What need the Cross, if washing with water could sufficiently bring about its own ends? |
A26964 | What now will you answer to his Questions? |
A26964 | What reverence and honour can be paid to such persons by the people; which is most absolutely necessary for the success of their Ministry? |
A26964 | What signal service do such great Doctors, and Pluralists perform unto God and his Church? |
A26964 | What strong convincing, and Cogent Motives of credence wrought you into this perswasion, and brought you into this mind? |
A26964 | What therefore of help and remedy shall be found in the Case? |
A26964 | What think you of S. Coleman the Traytor? |
A26964 | What would you have him to do? |
A26964 | What, Sir, do you think what you speak? |
A26964 | What, are we in earnest, or in jest? |
A26964 | What, shall the Fables of Apochrypha beavouched, to serve for instruction, comfort and reproof as the Parables of our Saviour do? |
A26964 | What? |
A26964 | What? |
A26964 | Where speaking of those who were saved in Noah''s Ark by water, he subjoyns, the like Figure whereunto even Baptism doth also now save us? |
A26964 | Wherefore I would humbly and peaceably enquire of you, Whether Conformists may not be Sacrilegious as well as Non- conformists? |
A26964 | Who knows? |
A26964 | Who, in this case, shall set the limits, and say, Ne plus ultra? |
A26964 | Why should you presume to set such limits, to put such a close Hedge about the Rubrick, when it lies open, and in common? |
A26964 | Why this rather then any of the rest, which are altogether Ejusdem farinae of the same leven? |
A26964 | You say, And what is more required? |
A26964 | You say, Is not Baptism said to be for remission of sins? |
A26964 | You say, My reasoning against the Cross is so trifling, that you wonder with what face any can urge it? |
A26964 | You should have rather queried, About what this rule is given? |
A26964 | You therefore deserve a rebuke from your Superiours for your presumptuous intrusion; who made you of their counsel? |
A26964 | and particularly to be instructed concerning the nature and quality of those solemn baptismal promises made on their behalf? |
A26964 | and so what have I to do with the Curiosity and intreague of the Kalendar in this particular? |
A26964 | and whither I would conform, yea or not? |
A26964 | are we not abased sufficiently? |
A26964 | but with what forehead could you utter it? |
A26964 | can meerly taking holy Orders, take away the name and thing of what we call Sacriledge? |
A26964 | can the putting on a canonical habit, put off all guilt and demerit in that kind? |
A26964 | can these be supposed to have a throne in the hearts of the people, and to speak unto them with all authority and power? |
A26964 | can these rule over the house of God? |
A26964 | can you then with a good Conscience say, God in great mercy hath taken his Soul to himself? |
A26964 | could he not have provided himself with a counter- charm? |
A26964 | could he not have smelled out before hand what was consulted against him? |
A26964 | could he not( as I have said) have stopped his nose, and kept out the stink? |
A26964 | do ye envy our being and breathing amongst you? |
A26964 | do you understand the Kings mind, and his true intent and meaning herein? |
A26964 | does the Declaration only bind you to rehearse the Articles of it before the Congregation, and not believe them your self? |
A26964 | has a devil the Organs of carnal sense? |
A26964 | has he a palat to taste, as man tasteth? |
A26964 | has he any word of Exhortation to stir them up to pay their Vows, and bind their Consciences to a due care and faithfulness herein? |
A26964 | has he ears to hear, as man heareth? |
A26964 | has he eyes to see, as man seeth? |
A26964 | has he fingers to touch, as man toucheth? |
A26964 | have ye not all in possession? |
A26964 | have you kill''d him? |
A26964 | how can you think it not incumbent upon you to make good the Assertion, and justifie what you have assented and consented unto? |
A26964 | how do they answer the trust reposed in them? |
A26964 | how good and faithful are they in their Steward- ship? |
A26964 | is it odious and detestable Sacriledge in one person, and not in another? |
A26964 | is this the end of the Church''s bounty and liberality? |
A26964 | is this their constant imploy and negotiation? |
A26964 | or do they not require continuance of time, with a continual care and diligence? |
A26964 | or else to ruine and undo us, by turning us out a grazing in the woful wild of extreme poverty and want? |
A26964 | or govern my Faith and Practice by your private Sentiments? |
A26964 | or has he a nose to smel, as man smelleth? |
A26964 | or whether he changed himself into the shape of any Fowl, Stork, long wing''d Hawk or the like? |
A26964 | or why they should not be mentioned and appointed in Scripture? |
A26964 | should this be your answer? |
A26964 | that is, not to believe what he prays for to be right, and according to Gods holy will and pleasure? |
A26964 | that they are all undoubtedly saved? |
A26964 | what can more fully declare the love and favour of God towards it, and place it in Heaven? |
A26964 | what does not the Declaration bind you to believe it your self, as well as to teach it the Children? |
A26964 | what evil in it? |
A26964 | what is our desert? |
A26964 | what is the cause ye can not speak peaceably of us, or to us? |
A26964 | what need therefore of that grave Item and Caution? |
A26964 | what our provocation? |
A26964 | what think you of the Creed? |
A26964 | what use do they make of their vast incomes and salaries? |
A26964 | what, is all meer formality without reality? |
A26964 | whether by any Magical operation he changed himself into the shape of any Beast, Dromedary, Gray- hound or the like? |
A26964 | who can discover this inscrutable secret? |
A26964 | who hath authorized the Church to lay such a charge upon any, besides the Parents upon whom God has laid it? |
A26964 | who hath known the mind of God herein? |
A26964 | who shall take on them to determine which is most intelligible, and most edifying to the people, either the holy Scripture, or any other writings? |
A26964 | who their substitutes, and under- feeders? |
A26964 | why should you insert the word use, which they never inserted? |
A26964 | why should you leave out, or put in any thing without their Commission? |
A26964 | why was it not enjoyned us thus to declare, I assent and consent to the use and doing of all and every thing contained,& c? |
A26964 | why was not this word openly mentioned and expressed? |
A26964 | will you bring in your last mentioned plea, and think to help and justifie your self by it? |
A26847 | ( Saith God) Who is this, that darkneth wisdom, with words without knowledge? |
A26847 | ( i e.) what this Affliction meaneth? |
A26847 | 1. he puts the question, Why doth the way of the Wicked prosper? |
A26847 | 10. who would undertake to make a Judgment of Times, and did ask, Why were the former times better than these? |
A26847 | 19. Who will appoint me the time? |
A26847 | 2. Who knoweth, or can say, That is good for a man in this life, that never made a man Good? |
A26847 | 20) Why is life given to the Afflicted, and light to the bitter in Soul? |
A26847 | 20. that he vowed a vow; And see what he desireth of God? |
A26847 | 3. Who knoweth, or can say, That those things are good for a man in this life, that have made many men worse, through their Abuse of them? |
A26847 | 4. Who knoweth, or can say, That those things are good for a man in this life, that are things so uncertain? |
A26847 | 8. Who can say, That is good for a man in this life, that makes the entrance into Eternal Life so difficult? |
A26847 | A God that may give, and take away; and who can say to Him, What doest Thou? |
A26847 | A Rebellious Heart into Obedience? |
A26847 | An Honourable, Rich,& Prosperous Condition is changeable: and then, what is man the better for being in such a condition? |
A26847 | An hard Heart into Softness? |
A26847 | And considering this, Who can say, This or that condition is good or evil for a man, when he knoweth not how that condition may change? |
A26847 | And do you think to enter Heaven, with two Steeples on your back? |
A26847 | And if any ask, For what reason God hath hid this knowledg from man? |
A26847 | And if he grieve, What reason have I for it? |
A26847 | And likewise, What is it that makes an Afflicted condition Evil to some? |
A26847 | And now, What doth the Lord thy God require of thee? |
A26847 | And see for what end? |
A26847 | And there is nothing befalleth us in an Afflicted Condition, but what is by Divine Ordination; and why should we then fret at it? |
A26847 | And to see, What Crop is brought forth, and groweth in those furrows of Affliction? |
A26847 | And what got she by it? |
A26847 | And what is the reason that man knows not what shall be? |
A26847 | And what knowest thou, O poor man, but thy poverty may be for thy good; and why then shouldst thou envy the Rich? |
A26847 | And what will correct the bitter ingredients of an Afflicted Condition, that they be not too much dejected and cast down? |
A26847 | And, if I am Rich, must I not say, It is by the blessing of the Lord? |
A26847 | And, who can say, Prosperity is good for him, when he seeth Adversity over against him? |
A26847 | Are you in a prosperous condition, and would you make a judgment of it, whether it be good for you? |
A26847 | As Elkanah told Hannah, Am not I better to thee then ten Sons? |
A26847 | As that Wicked King of Israel said, This Evil is of the Lord, why should I wait any longer? |
A26847 | As when a loss or cross befalleth us, Whether we may lawfully wish, it had not been so? |
A26847 | Behold the word of the Lord came to him, And he said to him, What doest thou here, Elijah? |
A26847 | But how may a man know, that he is not the chooser of his own condition? |
A26847 | But some may Ask, How may I know, in praying for the things of this Life, that I have a respect to Gods Glory; since the Heart of man is so Deceitful? |
A26847 | But some may ask, Whether it be lawful for a man to wish, that a thing had fallen out otherwise then it did? |
A26847 | But some will say, Is it not the Blessing of the Lord that maketh Rich? |
A26847 | But then you will ask, What is the work, and what are the duties, that he is to do in an Afflicted condition? |
A26847 | But then you will ask, What should a man do in this case, that he may know? |
A26847 | But what is the Prophets reply? |
A26847 | But what saith the Psalmist? |
A26847 | But would you know, what is good for a man indeed, in this life? |
A26847 | But you will ask, How may a man come to take a right view of his condition, that he be not mistaken about it? |
A26847 | But, saith Solomon, What hath the Wise more than the Foolish? |
A26847 | But, whether it be the place the great Master of the Family placed us in? |
A26847 | But, why doth our Saviour call it, The unrighteous Mammon? |
A26847 | Can you say, Lord, It is the Condition that thou hast chosen for me; and I am here by thy Disposal and Appointment? |
A26847 | Can you say, The Rod of Affliction hath Sealed an Instruction to you concerning God, What he is? |
A26847 | Christians, in an Afflicted Condition, are to see, Whether the Furnace hath done this work upon them? |
A26847 | Dare you dye in an Unbelieving, and an Unregenerate Estate? |
A26847 | Did not I weep for him that was in trouble? |
A26847 | Did not Solomon, King of Israel, sin by those things? |
A26847 | Do I know what these Crosses and Afflictions may bring forth? |
A26847 | Do I know, but that good may lie in the womb of them? |
A26847 | Do you do every Duty, as if it were your dying Duty? |
A26847 | Do you do the work of your condition, and perform the duties of your condition? |
A26847 | Do you not make them the Fuel for Lusts, and Instruments of Revenge? |
A26847 | Do you not say to the Wedge of Gold, Thou art my Confidence? |
A26847 | Do you not spend them upon your Lusts? |
A26847 | Do you use the things of a prosperous condition, with this consideration, That they are things for which you must give an Account? |
A26847 | Do you use the world, as though you used it not? |
A26847 | Doth it hinder, or further my Salvation? |
A26847 | Doth it hinder, or further my growth in Grace? |
A26847 | Doth it set me, nearer Heaven, or nearer Hell? |
A26847 | Doth your behaviour become your condition? |
A26847 | For Prosperity; How do many abuse it to the feeding of their lusts, whereby that becomes evil to them that might have been for good? |
A26847 | For the better understanding of this, consider, What it is that we call good? |
A26847 | For, who knoweth what is Good for Man in this Life? |
A26847 | For, who knoweth what is good for man in this life? |
A26847 | Had Abraham a prosperous condition? |
A26847 | Hath God made you one of His? |
A26847 | Hath not God done this to cure the Tympany of Pride, or the Dropsy of Covetousness, or some Creature- Surfet? |
A26847 | Hath not the Lord sent it to take me off the creature, and to imbitter it more to me? |
A26847 | He putting out his Foot, shewed them his shoo, and said, Is not this shoo new? |
A26847 | How Conscientious was David, when he was David the Persecuted? |
A26847 | How a man may know, Whether a Prosperous Condition be good for him? |
A26847 | How know you, that the Branch of the Tree hath nourishment from the Root? |
A26847 | How many Ignorant ones, hath Affliction taught? |
A26847 | How many Proud ones, hath Affliction Humbled? |
A26847 | How many Wandring ones, hath Affliction Reduced and brought into the Way? |
A26847 | How many are there, that do not enjoy, but lose themselves in that condition? |
A26847 | How many are there, whom outward Fulness causeth to despise the Hony- Comb of the Gospel? |
A26847 | How many are there, whose wealth hath cost them their lives? |
A26847 | How many be there, that darken providence with their own sinful Inventions? |
A26847 | How many do Fret, and Murmur, and break forth into the indecencies of passion, against God? |
A26847 | How many fall a sleep, before they do their work? |
A26847 | How many men are there, that had been happy, had not their prosperity destroyed them? |
A26847 | How many men hath prosperity undone? |
A26847 | How many wild, and unruly Spirits, hath Affliction tamed? |
A26847 | How many worldlings, hath Afflictions Weaned from the world? |
A26847 | How may a Man know, That a Prosperous condition is good for a man in this Life? |
A26847 | How much do men father upon God, as his Gifts and Blessings, which they have got by their own injustice and oppression? |
A26847 | How we have demeaned our selves in our conditions? |
A26847 | If he rejoyce, it teacheth him, to put this question to himself, What reason have I for it? |
A26847 | If they were good for Abraham,& c. Why may they not be good for me? |
A26847 | Is God Vnrighteous,( saith the Apostle) that taketh Vengeance? |
A26847 | Is it not finely made? |
A26847 | Is it such, as becometh such providences and dispensations? |
A26847 | Is not this great Babel that I have built,& c? |
A26847 | Is she not Beautiful? |
A26847 | Is she not Honest? |
A26847 | Is the thing worth my joy? |
A26847 | Is there any that walketh in darkness and hath no light? |
A26847 | It is good for Christians then, to put the Question to themselves, What God hath the more from them, for that they have received from Him? |
A26847 | It is thus with some, They never know when they have enough: And never consider, Can I run this Race with all these cumbersome things about me? |
A26847 | It was the saying of Socrates, when he saw great Riches carried through a Town, How happy am I, that I can live without all this? |
A26847 | It was wickedly spoken by that King of Israel, Who said, This evil is of the Lord, why should I wait any longer? |
A26847 | Lastly, How many Sinners, hath Affliction stopped, who else, had run headlong into Hell; if God had not made a Hedg of Affliction in their way? |
A26847 | Lest I be full and forget Thee, and say, Who is the Lord? |
A26847 | Many indeed say, concerning Afflictions, as those did concerning Nazareth, Can any Good come out of Nazareth? |
A26847 | Many there be, that never say, as Rebecca did, Why am I thus? |
A26847 | Now can you say, This Diet- drink of Affliction hath cured you of this Disease? |
A26847 | Now consider, What is the work of the Plough? |
A26847 | Now what is the reason, that the Physick of Affliction doth some persons no good? |
A26847 | Now where is the difference? |
A26847 | Now, What is their Sin all this while? |
A26847 | Now, how came David, to have his Judgment rectified, concerning these Dispensations of God? |
A26847 | Now, how is it with such men as goe to War? |
A26847 | Now, how shall we know it was good for the Land that it was Plowed? |
A26847 | Now, what is Godliness? |
A26847 | Now, what is the Fire and Furnace to do? |
A26847 | Now, what was the cause of all this? |
A26847 | Of your own Mortality? |
A26847 | Or in an Afflicted condition? |
A26847 | Plutarch, telleth us this Story of a Roman, He put away his Wife; his Friends thereupon asked him, VVhat fault he found with her? |
A26847 | Question, Whether it be lawful to pray for the things of this life? |
A26847 | Riches,& c? |
A26847 | Seeing there are many things that increase Vanity, what is Man the better? |
A26847 | Seeing there be many things that increase vanity, what is man the better? |
A26847 | Shall mortal man be just with God? |
A26847 | Shall not the Judg of all the Earth do Right? |
A26847 | Should we expect that Grace should have no Conflict, no Conquest before the Triumph; but be Crown''d, before we have shewed what it can do? |
A26847 | So ask a man, whether he be fit and able to bear a prosperous condition? |
A26847 | So the Question is, Whether this Truth, do not deny and destroy all Care of Providence? |
A26847 | So the things to be Known, are these: 1. Who is the Framer of our Conditions; Who it is Ordains and Appoints them, and puts us into them? |
A26847 | So then, Would a man know, whether prosperity be good for him; I would ask him this, What use he doth make of the things of a prosperous condition? |
A26847 | So then, in a prosperous condition, we should put this Question to our selves, What use we make of the things of the condition? |
A26847 | So we may say, Is God Unrighteous, that sendeth Affliction? |
A26847 | So, Can any good come out of Afflictions? |
A26847 | So, How can those things, that increase cares and troubles, make Man the better? |
A26847 | So, in every condition we should put this Question to our selves; What is it that the Lord requires me do, as the work of my condition? |
A26847 | So, on the contrary; Would you know, Whether an Afflicted condition be Evil for a Man? |
A26847 | Some may Ask, What is a convenient Estate? |
A26847 | Some may ask, But what are those things that are good without doubt, without controversy, for a man in this life? |
A26847 | Some may ask, What is it that speaks our giving the things of another life, the Preheminence? |
A26847 | Some there are that possess much in this life, but never put this question, Do I enjoy God, with the things that I receive from him? |
A26847 | The Apostle James, puts this Question, Can a Fountain send forth sweet water and bitter? |
A26847 | The Scripture discovereth this to us, What are the true Correctives of a Condition? |
A26847 | The great Question you are to put to your selves, is, Whether you are Spiritual gainers or losers by your condition? |
A26847 | The great Question, we are to put to our selves, is this, VVhether Affliction, hath opened a way for Instruction to come to our Hearts? |
A26847 | The question we are to put to our selves in an Afflicted Condition, is, What Instruction the Affliction hath Sealed to us? |
A26847 | The second thing to be Enquired after, is, Of what Men, this is to be understood? |
A26847 | There be many that say,( saith David) Who will shew us any good? |
A26847 | There is a known Story, of the answer that a Shepheard returned to some Travailers, who asked him, What weather they should have? |
A26847 | There were Talents delivered, and the Master called his servants to an account, how they had used, and improved those Talents? |
A26847 | Thereupon, Solomon makes this great Enquiry, Wherein Man''s chiefest Good and Happinesse consists? |
A26847 | This evil is of the Lord, why should I wait any longer? |
A26847 | Thou, o Rich man, knowest not but that thy riches may be for thy hurt, Why shouldst thou then despise the poor? |
A26847 | Though we are not able to tell you concerning outward things, What are good for a man in this life? |
A26847 | Thus a man should reason with himself; Why should I be proud of those things which have proved evill to some, and I know not but they may be so to me? |
A26847 | Thus we have finished the First thing, by which a man is to make a judgment of an Afflicted Condition; whether it be good for him in this life or not? |
A26847 | Thus, in General, You see what we Answer to the Question, Whether Evils of Affliction may be Prayed against? |
A26847 | To how many have they become a Trap, and Snare, and occasions of Sin? |
A26847 | Upon this, Pharoah thought, that he depended not upon God, for the fruitfulness of his Country; and presumes to say, Is not the River mine? |
A26847 | VVe are apt to affect the higher conditions, but we should look to this, Whether the place we sit in, be the place of God''s choosing? |
A26847 | VVe should consider, VVhether we do not take the Honour to our selves, of placing our selves in conditions? |
A26847 | VVhat do we deserve? |
A26847 | VVhether we did not place our selves? |
A26847 | VVho is it, that can look upon himself as such, and yet stand upon it, to have what he will? |
A26847 | WE now come to answer another Question, that some may Ask, concerning, What is convenient? |
A26847 | Was not my Soul grieved for the Poor? |
A26847 | We are to see, What good our Blood- letting hath done us, Whether it hath taken down our high Colour, and our high Looks? |
A26847 | We are to see, Whether it hath taken away any of our corrupt Blood? |
A26847 | We should see, Whether Afflictions do melt our hearts? |
A26847 | What Glory we have brought to God? |
A26847 | What Good we have done to others? |
A26847 | What Instructions hath Affliction Sealed concerning Sin? |
A26847 | What Instructions hath Afflictions Sealed concerning the Creature? |
A26847 | What Instructions hath Afflictions Sealed concerning your selves? |
A26847 | What Instructions hath the Rod sealed concerning Duty? |
A26847 | What a man is to do in that Condition? |
A26847 | What answer we can make, when we are asked, How came you there? |
A26847 | What comfort hath a Great man, if he hath the Stone in the Bladder, or the Gout? |
A26847 | What doest thou here, Elijah? |
A26847 | What hath the Poor, that knoweth to walk before the Living? |
A26847 | What if a prosperous condition should change? |
A26847 | What is it, that makes a Prosperous condition Evil to some? |
A26847 | What is the cause that to some, Afflictions are so heavy? |
A26847 | What is the meaning of that? |
A26847 | What is your carriage, and behaviour in the condition? |
A26847 | What may allay the Sweetness, and Pleasantness of Prosperity, that they be not too much lifted up? |
A26847 | What those things are? |
A26847 | What was the cause of all this? |
A26847 | What we have been? |
A26847 | What we have done? |
A26847 | What you do in your condition? |
A26847 | What you make of your condition? |
A26847 | When Esau asked Jacob, Whose Children are these? |
A26847 | When God Afflicts, and Chastiseth, and Corrects, Who would think there were good in His Intention? |
A26847 | When God puts you into an Afflicted condition, What do you do in that condition? |
A26847 | When Shimei cursed David, what said David? |
A26847 | When Solon the Wise, came to visit Croesus the Rich, Croesus shewed him his Wealth, and asked him, Whether he thought him not the happiest man living? |
A26847 | When a man seeketh after Riches, and Honour,& c. There is some question to be made, Whether these things are good for him? |
A26847 | When one came to Austin, and told him of one that came to a strange End, he presently asked, But, how did he Live? |
A26847 | When we are either in a Prosperous or an Adverse condition, and are asked, How we came there? |
A26847 | When we can say, as Job did, Shall we receive good at the hands of God, and shall we not receive evil? |
A26847 | When you went into the Furnace you went in dross, but do you come forth as Gold? |
A26847 | Where is the man that can come forth and say, That his Riches and Honours, did ever change his heart or reform his life? |
A26847 | Wherein stands the Adorning of a man''s Condition? |
A26847 | Whether God''s dealings with us, please us; and our carriage, in our condition, please Him? |
A26847 | Whether it be lawful to Pray for outward and worldly good things, as Riches,& c. Since we know not, but we may pray for what is evil for us? |
A26847 | Whether it hath Purified and Refined them? |
A26847 | Whether it hath melted a Proud Heart into Humility? |
A26847 | Whether they can love a hiding God? |
A26847 | Whether they can walk dutifully, when God walketh strangely? |
A26847 | Who knoweth what is good for man in this Life? |
A26847 | Who would esteem of Beauty,( saith another) which a Whore may have, as well as an honest Woman? |
A26847 | Why doth the living man complain, a man for the punishment of his sins? |
A26847 | Why doth the living man complain? |
A26847 | Why doth the way of the wicked prosper? |
A26847 | Why should he not patiently endure the akeing of teeth, that knowes he hath deserved the gnashing of teeth? |
A26847 | Why wilt thou set thy heart upon that which is not? |
A26847 | Would you know, whether Prosperity be Good for a Man? |
A26847 | You will ask, What is a man to do in an Afflicted condition, that he may be able to make a judgment of it, Whether it be good for him? |
A26847 | and Holiness to Jehovah, upon your Fore- heads? |
A26847 | and the burning of a feaver, when he knoweth he hath deserved Burning in Hell? |
A26847 | and worth my sorrow? |
A26847 | but how careless, when he was David the King? |
A26847 | for the choosing or refusing a condition; so that I may not do what is contrary the Will of God, and to my own good? |
A26847 | hath He given you, the New Name, which none knoweth, but he that hath it? |
A26847 | hath He shed his Love abroad in your hearts? |
A26847 | have you Love to Jesus, written upon your hearts? |
A26847 | have you, the Engravings of Heaven on your Spirits? |
A26847 | q. d. What hath a painfull and laborious Poor man lesse of Contentment than the Rich? |
A26847 | the last, The Lord giveth Baruch a sharp reproof for this, And seekest thou great things for thy self? |
A26847 | what answer can you give? |
A26847 | what can a man see, when he is at the bottom, and foot of a Mountain? |
A26847 | whether he be fit for Honour and Riches? |
A26847 | whether it intend good, or evil? |
A26847 | whether it proceed from love, or hatred? |
A26847 | why should I fret and murmur at these dispensations? |
A27061 | & c. and that all that name the name of Christ, must depart from iniquitie? |
A27061 | & that no man can be saved except he be converted and born again? |
A27061 | 1, 4? |
A27061 | 2, 3. and that you must be constant and fervent in Prayer? |
A27061 | 21. and wouldst thou not be thus perfected in soul and body? |
A27061 | 35, 36. to the end[ Who shall separate us from the love of God? |
A27061 | Alas, what should a faithfull Minister do, for the saving of your souls? |
A27061 | Am I beset with sin, and compassed with infirmities, and racked by my own distempered passion? |
A27061 | Am I maliced by dissenting adversaries? |
A27061 | And alas, how quickly are they gone, when once God sees them ripe for heaven? |
A27061 | And can there be any thing in the will of God, that his servants should inordinately fear? |
A27061 | And can we live in daily pain and weariness, and not be willing of release? |
A27061 | And doth not thy heart desire this? |
A27061 | And first, you may hence be easily resolved; Whether Death be truly penal to the godly? |
A27061 | And hast thou not far better and more in heaven? |
A27061 | And if so, why then shouldst thou not be more willing to die, and be with Christ and all his holy ones, that are so much more excellent than we? |
A27061 | And is it not hainous then to denie him with the heart and life; and to denie him the love and obedience that is Properly due to God? |
A27061 | And is not this enough for us to know? |
A27061 | And is not this the case of all those millions, whose souls now see the face of Christ? |
A27061 | And is there any thing in this that thy soul is against, and which dost not value above this WORLD? |
A27061 | And knowest thou not poor complaining soul, that the kindness of Christ overcometh all the unkindness of his children? |
A27061 | And may we not bear a while the sorrows that shall have so good an end? |
A27061 | And rather here suffer with us, than reign in Heaven with Christ and us? |
A27061 | And shall we grieve that they are not here, when to be here, would be their grief? |
A27061 | And shall we not more boldly trust the will of God then of our dearest friend? |
A27061 | And shall we stick at the uncloathing of our souls, in ord ● ● to their everlasting Rest? |
A27061 | And shall we think much to dye ▪ for such a gain? |
A27061 | And was Heaven the spring and motive of thy obedience, and the comfort of thy life? |
A27061 | And will not he perfect the conquest which he hath begun? |
A27061 | And would we be thus still? |
A27061 | And yet he doth not therefore disown them, and turn them out of his family; but is tender of them in their froward weakness; because they are his own? |
A27061 | Are thy friends lamenting thee, and grieved to see the signs of thy approaching death? |
A27061 | Are we not all agreed that the Law of the Lord must be your delight and that you must meditate in it day and night? |
A27061 | Are we not hasting after them at the heels, and do we not hope to live with them for ever? |
A27061 | Art thou better then Noah, and Abraham, and David? |
A27061 | Art thou loath to leave thy friends on earth? |
A27061 | Art thou not delivered from the reign and tyranny of it, which thou wast once under? |
A27061 | Art thou under pains, and consuming sicknesses? |
A27061 | But if we might pass from Earth to Heaven, as from one room to another, what haste should we make in our desires? |
A27061 | But now what a pillar is here for faith? |
A27061 | But to our selves, that are brought out of Aegypt into the Wilderness, how desirable is the promised Land? |
A27061 | But what comfort is all this to me that know not whether I have part in Christ or no? |
A27061 | But what is it that an hypocrite will not do to escape Death? |
A27061 | But when the glorious King of Peace hath put all his enemies under his feet, what then is left to make disturbance? |
A27061 | But when we stand over the grave, and see our friends laid in the dust; how mortified do we seem? |
A27061 | Can we have grace and not be weary of these corruptions? |
A27061 | Can we have life, and not be pained with these diseases? |
A27061 | Canst thou think that Christ hath purchased, and offered, and promised that which he will not give? |
A27061 | Could we but come to Heaven as easily as innocent Adam might have done if he had conquered, what wings would it add to our desires? |
A27061 | Couldst thou not joyfully see the coming of Christ, if it were this day( if thou have done thy work, and art assured of his love?) |
A27061 | Did Christ ever shew himself unkind to thee? |
A27061 | Did he ever give thee cause to think so poorly of his Love and grace, as thy doubts do intimate thou dost? |
A27061 | Did he take flesh purposely that he might dye and rise, and shew us how he will raise his members? |
A27061 | Did they not lie as thou dost, and die as thou must, and pass by death to the life which they have now attained? |
A27061 | Didst thou pray for that which thou wouldst not have? |
A27061 | Do they privily lay snares for me, and watch my halting, and seek advantage against my name, and liberty and life? |
A27061 | Do they seem so hard and grievous to thee, that thou wilt venture thy soul in thy state of sin, rather then accept of them? |
A27061 | Do you dislike the sins of Professors of Godliness? |
A27061 | Do you know how near you are to judgement, and will you fearlesly thus heap up wrath, and lay in fewel for the everlasting flames? |
A27061 | Do you love life, or do you not? |
A27061 | Do you think they would wish themselves again on earth? |
A27061 | Dost thou fear the dreafdul face of death? |
A27061 | Dost thou know what thy Brethren are now enjoying, and what the heavenly Host are doing? |
A27061 | Dost thou not hate it, and set thy self against it as thy enemy? |
A27061 | Dost thou not know that all his children have their forwardness, and are guilty of their unkindnesses to him? |
A27061 | Had you not far rather be thus changed then abide on earth? |
A27061 | Hadst thou rather have liberty to commit it, or be delivered from it? |
A27061 | Hadst thou rather travel with us, than dwell with us? |
A27061 | Hast thou any thing here that thou shalt want in Heaven? |
A27061 | Hast thou laboured for it, and denyed thy self the pleasures of the world for it? |
A27061 | Hast thou not found him kind when thou wast unkind? |
A27061 | Hath he conquered Death for himself alone, and not for us? |
A27061 | Hath he not broken the heart of thy pride and worldliness, and sensuality and made thee a new Creature? |
A27061 | Hath he taken our Nature into Heaven, to be there alone, and will he not have all his members with him? |
A27061 | He was found of thee,( or rather found thee) when thou soughtest not after him: and can he reject thee now thou cryest and callest for his grace? |
A27061 | How careful are we to keep in these Lamps, and to maintain the Oyl? |
A27061 | How dealt he with the Disciples, that fell a sleep; when they should have watcht with Christ in the night of his great agony? |
A27061 | How earnestly we should pray? |
A27061 | How joyfully should we think and speak of Heaven? |
A27061 | How joyfully will the soul and body meet, that were separated so long? |
A27061 | How much the imitation of such examples would conduce to the sanctifying of families, is easie to be apprehended? |
A27061 | How noble a creature doth it destroy? |
A27061 | How readily would our Thoughts run out to Christ? |
A27061 | How seriously should we meditate and confer of Heaven? |
A27061 | How terrible is Death to an earthly- minded man, that had neglected his soul for a treasure here, which must then be dissipated in a moment? |
A27061 | I would ask thee, Whether thou see not a beauty in Holiness, which is the Image of Christ, and whether thy soul do not desire it even in perfection? |
A27061 | If it be a sin to crack our faith by some particular error, what is it to dash it all to peices? |
A27061 | If it be odious in your eyes, to denie some particular Ordinance of God, what is it to neglect or Prophane them all? |
A27061 | If not, why are you afraid of death? |
A27061 | If so, I would know of thee, whether this be not from the spirit of Christ within thee? |
A27061 | If so, be assured that it is not without Holyness, that thou choosest and preferrest Holyness? |
A27061 | If thou hadst no sin, what use hadst thou of a Saviour? |
A27061 | If thou say that it is not his unkindness, but thy own that feeds thy doubts; I further ask thee, Is he not kind to the unkind? |
A27061 | If you ask, How is all this to be ascribed to Christ? |
A27061 | If you do, why then are you loath to pass into everlasting life? |
A27061 | Indeed we may say, O Death, Where is thy sting? |
A27061 | Is it Christ that your heart is thus a verse to, or is it only Death that standeth in the way? |
A27061 | Is it God and Heaven, or is it Death? |
A27061 | Is it not for Christ& his benefits, that thy heart thus worketh, and thou dost all this? |
A27061 | Is it nothing to be dead in sins and trespasses? |
A27061 | Is it seemly for thee to lament thus at the door, when they are feasted with such unconceivable joys within? |
A27061 | Is not all this grievous to an honest heart? |
A27061 | Is not this the case of manie among you? |
A27061 | Is the presence of Christ less desirable in thy eyes, than the presence of such sinful worms as we, whom thou art loath to part with? |
A27061 | Is there a gracious soul, that groaneth not under the burden of these miseries? |
A27061 | Is there no remedie? |
A27061 | Is this a time to fear and mourn, when thou art entring into endless joy? |
A27061 | Let Faith take a view of him that was dead and is alive, that was buried and is risen, and was humbled and is now exalted? |
A27061 | Moreover, art thou not truly willing to yield to all the terms of grace? |
A27061 | Must he therefore plead against his Physician? |
A27061 | Must not your Teachers say, He sent to you, and was willing to have done his part, and you refused? |
A27061 | Must there a place be empty, and a voice be wanting in the Heavenly Chore, Iest we should miss our friends on earth? |
A27061 | Must thy tender flesh be turned to rottenness and dust? |
A27061 | Must we let them go? |
A27061 | Nay what a treasure of everlasting consequence do these two words express? |
A27061 | Now, if we will vigorously appear for God, against a sinful generation, how many will appear against us? |
A27061 | O Sirs, do you know what you are doing? |
A27061 | O What a brutish thing is flesh? |
A27061 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
A27061 | O what should we do for the saving if careless, senseless souls? |
A27061 | Once thou wast a despiser of God and his holy wayes: but now it is far otherwise with thee? |
A27061 | Or dost thou not love their names, and wouldst thou not be with them? |
A27061 | Shall the face of death discourage us from desiring such a blessed day? |
A27061 | Shall the happiness of our friends be our sorrow and lamentation? |
A27061 | Shall we believe, and fly from the end of our belief? |
A27061 | Shall we desire and pray, and be afraid of attaining our desires, and lest our prayers should be heard? |
A27061 | Shall we hope, and be loath to enjoy our hopes? |
A27061 | Shall we spend our lives in labour and travel, and be afraid of comming to our journeys end? |
A27061 | She was very exemplary in self- denial and humility: And having said thus much, what abundance have I comprehended? |
A27061 | Suppose that I, and such as I, were the friends that thou art loath to leave: What if we had dyed long before thee? |
A27061 | Tell me plainly, hadst thou rather keep thy sin, or leave it? |
A27061 | The Lord doth gently question with him[ Dost thou well to be angry?] |
A27061 | The deterred, discouraged soul moves slowly in the way of life: Whereas if Death were not in our way, how chearfully should we run towards Heaven? |
A27061 | Then where is the man that will stand forth, and break a jest at godliness, or make a scorn of the holy diligence of Believers? |
A27061 | They were once on earth as low as we: and we shall be shortly in heaven, as high as they: Am I now in flesh, in fears, in griefs? |
A27061 | What a bondage is it, that our souls are so entangled with the creatures? |
A27061 | What a multitude of the most hainous sins are daily committed through the fears of death? |
A27061 | What a word of Hope and Joy is this, that[ Christ is risen?] |
A27061 | What an unreasonable thing is unbelief? |
A27061 | What an unspeakable comfort would this be to a dying man? |
A27061 | What else is Deaah but the ending of our Time? |
A27061 | What if the patient understand not how blood- letting cureth the infected blood that is left behind? |
A27061 | What is it that is ungrateful to you in your meditations of your change? |
A27061 | What saith thy heart now to those terms? |
A27061 | What suffering then can be so great, in which a believer should not rejoyce, when he is before hand promised a gracious end? |
A27061 | What terrour will seize upon those hearts, that here were wo nt to make themselves sport at the weaknesses of the upright servants of the Lord? |
A27061 | What then wilt thou think of all these disquieting, distrustful Thoughts that now so wrong thy Lord and thee? |
A27061 | What though at the present it be not joyous, but greivous( in it self?) |
A27061 | What was it that that rejoyced thee all thy life, in thy prayers, and sufferings, and labours? |
A27061 | What 〈 ◊ 〉 doth it cost our ▪ Parents ▪ and our selves to make provision for this Life? |
A27061 | What? |
A27061 | When we have so full assurance, that at last this enemy also shall be destroyed? |
A27061 | Where there is one on earth, how many are there in Heaven? |
A27061 | Who is so mad, as wilfully to sin with Death in his eye? |
A27061 | Who then is the wise and knowing man amongst you? |
A27061 | Who would not enter willingly into the fight, when he may before hand be assured, that the field shall be cleared of every enemy? |
A27061 | Who would not submit to any labour or toyl for a day, that he might win a life of plenty and delight by it? |
A27061 | Why dost thou doubt( poor humbled soul) of thy interest in Christ, that must make the conquest? |
A27061 | Why shouldst thou be afraid to go the way that all the Saints have gone before thee? |
A27061 | Why then art thou not as loath to stay from them? |
A27061 | Why thus it was once with the millions that are now triumphing with their Lord? |
A27061 | Will thy Physitian therefore cast thee off, because thou art sick? |
A27061 | Would it not rejoyce your hearts, if you were sure to live, to see the coming of the Lord, and to see his glorious appearing and retinue? |
A27061 | Wouldst thou have our company? |
A27061 | Yea hath not Christ already subdued so many of thy enemies, as may assure thee he will subdue the rest? |
A27061 | and be not his Image it self upon thee? |
A27061 | and begun that life in thee, which may assure thee of eternal life? |
A27061 | and canst thou think it seemly to be so unlike them, that are passing to them? |
A27061 | and is not this a pledge that he will do the rest? |
A27061 | and must thou lie in darkness till the Resurrection, and thy body remain as the Common earth? |
A27061 | and now art thou afraid to enter in? |
A27061 | and part with any thing to attain it? |
A27061 | and say, It will not be done, because he knoweth not how it s done? |
A27061 | and shall thy approaches to it be thy sorrows? |
A27061 | and shall we grudge that they are gone a day, or week, or year, before us? |
A27061 | and so detained from the love of God? |
A27061 | and that he thought on thee when thou didst not think on him? |
A27061 | and that his blood and grace is sufficient to save thee, from greater sins then those that trouble thee? |
A27061 | and that if you live after the flesh ye shall die? |
A27061 | and that thou shouldst cast away the joy of the Lord which is thy strength, and gratifie the enemy of thy peace? |
A27061 | and that you must first seek the Kingdom of God& his Righteousness? |
A27061 | and the motions of the new and heavenly nature, which is begotten in thee by the Holy Ghost? |
A27061 | and what can be more necessary to a comfortable end, then faithfully to use it while we have it? |
A27061 | and where we must live for ever, than where we must be but for so short a time? |
A27061 | and whether it be not only a lothness to die, and not a lothness to be with Christ? |
A27061 | and who doth not dread the name, or at least the face of Death? |
A27061 | and will he after all this, break his promise, and leave us in the dust for ever? |
A27061 | and will he now forget thee, and end in wrath that begun in Love? |
A27061 | and will you live as if you had nothing but the world to mind, when you are even readie to step into the endless world? |
A27061 | and yet had we rather dwell with sin, in tempting, troubling, corruptible flesh, then lay them by, and dwell with Christ? |
A27061 | and yet will you now stand loitering; and quarrelling, and jesting, and dallying in the matters of salvation? |
A27061 | and yet wilt thou pass into it with heaviness? |
A27061 | are thine eyes held waking; and doth trouble and sorrow wast thy spirits? |
A27061 | are we not all agreed, that God is to be preferred before the world? |
A27061 | do they weep when they see thy pale face, and consumed body, and when they hear thy sighs and groans? |
A27061 | doth thy flesh and thy heart fail thee, and thy friends prove silly comforters to thee? |
A27061 | especially when they lament their own unkindness? |
A27061 | how bitterly will they reproach us? |
A27061 | how falsly will they slander us, and say all manner of evil against us? |
A27061 | how full they are of God and how they are ravished with his Light and Love? |
A27061 | or is it only because you fear lest you have no interest in his Love, and shall not attain the blessedness which you desire? |
A27061 | or unwilling to receive thee, and have mercy on thee? |
A27061 | or who so dead, as with Death in his eye, to refuse to live a godly life, if he have any spiritual light and feeling? |
A27061 | or would they take it kindly of you, if you could bring them down again into this world, though it were to reign in wealth and honour? |
A27061 | our thoughts of it would be still sweet, and these would be a powerful Spring to action? |
A27061 | shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
A27061 | so did they by David, and many other now with Christ? |
A27061 | that we find continually so much of the creature, and so little of God upon our hearts? |
A27061 | then Peter and Paul and all the Saints? |
A27061 | was it not the hopes of heaven? |
A27061 | where no more complainings shall be heard from our mouths, nor no more sorrow shall possess our hearts? |
A27061 | who would not be spit upon, and made the scorn of the world for a day, if he might have his will for it as long as he liveth on earth? |
A27061 | would it not be the greatest joy that you could desire? |
A27061 | would you not gladly do it? |
A27061 | yea, in every prayer, what do we else but confess them, and lament them, and groan for help, and for deliverance? |
A27048 | 8.35, 36. to the end[ Who shall separate us from the love of God? |
A27048 | A ● as, what should a faithfull Minister do, for the saving of your souls? |
A27048 | Am I beset with sin, and compassed with infirmities, and racked by my own distempered passion? |
A27048 | Am I maliced by dissenting adversaries? |
A27048 | And alas, how quickly are they gone, when once God sees them ripe for heaven? |
A27048 | And can there be any thing in the will of God, that his servants should inordinately fear? |
A27048 | And can we live in daily pain and weariness, and not be willing of release? |
A27048 | And doth not thy heart desire this? |
A27048 | And first, you may hence be easily resolved, Whether Death be truly penal to the godly? |
A27048 | And hast thou not far better and more in heaven? |
A27048 | And if so, why then shouldst thou not be more willing to die, and be with Christ and all his holy ones, that are so much more excellent then we? |
A27048 | And if thou be not willing, what makes thee wish, and groan, and pray, and labour in the use of means? |
A27048 | And is it not haynous then to deny him with the heart and life; and to deny him the love and obedience that is properly due to God? |
A27048 | And is not this enough for us to know? |
A27048 | And is not this the case of all those millions, whose souls now see face of Christ? |
A27048 | And is there any thing in this that thy soul is against, and which thou dost not value above this wor ● d? |
A27048 | And may we not bear a while the sorrows that shall have so good an end? |
A27048 | And shall death seem intolerable to us, that letteth in our souls to Christ? |
A27048 | And shall we grieve that they are not here, when to be here, would be their grief? |
A27048 | And shall we not more boldly trust the will of God then of our dearest friend? |
A27048 | And shall we stick at the uncloathing of our souls, in order to their everlasting Rest? |
A27048 | And shall we think much to die for such a gain? |
A27048 | And was Heaven the spring and motive of thy obedience, and the comfort of thy life? |
A27048 | And will not he perfect the conquest which he hath begun? |
A27048 | And would we be thus still? |
A27048 | And yet he doth not therefore disown them, and turn them out of his family; but is tender of them in their froward weakness, because they are his own? |
A27048 | And yet we say, we believe, and hope, and labour, and wait for the same felicity ● Shall the happiness of our friends be our sorrow and lamentation? |
A27048 | Are thy friends lamenting thee, and grieved to see the signs of thy approaching death? |
A27048 | Are we not hasting after them at the heels, and do we not hope to live with them for ever? |
A27048 | Art thou better then Noah, and Abraham, and David? |
A27048 | Art thou loath to leave thy friends on earth? |
A27048 | Art thou not delivered from the reign and tyranny of it, which thou wast once under? |
A27048 | Art thou under pains, and consuming sicknesses? |
A27048 | But if we might pass from earth to heaven, as from one room to another, what haste should we make in our desires? |
A27048 | But now what a pillar is here for faith? |
A27048 | But to our selves, that are brought out of Aegypt into the Wilderness, how desirable is the promised Land? |
A27048 | But what comfort is all this to me that know not whether I have part in Christ or no? |
A27048 | But what is it that an hypocrite will not do to escape Death? |
A27048 | But when the glorious King of peace hath put all his enemies under his feet, what then is left to make disturbance? |
A27048 | But when we stand over the grave, and see our friends laid in the dust, how mortified do we seem? |
A27048 | Can we have grace and not be weary of these corruptions? |
A27048 | Can we have life, and not be pained with these diseases? |
A27048 | Canst thou think that Christ hath purchased, and offered, and promised that which he will not give? |
A27048 | Could we but come to Heaven as easily as innocent Adam might have done if he had conquered, what wings would it add to our desires? |
A27048 | Couldst thou not joyfully see the coming of Christ, if it were this day( if thou have done thy work, and art assured of his love?) |
A27048 | Did Christ ever shew himself unkind to thee? |
A27048 | Did he ever give thee cause to think so poorly of his Love and grace, as thy doubts do intimate thou dost? |
A27048 | Did he take flesh purpose ● y that he might die and rise, and shew us how he will raise his members? |
A27048 | Did men but know the difference between the death of the holy and the unholy, which doth not appear to fleshly eyes, how speedily would they turn? |
A27048 | Did they not lie as thou dost, and die as thou must, and pass by death to the life which they have now attained? |
A27048 | Didst thou pray for that which thou wouldst not have? |
A27048 | Do they privily lay snares for me, and watch my halting, and seek advantage against my name, and liberty and life? |
A27048 | Do they seem so hard and grievous to thee, that thou wilt venture thy soul in thy state of sin, rather then accept of them? |
A27048 | Do you dislike the sins of the Professors af Godliness? |
A27048 | Do you know how near you are to judgement, and will you fearlesly thus heap up wrath, and lay in fewell for the everlasting flames? |
A27048 | Do you love l ● fe, or do you not? |
A27048 | Do you think they would wish themselves again on earth? |
A27048 | Dost thou fear the dreadfull: face of death? |
A27048 | Dost thou know what thy Brethren are now enjoying,& what the Heavenly Host are doing? |
A27048 | Dost thou not hate it, and set thy self against it as thy enemy? |
A27048 | Dost thou not know that all his children have their frowardness, and are guilty of their unkindnesses to him? |
A27048 | Had you not far rather be thus changed then abide on earth? |
A27048 | Hadst thou rather have liberty to commit it, or be delivered from it? |
A27048 | Hadst thou rather travail with us, then dwell with us? |
A27048 | Hast thou laboured for it, and denyed thy self the pleasures of the world for it? |
A27048 | Hast thou not found him kind when thou wast unkind, and that he thought on thee when thou didst not think on him? |
A27048 | Hath he conquered death for himself alone, and not for us? |
A27048 | Hath he not broken the heart of thy pride and worldliness, and sensuality and made thee a new creature? |
A27048 | Hath he taken our Nature into Heaven, to be there alone and will he not have all his members with him? |
A27048 | He was found of thee,( or rather found thee) when thou soughtest not after him: and can be reject thee now thou criest and callest for his grace? |
A27048 | How carefull are we to keep in these lamps, and to maintain the oyl? |
A27048 | How dealt he with the Disciples, that fell asleep, when they should have watcht with Christ in the night of his great agony? |
A27048 | How earnestly should we pray? |
A27048 | How grievous is it to us that we can love him no more, nor be more assured of his love to us? |
A27048 | How joyfully should we think and speak of Heaven? |
A27048 | How joyfully will the soul& body meet, that were separated so long? |
A27048 | How much the imitation of such examples would conduce to the sanctifying of families, is easie to be apprehended? |
A27048 | How noble a creature doth it destroy? |
A27048 | How readily would our Thoughts run out to Christ? |
A27048 | How seriously should we meditate and conser of Heaven? |
A27048 | How terrible is death to an earthly- minded man that had neglected his soul for a treasure here, which must then be dissipated in a moment? |
A27048 | If it be a sin to crack our faith by some particular error, what is it to dash it all to pieces? |
A27048 | If it be odious in your eyes, to deny some particular Ordinance of God, what is it to neglect or prophane them all? |
A27048 | If not, why are you afraid of death? |
A27048 | If so, I would know of thee, whether this be not from the spirit of Christ within thee? |
A27048 | If so, be assured that it is not without Holiness, that thou choosest and preferrest Holiness? |
A27048 | If thou hadst no sin, what use hadst thou of a Saviour? |
A27048 | If thou say that it is not his unkindness, but thy own that feeds thy doubts; I further ask thee, Is he not kind to the unkind? |
A27048 | If you ask, How is all this to be ascribed to Christ? |
A27048 | If you do, why then are you loth to pass into everlasting life? |
A27048 | Indeed we may say, O Death, where is thy sting? |
A27048 | Is it Christ that your heart is thus averse to, or is it only Death that standeth in the way? |
A27048 | Is it God and heaven, or is it Death? |
A27048 | Is it not for Christ and his benefits that thy heart thus worketh, and thou dost all this? |
A27048 | Is it nothing to be dead in sins and trespasses? |
A27048 | Is it seemly for thee to lament thus at the door, when they are feasted with such unconceivable joys within? |
A27048 | Is not all this grievous to an honest heart? |
A27048 | Is not this the case of many among you? |
A27048 | Is the presence of Christ less desirable in thy eyes, then the presence of such sinfull worms as we, whom thou art loth to part with? |
A27048 | Is there a gracious soul, that groaneth not under the burden of these miseries? |
A27048 | Is there no remedy? |
A27048 | Is this a time to fear and mourn, when thou art entring into endless joy? |
A27048 | It is hard to win their hearts to such a state of Hap ● in ● ss, that can not be obtained but by yielding unto death? |
A27048 | Moreover art thou not truly willing to yield to all the terms of grace? |
A27048 | Must not your Teacher say, He sent to you, and was willing to have done his part, and you refused? |
A27048 | Must there a place be empty, and a voice be wanting in the Heavenly Chore, lest we should miss our friends on earth? |
A27048 | Must thy tender flesh be turned t ● rotness and dust? |
A27048 | Must we let them go? |
A27048 | Nay what a treasure of everlasting consequence, do these two words express? |
A27048 | Now if we will vigorously appear for God, against a sinfull generation, how many will appear against us? |
A27048 | O Sirs, do you know what you are doing? |
A27048 | O grave where is thy Victory? |
A27048 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
A27048 | O what a brutish thing is flesh? |
A27048 | O what should we do for the saving of careless, senseless souls? |
A27048 | Once thou wast a despiser of God and his holy wayes: but now it is far otherwise with thee? |
A27048 | Or dost thou not love their names, and wouldst thou not be with them? |
A27048 | Our thoughts of it would be still sweet, and these would be a powerfull Spring to action? |
A27048 | Shall the face of death discourage us from desiring such a bessed day? |
A27048 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
A27048 | Shall we believe, and fly from the end of our belief? |
A27048 | Shall we desire and pray, and be afraid of attaining our desires, and lest our prayers should be heard? |
A27048 | Shall we hope, and be loth to enjoy our hopes? |
A27048 | Shall we spend our lives in labour and travail, and be affraid of coming to our journeys end? |
A27048 | She was very Exemplary in self- denyal and humility: And having said this much, what abundance have I comprehended? |
A27048 | Suppose that I, and such as I, were the friends that thou art loth to leave: What if we had dyed long before thee? |
A27048 | Take heed lest Christ say,[ I have lent them my messengers long enough in vain; From henceforth never fruit grow on them? |
A27048 | Tell me plainly, hadst thou rather keep thy sin, or leave it? |
A27048 | The Lord doth gently question with him[ Dost thou well to be angry?] |
A27048 | The deterred, discouraged soul moves slowly in the way of life: Whereas if Death were not in our way, how chearfully should we run towards Heaven? |
A27048 | Then where is the man that will stand forth and break a jest at godliness, or make a scorn of the holy diligence of believers? |
A27048 | They were once on earth as low as we: and we shall be shortly in heaven, as high as they: Am I now in flesh, in fears, in griefs? |
A27048 | We should long so earnestly to be in Heaven, if Death were not in the way, that nothing could easily stop us in our course? |
A27048 | What a bondage is it, that our souls are so entangled with the creatures? |
A27048 | What a multitude of the most haynous sins are daily committed through the fears of death? |
A27048 | What a word of Hope and Joy is this, that[ Christ is risen?] |
A27048 | What an unreasonable thing is unbelief? |
A27048 | What an unspeakable comfort would this be to a dying man? |
A27048 | What else is Death but the ending of our Time? |
A27048 | What if the patient understand not how blood letting cureth the infected blood that is left behind? |
A27048 | What is it that is ungrateful to you in your meditations of your change? |
A27048 | What saith thy heart now to those terms? |
A27048 | What suffering then can be so great, in which a believer should not rejoyce, when he is before hand promised a gracious end? |
A27048 | What then wilt thou think of all these disquieting distrustfull thoughts that now so wrong thy Lord and thee? |
A27048 | What though at the present it be not joyous, but grievous( in it self?) |
A27048 | What was it that rejoyced thee all thy life, in thy prayers, and sufferings, and labours? |
A27048 | What way so ● owl that we would not travail, to our beloved home? |
A27048 | What? |
A27048 | When we have so full assurance, that at last this enemy also shall be destroyed? |
A27048 | Where there is one on earth, how many are there in Heaven? |
A27048 | Who is so mad as wilfully to sin with Death in his eye? |
A27048 | Who then is the wise and knowing man amongst you? |
A27048 | Who would not be spit upon, and made the scorn of the world for a day, if he might have his will for it as long as he liveth on earth? |
A27048 | Who would not enter willingly into the fight, when he may before hand be assured, that the field shall be cleared of every enemy? |
A27048 | Who would not submit to any labour or toyl for a day, that he might win a life of plenty and delight by it? |
A27048 | Why dost thou doubt( poor humbled soul) of thy interest in Christ, that must make the conquest? |
A27048 | Why then art thou not as loth to stay from them? |
A27048 | Why thus it was once with the millions that are now triumphing with their Lord? |
A27048 | Will thy Physitian therefore cast thee off, because thou art sick? |
A27048 | Would it not rejoyce your hearts, if you were sure to live, to see the coming of the Lord, and to see his glorious appearing and retinue? |
A27048 | Wouldst thou have our company? |
A27048 | Wy shouldst thou be afraid to go the way that all the Saints have gone before thee? |
A27048 | Yea hath not Christ already subdued so many of thy enemies, as may assure thee he will subdue the rest? |
A27048 | and be not his Image it self upon thee? |
A27048 | and begun that life in thee, which may assure thee of eternal life? |
A27048 | and canst thou think it seemly to be so unlike them, that art passing to them? |
A27048 | and is not this a pledge that he will do the rest? |
A27048 | and must thou lie in darkness till the Resurrection, and thy body remain as the Common earth? |
A27048 | and now art thou afraid to enter in? |
A27048 | and part with any thing to attain it? |
A27048 | and rather here suffer with us then reign in heaven with Christ and us? |
A27048 | and shall thy approaches to it be thy sorrows? |
A27048 | and shall we grudge that they are gone a day, or week, or year before us? |
A27048 | and should we not be so far weary of such a life as this, as to be willing to depart and be with Christ? |
A27048 | and so detained from the love of God? |
A27048 | and that he that hath not the Spirit of Christ is none of his? |
A27048 | and that his blood and grace is sufficient to save thee, from greater sins then those that trouble thee? |
A27048 | and that no man can be saved except he be converted and born again? |
A27048 | and that thou shouldst cast away the joy of the Lord which is thy strength, and gratifie the enemy of thy peace? |
A27048 | and that you must first seek the Kingdom of God and his Righteousness? |
A27048 | and the motions of the new and heavenly nature, which is begotten in thee by the Holy Ghost? |
A27048 | and what can be more necessary to a comfortable end, then faithfully to use it while we have it? |
A27048 | and whether it be not only lothness to die, and not a lothness to be with Christ? |
A27048 | and who doth not dread the name, or at least the face of Death? |
A27048 | and will he after all this break his promise, and leave us in the dust for ever? |
A27048 | and will he now forget thee, and end in wrath that begun in Love? |
A27048 | and wouldst thou not be thus perfected in soul and body? |
A27048 | and yet had we rather dwell with sin, in tempting, troubling, corruptible flesh, then lay them by, and dwell with Christ? |
A27048 | and yet wilt thou pass into it with heaviness? |
A27048 | are thine eyes held waking, and doth trouble and sorrow waste thy spirit? |
A27048 | are we not all agreed, that God is to be preferred before the world? |
A27048 | do they weep when they see thy pale face, and consumed body, and when they hear the sighs and groans? |
A27048 | doth they flesh in thy heart fail thee, and thy friends prove silly comforters to thee? |
A27048 | especially when they lament their own unkindness? |
A27048 | how bitterly will they reproach us? |
A27048 | how carefully would they live? |
A27048 | how constantly, painfully and resolvedly w ● uld they labour? |
A27048 | how falsly will they slander us, and say all manner of evil against us? |
A27048 | how fervently would they pray? |
A27048 | how full they are of God, and how they are ravished with his Light and Love? |
A27048 | how seriously would they meditate? |
A27048 | must he therefore plead against his Physitian, and say, It will not be done, because he knoweth not how it s done? |
A27048 | or is it only because you fear lest you have no interest in his Love, and shall not attain the blessedness which you desire? |
A27048 | or unwilling to receive thee, and have mercy on thee? |
A27048 | or who so dead as with death in h ● s eye, to refuse to live a godly life, if he have any spiritual light and feeling? |
A27048 | or would they take it kindly of you, if you could bring them down again into this world, though it were to reign in wealth and honour? |
A27048 | so did they by David, and many other now with Christ? |
A27048 | that such horrid thoughts of unbelief should look into our minds, and stay so long, and be so familiar with us? |
A27048 | that we find continually so much of the creature, and so little of God upon our hearts? |
A27048 | the love of life, and the love of ease; the fear of death, and the fear of suffering? |
A27048 | then Peter& Paul and all the Saints? |
A27048 | was it not the hopes of heaven? |
A27048 | would it not be the greatest joy that you could desire? |
A27048 | would you not gadly do it? |
A27048 | yea, in every prayer, what do we else but confess them, and lament them, and groan for help, and for deliverance? |
A27048 | ● nd will you live as if you had nothing but the world to mind, when you are even ready to step into the endless world? |
A26982 | & c. Are my Betters so good at Alchimy, that they can transform the most heinous Crimes into sacred Vertues, and the greatest Duties into odious Sins? |
A26982 | ( By whom? |
A26982 | ( What Act may that be?) |
A26982 | 12, 13. Who can understand his Errours? |
A26982 | 17. and is it now a heinous crime? |
A26982 | 2. Who is to be Judge who the Preachers were that caused our Confusions? |
A26982 | 4. and to mourn for the reproach of the solemn Assembly, as a burden? |
A26982 | 9 Was it for Sedition that Men were punished for not Receiving the Sacrament, when the Conscience of their ignorance and unfitness deterred them? |
A26982 | And are all, or most Wise and Judicious that read and censure them? |
A26982 | And are these the best Men in all the World? |
A26982 | And did any Man doubt of it, that then lived with his Reason awake? |
A26982 | And do not many Bishops now blame the Laws? |
A26982 | And for that which he mischievously would overthrow? |
A26982 | And for what?) |
A26982 | And how few scruple receiving and reporting them,& how fewer rebuke them? |
A26982 | And how little would it cost them yet to prevent the Continuance of it? |
A26982 | And how many Souls converted and confirmed by them? |
A26982 | And how? |
A26982 | And if Christ made Christians no better than the Philosophers, how could I think better of him, than of them? |
A26982 | And if a Protestant did Hang this Man himself, would he take it for Popery or Sin, to consent that a Papist cut the Rope? |
A26982 | And if neither Reasoning nor Petitioning them might be used, what were we Commissioned for? |
A26982 | And indeed is both Damnation and the renewing of our Troubles and Divisions a matter of jest? |
A26982 | And is any Name more tenderly to be used than Gods? |
A26982 | And is governing a Family, or my self, governing all the World? |
A26982 | And is governing a Parish- Church under an Archbishop, the governing of many hundred Parishes that are no Churches, but parts of a Diocesan Church? |
A26982 | And is it Mercy to drive Men to Sin and Hell, or a crime to beg for so cheap Mercy for the Souls of Men, even of Bishops? |
A26982 | And is it a Crime to be against a scandalous, insufficient Ministry, and a Duty to be for them, that we may be the best Church in the World? |
A26982 | And is it a Crime to honour God, and his Works? |
A26982 | And is it not as bad to resist Christian Emperors, as Heathens? |
A26982 | And is that a Justification against Perjury, to them that own not the Imposing or Taking it, nor obligation to keep any but the Moral Necessary parts? |
A26982 | And may he not say the like by any Man that doth good? |
A26982 | And must I become a Voucher for Thousands whom I never knew? |
A26982 | And must the Land so tamely be perjured and enslaved? |
A26982 | And must they rise against them and not kill them? |
A26982 | And must we go on such suppositions that our Law- makers must not be said to make sinful Laws? |
A26982 | And so all our Parliaments till the Dividing and Tearing Long one, were not of the Church of England: And what then was that Church? |
A26982 | And that I know what it was naturally impossible for me not to know? |
A26982 | And that all that are to be judged by the chief Judicature, shall Fight to Conquer them, if the King do but bid them? |
A26982 | And the French Edicts against the Protestants? |
A26982 | And was Archbishop Usher such a Robber of himself, and all the Bishops? |
A26982 | And was I perjured for refusing Perjury? |
A26982 | And was not the Murderous temper and use of the Irish well known? |
A26982 | And what Man hath a louder Call to Repent from God and Man than I my Self? |
A26982 | And what am I, that I should swear or say that I am wiser than all these Doctors, and sure that they are mistaken? |
A26982 | And what an odious state is such a governed Kingdom in? |
A26982 | And what harm is that? |
A26982 | And what is that to me, that constantly used it? |
A26982 | And where Repentance, and Persuading Men to repent, goeth for the most intolerable Evil? |
A26982 | And who may not see that the use of it was prescribed in the Directory? |
A26982 | Arcadius, Zeno, Basiliscus, Anastasius, and many such, Heathen Persecutors? |
A26982 | Are my Betters better than Peter and the Apostles, that were for obeying God before Men? |
A26982 | Are not above Sixty Books of Sectaries written( more or less) against me; an evidence to prove that they take me not for their Champion? |
A26982 | Are they for Episcopacy that put down hundreds, to set up one in their stead? |
A26982 | Are they so much better Men than the Nonconformists? |
A26982 | Are they so much lower than the Bishops? |
A26982 | Art thou come to torment us before the time? |
A26982 | At least the French and Dutch? |
A26982 | But alas how far are Leeches from feeling the smart of the Persons whose Blood they feast upon? |
A26982 | But am I Episcopal, and yet the greatest Enemy to Episcopacy? |
A26982 | But can we not, even among Conformists, distinguish the Malicious, Ungodly, Worldly, from holy Men of Love and Peace? |
A26982 | But did I make those words? |
A26982 | But had he no pretence for this notorious Lie against the Secluded Members? |
A26982 | But have you known me better than I have known my self? |
A26982 | But if no such liberty was intended to be continued( which I easily foresaw) why should I be a Bishop to be quickly cast out? |
A26982 | But if you are guilty, is not that more to be feared by you, than our saying why we dare not imitate you? |
A26982 | But methinks I hear the Legion that are his Army who was a Liar and Murderer from the beginning, say, What have we to do with thee? |
A26982 | But must I tell this Man, how I got the Money that did it? |
A26982 | But this Accuser saith, that he will not believe Mr. Stanley( as he calls him) or me:( But must we therefore both disbelieve our own Ears?) |
A26982 | But what is the deadly evil? |
A26982 | But what is the fault that deserveth burning? |
A26982 | But who in the beginning fore- knows the end? |
A26982 | But why then do not these Men love and cherish me, while they are striving for a Foreign Jurisdiction, if I be so much for them? |
A26982 | By what? |
A26982 | Can we chuse but know that which every Corner in all the Land did speak? |
A26982 | Dare you ask leave to sin again and again, when the pardon of every sin, is the pardon of the punishment in Hell Fire? |
A26982 | David saith, Shall the Throne of Iniquity have Fellowship with thee that frameth mischief by a Law? |
A26982 | Did Meditating broach a Book that was not published nor written till thirty years after? |
A26982 | Did he know my Heart, that I did it for Reputation? |
A26982 | Did he motion any thing but the Primitive Episcopacy, with the edditions of their large Diocess, Wealth and Honour? |
A26982 | Do their Lives shew it? |
A26982 | Do you think that I can remember all that I have written before mens Books? |
A26982 | Doth God require us to mourn and cry for the common evils, if we will escape our selves? |
A26982 | Doth Scripture use Hellish Language, in calling wicked Rulers GODS? |
A26982 | Doth credible fame speak it? |
A26982 | Doth he say a word so much as to deny his Letter to the Pope, to venture Crown and all for Union? |
A26982 | Doth he say a word to confute all this? |
A26982 | Doth not Conformity renounce and forswear this? |
A26982 | Doth not this Man more disgrace his Church than me, that taketh it for the poyson of Asps to cast out only the uncapable, and keep in the rest? |
A26982 | Go ye cursed,& c. What enmity to the Church is it to complain of such Men? |
A26982 | Have I not fully proved it? |
A26982 | Have not the Divisions been these thirty years a trouble to this Land, which these Men might have prevented and cost them nothing? |
A26982 | He asketh, How know you but your Master certified of you? |
A26982 | He querieth, Did not your Master Examine you? |
A26982 | How came I to escape till now my self? |
A26982 | How can a Man be n nocent before such impudent Accusers and Judges? |
A26982 | How contrary is it to Thankfulness and Ingenuity, to wish to be spared in Impenitency, after the purchase and tenders of so great Mercy? |
A26982 | How easily ▪ by such Fictions, may he turn much of the Gospel into Blasphemies? |
A26982 | How foolish, and how wicked? |
A26982 | How impossible is that? |
A26982 | How know I what odd or secret Act of any particular Persons this Man might know of? |
A26982 | How large is Hooker for the Popular Legislative Power; and that the King useth not Power, but Usurpation, when he useth more than the Law giveth him? |
A26982 | How large is bishop Bilson for Resisting the King in divers Cases? |
A26982 | How many German Divines blamed the Interim imposed by the Emperor as for Peace? |
A26982 | How many Lies for one Truth is carried for News, or for Slander about the Streets? |
A26982 | How many excellent Preachers hath God raised by this Way, which he would have hinder''d by severe Penalties? |
A26982 | How pregnant is malice of falshood? |
A26982 | I have his Testimony to the contrary: He sent D. Lauderdale to me purposely to invite me to receive the Testification of his Favour and Acceptance? |
A26982 | I have written against the Pope too: And is not that as bad? |
A26982 | If King James Commission a French and Irish Army to Invade England, are all bound not to resist them? |
A26982 | If each Man, sure England had not Diocesses enough for so many Thousands: If all, as an Aristocracy, could they desire more than Convocations have? |
A26982 | If it were good, why is it a Scandalum magnatum to say you did it? |
A26982 | If it were not good, why did they do it, and why do you justifie it? |
A26982 | Is Repentance for feeling and bewailing all this, so great a duty, as you suppose? |
A26982 | Is an Attempt of voluntary Concord and Peace the poyson of Asps? |
A26982 | Is it Integrally perfect: Or must I wish it burnt else? |
A26982 | Is it a wrong to Princes that Beelzebub is called The Prince of the Devils, and the Prince that Ruleth in the Air? |
A26982 | Is it like that I was against the pious Conformists, when I was tutored by them, heard them, and was of their Judgment? |
A26982 | Is not a General Prayer for them enough? |
A26982 | Is silencing, ruining, and keeping in Goals all that own not so much of your Infallibility, the Means to avoid Confusions? |
A26982 | Is there any thing pious or charitable, that these Men can not turn into odious Crimes, by malignant Calumny? |
A26982 | Is this so poysonous? |
A26982 | Is this the Credit of our Church History? |
A26982 | Is your Merit and Praise a Scandal? |
A26982 | May not a Man disown such shameless Liars as some Ministers are, without disowning the Ministry? |
A26982 | Must I repent of that? |
A26982 | Must I, or may I therefore Repent of all that men of divers Minds call me to Repent of? |
A26982 | Must the Rulers themselves be Judges, or every Subject for himself? |
A26982 | Must we be brought under Aristocratical Popery, or French Church- Government, merely by saying It is not Popery? |
A26982 | Must we not refuse Perjury, for fear of your supposition that we accuse you? |
A26982 | O how hard is it to be impartial? |
A26982 | O how much more of such work have some to answer for? |
A26982 | Or did he know me better, who I suppose never spake with me, but hath lived two hundred( and lately and hundred) Miles from me? |
A26982 | Or is he displeased that I gathered not a separated Church? |
A26982 | Or is not the poyson of Asps under their lips, that are haters of it, and have not known the way of peace? |
A26982 | Or of disliking such Churchmen? |
A26982 | Or than Paul, that charged Timothy so dreadfully, as before God and Christ, to preach the Word, and be instant, in Season, and out of Season? |
A26982 | Or that he set up such Bishops as Laud, Bromhall, and others? |
A26982 | Or to deny his sworn Articles for Toleration, mentioned in Rushworth''s Collections, and others? |
A26982 | Or to deny the Papists Murders in Ireland, and their power in the King''s Armies in England? |
A26982 | Or trust that Physician that cureth none? |
A26982 | Particularly: Who is there among the Living that entertained more early Prejudices against the Bishops?] |
A26982 | Read the rest; who would think but that he foresaw King Charles Reign, and our calamitous Wars in the Death of Prince Henry? |
A26982 | Reader; Oh, Who governeth that part of the World, where the greater the Sin is, the more heinous is his Crime that blameth it? |
A26982 | Saith he,[ Doth not the Reader blush for Mr. B. to read such arrogant Censures of a dying Man, concerning his Betters?] |
A26982 | Shall every Minister that preacheth occasionally for him, presume to Congregate his Flock, and give them the Sacrament? |
A26982 | That I never wrote a word to justifie his Death; but only once told the Papists that they were unmeet Accusers, as being guilty of more? |
A26982 | That think he heinously injureth them that sheweth them by the clearest light of Evidence, that they need Repentance? |
A26982 | The Archbishop of York Williams was one of them, and was not he for Episcopacy? |
A26982 | They rejected this Reviling Petition: And hath England or Hell gained more by their rejection? |
A26982 | This Man is for Moderation: Do you think he or I is more for Popery, or hath written more against it? |
A26982 | To spend his Life against his own Affections? |
A26982 | To the King? |
A26982 | To whom? |
A26982 | Uneasie? |
A26982 | V. Who hath said more to justifie, not the War only, but the Death of the Royal Martyr?] |
A26982 | Was he that hated them, more oft in their Churches than I? |
A26982 | Was it Faction to offer to teach freely in a Parish, where were Fifty Thousand that could not come within the Church? |
A26982 | Was it Sedition for Religious people to go hear a Conformable Preacher at the next Parish, when they had no Preaching at Home? |
A26982 | Was it Sedition to refuse the false Et caetera Oath of 1640? |
A26982 | Was it Sedition to say that other Societies in England were true Churches besides the Episcopal Churches? |
A26982 | Was it a Christian Kingdom, and yet was the Kingdom Representative no part of it? |
A26982 | Was it no Persecution to be Excommunicate ipso facto by Canons 6, 7, 8,& c. without being admonished or heard? |
A26982 | Was it the Presbyterians bringing home the King, who they doubted not would set up the revengeful Clergy? |
A26982 | Was it to be Diocesans, to rule a Diocess as the smallest Church that had none under it? |
A26982 | Was this a Crime? |
A26982 | Were I at his Ear I would whisper to him, Do you not take the New Testament it self to be far worse? |
A26982 | Were New England and Barmudas planted without any Persecution? |
A26982 | Were all the Thousands guilty of the Wars, that were Children or School- boys? |
A26982 | Were not the Military Clergy Men of Blood who complain of the Parliament for ejecting them, for promoting the War against them? |
A26982 | Were the many thousand Families that were put to fly the Land to Holland and America punished for nothing but Sedition? |
A26982 | What Answer do these Men deserve? |
A26982 | What Duty so great, that some will not say is a Crime that deserveth death? |
A26982 | What Historical Proof can convince this sort of Men? |
A26982 | What Hypocrisie is it to shoot at the King and say you fight for him? |
A26982 | What Law is it but the Gospel or Law of Grace that giveth pardon on such gentle terms? |
A26982 | What a Reproach is this to such a Church? |
A26982 | What abundance of false Doctrines and Censures doth ignorant Sectarian Zeal foment? |
A26982 | What doth the Man mean by rendering this odious? |
A26982 | What is Repentance but the actual healing of a sinful Soul? |
A26982 | What was the power that they would have taken to themselves? |
A26982 | What were the present Endeavours to reduce you to the like? |
A26982 | What would it do but equal Devils and Men, to save the Impenitent? |
A26982 | What would you think of such terms of pardon offered by Man, in his lesser injuries? |
A26982 | Whence then did this Man find matter or occasion for such a shameless forgery? |
A26982 | Where and in what Ages doth this Principle hold? |
A26982 | Who by refusing a Bishoprick, and other Emoluments, have lost, I think, above Twenty Thousand Pounds by Nonconformity? |
A26982 | Who can escape the charge of Rebellion from such Accusers? |
A26982 | Who could have forethought that all those doleful Events would follow, which make up Whitlock''s impartial Memorials? |
A26982 | Who ever boasted of drawing thousands to that War?] |
A26982 | Who is to be Judge whether their Rulers be so bad, as that the Bishops and People may disobey them? |
A26982 | Who more opposed the Return of our present Soveraign?] |
A26982 | Why I say with Paul, That if an Angel from Heaven preach another Gospel let him be accursed? |
A26982 | Why did he not venture to Name better than they put down? |
A26982 | Why did you not name the Book which I prefaced, that I might examine it? |
A26982 | Why doth he not also make me a Liar for saying that I then dwelt in England; and both sides were English Men, and spake English? |
A26982 | Why is not that Book answered to this day, when so many Nonconformists have Challenged, Called and Beg''d for an Answer to it? |
A26982 | Why then did they consent if they were unwilling? |
A26982 | Why were not the Eight Thousand that after conformed, guilty of those Confusions as much as the rest? |
A26982 | Will a Lying Scorn satisfie any Conscionable Nonconformist? |
A26982 | Would each Man have had this Diocesan Power, or only all, as one Political Body? |
A26982 | Would he not have them used like Men? |
A26982 | Would the King have made such an Enemy his Chaplain and a Bishop? |
A26982 | Would this be a Character of the best Church in the World, to have such Ministers? |
A26982 | Would we destroy that which we desired? |
A26982 | Would you have me confess all that he falsly accuseth me of? |
A26982 | Yet how is Hooker extolled by them? |
A26982 | You see what kind of crimes we Nonconformists are guilty of: A willingness to live out of Goals, against the Churchmens will? |
A26982 | [ Or who hath or can do more than Mr. B. to renew all our troubles and confusions?] |
A26982 | [ With what Heart could he be an Eye- witness of the Inhumane Butcheries that had been made in almost every Fight from the beginning of the Wars? |
A26982 | and is committing it and preaching it up, a virtue not to be repented of? |
A26982 | nor suffered to live? |
A26982 | or so indifferent, as that it is threatening and reviling humbly to petition Drs to take heed of them? |
A26982 | what abundance of false accusations doth Envy and Malice vend? |
A27065 | 11. and saith, he is full of their burnt- offerings, and delights not in them? |
A27065 | 14, 15,& c. Or if they despise or hate the Discipline, Ordinances and Holy Communion of the Church? |
A27065 | 5. Who ever hardened himself against him, and hath prospered? |
A27065 | 8, 9[ For what is the hope of the Hypocrite though he hath gained, when God taketh away his soul? |
A27065 | And as James saith( as aforecited)[ Do not the rich oppress you, and draw you before the judgement seats? |
A27065 | And do you not grosly play the Hypocrites here? |
A27065 | And do you so indeed, or do you not play the Hypocrites? |
A27065 | And hath not Satan instruments and tongues enough of his own, but he must use those that are Christs against himself? |
A27065 | And here let me set before you your Profession, and then try your selves, Whether you are such as you profess your selves to be or not? |
A27065 | And how comes it to pass that you distaste the highest degrees of holiness? |
A27065 | And how dost thou cross thine own intentions? |
A27065 | And how few of these Dives''es do think the damning sin of flesh- pleasing to be any sin in them at all? |
A27065 | And if another hurt thee, in the heel, wilt thou therefore stab thy self to the heart? |
A27065 | And if they live in Communion with drunkards, with harlots, with worldlings, or sensual, vain, or ambitious men, and fly from the Communion of Saints? |
A27065 | And if this mirth could alwaies last, how happy a man were the self- deceiver? |
A27065 | And in all this sin and misery how senseless and secure are these prosperous fools? |
A27065 | And is it thus with you, that have unhumbled hearts, that never felt the need of Christ, as condemned miserable men must do? |
A27065 | And is reproach and evil- speaking the fruit or evidence of such love? |
A27065 | And really is it thus with you, as you profess? |
A27065 | And that hath no hurt but what shall certainly procure his good? |
A27065 | And what is the meaning of this much of your profession? |
A27065 | And which way then wilt thou look for help? |
A27065 | And why are you not now of the mind that you will be at death or judgement, but that your solly doth turn your prosperity to your bane? |
A27065 | And will you think so strange of smaller matters, as to think they excuse your impatience, and evil speeches? |
A27065 | And, alas, what a pittiful reward is it, to be thought well of, and applauded by the tongues of mortal men? |
A27065 | Are there not tongues enough sharpened against us in the world, but we must wound each other with our own? |
A27065 | Are they great? |
A27065 | Are you used worse then Christ was used? |
A27065 | Art thou ever the better when death awaketh thee, and thy confident dream is at an end? |
A27065 | Art thou he that troubleth Israel? |
A27065 | As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord; how strange and precise a course would it seem to them? |
A27065 | As if it would prove that a man is sound, because he dwelleth with them that are so? |
A27065 | Bethink you well whether Christ and his Apostles lived not a more comfortable life then you? |
A27065 | But I suppose you will here say, Is it not lawful to call a spade a spade? |
A27065 | But do I need to tell the worldly fleshly Hypocrite how far he is from this? |
A27065 | But do you live as men that believe indeed, that they are passing unto such a judgement? |
A27065 | But do you not play the Hypocrites? |
A27065 | But doth Christ encourage their destroying zeal? |
A27065 | But doth he deceive thee, if he give thee not the salvation which he never promised thee? |
A27065 | But how should it be done? |
A27065 | But is it not folly that goes under the name of wisedom? |
A27065 | But must we stay so long? |
A27065 | But where did he ever promise salvation to a superficial Pharisee? |
A27065 | But who will spend words on such impious absurdities? |
A27065 | Can any thing prove him truly wise that directly contradicteth the wisdom of the Lord? |
A27065 | Can any thing prove that man to be wise, that is not wise enough to be saved? |
A27065 | Can flags there flourish where no waters flow? |
A27065 | Can not you endure to hear and consider of these things? |
A27065 | Dare any of you say and stand to it, that there is not greater matter for joy in the love of Christ, then in the love of a harlot? |
A27065 | Did you lovingly first admonish them, and impartially hear what they can say for themselves? |
A27065 | Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgement- seats? |
A27065 | Do these seem strange matters to you? |
A27065 | Do they not blaspheme that worthy name by which you are called? |
A27065 | Do they not blaspheme that worthy name by which you are called?] |
A27065 | Do you find it as easie to be meek and patient, and forgive a wrong, and love an enemy? |
A27065 | Do you first and principally desire the hallowing of Gods name, the coming of his Kingdom, and the doing of his will?] |
A27065 | Do you go about to tell him of the necessity of the fear of God, and of loving him above all, and of trusting him, and serving him as our only Lord? |
A27065 | Do you indeed Love God as God? |
A27065 | Do you make it your principal care to please him? |
A27065 | Do you not all profess that you believe in Jesus Christ? |
A27065 | Do you not all profess to believe in the Holy Ghost? |
A27065 | Do you not all say that you Believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of Heaven and earth, and that you will have no other gods but him? |
A27065 | Do you not know as much by your selves as you have to reproach your brother with? |
A27065 | Do you not then invite both God and man to take you at the worst, and use you as you use your brother? |
A27065 | Do you put him upon the inward practice of Religion, and the fuller devoting of his soul to God, and the life of faith, and a heavenly mind? |
A27065 | Do you tell him of hell fire, and of the wrath of God against the ungodly? |
A27065 | Do you tell him of hypocrisie? |
A27065 | Doth it grieve you most to offend him? |
A27065 | For the time to come, will you but try a serious holy life before you speak against it any more? |
A27065 | For what good can it do him, that another hears him evil spoken of? |
A27065 | Have you not enemies enough to do the work of enemies, but friends must do it? |
A27065 | Have you not load enough from the world? |
A27065 | He asketh such, To what purpose is the multitude of their sacrifices? |
A27065 | He shall lean upon his house, but it shall not stand: he shall hold it fast, but it shall not endure,] Or, Can bull- rushes but by the rivers grow? |
A27065 | He will save to the utmost: but whom? |
A27065 | How Vain is that hope that will vanish when the enjoyment is expected, and will end in endless desperation? |
A27065 | How can they love him with all their hearts, that have let out those hearts to vanity before? |
A27065 | How easie a thing is it to bring an ungodly man to be of a Religion that consisteth in such things as these? |
A27065 | How few, were ever the more holy by applause? |
A27065 | How little are they annoyed, or their joy or melody interrupted, by all the race of earth or hell? |
A27065 | How oft have we told God in our prayers, that we had rather have the light of his countenance in adversity, then be strange to him in prosperity? |
A27065 | How ready is Herod to gratifie a wanton dancer with a Prophets head? |
A27065 | How saie and quiet are those millions of souls, that are now with Christ? |
A27065 | How then will you endure to feel them? |
A27065 | How wonderful hard is it to convince them of their misery? |
A27065 | If all such must be defamed, how infamous will you be? |
A27065 | If another be bad, wilt thou become so by unjust defaming him? |
A27065 | If another suffered as you do, and you were advanced as another is, would you not speak more mildly then? |
A27065 | If it be Hypocrisie or other vice that you so hate; why do you not hate them in your selves? |
A27065 | If not, how comes it to pass that you stick in your natural state, as if you had no need of sanctification? |
A27065 | If now thou wilt hope under the threatenings of God( that thou mayst be saved in thy present state) wilt thou then hope under his execution? |
A27065 | If you are your selves believers, go into the Sanctuary, and ask the Scriptures what will be their end? |
A27065 | If you say, How are they safe that are so tossed by sufferings? |
A27065 | If you thus truly love him as God;( and above all) how comes it to pass that you seek the world more carefully, and eagerly then him? |
A27065 | In the use of the Lords prayer, what word do you speak that is not in hypocrisie? |
A27065 | In their entertainments, visitations, and converse, how rare is serious holy confere ● ce among them? |
A27065 | Is he not safe that hath the promise of God for his security, and is related to him as his child, and hath Christ for his Head and Saviour? |
A27065 | Is he not safe that is delivered from the wrath of God, and the flames of hell, and dare look before him to eternity with hope and comfort? |
A27065 | Is he wise that preferreth a feather to a Kingdom? |
A27065 | Is it I? |
A27065 | Is it not shame and pitty, that the followers of Christ should imitate the Devil, and ungodly men, as by detraction and reviling words they do? |
A27065 | Is it sweeter to you to think and speak of him, then of the world? |
A27065 | Is it to do him hurt, or good? |
A27065 | Is it wisdom to esteem men by their prosperity and pomp? |
A27065 | Is it your delight to do his will? |
A27065 | Is not God severe enough? |
A27065 | Is not a wo against them that call evil good? |
A27065 | Is not this Hypocrisie? |
A27065 | Is the condemned man wiser that makes friends for a pardon? |
A27065 | It is better to go to the house of mourning, then to the house of feasting;( do you believe this?) |
A27065 | Judge now by the success, as it is discovered in the Scriptures, what good prosperity doth to fools? |
A27065 | Lastly, you pretend also to sincere obedience: If we ask you, whether you are willing to obey God? |
A27065 | Like condemned Traytors, that should say to him that ● ● ● ngeth them a pardon[ Who 〈 ◊ 〉 you authority to make so 〈 … 〉 me?] |
A27065 | Nay why do you make such men your companions? |
A27065 | Nor any, but what he may rejoyce in: and is sure shall be the matter of his thanks when it is past? |
A27065 | O that I had lain in medicinal poverty and rags, when I took this mortal surfeit of prosperity? |
A27065 | O that we could do it? |
A27065 | One would think it should be the easiest matter in the world, for such as you to know that you are ungodly, that hate godliness and oppose it? |
A27065 | Or as if it would prove a man rich or honourable, that he converseth with such? |
A27065 | Or else that you take up with a Formal, an affected, or a forced kind of Religion, in stead of Sanctification and spiritual devotion? |
A27065 | Or from the depth of sorrows hear his cryes? |
A27065 | Poor self- deceiver what wilt thou then do, or whither wilt thou betake thy soul for help? |
A27065 | Then conscience will force the now befooled Dives to cry out,[ O that I had been the most despised man on earth, while honour did befool me? |
A27065 | Then you say, who gave you authority to do thus and thus by me? |
A27065 | This and no better being the self- deceivers case, is not conscience now at work within you? |
A27065 | Thy flatterers and prosperity may cherish thy deceitful hopes for a time; but who will maintain them, when God commandeth desperation to torment thee? |
A27065 | To conclude, you pretend to all that necessary to salvation; but have you that in reality which you pretend to? |
A27065 | What can you say to excuse all this from palpable Hypocrisie? |
A27065 | What can you say to such a man in order to his conversion, which his self- deceiving Religion will not frustrate? |
A27065 | What families are worse ordered, and have less of serious piety then the rich? |
A27065 | What hope hath the prevailing Hypocrite, When God shall chase his soul to endless night? |
A27065 | What men do more carelesly cast away their precious time, then these Dives''es do? |
A27065 | What men in the world do live so sensual a life as rich and prosperous worldlings live? |
A27065 | What say you? |
A27065 | What soul so sleepy and regardless now, that will not then cry,[ Lord, Lord open to us] when the door is shut, and it is too late? |
A27065 | What tell you him of Repentance and Conversion? |
A27065 | What''s this but to deceive your own hearts, and to mock your selves with a seeming vain and mock- repentance? |
A27065 | When God hath no competitour, to whom else then canst thou turn thy thoughts? |
A27065 | Where do you find less serious ● ure 〈 … 〉 salvation, then among the prosperous great ones of the world? |
A27065 | Who then shall take us out of his hands? |
A27065 | Why do you not hate as much the sins of the notoriously ungodly, who shew them without shame? |
A27065 | Why is it that you speak of men that you know not? |
A27065 | Why speak you not of their good as well as of the supposed evil? |
A27065 | Why then dost thou hurt and shame thy self? |
A27065 | Will God relieve him in his agonies? |
A27065 | [ A ● ● thou made of the Kings counsel ● f ● rbear: why should''st thou be smitten? |
A27065 | [ Are they sin? |
A27065 | [ By what authority dost thou these things, and who gave thee this authority?] |
A27065 | [ Can the rush grow up without mire? |
A27065 | [ Have any of the Rulers or of the Pharises believed on him?] |
A27065 | [ How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the Kingdom of God?] |
A27065 | [ Knowest thou not this of old since man was placed upon earth, that the triumphing of the wicked is short, and the joy of the Hypocrite for a moment? |
A27065 | [ Shall not God avenge his own elect, that cry day and night unto him, though he bear long with them? |
A27065 | [ Who hath hardened himself against him and hath prospered?] |
A27065 | [ Who made thee a Prince and a Judge over us?] |
A27065 | [ Who then can be saved?] |
A27065 | [ Who would set the bryers and thornes against me in battel? |
A27065 | an hour to eternity? |
A27065 | and are you not accordingly engaged in Covenant with him? |
A27065 | and are you not engaged to him in Covenant as your Sanctifier? |
A27065 | and by the noise, and business and pleasures of the world, to be diverted and hindered from the speedy setling and securing your everlasting state? |
A27065 | and for the comforts of true- hearted holiness that now they hate? |
A27065 | and have you not in Covenant taken him for your Saviour and Lord? |
A27065 | and if he should not condemn such heartless Formalists, when he hath so often told us that he will condemn them? |
A27065 | and if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? |
A27065 | and live as quietly without any acquaintance with true Regeneration, and the Spirit to dwell and rule within you, as it you needed no such change? |
A27065 | and of others that are innocent, for the sakes of those that you imagine to be guilty? |
A27065 | and shall live with Christ in joy for ever? |
A27065 | and that love the sin that he would cure, and are unwilling to be mortified and sanctified by his grace? |
A27065 | and that you are more pleased with worldly thoughts and speeches and employments, then with divine? |
A27065 | and that you will not be brought to the mortification, self- denyal, and unreserved obedience, which are the essence of sanctification? |
A27065 | and valueth most the things that are most vilified by the doctrine and example of Christ and his Apostles? |
A27065 | and vilifieth that which Christ extolleth? |
A27065 | and whether this be the work that the God of heaven did send you about into the world? |
A27065 | and why do you so greedily snatch at any matter of reproach, and take it by hearsay from the most ignorant, rash, or malicious mouths? |
A27065 | and will it not be soon enough? |
A27065 | and yet will you not confess that you are dissembling Hypocrites? |
A27065 | are not they malicious? |
A27065 | are you so hasty for so dreadful a revenge, can you not stay when the Judge is at the door? |
A27065 | can the flag grow without water? |
A27065 | can you talk so of the friends that are most dear to you, or that you love indeed? |
A27065 | comest thou hither thus Controler- like, to prate and preach to us? |
A27065 | did you never count what it must cost you to be saved? |
A27065 | did you never read of forsaking all for Christ, if indeed you would be his Disciples? |
A27065 | did you never read or hear the Gospel? |
A27065 | earth to heaven? |
A27065 | he will tell you that its the thing he hateth: who speaks against it more then he? |
A27065 | how do our hearts rise against that man, that speaks reproachfully of our dearest friends? |
A27065 | if not more passionately, yet more deeply, effectually and resolvedly; with a love that will cause you to deny and part with all for him? |
A27065 | in reading, and meditating on the Word of God, in holy conference, and secret prayer, and instructing your families& c? |
A27065 | in the assurance of salvation, then in lands and Lordships? |
A27065 | is he not a Christian, a Protestant, a Religious man? |
A27065 | may not a man speak of the hurtful crimes of others? |
A27065 | more then hell? |
A27065 | nor know the terms of Christ till now? |
A27065 | or he that with unanswerable subtilty reasoneth against it, till the ladder be turned? |
A27065 | or is that which is good made death to them? |
A27065 | or to avert his sentence which must shortly pass on all that are impenitent? |
A27065 | perhaps thou mayst: But when thou art burning, wilt thou hope? |
A27065 | should that time be laught and plaid away, that hasteth so fast, and is all so short for so great a work, as the securing our salvation? |
A27065 | speak but as men that dare not lye before the Lord that knows your hearts? |
A27065 | that shall lose nothing but what he hath already forsaken, and esteemeth but as dross and dung? |
A27065 | to such a seeming Christian as thou? |
A27065 | what abundance of them are de ● d- hear ● ed, sensless, disregarders of everlasting things? |
A27065 | what dost thou, when thou sayst[ I believe the Communion of Saints] but say[ I am a dissembling Hypocrite] if it he thus with thee? |
A27065 | what harm dost thou fear by it? |
A27065 | what is your end in speaking against your brother? |
A27065 | what pitty is it to see them so eager for prosperity, and so regardless of the proper use and benefit of it? |
A27065 | what sign of a man in so great danger, of eternal torment, unless it be that he little feareth it? |
A27065 | what sign of his spiritual captivity and slavery, and of the load of sin that lyeth upon his soul, unless it be that he feels it not? |
A27065 | what though thou sit here with so great hopes and confidence of salvation, as maketh thee even scorn the man that questions it? |
A27065 | when they come to appear before him, he asketh them, Who required this at their hands, to tread in his Courts? |
A27065 | when thou art dying, wilt thou hope? |
A27065 | when thou art tormented, wilt thou hope? |
A27065 | when you are far more tender of your own names then of Gods, and more regardful of your own honour? |
A27065 | when you die by your wisdom; and have disputed your selves out of the reach of mercy, will you not bewail it then as folly? |
A27065 | who shall condemn us? |
A27065 | why are you not more in speaking well of what is well, then in speaking ill of what is ill? |
A27065 | why do you willfully continue in those sins, which conscience tells you God forbids? |
A27065 | why is it that you obey your fleshly desires, before and against the God whom you acknowledge? |
A27065 | why live you so viciously, while you profess obedience to the Lord? |
A27065 | why will you not be perswaded to that holiness, justice and charity which you know his Law commandeth you? |
A27065 | will God hear his cry, when trouble cometh upon him?] |
A27065 | will not his judgement be terrible enough? |
A27065 | with your superlative love: Are your hearts set upon him? |
A27065 | would you wish men to suffer more then he will inflict on the impenitent? |
A27065 | would you wish us to be silent, and betray your souls, and damn our own, for fear of disquieting and displeasing you? |
A27065 | 〈 … 〉 you will yet wink and hate the light, if you perish in your self- deceiving, who can help it? |
A26917 | 24.5, 6. and which of the Prophets and Apostles did they not persecute? |
A26917 | After all that is come upon us, should we again break thy Commandements, wouldst thou not be angry with us till thou hadst consumed us?] |
A26917 | Ah thinks a poor Minister, What hopes had I once of these Professors; and are they come to this? |
A26917 | Alas Sirs, if any deceivers come among us, how few of our people are able to withstand them, and defend the truth of God against them? |
A26917 | Alas, how little hearty love is there to Christ in his Members, even in them that are confident they love the brethren? |
A26917 | Alas, how much pride prevaileth with many that seem to go far in the way of Piety? |
A26917 | And O what an insensible heart hath he that doth not understand the voice of all this wondrous mercy? |
A26917 | And O who would not aspire after the highest measure of Holiness, in hope of a high degree of Glory? |
A26917 | And can you think it is not somthing extraordinary that God must needs expect from you? |
A26917 | And do you not know that if ever you be damned, it will be for loving the World too much, and God too little? |
A26917 | And how apt is he to think almost as highly of the teaching of Aristotle, Plato, Seneca, or at least of some excellent preacher, as of Christs? |
A26917 | And how can Infants go through all these works? |
A26917 | And how little comfort findeth he in believing, in comparison of that which the confirmed find? |
A26917 | And how little doth he repent of this, or endeavour to reform it? |
A26917 | And how little doth this weak Christian refer his common knowledge to God? |
A26917 | And how little life receives he from him? |
A26917 | And how loyal would those rebellious Jews seem, when they thought it the only way to engage the Roman Power against Christ? |
A26917 | And how many a snare doth lie before him which he never did observe? |
A26917 | And if we try the Graces, or obedience of Professors, alas, how small shall we find them in the most? |
A26917 | And must God have such servants as these, that upon every rumour or word or trouble, are wavering and looking back, and ready to forsake him? |
A26917 | And must we incur all this for magnifying you, and will you dishonour your selves? |
A26917 | And should a people thus fed be Dwarfs continually? |
A26917 | And should all this be answered but with triss ● ng from you? |
A26917 | And should not believers now, be awakened to great and careful preparations, for such a day as this? |
A26917 | And should not you abound in love and holiness? |
A26917 | And under such pressing necessities as these, what Christians should we be? |
A26917 | And what can be said more Blasphemously against God, or more injuriously against Religion, the Scriptures, and the Saints? |
A26917 | And what man would choose such a weak and languishing state as this, before a confirmed healthful state? |
A26917 | And who hath not only frustrated these hopes, but almost broke them all to pieces? |
A26917 | And why came we into the Army of Christ but to fight? |
A26917 | And why have we the life of Grace but to use it, and to live by it? |
A26917 | And why then should we imagine that the Heavenly Hierusalem shall not be so too? |
A26917 | And yet I hope you will not seek after these because they are novelties, and give over eating Bread because you have eaten of it already? |
A26917 | And yet will you be Infants, and do no more with all your helps? |
A26917 | And yet will you stop in a state so like to those that perish? |
A26917 | Are Infants meet for such encounters? |
A26917 | Are the thoughts or God and Heaven unpleasant or terrible to you? |
A26917 | Are you content if you have but Life here, to difference you from the dead? |
A26917 | Are you inclined to fleshly lust? |
A26917 | Are you inclined to please your appetite in drinking? |
A26917 | Are you lyable to a gluttonous pleasing of your appetite? |
A26917 | Are you not in more danger of overloving a pleasing and prosperous condition, than a bitter and vexatious state? |
A26917 | But I am a poor obscure person, that have neither abilities of mind or body or estate; and what good can I do? |
A26917 | But how few lament the sins against Government, which this Land hath been sadly guilty of? |
A26917 | But if you can, when think you should it be done? |
A26917 | But on whom? |
A26917 | But the seeming Christian is most carefull how to prosper in the World, or please his flesh? |
A26917 | But the weak Christian, though he be also united unto Christ, and live by faith, yet how languid are the operations of that faith? |
A26917 | But the weak Christian, though he hath no sin but what he is a hater of, and fain would be delivered from, yet alas how imperfect is his deliverance? |
A26917 | But to the weak unconfirmed Soul, how much of the means of Grace is even as lost? |
A26917 | Can I be a gainer if I lose my soul? |
A26917 | Christ is the way to the Father: but to what purpose did you come into this way, if you meant not to travel on in it? |
A26917 | Christian, hadst thou not infinitely rather Love God with the greatest Love than with a less? |
A26917 | Consider this as the highest Motive of all? |
A26917 | Did not his Master prove as was reported? |
A26917 | Do you consider what great things you must make account to suffer for Christ? |
A26917 | Do you think that men are like to be won by such lives as these? |
A26917 | Do your worst to draw them to intemperance in eating or drinking or recreations, or any of the delights of the Flesh? |
A26917 | For while one saith, I am of Paul, and another, I am of Apollo, are ye not carnal? |
A26917 | For will he be at so much care to keep up a World to dishonour and abuse him? |
A26917 | For ye are yet carnal: For whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men? |
A26917 | God expecteth more from you; for he hath given you more, and meaneth to do more for you? |
A26917 | Have you been warmed with his wondrous love, and washed with his blood, and saved by his matchless mercy? |
A26917 | Have you not seen how many that seemed strong have been overthrown in a time of tryal? |
A26917 | Here is a man eminent in meekness and humility, and patience and self- denial; discompose and disturb his mind if you can? |
A26917 | His friend meeting him, asked him how he came so quickly to forsake his happiness? |
A26917 | His heart saith; Alas, whither shall I go, if I go from Christ? |
A26917 | How apt are( not only Hypocrites, but) weak Christians, to aggravate all that is done against them? |
A26917 | How can you then expect that he should preserve the World? |
A26917 | How censorious are they of others, especially that differ from them in lesser things? |
A26917 | How dark and dull are his thoughts of Christ? |
A26917 | How few are they that can rejoyce in tribulation, persecution and bodily distresses, because of the hopes laid up in Heaven? |
A26917 | How few are they that stand in a day of tryal? |
A26917 | How few can use prosperity in riches and health and reputation, with a mortified, weaned, heavenly mind? |
A26917 | How few will do or suffer much for them, or relieve them in their want as suffering with them? |
A26917 | How ill do they bear dis- esteem or under valuing? |
A26917 | How ill doth it become men to make any stand in the way to Heaven? |
A26917 | How little are most acquainted with the life of Faith? |
A26917 | How little do they admire the Redeemer and his blessed work? |
A26917 | How little doth he depend on Christ in his enquiries after the things of nature? |
A26917 | How little is his sense of the wonders of Gods love revealed to the world in the mysterie of Redemption? |
A26917 | How little sweetness do they find in means? |
A26917 | How little use doth he make of Christ? |
A26917 | How many a temptation is he much unacquainted with? |
A26917 | How much more when he that is for Paul doth censure and rail at Cephas and Apollo? |
A26917 | How oft have I heard a common drunkard with tears cry out against himself for his sin, and yet go on in it? |
A26917 | How oft have I heard a sick man most vehemently profess his resolutions for a holy life, which all have come to nothing afterwards? |
A26917 | How often is he soild and wounded? |
A26917 | How small a matter, a word, a seeming wrong or disrespect will turn their love into estrangedness or bitterness? |
A26917 | How then will silly ignorant Christians be able to perswade them? |
A26917 | How unskilfully doth he manage his Christian armour? |
A26917 | How well do they think of themselves and their own parts and performances? |
A26917 | How wise are they in their own conceits? |
A26917 | How worldly, and close handed and eager of gain, are many that say they despise the World, and take it for their enemy? |
A26917 | I beseech you look upon the face of the World, and see whether it have not need of the strongest helps? |
A26917 | I mean, by partaking of the greatest effects of it, and the fullest sense of his everlasting favour? |
A26917 | If a Papist be to plead his cause with them, how few have we that can answer him? |
A26917 | If any duty be cross to their profit or credit with men, how obstinate are they against it? |
A26917 | If ever Christ were needful, he is needful still? |
A26917 | If he would have Godliness be scandalized, who hath he to do it but Professors of Godliness? |
A26917 | If no, why do you wish a death to be tryed once again? |
A26917 | If you were never drawn to do any thing to the reproach of the Church, yet what a grief must it be to us, to see so many of your selves miscarry? |
A26917 | Is ignorance, and dulness, and earthliness, and selfishness, excusable after all these means? |
A26917 | Is it long of him, who girdeth himself to wash and wipe their feet? |
A26917 | Is the time of uncertain painful sickness better than this? |
A26917 | Is there any former or present sin which is a burden or terror to your Consciences? |
A26917 | Is there any other that hath the word and spirit of eternal life? |
A26917 | Is there any thing in all this Character of a Christian, that deserveth the suspicion or hatred of the world? |
A26917 | Is there any thing in this World that is sw ● ● t ● r t ● your thoughts than God and Heaven? |
A26917 | It is but a few from whom God expecteth any great matter: And shall those few prove deceitful to him? |
A26917 | It is most sweet in quality: what sweeter to miserable souls than Mercy? |
A26917 | Let not death surprize you as a thing that you never seriously expected ▪ Can you do no more in preparation for it than you do? |
A26917 | Many good works have I shewed you from my Father: for which of these works do ye stone me? |
A26917 | Many heavenly graces are in the sanctified Believer: For which of these do you hate and injure him? |
A26917 | Must those hands be employed to demolish his Kingdom, that were washed by him, and should have built it up? |
A26917 | Must you be in the eternal Joyes of Heaven, when all your unsanctified Neighbours are in torments, and yet will you not more endeavour to excel them? |
A26917 | O Sirs, must God be thus wonderfully tender of you, and will you not now be very tender of his interest and your duty? |
A26917 | O how many Prayers, and Confessions, and Duties do these men lose? |
A26917 | O if he were but sure that this would be the day, or week, or year of the coming of his Lord, how glad would the confirmed Christian be? |
A26917 | O there is not the holiest Saint on earth, but will confess with lamentation, how little his love to God is in comparison of what it should be? |
A26917 | O what a glory would you be to your Profession, if you could attain to this degree? |
A26917 | O what a heart hath that man, that will not be heartned with such calls as these? |
A26917 | O what a noyse they make of it, if they think that any one hath wronged them? |
A26917 | O what a sin and shame is this? |
A26917 | O what a sport is this to the Devil, when he can set his professed enemies by the ears, and make them fall upon one another? |
A26917 | O what an unrighteous generation are his enemies, that blame the Law because men break it? |
A26917 | O what endeavours then should be used, for the heavenly everlasting treasure? |
A26917 | O who hath gone beyond thee for power and plenty and purity of Ordinances? |
A26917 | Or will you teach your children Hebrew, and Greek, and Latine, before they learn English? |
A26917 | Or would they have him condemn sinners to more grievous punishment, when they are already offended at the severity of his threatnings? |
A26917 | Shall all the Workmanship of God abuse him? |
A26917 | Shall all these high things be spoken of you, and will you live so far below them all? |
A26917 | Shall he have no honour from any inferiour Creature? |
A26917 | Shall he thus difference you from all the rest of the world, and will you not study to declare the difference? |
A26917 | Shall such a thing as Heaven be coldly, or carelesly minded and sought after? |
A26917 | Shall the Lord of Heaven thus make his boast of you to all the World, and will you not make good his boasting? |
A26917 | Should not all the love and service that you have be his? |
A26917 | Should not new Motives and helps thus added to the old, be the means of adding to your zeal and holiness? |
A26917 | Should such a matchless Miracle of Love, be answered with no greater 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A26917 | Though the weak Christian hath the same Master, yet alas how little doth he learn? |
A26917 | Were these men confirmed and stablished in the Faith? |
A26917 | Were these men rooted and built up in Christ? |
A26917 | What a Life is this to be the burdens of the Church, when you might be the Pillars of the Church? |
A26917 | What a case is that Hospital in where all are sick, and no healthful persons among them to help them? |
A26917 | What a hainous wrong is this to God? |
A26917 | What a stay to the places where you live? |
A26917 | What can rationally rejoyce that man, who is sure to die, and unready to dye, and is yet unfurnished of dying comforts? |
A26917 | What do men choose a Physician for, but to heal them? |
A26917 | What excellent disputations have Cicero and Seneca, the Platonists and Stoicks, to prove that Virtue is of it self sufficient to make Man happy? |
A26917 | What excellent hopes had we once in England of the flourishing of piety and happy union among the Churches and servants of Christ? |
A26917 | What greater reproach almost could have befallen us, than for the adversary to stand by, and see men pulling out each others Throats? |
A26917 | What if Christs Disciples strive who shall be the greatest? |
A26917 | What more would you have? |
A26917 | What shifts and frivolous excuses have they then? |
A26917 | What sin would not gain or pleasure draw him to commit, if he were but sure to be forgiven? |
A26917 | What then would they prove if they were tryed by the flames? |
A26917 | What work are you like to make him, in this decrepit and weak condition? |
A26917 | When they need Discipline themselves how impatient are they of it, and how do they abhor it? |
A26917 | Where then is the mouth that pleadeth the cause of infidelity and impiety? |
A26917 | Which of you would desire an Infant or Criple to be your servant? |
A26917 | Who heareth of such angry complaints on Gods behalf, as on mens own? |
A26917 | Whose Oxe or Asse have I taken? |
A26917 | Why came we into the Vineyard, but to work? |
A26917 | Why came we into the race but to run for the prize? |
A26917 | Will you go to the top of the stairs or ladder, without beginning at the lower steps? |
A26917 | Will you not walk in the Spirit which is given you, and mortify the flesh by it? |
A26917 | Will you ride your colt before you break him? |
A26917 | Will you run up and down for Physick when you are sick? |
A26917 | Will you sow your ground before you manure or plow it? |
A26917 | Will your rear an house before you frame it? |
A26917 | Would he have a Church divided? |
A26917 | Would he have publick divisions maintained among all the Churches of the World? |
A26917 | Would he have the truth opposed, and error and darkness to be promoted? |
A26917 | Would they have him yet make stricter Laws( when they hate these for being so strict already?) |
A26917 | Would they not say that you unworthily exposed them to scorn? |
A26917 | Would you wish the poor World to write after such a crooked and bloted Copy? |
A26917 | Yea, how often are you quarrelling with your food; and you do not like it? |
A26917 | You are his dear adopted children, and his Spouse: and should not you be faithful to him to the death? |
A26917 | You are his friends; and should a friend abuse him? |
A26917 | You are his houshold- servants; and will you not labour for him and stick to him? |
A26917 | You have bound your selves to him by more serious frequent vows and Covenants than other men have done? |
A26917 | You have had many a Prayer answered, and many a deliverance granted; and will you make a stand when all these experiences do call you forward? |
A26917 | You have tasted of the sweetness of the Love of Christ, and wondered at the unspeakable Riches of his Grace? |
A26917 | You or none that must be exemplary to the World; and shall it be none at all? |
A26917 | You receive Christ as a Physician of your diseased Souls; and doth not this engage you to go on to use his Medicines till you are cured? |
A26917 | [ If ye offer the blind for Sacrifice, is it not evil? |
A26917 | [ O how great is his goodness which he hath laid up for them that fear him? |
A26917 | and be beloved again with the greatest of his Love? |
A26917 | and blame Religion because many are not Religious enough? |
A26917 | and fear and abhor the approach of an evil thought? |
A26917 | and hath charged them to mark them that cause divisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which they had learned, and to avoid them? |
A26917 | and hath told them, that if they bite and devour one another, they shall be devoured one of another? |
A26917 | and how carnal, and common is much of his knowledge? |
A26917 | and how little good can they say they get by them? |
A26917 | and how oft is he hearkning to the teaching of the flesh? |
A26917 | and how unapt to judg themselves? |
A26917 | and if ye offer the lame and sick, is it not evil? |
A26917 | and inconsiderateness deprive them of the benefit of their reason? |
A26917 | and made a jest of the Judgements of the Lord? |
A26917 | and make provision for it? |
A26917 | and of overloving Riches, honour, and sensual fulness and delights, rather than Poverty, reproach, and mortification? |
A26917 | and reproached the serious holiness of Believers? |
A26917 | and should you not be as tender of his favour and his law, and honour, as of the Apple of your eye? |
A26917 | and so barren and common a kind of life? |
A26917 | and that can live upon a Promise, and comfortably wait on God for the accomplishment? |
A26917 | and to extenuate or justifie all that they do against another? |
A26917 | and what a stir do they make before they will submit? |
A26917 | and what a wrong to God and thee? |
A26917 | and what order, and growth and comfort is among them? |
A26917 | and whether he should poison, or famish, or torment himself? |
A26917 | and whether it be for wronging God or them, that all the stirre is made? |
A26917 | and who should do it but the unstable Members of it? |
A26917 | and why are you troubled that you lived no better? |
A26917 | and will you no more regard the health and stability, and spiritual peace and vigour of your souls? |
A26917 | and will you not study to shew your selves more excellent indeed? |
A26917 | and yet will you rest satisfied with an Infant- strength, to do those great and matchless works, which your Salvation lyeth on? |
A26917 | defamed them? |
A26917 | disparaged them? |
A26917 | especially when they have been in the way so long, that we might have expected before this they should have been as it were almost within sight of it? |
A26917 | even more sometimes than a Drunkard or a Swearer, so small is their Repentance and detestation of their sin? |
A26917 | hast thou found God a hard Master, a barren Wilderness to thee? |
A26917 | how carelesly doth he watch them? |
A26917 | how do you think that God must take this at your hands? |
A26917 | how oft are they defiled with impurity and uncharitableness? |
A26917 | how quickly doth he find a bone of contention? |
A26917 | how remisly doth he rebuke them, excite them and command them? |
A26917 | if God be for us, who can be against us? |
A26917 | must those abuse him whom he hath Redeemed from damnation? |
A26917 | offer it now to thy Governour: Will he be pleased with thee or accept thy person, saith the Lord of Hosts?] |
A26917 | or can they read before they learn to spell, or know their letters? |
A26917 | or can you reap before you sow it? |
A26917 | or incroached on their right? |
A26917 | or of whose hand have I received any bribe, to blinde mine eyes therewith, and I will restore it? |
A26917 | or to read the hardest books before they learn the easiest? |
A26917 | or to the furtherance of his own and others happiness? |
A26917 | or use it for him? |
A26917 | or what will it do against them? |
A26917 | or whom have I defrauded? |
A26917 | or why turned we into the right way, but to travel in it? |
A26917 | should not a friend be faithful? |
A26917 | than, How shall I know that I shall be saved? |
A26917 | that thou shouldest now begin to make a stand, as if thou were in doubt whether it be best to go further? |
A26917 | what a deal of vanity and confusion is in them? |
A26917 | what harm is there in it? |
A26917 | who must do it but Professors of the truth? |
A26917 | who shall deliver me from this body of death? |
A26917 | whom have I oppressed? |
A26917 | you are not able much to help one another; how much less to help the dead ungodly World? |
A65061 | ( Let them take notice of it, the great learned men that preach Heathenism among us) Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
A65061 | ( Oh Lord, may some say? |
A65061 | 1. Who hath believed our report? |
A65061 | 1. what advantage then hath the Jew, or what is the profit of circumcision? |
A65061 | 10. of the latter: and what doth God construe their action to be? |
A65061 | 11. the purpose of God must stand, that is, not defeated, frustrated, and finally opposed, for then it stands not: And how doth it stand? |
A65061 | 13. to prove this drawing to him; Is it not said in the Prophets, All thy children shall be taught of God? |
A65061 | 15. is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? |
A65061 | 15. speaking about Fornication, Shall I take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? |
A65061 | 15. why dost thou strive against the Lord? |
A65061 | 16. but in God that shews mercy: Then why doth God finde fault, or complain of us? |
A65061 | 19 ▪ whose: hand lies it in? |
A65061 | 20. Who art thou that repliest against God? |
A65061 | 20. that they might be without excuse; for what? |
A65061 | 22. and if so, what dissonancy will you make between preaching of the means and the end? |
A65061 | 25? |
A65061 | 28. and what''s the meaning properly of all Nations and every creature? |
A65061 | 29. then, Lord save me, or else I perish: then Christ saith, Oh thou of little faith, wherefore dost thou doubt? |
A65061 | 29. what purpose? |
A65061 | 3. for if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast, and every transgression,& c. what then? |
A65061 | 31. why? |
A65061 | 32. that he draws? |
A65061 | 35. who hath first given to God? |
A65061 | 35. who hath given to him first? |
A65061 | 35: Who hath first given to God? |
A65061 | 3? |
A65061 | 4, 5. and what''s that, but it takes away the actual resistance of the heart at that present time? |
A65061 | 4. meaning worldly men, know you not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
A65061 | 44. how can you believe that receive honour one of another, and not that which comes from God only? |
A65061 | 5. had he not stricken thee down( as Paul was) until he made thee say, Lord what wilt thou have me to do: what might have become of thee? |
A65061 | 7. Who made thee to differ from another? |
A65061 | 7. Who makes thee to differ from another? |
A65061 | Again, Shall we sin that Grace may abound? |
A65061 | And How shall this offence that reason may take at the proceeding of God in this point, be cured? |
A65061 | And do not we denominate our selves by the Name of Christ, without any membership with him, or real union? |
A65061 | And is not the new creature made of as little as the old is? |
A65061 | And is ● ot the Name of God blasphemed by prophane people, through our outwardness? |
A65061 | And now let me speak to the Analogie; I may say as the Apostle; what then, are we better then they? |
A65061 | And this was a holiness of separation by Covenant: and truely what is this? |
A65061 | And thou( saith the Apostle) that abhorrost Idols, dost thou not commit sacriledge? |
A65061 | And to the Sacrament you will come, and pretend zeal in it; but do you any thing but observe a fair decorum for that day or time? |
A65061 | And truly there lies some emphasis in this word Gospel- grace: for, may some say, what do you mean by that? |
A65061 | And what is that Proclamation? |
A65061 | And what, are the other attributes of God past by in silence? |
A65061 | And who are these that took offence? |
A65061 | And who are they, aud what is their sin? |
A65061 | And who will say that these promises are built on any conditions in man? |
A65061 | And, Good Master, what shall I do, that I may inherit eternal life? |
A65061 | Art thou a sinner? |
A65061 | Art thou willing to be paid for thy service in spirituals, and( if God will) to forbear temporals? |
A65061 | But can a supernatural principle be educed by the power of the matter? |
A65061 | But how is he to us that are called both Jewes and Greeks? |
A65061 | But how shall I do that? |
A65061 | But that Text, Who made thee to differ? |
A65061 | But was it so with all? |
A65061 | But we shall look only into man himself, in whom there is reason enough for his unbelief: how can you believe, that receive honour one of another? |
A65061 | But what do you mean, may some say, by carnal man? |
A65061 | Can a Camel go through the eye of a needle? |
A65061 | Can not the maker of the heart work upon the heart, he that turnes the heart as the rivers of water are turned in the channel? |
A65061 | Can the Aethiopian change his skin? |
A65061 | Can you say, that the Gospel- ministry hath wrought faith in me? |
A65061 | Cast from you all your transgressions, make you 〈 ◊ 〉 new heart and a new spirit, for why will ye dye? |
A65061 | Did he abhor Idols, yet commit sacriledge? |
A65061 | Did not the Jew honour the great Names of Abraham and Moses, but were neither true Disciples of the one, nor Children of the other? |
A65061 | Did not the Jew observe the Laws of his Religion with mighty zeal and strictness as ever Nation did? |
A65061 | Do not we cry and labour that our sores may not be toucht? |
A65061 | Do not we know this mans Fathers and Mother? |
A65061 | Doth any man say unto God, Depart? |
A65061 | Doth not the manducation of Christs body and blood in the Sacrament tend unto this inward and spiritual inhabitation of Christ in us? |
A65061 | First do ye find a prizing of and an Appetite to the sincere milk of the word, that you may grow thereby? |
A65061 | Fourthly, The patient expectation and loving call of God is gain said, even by Israel that had the Ordinances of God; what good did they? |
A65061 | From all this that hath been said, what followes now, if we will make use of it? |
A65061 | God knows all manner of ways( saith one) whereby the heart of man can be wrought upon; and must he not needs know? |
A65061 | He loved me, and gave himself for me: No man can say this word me, until he be drawn unto Christ: And when is that? |
A65061 | He( as other Erronists that live in our times) did not abstain from Orthodox words: But what said Austin to them? |
A65061 | How can these offers of grace be serious or in earnest, when so many thousands called by the Word are not absolutely converted? |
A65061 | How can ye believe, that receive honour one of another? |
A65061 | How incongruous is it that working is set before Being? |
A65061 | How is it then said, Except my Father draw him? |
A65061 | I purged thee and thou wast not purged: are these things spoken in jest? |
A65061 | I will make that to be a door of hope: what is that? |
A65061 | If God and man work together, what shall we think of them that divide this partnership, this conjunction? |
A65061 | If any man living can know himself to be Elected of God, how must he know it? |
A65061 | If he be drawn, how doth he come? |
A65061 | In nature did I make my self? |
A65061 | In the Gospel it was a Miracle to turn water into wine; and is it nothing to change a filthy swine into a sheep, and darkness into light? |
A65061 | Is any thing both a creature and a Creator? |
A65061 | Is it not envied in them that have it? |
A65061 | Is it not so with us? |
A65061 | Is not this Jesus the son of Joseph? |
A65061 | Is the promise of Christ more powerful with thy heart than the performance of the world? |
A65061 | Is the work of Regeneration passed upon you? |
A65061 | It is excluded( saith he) By what Law? |
A65061 | It s free to such as are called, though it be not common to all: Was not the grace of God free to Jacob? |
A65061 | Lastly, Do you find pulsations, beatings, knocking''s? |
A65061 | Let the Minister instruct in meekness them that oppose themselves: And who are these? |
A65061 | Lord, who hath believed our report? |
A65061 | Master, what shall we do, that we may work the works of God? |
A65061 | Nay, would you think that any mans sin should be so fast rivetted in him, as that it should cause him to love death? |
A65061 | Now all the question of the Text will be whose surety is Christ: Is he Gods surety that makes it, or mans surety with whom it is made? |
A65061 | Of what avail is the setting forth of an object, where there is no eye to see it? |
A65061 | Repent and make you a new heart, and a new spirit, and cast away your transgressions; for why will you die? |
A65061 | Secondly, If the spirit of God strive with you still, Convincing and reproving: are your hearts often Convict of secret sins? |
A65061 | Secondly, Is thy faith an inchristing, that is, a Christ receiving faith? |
A65061 | Secondly, Man by nature is opposite to Christ: Why? |
A65061 | Shew not your Opinions, and Notions, and Forms: Have you the inward work? |
A65061 | There are some( that are otherways great men) that when they come to die, whither do they fly? |
A65061 | Thirdly, Do you find God making a thorny hedge about you ways? |
A65061 | Thirdly, It is wondred at, that God should command what he works or gives; for if he mean to give it, why doth he command? |
A65061 | This is the great offence, Who hath refisted his will? |
A65061 | This is the test: But the touchstone that tryes other mettals, who shall try it? |
A65061 | Thou pleadest Christs mission: but Canst thou make Gods traction of thee to appear? |
A65061 | Thou wilt say, Why doth he yet complain, who hath resisted his Will? |
A65061 | To whom is the arm of the Lord revealed? |
A65061 | Use 1 First, I say hence: Can our outward Christian give any good account of any momentous difference between himself, and the Jew outwardly? |
A65061 | Use 3 Have you this inward man? |
A65061 | Was not the man deceived? |
A65061 | Was that which is good made death to me? |
A65061 | We make not a haire of our selves, no not the colour, and shall we not lay it to heart? |
A65061 | What do you gather from these two expressions? |
A65061 | What failed then? |
A65061 | What is the meaning of this phrase? |
A65061 | What is the reason that God effectually works that grace in one, which he doth but offer to another? |
A65061 | What poor draughts of men did Christ make by his preaching, until he was lift up, and by his Spirit drew men by conviction? |
A65061 | What? |
A65061 | When I go to send the Holy Ghost from the Father unto the world, what greater works can there be? |
A65061 | When did he speak the word? |
A65061 | Whence came the first light? |
A65061 | Where is boasting then? |
A65061 | Where is that inward holiness of heart, and the saying knowledg of Christ Jesus? |
A65061 | Where is the wise? |
A65061 | Whether of these is the hardest work? |
A65061 | Who can help it? |
A65061 | Why not? |
A65061 | Why nothing but Christ, saith the heart: But what say you to victory over enemies? |
A65061 | Why so? |
A65061 | Why then may some say, i ● there no power in man to come unto, or to believe in Christ Jesus? |
A65061 | Why? |
A65061 | Why? |
A65061 | Will not God be found always when man seeks? |
A65061 | Will you not believe that God is able by this sympathy in the will, to make the heart by power willing to come to Christ Jesus? |
A65061 | Will you take me right in this word that I am now speaking? |
A65061 | and can not he move nature by his omnipotency without ordinary course? |
A65061 | and doth it stand, and is not pulled up? |
A65061 | and doth not God that made the heart know how to move and determine it to himself? |
A65061 | and if he command, how doth he give? |
A65061 | and if it be Gods work, how can it be my duty? |
A65061 | and to whom is the arme of the Lord revealed? |
A65061 | and what hast thou that thou diddest not receive? |
A65061 | and what hast thou that thou hast not received? |
A65061 | are not we lovers of our selves, covetous, proud, boasters,& c. having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof? |
A65061 | are there such monsters in the world, such miscreants as do this; yes saith he, that there is; and who are they? |
A65061 | are you Christians inwardly? |
A65061 | are you drawn into union and acquaintance with Christ? |
A65061 | but where is the inward reason of that Ordinance? |
A65061 | by virtue of which, if the option was given to man, what would he chuse? |
A65061 | determining and carrying it out so as shall not prejudice the freedome and inclination of it? |
A65061 | did not God make the day without the Sun at first? |
A65061 | doth any body rap at the door still, as they have done? |
A65061 | doth not God know how to work upon the heart of man? |
A65061 | doth nothing of this sit upon you? |
A65061 | doth this draw you to a more sharp and vehement seeking? |
A65061 | for Nazareth, where he lived, was near to Capernaum: how doth he say, I came down from Heaven? |
A65061 | for not believing in Christ? |
A65061 | grace( may some say) before Faith? |
A65061 | have you felt any moulding and fashioning of your hearts into the Image of Christ? |
A65061 | he that believes and is baptized, shall be saved; he that believes not, shall be damned: but is this Gospel? |
A65061 | his absent glory above the present inducements? |
A65061 | how doth God deal in good earnest in the offer of grace, when he doth not absolutely give it and work this Conversion? |
A65061 | how often have you gainsaid and contradicted the God of heaven? |
A65061 | how shall it be made appear, that this Doctrine is indeed the true test? |
A65061 | how shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation: neglect is a word somewhat lower then this that we call resistance; and yet how shall we escape? |
A65061 | how? |
A65061 | if it be a duty, how is it Gods work? |
A65061 | if there be no salvation, from whence is he called a Saviour? |
A65061 | is it a marriage faith? |
A65061 | is there a restraint that a man can not run out but his Conscience pricks him? |
A65061 | now can a dead man be raised from the dead, and not be sensible? |
A65061 | that doctrine that is conceived to be so scandalous? |
A65061 | that have a humour of doing honour, and receiving honour from men, and do not content your selves with the honour that comes from God only? |
A65061 | that he should make expiation for sin? |
A65061 | that is one of the main points that he insists upon with his outward Jew: What are we better, that cast off Popery, and starve the Gospel Ministry? |
A65061 | there is the inward working: The revealing of Gods arm must go together with the report, or else who hath believed it? |
A65061 | there''s the preaching: and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed? |
A65061 | they were resisted; how is that proved? |
A65061 | those that were enlightned, convinc''d by this light commanded to shine out of darkness? |
A65061 | to plant the work of Regeneration, as well as give them the outward mark? |
A65061 | to worldly greatness, pleasures, prosits of this or that kind? |
A65061 | we the outward Christians that profess the Christian Religion, though that be meant of Gentiles, and may we not make the same answer? |
A65061 | what Lord would he serve? |
A65061 | what an assumption is that? |
A65061 | what grace is that? |
A65061 | what of all things in the world would he pitch his choyce upon, if he might have it for wishing? |
A65061 | when a man sees the vast compass of his sins, and sees the frowning face of God; no ability nor power to help himself, is it easie then? |
A65061 | when will it once be? |
A65061 | where is the Disputer of this world? |
A65061 | where is the Lord Jesus received and sealed to your comfort? |
A65061 | where is the Scribe? |
A65061 | who hath unshackled, nay who hath revived this will? |
A65061 | why doth he finde fault with us, that we do not believe, that we stand out in opposition? |
A65061 | why shall not I give as much to God in regeneration as generation, seeing God is seen in the one as well as in the other? |
A65061 | would not we be at ease and quiet? |
A65061 | 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉, who hath first given to God? |
A26923 | & c.] But is all false that is not agreeable to their imagination? |
A26923 | ( And if the humane nature be an Accident to the divine in Christ, why must we deny Creatures to be Accidents of God?) |
A26923 | 3. than to have burnt them, or than its ordinary Action? |
A26923 | 6. by imputing righteousness without works? |
A26923 | 8? |
A26923 | Accordingly a great Question must be determined, Whether the sins of the Faithful deserve any more than a temporal Chastisement? |
A26923 | Adam had such a Holiness as might be lost: And why may we not say, that Infants first ▪ Grace is of such a sort or degree? |
A26923 | All Propositions that God maketh are true: Because true Propositions are true, must all be true? |
A26923 | All that he hath said against me is materially Answered in the Book already, and if he perceive it not, how can I help that? |
A26923 | And are these so numerous? |
A26923 | And by this time you may answer their Objection that say, Why not a common and conditional Election, as well as a common and conditional Redemption? |
A26923 | And did ● ● die with them? |
A26923 | And how can a man accept of that which he believeth not was ever purchased, procured, or offered him? |
A26923 | And how can a man be thankful for that which he believeth not was ever done for him, or given him? |
A26923 | And how shall they call on him on whom they have not believed,& c.? |
A26923 | And if he be not loved of God, he is miserable? |
A26923 | And if it was made since then, who wa ● the Maker of Objective Christianity? |
A26923 | And if the Law of Grace, whether of the first or second Edition? |
A26923 | And if you add, But what is the cause that, à priore, his Will is thus related and denominated as decreeing this or that? |
A26923 | And is Possibility then any thing extra m ● ntem Di ● inam& humanam? |
A26923 | And is it any Wonder that Humane Language wanteth proper words to signifie that of God, which is so far above our comprehension? |
A26923 | And is this to be denied by any Christian? |
A26923 | And must others be troubled with such Cases? |
A26923 | And then, 2. to enquire, Whether they so keep that Law, as to be saved by it? |
A26923 | And what his merits, sacrifice and intercession could do, before they did exist? |
A26923 | And what man dare say that he can search out the waies of God? |
A26923 | And what would you have more? |
A26923 | And whether Christ''s Abrogation of it was not a returning them to the common, easier and better Condition of Mankind? |
A26923 | And whether they may pray for pardon of perpetual punishment, or need any such pardon? |
A26923 | And whether, as it receiveth him in all the parts of that Office, or which? |
A26923 | And who hath power or skill to make a better than Christ made 〈 … 〉 that attempted it, thereby is an accursed Antichrist? |
A26923 | And who will avoid Sin, Temptations, and Hell, that believeth not him that tells them of the evil, and of the danger that is before him? |
A26923 | And why answer you not what I wrote against Dr. Twisse, before you call for an Answer to him? |
A26923 | And why may not Infants be in a pardoned state, that at first have but that Grace which giveth a moral Power to believe when they come to age? |
A26923 | And why then do they make two Controversies of Election and Redemption, when they mean the same in both? |
A26923 | And ● ● Christ repealed that Law, by which Act did he do it? |
A26923 | And, 1. will not any reasonable Infidel confess, That Thankfulness is naturally due for great and inestimable Benefits? |
A26923 | Are all or most Christians certain that they shall persevere? |
A26923 | Are such esse''s as many in God as the things will be in themselves? |
A26923 | Are these all one with you? |
A26923 | Are they saved by the Ceremony, or by Consent to the Covenant? |
A26923 | As God is not a part of the World, or universal Substance, and yet is eminenter more than a part, what if it be so answered here? |
A26923 | As to the Question, Whether the divine and humane nature be two or one, it is to ask, Whether the nature of God and his Creatures be two or one? |
A26923 | As to the third, is it a divine Proposition, or a humane? |
A26923 | Because they are sacred persons, and belong to God, and serve at his Altars? |
A26923 | But alas how shall I know what esse intentionale is in God? |
A26923 | But he saith( If there be no eternal Futures, what becometh of Divine Prescience?) |
A26923 | But how doth God love a holy Soul if he forsake him, and with- hold his Spirit? |
A26923 | But how is Christ himself physically received? |
A26923 | But if so, then what if Christians take Heathens Children against their Wills, and baptize them, and then turn them home again? |
A26923 | But is it Grace or Free- will that is the chief Cause? |
A26923 | But is not Grace the only cause of the Change? |
A26923 | But is the Divine a part of the Person of a Mediator? |
A26923 | But must Futurity, or Non- futurity, or Nothing, be therefore any thing? |
A26923 | But not as Acts, but for the Object? |
A26923 | But the sticking difficulty is, Whether any men in the World have Grace sufficient to repent and believe savingly, who do not? |
A26923 | But wherein then lieth the Hypostatical Union, if God be equally near to all things? |
A26923 | But whether sub poena mortis is the doubt? |
A26923 | But, 2. have all that hear the Gospel sufficient Grace to believe? |
A26923 | By what Faculty do we be ● ● eve, but by the rational Intellect and Will? |
A26923 | Can you English to any man that takes words for means of understanding things, what it is for[ Things to have an esse intentionale in God?] |
A26923 | Can you forgive me for not loving Confusion? |
A26923 | Controversies I have written of, but only to end them, and not to make them: And who can reconcile them that never mentioneth them? |
A26923 | Could you forget that this would be expected from you? |
A26923 | Do I in all this take part with Ignorance, Error, Heresie or any Sin? |
A26923 | Do not great Benefits freely offered, require Acceptance? |
A26923 | Do not you confess that that esse is non- esse as to any Creature? |
A26923 | Do you not thus confound the World and the Church? |
A26923 | Doth Death bind God, because it is but the privation of Life; or vacuity( si detur vacuum) because it is nothing? |
A26923 | Doth the Comfort of most Christians rest upon the Doctrine of Certainty to persevere? |
A26923 | Doth the Doctrine of eventual Apostasie inferr Mutability in God? |
A26923 | For Repentance is the change of the mind from evil to good? |
A26923 | For is it mediate or immediate Causation or Efficiency which they mean? |
A26923 | For no Man or Angel can have any thing of God, but by free Gift: What have we which we receive not, when our being is of God? |
A26923 | Futurity? |
A26923 | Hath God Accidents, and so many millions of millions of Accidents, and yet most simple and immutable? |
A26923 | Hath Gods Knowledg any Cause? |
A26923 | Hath it any sence? |
A26923 | How fain would some men differ, if they could, or seem to do it, when they do not? |
A26923 | How is it that Nothing will come to pass? |
A26923 | I pray what is the Verity that you say resulteth eternally? |
A26923 | I would you had told me, whether you take the Reality of Futurity to be 〈 … 〉 n esse rei extrinsecae, or in esse objectivo intrinseco? |
A26923 | I ● such Certainty fit for all the justified? |
A26923 | If Dr. Twisse hold Sin to be nothing, doth it follow, that it binds God, because it''s nothing? |
A26923 | If Holiness be not actually lost, is the loss possible? |
A26923 | If a man were holy,( that is, an obedient Lover of God and Goodness) without Faith in Christ, would that save him? |
A26923 | If an outward, then the sence of the Question is, Whether some other Work of God be sufficient to move the Will of Man? |
A26923 | If any, Whether it be the Law of Innocency as made to Adam, or the Law of Grace? |
A26923 | If it be the Essence, why may not the proved Trinity of objective Conceptions, as formal, be called Persons or Hypostases? |
A26923 | If the latter, What is the effect whose sufficiency he questioneth? |
A26923 | If the question be only whether the respective Termination of God''s will, and the Denomination of it as thus or thus terminated, can be resisted? |
A26923 | If the question be, How God knoweth future contingents? |
A26923 | If they should, whence had they that Power? |
A26923 | If you hold, That He hath no Decrees, what is it that you plead for? |
A26923 | Is Futurity a more excellent Being tha ● Spirit, Matter and Motion, to be capable of this Divine Attribute? |
A26923 | Is God''s Will resistible? |
A26923 | Is Nothing a wonder? |
A26923 | Is any point of Faith above Reason, or contrary to it? |
A26923 | Is it a Grace or Power to do some more common good, use some means, forbear some evil, as the Unregenerate may do? |
A26923 | Is it a Substance or an Accident? |
A26923 | Is it a wonder for nothing to be independent? |
A26923 | Is it knowing ones self, or knowing another, or another''s knowing me, that constituteth Personality? |
A26923 | Is it the Conceptus Divinus? |
A26923 | Is it the Name[ Worthiness] or the meaning that displeaseth you? |
A26923 | Is it the Realitas futuritionis ex parte ● ei? |
A26923 | Is it the res futura? |
A26923 | Is it unfit for all, and doubting a more safe condition? |
A26923 | Is not that a Proposition? |
A26923 | Is that God bound or conquer''d that can turn Nothing into Something at his pleasure? |
A26923 | Is that esse intentionale any thing real besides God himself? |
A26923 | Is there no other sounder way? |
A26923 | Is this Nothing the Ruler of God and All things, because he causeth not that which is not causable? |
A26923 | Is what true? |
A26923 | It may seem to some a difficult Question whether God by such a Law made them Happier or Worse than the rest of the World? |
A26923 | It must be enquired, Whether such a thing be? |
A26923 | It troubleth men much to open, how Christ was any true Cause of our Pardon and Salvation as a Mediator, before his Incarnation? |
A26923 | Might not the Church have lived with such in Peace? |
A26923 | Might not they yet have lived in Love, that agreed in all the Essentials of Christianity? |
A26923 | No: For, 1. most Christians in the World hold, that Perseverance is uncertain to the godly; and how can they be certain of it to themselves? |
A26923 | No: I ask you, Did he confound them before Christ''s Incarnation, who thought that more than the Jews were saved? |
A26923 | Or are they Creatures in esse intentionali? |
A26923 | Or as a Condition? |
A26923 | Or as it receiveth his Righteousness only? |
A26923 | Or as meritorious? |
A26923 | Or at least, why answer you not Strangius, but impertinently talk of the Serpent Socinus? |
A26923 | Or can he be thankful to he knoweth not whom? |
A26923 | Or can nothing have a ruling Power? |
A26923 | Or how far must our Confidence ascend? |
A26923 | Or is it a Power truly to repent and believe? |
A26923 | Or is it any Virtue or Duty to lye, and say that they know or believe what they are utterly ignorant of? |
A26923 | Or is this a convincing way of reasoning? |
A26923 | Or may others after them make also a new Christianity? |
A26923 | Or only as in his Priestly Office? |
A26923 | Or the Verity of a Proposition? |
A26923 | Or the veritas conceptus Divini de rerum futuritione? |
A26923 | Or to love God habitually, and live holily? |
A26923 | Or to overcome greater Temptations, and persevere? |
A26923 | Or when there was nothing but God, did Nothingness bind God? |
A26923 | Or whether Christ''s Will and Operations should be said to be One or Two? |
A26923 | Or whether Perseverance depend on meer Election and God''s Will, which secureth only some of the justified? |
A26923 | Or will killing men cure them? |
A26923 | Perhaps they will say, That Experience telleth us that God doth usually concurr with them: I answer, And is not that because he worketh by them? |
A26923 | Say you so? |
A26923 | So if the Question be[ Whether God gave any Conditional Will?] |
A26923 | So if the question be, Whether God''s Knowledge be mutable? |
A26923 | So if the question be, Whether God''s Knowledge ● ave many Acts? |
A26923 | Speak Christians, is it not so? |
A26923 | That God should will and cause David''s Concubines to be defiled, and not will or cause that Absolom should defile them? |
A26923 | That He should will and cause the Kingdom to be rent from Rehoboam, and yet not cause any one to will or do it? |
A26923 | That there is a Futurum? |
A26923 | The Godfather may be an Hypocrite, and mean nothing that he promiseth; and shall the Child be saved by his Lye that damneth the Lyer himself? |
A26923 | The Godfather may have no Propriety in the Child, but steal him, shall that save him? |
A26923 | The common disputed question is, Whether all men have Grace sufficient to believe? |
A26923 | The difference is, Whether a bad man can change his own will? |
A26923 | The form enquired of, is Quid morale? |
A26923 | The same ● say of his words( if futures be futures without the Divine will, what horrible Fate must be upon God?) |
A26923 | The verit ● rei futurae? |
A26923 | The word[ Rewardable] is long and oft harsh: And what other have we? |
A26923 | Therefore all that remaineth, is to resolve what is the reason of the certain effect when we believe? |
A26923 | Therefore being agreed of the fact and event, we must be agreed of the Intention or Decree, and what needs there more? |
A26923 | They must learn and obey his Doctrine; and can they obey it that believe it not? |
A26923 | Thus much to answer the question, Who shall be Iudge of Controversies and Scripture Sence? |
A26923 | V. About the next Question I may yet be shorter, How far any Works of ours may be trusted in? |
A26923 | What Accident( or mode) or of what Substance? |
A26923 | What Experience or Reason have you, that God should still work immediately with ▪ them, and yet not by them? |
A26923 | What Law the World was under before Christ''s Incarnation: And, 2. whether Christ repealed it to them? |
A26923 | What are all these things in God from eternity in proper language? |
A26923 | What can never come to pass? |
A26923 | What doth Inspiration do, but so move the Mind, Will and Tongue of a Prophet? |
A26923 | What i ● it to decree in compliance with nothing? |
A26923 | What if Chrysostom and others had bin permitted to silence their Thoughts of Origine? |
A26923 | What if a man that was sanctified by believing, should retain his Holiness, or Love and Obedience, and lose his Faith in Christ? |
A26923 | What if such forbearance had spared all the rage and bloodshed at Antioch, Alexandria and other parts? |
A26923 | What if the questions, Whether Mary should be called the Mother of God, or rather of Him who is God? |
A26923 | What if those that with Ierome misliked the word Hypostasis, and those that preferred it before Persona, had forborn censuring one another? |
A26923 | What if we think that Infant''s first Holiness, besides relative( Pardon, and jus ad impunitatem& regnum) is but of the first degree? |
A26923 | What if when the World was in a flame about Images, they had left them only to those that desired them? |
A26923 | What is it antecedent to the Proposition that you call true? |
A26923 | What is it for Nothing to come to pass? |
A26923 | What is meant by[ imputing our Faith to us for righteousness?] |
A26923 | What it is if it be? |
A26923 | What mean you then by( it?) |
A26923 | What shall we say to this? |
A26923 | What was the Judgment of the ancient Churches after the Apostles? |
A26923 | What was the judgment of the ancient Churches of this Point? |
A26923 | What''s that? |
A26923 | Whence then came the supposition of Fate, imposing on the summum Ens, or what meaneth it? |
A26923 | Wheth ● r there be a state of Confirmation here? |
A26923 | Whether Certainty of perseverance be fit for all the justified? |
A26923 | Whether Christ as God did purpose to justifie and save all men by his death? |
A26923 | Whether Conscire being scire, is not the proper Act of an Intellect, and not of a Will, or executive Power, as such? |
A26923 | Whether Faith alone justifie us, or also Repentance, Desire, Hope, or any other acts of the Soul towards Christ? |
A26923 | Whether Faith justifie us as an Instrument only? |
A26923 | Whether Perseverance depend on meer Election? |
A26923 | Whether all Christ''s Grace given us, be such as is never lost? |
A26923 | Whether all Grace procured and given by Christ, be such as is never lost? |
A26923 | Whether all, or most, or many Christians are themselves sure to persevere? |
A26923 | Whether any degree of this be ever lost? |
A26923 | Whether any lose actual true justifying Faith? |
A26923 | Whether any lose true Holiness, or love of God in the Habit? |
A26923 | Whether any lose true actual Faith and Iustification? |
A26923 | Whether habitual Love, or Holiness( or the Spirit) be ever lost? |
A26923 | Whether imputing Christ''s righteousness to us, be a Scripture- phrase? |
A26923 | Whether it be possible to lose that Holiness which never will be lost? |
A26923 | Whether it be unfit for all, and a more unsafe Condition than doubting? |
A26923 | Whether it justifie us by being it self imputed to us for Righteousness, or it be Christ''s righteousness only that is so imputed? |
A26923 | Whether only Faith in Christ justifie, and not Faith in God the Father, or belief of the Promise, or of Heaven? |
A26923 | Whether sufficient grace to believe, which giveth the meer power of believing to Infants or Adult, be ever lost? |
A26923 | Whether the Comfort of most Christians lie upon the Doctrine of such Certainty? |
A26923 | Whether the Doctrine of Apostacy infer any mutability in God? |
A26923 | Whether the Doctrine of Eventual Apostacy infer any mutability in God? |
A26923 | Whether there be a state of confirmed Persons besides the meerly sanctified, that from the degree or kind of their grace, never fall away? |
A26923 | Whether they are under any Law or none? |
A26923 | Whether they that affirm, That Christ''s Righteousness is imputed to us, or those that deny it are to be accounted Orthodox? |
A26923 | Whether, if Holiness be never lost, it be possible to lose it, and be in danger? |
A26923 | Who can know in India that never heard of Christ, that he was incarnate, and rose from the dead, and ascended,& c.? |
A26923 | Why God hath left this point so dark? |
A26923 | Why did God ledve this Case so dark? |
A26923 | Why should a Promise of future Education save a Child that must die to morrow, or ere long? |
A26923 | Why talk you of our designing another Origin, when we are proving, that it''s nothing, and needs no Cause? |
A26923 | Will you accept a shadow? |
A26923 | Will you leave your Country, and follow one over Seas, that promiseth you a Kingdom, if you trust him not? |
A26923 | Will you venture your life in the Hands of a Physician, and take his Medicines, if you believe not that he hath Skill and Will to cure you? |
A26923 | Yes,''t is God''s Will so to do, and is that nothing? |
A26923 | You add( To what purpose shall Decrees be?) |
A26923 | You ask( How are the Promises, being Propositions, true signs of the Divine Will, where there are none?) |
A26923 | You ask[ Is it true because formed into a Proposition? |
A26923 | You may say also, If there be no eternal Nothings, Non- futures, how can God know them? |
A26923 | You meet with a distinction of[ Futurity as nothing, and a Proposition de futuro as something] with an[ how so? |
A26923 | You say( But was it not true before:) what is your( it)? |
A26923 | You say[ Did not the Futurity of the World result from a Decree?] |
A26923 | and so, That he hath no meerlysufficient Grace to any one act in all his life? |
A26923 | and whether one be before or after ● thers? |
A26923 | are they his Volitions or Intellections? |
A26923 | as it would be to dispute, Whether he could not illuminate the Earth without the Sun? |
A26923 | had been managed with mutual forbearance, without Zeno''s Henoticon, or Anastasius''s forcible Amursty? |
A26923 | he that can cure it, let him: But is he a fit person to cure it, that hath the Errours of Ungodliness, Malice, Lying, and Bloodthirstiness in himself? |
A26923 | how commonly do Words and Thoughts go in Disputes for Extrinseck Realities? |
A26923 | or all special Grace have such Confirmation as the Angels have? |
A26923 | or arbitrate in a Cause unheard and not opened? |
A26923 | or else, Whether he purposed to do good to all men by his death? |
A26923 | or to give the first grace rather to one than to another? |
A26923 | that his Will is terminated rather on Peter than Judas in election? |
A27045 | & vicarius Christi? |
A27045 | 1. Who is it( ad esse) that must call, convene, confirm it? |
A27045 | 107 Whether the Armenians, Ethiopians, Syrians,& c. are excluded as Hereticks? |
A27045 | And I pray you tell me in your next, to which of these doth the nomination or proof of such a Church as you describe belong? |
A27045 | And I pray you tell me, what power Valentinian had out of the Empire? |
A27045 | And are Infidels of your Church while you are arguing us out? |
A27045 | And doth it follow, that because he did it, therefore he did it justly, yea and as the Governour of that Church? |
A27045 | And for the words of Vincentius Lirinensis, c. 9. what are they to your purpose? |
A27045 | And how can the people be acquainted with the passages in Election and Ordination that are necessary to the knowledge of their authority? |
A27045 | And how know they that there is such a Scripture, if all their senses be so fallible? |
A27045 | And if it could( as it never can) be proved of Abassia, what is that to all the other Churches in India, Persia, and the rest of the world? |
A27045 | And indeed, is dependance and non- rejection all one? |
A27045 | And is Episcopal Consecration also unnecessary? |
A27045 | And is it possible for these men then to know any thing? |
A27045 | And is not this now the very form of Popery, which Gregory makes so great a sin? |
A27045 | And may not any Sect do so too as honestly as they? |
A27045 | And must we then either be murdered, or taken for uncha ● ● ● ● ble? |
A27045 | And then have we not cause to pray God to bless us from the company of your Priests? |
A27045 | And then w ● at historicall testimony will they believe? |
A27045 | And then why did they not charge this defection from the Pope upon them, among their hainous crimes? |
A27045 | And to what purpose talk you of determinate Congregations? |
A27045 | And what can a Protestant say more against the Vice- Christship, and your novelties? |
A27045 | And what fitter English have we for the Kings deputy in a distant Kingdom, who is Vice Regis, then the Vice- King? |
A27045 | And what if I have sufficient means to know the authority of a thousand Priests, but am culpably ignorant of it in some few through my neglect? |
A27045 | And what if you tell me your own opinion, of the sufficient means by which I must be convinced of the Popes and Priests authority? |
A27045 | And what maketh more Necessary to me, or others here in England, if it be not necessary to all? |
A27045 | And what mean you then? |
A27045 | And what then? |
A27045 | And whether every particular sin unchurch men? |
A27045 | And who is ignorant that knowe ● h any thing of Church- history, that others were called successours of Peter as well as the Bishop of Rome? |
A27045 | And who is it that must approve this custom? |
A27045 | And who knows what custome, and of what continuance you mean? |
A27045 | And why did not the Fathers rebuke them for sinning against conscience, and their own profession herein? |
A27045 | And why would it not have been so then between the Fathers, and the Donatists, Arrians, and such like, if the Fathers had believed this? |
A27045 | And withall, who knows not how full of fictions Nicephorus is? |
A27045 | And yet Cyril did not hereupon reject him without further warning: And what was it that he threatned, but to hold no Communion with him? |
A27045 | Are all the mysteries of your succession and mission resolved into Popular Consent? |
A27045 | Are not these the most common titles that Papists give them, and that they take unto themselves? |
A27045 | Are you ashamed of the very Cause or Title of it, which you will have necessary to our salvation? |
A27045 | Are you still in jest? |
A27045 | As to your citation what can I say? |
A27045 | Audeat ergo aliquis dicere, illos errasse qui tradiderunt? |
A27045 | But all the doubt is, by whom this Tradition that''s valid, must be By your Pastors, or people, or both? |
A27045 | But do they indeed believe themselves? |
A27045 | But do you in good earnest think that all such addresses, or appeals are ad superiorem judicem? |
A27045 | But how and by whom; and with what Evidence? |
A27045 | But if somewhat must be explicitely( that is, Actually) believed, the Question that you should have answered was,[ What is it?] |
A27045 | But if your words were there to be found, what are they to your purpose? |
A27045 | But is not this to say nothing while you pretend to speak? |
A27045 | But must the Prince and people let alone delinquent Pastors for fear of being blamed for taking their Bishopricks? |
A27045 | But that Nestorius was condemned by a Council needs no proof: And what if Celestine began and first condemned him? |
A27045 | But what have you from this Council against this Council? |
A27045 | But what if the Archbishop of Canterbury sate highest, and subscribed first in England? |
A27045 | But what if you had put the Question, At what time it was that your Church began to claim this universal Dominion? |
A27045 | But what must we prove? |
A27045 | But what name else is it that you agree on as proper to express the power which is controverted? |
A27045 | But what say you now to the contrary? |
A27045 | But why did you not tell us to whom it is that it belongs to esteem the Choosers fit? |
A27045 | But why do you not tell me what you mean by[ an Implicite faith]? |
A27045 | But why then did you at all put on the face of an Opponent? |
A27045 | But why were not the antecedent words of the Bishop of Antioch and his Clergy as valid to the contrary, as Iuvenals for this? |
A27045 | But you ask again[ Did those Heathen Emperours give it him?] |
A27045 | By Pope, or Councils, or Bishops disjunct? |
A27045 | By the Major part of the Church, or Bishops( or Presbyters) or the Minor? |
A27045 | Can any writing make any matter plainer to you, then that Bread is Bread, and Wine is Wine, when you see them, and tast, and eat, and drink them? |
A27045 | Can they say[ ex hac omnes?] |
A27045 | Can you have any thing brought to a surer judgement then to all your senses? |
A27045 | Can you prove this Consequence? |
A27045 | Did all the rest arise from Rome? |
A27045 | Did hell ever hatch worse hypocrisie then this that he fathers on his holiest Pope? |
A27045 | Did not Cyprian believe that this was a Law of Christ before Stephen medled in that business? |
A27045 | Did the Council speak a word for your power without the Empire? |
A27045 | Did this prove Acacius the Vice- Christ? |
A27045 | Did you think that it proved the Pope to be the Vice- Christ? |
A27045 | Do I need then to say any more to disprove his universal Headship, and that Rome is not the Catholike Ruling Church? |
A27045 | Do you build upon such foundations? |
A27045 | Do you leave that to be varied as a thing indifferent? |
A27045 | Do you mean individual assemblies? |
A27045 | Do you mean, that he must have this jure divino, or humano? |
A27045 | Do you not see now whither your Implicite faith hath brought you? |
A27045 | Do you think to satisfie any reasonable man by calling for positive proof from Authors, of such Negatives? |
A27045 | Domini nostri Iesu Christi? |
A27045 | Dorylaei had read his bill of complaint? |
A27045 | Doth he charge the other Patriarchs and Bishops to give it no man? |
A27045 | Doth it follow that he was Governour of all the world? |
A27045 | Doth it follow that therefore I am out of the Church? |
A27045 | Doth not Boverius( cited in my Key) labour to prove him the Vicar of Christ, and to be Vice Christi? |
A27045 | Doth not your Definition agree to a Provincial, or the smallest Council? |
A27045 | For what shall not be lawful for the authority of so great a Bishop to exercise upon the Churches? |
A27045 | Had he that authority( think you) from an Heathen Emperour? |
A27045 | Had not the people in all former ages the choice of their Pastors? |
A27045 | Have you had all these Nations man by man before your bar, and convinced them of pertinaciousness in heresie? |
A27045 | How came St. Cyprian, in time of the Heathen Empire to request Stephen the Pope to punish and depose the Bishop of Arles, as we shall see hereafter? |
A27045 | How came it to pass that the Fathers did labour no more to convince them of that( now supposed) fundamentall Errour? |
A27045 | How could there be a Church protesting against an universal Vicar of Christ, before any claimed that Vicarship? |
A27045 | How frequent is it with you to appropriate the name of[ the Church] to the Clergy? |
A27045 | How gross a subterfuge is this? |
A27045 | How is it possible they should actually reject both the Doctrine and Communion of the Pope and Roman Church? |
A27045 | How is it that we find not this point disputed by them on both sides, yea and as copiously as the rest, when it would have ended all? |
A27045 | How many Bishops, and from what parts must( ad esse) make such a Council? |
A27045 | How many restored he out of the Empire? |
A27045 | How shall we know who hath this power? |
A27045 | How should any Heresie be opposed or condemned before it doth arise? |
A27045 | How then could he censure the name as undue, injurious, prophane, and blasphemous, if he owned the Thing? |
A27045 | How unconstant are you among your selves in the use of terms? |
A27045 | I know no name so fitted to the reall controversie? |
A27045 | I pray tell me how you can avoid it? |
A27045 | I she therefore the Universal Bishop? |
A27045 | If Christianity had ever ceased in the world, how came it to be new planted, and revived? |
A27045 | If a piece of the Church may turn Hereticks, or but Schismaticks, as the Novatians, and African Donatists, why may not another piece turn Papists? |
A27045 | If not, must they all take the words of their present Teachers? |
A27045 | If that were true, yet what''s that to all the rest? |
A27045 | If you askt, Whether men rule not Angels? |
A27045 | If you believe this Synod, the Controversie is at end: If you do not, why do you cite it? |
A27045 | Is Consecration necessary? |
A27045 | Is it a Council if difficulties keep away all? |
A27045 | Is it any lawful Pastors, or All, that must necessarily be depended on by every member? |
A27045 | Is it because that more is Revealed to us? |
A27045 | Is it no Schism to separate from a particular Church, unless from the whole? |
A27045 | Is it none, if you make a Division in the Church, and not from the Church? |
A27045 | Is it not now a fair Argument that you offer? |
A27045 | Is it that he must do it in Love for their good? |
A27045 | Is my obedience to each Priest as necessary, as my belief of every Article of my faith? |
A27045 | Is no one way of Election necessary? |
A27045 | Is not the Bible, a publick Testimony and record, and being universally received, is an universal Tradition? |
A27045 | Is that too general? |
A27045 | Is the opposition and obstinacy that makes Heresie, in the Intellect or will? |
A27045 | Is this argument good think you? |
A27045 | Is this disunion, think you, fit to make one and the same Congregation of you and them? |
A27045 | Iustinian deposed Sylverius and Vigilius: Will you confess it therefore justly done? |
A27045 | May none but Bishops and chief Prelates be members, as you intimate? |
A27045 | Must it needs be against the Formal object of Faith? |
A27045 | Must it not represent all the Catholike Church? |
A27045 | No man contradicted this: And is not this as much or more, then you alledge as spoke to Leo? |
A27045 | Or is it necessary to their salvation? |
A27045 | Or is it no Schism, unless willfull? |
A27045 | Or was he so silly as not to know that this might have been retorted on him? |
A27045 | Purposely opening the true nature of the Catholick Church for the stating of the Case, saith,[ Quaestio certè inter nos versatur, ubi sit Ecclesia? |
A27045 | Quid ergo facturi sumus? |
A27045 | Reader, IF thou meet me at the threshold with a[ What need any more against Popery then is written?] |
A27045 | So what doth it concern my Salvation to know whether the Church of Rome be now a true particular Church? |
A27045 | Tell me now whether you said true in the Paragraph about the Title Vice- Christ? |
A27045 | The Pope can punish the Bishop of Antioch: But how? |
A27045 | The foundation of all our controversie is doctrinal, whether the Papal Soveraignty be Essential to the Church? |
A27045 | Therefore the Question between us should not be, when it ceased, but when it begun to be such a Capital Ruling Church, Essential to the whole? |
A27045 | Urge them with this as a granted truth, till they had renounced it? |
A27045 | WHether the Church of which the Protestants are members have been visible ever since the daies of Christ on earth? |
A27045 | Was Gregory Thaumaturgus no Bishop, because when he came first to Neocaesarea, he had but seventeen souls in his charge? |
A27045 | Was not a Baptized person in the primitive and ancient Churches a true Church- member, presently upon Baptism? |
A27045 | Was not the Church then purely Protestant in their Religion? |
A27045 | Was the Popes Legate the whole Catholick Church? |
A27045 | Was there one man at either of these Councils but within the Empire, yea a piece of the Empire? |
A27045 | Were those primitive Christians of another kind of Church- order and Government, then were those under the Roman Empire*? |
A27045 | What a silly ● or, what a wicked dissembling hypocrite, doth Bellarmine feign Pope Gregory to have been? |
A27045 | What are all their disputings for, and all this stir that they make in the world, but to set up one man over all the earth? |
A27045 | What if a man deny that there is a Christ, a Heaven, a Hell, or a Resurrection? |
A27045 | What if ten of you write to me at once, is it fair for each one of you to call for an answer as hastily as if I had but one in hand? |
A27045 | What if the people be engaged to one Prince, and afterward break their vow, and consent to a Usurper? |
A27045 | What if they shew me the Bishops orders, and I know that many have had forged Orders? |
A27045 | What is that faith in unity whereof all members of the Catholike Church do live? |
A27045 | What many? |
A27045 | What mean you by a sufficient proposal? |
A27045 | What more common then to appeal or make such addresses to any that have advantage of interest, for the relief of the oppressed? |
A27045 | What personal qualification is necessary ad esse? |
A27045 | What proof, or notice of it, must satisfie me in particular, that it so past? |
A27045 | What then? |
A27045 | What then? |
A27045 | What then? |
A27045 | What then? |
A27045 | What were these as many or more? |
A27045 | What 〈 ◊ 〉, or proof is necessary to your Subjects? |
A27045 | When and how must the institution of Christ be found? |
A27045 | When the Roman Emperors were yet Heathens, had not the Bishop of Rome the Supremacy over all other Bishops through the whole Church? |
A27045 | When was it that the Church of Rome ceased to be a true Church? |
A27045 | Whether it be our duty to enter into reconciliation and communion with the Papist,( though not subjection) and on what terms? |
A27045 | Whether it be the right and safe Religion? |
A27045 | Whether it may be tolerated? |
A27045 | Whether the Church of Rome was a true Church in the Apostles dayes? |
A27045 | Whether the Church, of which the Protestants are Members, have been Visible ever since the dayes of Christ on earth? |
A27045 | Whether the substance of all our cause lie not in this Question, Whether the Papacy or universal Government by the Pope, be of heaven, or of men? |
A27045 | Whether was Bellarmine or Gregory the wiser man? |
A27045 | Which of these is it that you deny? |
A27045 | Who will believe a Saint to be so diabolical, that calls it an imitation of the Devil? |
A27045 | Why did not all the precedent Roman Bishops disclaim the title of universal Bishop or Patriarch, till Pelagius and Gregory? |
A27045 | Why exclude you the chief Pastors, that depend on none? |
A27045 | Why may not the Donatists, the Novatians, or the Greeks( much more) do so as well as Papists? |
A27045 | Will any Diocess serve ad esse? |
A27045 | Will any ones election prove one to be Pope? |
A27045 | Will esteeming them fit, serve turn though they be unfit? |
A27045 | Will it follow that if the Eucharist be not Accidental or integral, but Essential, that therefore every thing Instituted by Christ is Essentiall? |
A27045 | Would you have my proof? |
A27045 | Would you know then where our Church, that is, the Catholike Church hath been, in all ages? |
A27045 | You ask,[ Were those Primitive Christians of another kind of Church order and Government then were those under the Roman Empire?] |
A27045 | You ask[ were they different Congregations?] |
A27045 | You next enquire whether[ we account] Rome and us One Congregation of Christians?] |
A27045 | You say Cyril would not break off Communion with Nestorius till Celestine had condemned him; of this you give us no proof: But what if it be true? |
A27045 | [ See how this Minister of the Devil is beside himself, and would draw us with him into the ditch of perdition? |
A27045 | [ When every Sect pretend that they have the true Church and Ministry, who shall judge?] |
A27045 | am I bound to believe in his authority? |
A27045 | an in Verbis capitis sui? |
A27045 | and also deny the Revelation it self, by which he should discern these truths? |
A27045 | and by how many? |
A27045 | and by whom ad esse? |
A27045 | and did that prove that Rome was subject to Constantinople? |
A27045 | and did those Heathen Emperors give it him? |
A27045 | and drew both your selves and their other subjects from all subjection to them, and communion with them? |
A27045 | and if jure divino, whether mediately or immediately? |
A27045 | and if not, why the contempt or rejection of a drunken Priest doth it, while all the rest are( perhaps too much) honoured? |
A27045 | and many such like? |
A27045 | and never opened it to the auditors, till they were Baptized? |
A27045 | and so whether it hath been from the beginning? |
A27045 | and that they should so solicitously labour the perversion of States and Kingdoms for the promoting of stupidity or stark madness? |
A27045 | and to hide what you pretend to open? |
A27045 | and what approbation must there be? |
A27045 | and what part? |
A27045 | and whether their disobedience unchurch them or no? |
A27045 | and who are these Pastors? |
A27045 | and why pretend you to believe Generall Councils? |
A27045 | and yet deny not the Veracity of God,( no nor of the Church?) |
A27045 | appeal to Rome, as the Judge, or Church that the rest are subjected to? |
A27045 | are there no proofs in the world, but what you have seen? |
A27045 | but that they spoke falsly? |
A27045 | could you not without this lost labour at first have called me to prove the successive visibility of our Church? |
A27045 | doth all the world know that Christ hath instituted in his Church nothing but what is essential to it? |
A27045 | doth he blame them after in other Epistles that gave him that Title? |
A27045 | even to subject all Christs Members to one, as an Universal Patriarch or Bishop? |
A27045 | how is it possible? |
A27045 | how shall I then be sure of his authority that is ordained? |
A27045 | in Verbis nostris eam quaesituri? |
A27045 | is he no Heretick, that denieth the matter revealed, without opposing obstinately the Authority revealing? |
A27045 | is it P. Stephen that is the Law- giver of the Law against unjust innovation? |
A27045 | is it the belief of all that God hath revealed to be believed; or of part? |
A27045 | is this no Heretick? |
A27045 | must I nominate Christians of these Nations, to prove that there were such? |
A27045 | must you have their names, sirnames, and Genealogies? |
A27045 | or any controversie between us and them to be decided? |
A27045 | or had intentionem ordinandi? |
A27045 | or may not many of those proofs be valid which you have seen, though you esteem them not so? |
A27045 | or necessary to our membership? |
A27045 | or were they quite different Congregations? |
A27045 | or who must elect him ad esse? |
A27045 | quid de proprio intulimus, ut aliquid contrarium ei& in Scripturis deprehensum, detractione vel adjectione vel transumtatione remediaremus? |
A27045 | sed quo jure? |
A27045 | surely no? |
A27045 | that all the Church hath been guiltless of the Papal usurpation, or only some in every age? |
A27045 | therefore he was Governour of all the Christian world? |
A27045 | those cease when the persons die; or do you mean assemblies meeting in the same place? |
A27045 | upon the denyal of common principles and sence? |
A27045 | utrum apud nos, an apud illos? |
A27045 | were they the same which you nominated first, or others? |
A27045 | were they the same which you nominated in the beginning, and made one Congregation with them? |
A27045 | what Election, or Consecration is necessary thereto? |
A27045 | what am I the wiser by your saying many more incomparably, when you tell me not what, or who they were? |
A27045 | what if I be utterly ignorant whether he that ordained him, were himself ordained? |
A27045 | what if it be but in particular Assemblies? |
A27045 | what more? |
A27045 | what opportunity have ordinary Christians to compare them, and discern the moral advantages on each side? |
A27045 | when Menna Bishop of Constantinople excommunicated Pope Vigilius, was he not even with him? |
A27045 | whose whole institution of the Church office, specially the old one, was invented and approved by him? |
A27045 | why possessed you your selves of the Bishopricks and Cures of your own Prelates and Pastors, they yet living in Queen Elizabeths time? |
A27045 | will you say you meant in voto? |
A27045 | would you have the Communion of our Ashes, or else say, We forsake your Communion? |
A27045 | yea, whether it be not much more that hath been given and accepted? |
A27045 | — Quaestio est, ubi sit hoc corpus, i. e. ubi sit Ecclesia? |
A27038 | 1. Who should be first served? |
A27038 | 2. Who are his Angels? |
A27038 | A merciful Judge will hang a man for a fault against man: By proportion then what is due for sin against God? |
A27038 | All the death and calamity which you see in the world, comes from the anger of this merciful God: why then may not future misery come from it? |
A27038 | And are Love and Delight such grievous things? |
A27038 | And can you think that we should be for any one against our Maker and Redeemer? |
A27038 | And can you think that you shall not hear of this again, and pay for it one day? |
A27038 | And did it not seem as unlikely to you, that his word should be false? |
A27038 | And did you not hear these things read to you in the Congregation by the Minister? |
A27038 | And did you think so basely and blasphemously of God, that he would falsifie his word, lest such as you should suffer? |
A27038 | And do you think the undermining enemies of the Church have not a special Design upon you in this point? |
A27038 | And do you think you shall not hear of this? |
A27038 | And how importunate should we all be with sinners for their Conversion, when we consider that themselves also must shortly be Judged? |
A27038 | And if Christ be not obeyed, what a stir will conscience make? |
A27038 | And if my will were not free, ● ow could I choose but sin? |
A27038 | And is it not Reason, that it should go worse with contemptuous sinners, then with those creatures that never sinned? |
A27038 | And is it not just with God to make these friends their familiars in Torment, with whom they entertained such familiarity in sin? |
A27038 | And is not hell worse then the hardest way to heaven? |
A27038 | And might you not have gone where a powerful Minister was with a little pains? |
A27038 | And might you not have had a Bible your ● elves, and found them there? |
A27038 | And must you not much more use diligence in much greater things? |
A27038 | And now their time is past, what is it? |
A27038 | And shall not the Judge of all the earth judge righteously? |
A27038 | And should men be imitated, be they many or be they few, in such a course as this? |
A27038 | And should not a matter then that so concerneth thy self, go neer to thy heart, and awake thee from thy security? |
A27038 | And the Judge may thus expostulate with them,[ Did all these mercies deserve no more Thanks? |
A27038 | And to be out of heaven is to be out of all Happiness? |
A27038 | And was it wise or equal dealing to pref ● rr your lusts before that glory? |
A27038 | And was not Heaven worth the enduring of a scorn? |
A27038 | And were you not as earnestly perswaded by God to forsake sin and serve him, and yet that would not prevail with you? |
A27038 | And what did God entice you with? |
A27038 | And what the better was he? |
A27038 | And whose threatning should you have chiefly feared? |
A27038 | And why did you not hearken to God that ent ● ced you the other way? |
A27038 | And why is this so? |
A27038 | And why might not you have done so, if you had been as industrious as they? |
A27038 | And why then might not godlyness have been your ease and recreation? |
A27038 | And will you despise them all? |
A27038 | And will you wilfully sin, and think to scape because God doth not hinder you? |
A27038 | And yet wouldst thou now perswade the Judge that thou didst Love God above all? |
A27038 | And yet you have his written word that speaks plainer then all these? |
A27038 | Before you venture on them, enquire whether they will bear weight in Judgement, and be sweet or bitter when they are brought to tryal? |
A27038 | But I have not Power of myself to do any thing that is good: What can the creature do? |
A27038 | But Whither must they Depart? |
A27038 | But alas ▪ If we should be so foolish and unjust, what good would it do you? |
A27038 | But are you excusable if he do not? |
A27038 | But did he not also give you Reason to govern that Appetite? |
A27038 | But didst thou according ● y value him, and love him more? |
A27038 | But didst thou regard it accordingly? |
A27038 | But how shall Heathens be judged by the Law of grace, that never did Receive it? |
A27038 | But how shall Infants be judged by the Gospel, that were uncapable of it? |
A27038 | But if Christ have satisfied for my sins, and dyed for me, then how can I justly suffer for the same sins? |
A27038 | But if men will not hear, and there be no remedy, who can help it? |
A27038 | But seeing thou art also guilty of those special sins which he never shed his blood for, who shall deliver thee from that Accusation? |
A27038 | But the last Question which must decide the Controversie will be, whether we have performed the condition of the Gospel? |
A27038 | But what if the way to heaven had been harder then it was? |
A27038 | But who be they that are ready? |
A27038 | But why is it called a fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels? |
A27038 | Can foolish sinners think to lie hid or escape at that day, that will now sin wilfully before their Judge? |
A27038 | Can he not Awe them by Truth? |
A27038 | Could not God requite your labour or sufferings? |
A27038 | Could you expect that those should come to heaven, that would not believe there was such a state, but refused it, and preferred the world before it? |
A27038 | Could you have taken no time from your rest, or eating or at other intermissions? |
A27038 | Could you think with any Reason, that you should do so much for a life of a few years continuance and do no more for a life that shall have no end? |
A27038 | DO you soundly Believe this Doctrine which I have preached to you? |
A27038 | Dare you doubt of this which the God of Heaven hath so positively affirmed? |
A27038 | Despisest thou the riches of his goodness, and forbearance, and long suffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to Repentance? |
A27038 | Did God hide these things from you? |
A27038 | Did God make the world so easily? |
A27038 | Did Gods word make Heaven and Earth? |
A27038 | Did he not stand by you when you were in your cups, and lustful Pleasures? |
A27038 | Did he not tell you of the danger, and offer you far better things, if you would obey him and despise those baits? |
A27038 | Did not God also threaten you with everlasting Death, if you were not ruled by him? |
A27038 | Did not God purpose also to manifest the Glory of his Remunerative Justice? |
A27038 | Did the knees of King Belshazzar knock together with trembling, when he saw the hand- writing on the wall? |
A27038 | Did you doubt of his will, or of his power? |
A27038 | Did you joyn with the godly so far as they are all agreed? |
A27038 | Did you know where was any better security to be had? |
A27038 | Did you not feel pain and misery begin in this life? |
A27038 | Did you spend no time in Recreation, nor Idleness, nor vain talking? |
A27038 | Did you think God was no wiser then you, and understood not himself, because you understood him not? |
A27038 | Didst thou attend diligently on the word in publike, and think of what thou heardest when thou camest home? |
A27038 | Didst thou go to the Minister, or to others that could teach thee, and intreat them to tell thee the way to salvation? |
A27038 | Didst thou pray daily for it to God? |
A27038 | Didst thou use all the means thou couldest to get it? |
A27038 | Do not you use to ask this of your own hearts? |
A27038 | Do we desire this sad fruit of our Labours? |
A27038 | Do you think this will not one day cost you dear? |
A27038 | Doth any Repent when they come to Heaven ▪ that it cost them so dear to come thither? |
A27038 | Doth it support them, and secure them ▪ And is not his word sufficient security for you to have trusted your souls upon? |
A27038 | Especially when thou art every hour uncertain whether thou shalt see another hour, and not be presently snatch away by death? |
A27038 | FOR the fourth particular; VVho will be the Accuser? |
A27038 | FOR the seventh Head, VVhat will be the cause of the day to be enquired after? |
A27038 | FOR the sixth particular, What Law is it that men shall be Iudged by? |
A27038 | FOR the third point, Who are they that must be Judged? |
A27038 | For he knoweth vain man; he seeth wickedness also, and will he not consider it? |
A27038 | For how should it be? |
A27038 | For the poor creature to stand before his Maker and Redeemer, to be Judged to Everlasting Joy or Torment? |
A27038 | Friend, how camest ▪ thou in hither, not having on a wedding garment? |
A27038 | From whom? |
A27038 | God or man? |
A27038 | God thought not all these too good for you, and did you think your hearts and services too good for him? |
A27038 | God will make us Judge you,& witness against you: Can we absolve you, when the righteous God will condemn you? |
A27038 | Hath God given you no means towards the cure of this disability, which you have neglected? |
A27038 | Hath not God been merciful to thee, in bearing with thee so long, and offering thee Grace in the blood of Christ, till thou didst wilfully reject it? |
A27038 | Have you not seen some of your neighbors, who were as ill educated as your selves, attain to much knowledge afterwards by their Industry? |
A27038 | He served you with the weary labours of your fellow- creatures: and should you have grudged to bear his easie Yoak? |
A27038 | He told you it was an enemy that tempted you: and would you hearken to an enemy? |
A27038 | How can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God? |
A27038 | How canst thou live merrily, or sleep quietly in such a Condition, as if thou shouldst dye in it, thou shouldst perish for ever? |
A27038 | How could I be saved if Christ did not dye for me? |
A27038 | How familiarly doth Satan use their tongues, in cursing, swearing, lying, ribaldry, backbiting, or slandering? |
A27038 | How then can a little misery on earth prevent it? |
A27038 | How then should thy heart be affected that seeth the hand- writing of God as a summons to his barr? |
A27038 | I say, doth this man Believe that he is going to this Judgement? |
A27038 | If I shall tell you what you must do for preparation, shall I not lose my labour? |
A27038 | If any first demand, Whether the Evidence of their sin will not so overwhelm the sinner, that he will be speechless and past excuse? |
A27038 | If any foolish Infidel shall say, VVhere shall so great a number stand? |
A27038 | If you have the face to say, Lord, when did we see thee hungry? |
A27038 | If you knew not better, who was it long of but your self? |
A27038 | If you say, Why can not God find out a remedy for this sin, as well as he did for the first? |
A27038 | If you trust God, shew any word of Promise that ever he gave you to trust upon, that ever an Impenitent, Carnal, Careless person shall be saved? |
A27038 | Is death more terrible then Hell? |
A27038 | Is it all one to wrong you, and to wrong the God of Heaven? |
A27038 | Is man more dreadful than God? |
A27038 | Is not he Better, and more Lovely then all these? |
A27038 | Is not he worthy to go without it that thinks so basely of it? |
A27038 | Is not that man even worse then mad ▪ that is going to Gods Judgement and never thinks of it? |
A27038 | Is that a friend or a servant worthy to be regarded, that will disobey you, or betray you as oft as he is tempted to it? |
A27038 | Is this a matter to be forgotten? |
A27038 | Is this the thanks that God hath for his mercies? |
A27038 | It was God that let loose the Devil to Tempt me; and he was too subtile for me to deal with: and therefore what wonder if I sinned, and were overcome? |
A27038 | Look back man, upon thy heart and Life Hovv seldom and hovv neglectfully didst thou think of God? |
A27038 | Look now upon all the course of thy life, and see whether thou didst live to me, or to the world and thy flesh? |
A27038 | Look upon thy own heart now, and see whether it be a holy or an unholy heart; a spiritual or a fleshly heart; a heavenly or an earthly heart? |
A27038 | MY next Question is, Whether are you ready for this dreadful Judgement when it comes, or not? |
A27038 | MY next Question is, Whether you do ever soberly consider of this great day? |
A27038 | MY next Question to you, is ▪ How are you affected with the Consideration of this day? |
A27038 | Mans body will not endure so great labours as have no Intermission? |
A27038 | Many a time did we intreat them to try whether they were Regenerate or not? |
A27038 | May not God and Conscience witness, that it was because you cared not for knowledge, and would not be at the pains to get it, that you knew no more? |
A27038 | Must God either be Ignorant of what you will do, or else be the cause of it? |
A27038 | Must the raw unexperienced Learner despise his book or Teacher, as oft as in his ignorance he thinks he meets with contradictions? |
A27038 | Nor Christ that came purposely from heaven to reveal them? |
A27038 | Nor could reconcile his own words, because you could not reconcile them? |
A27038 | O Sirs, what shift do you make to keep your souls from Continual Terrours, as long as you remain unready for Judgement? |
A27038 | Or at least, did you not live neer some that could Read? |
A27038 | Or didst thou not rather carelesly neglect these matters; and hear a Sermon as a common tale, even when the minister was speaking of Heaven or Hell? |
A27038 | Or from a Thief or Murderer? |
A27038 | Or if you could, yet it was Gods Law, and not mens faults, that was made the Rule for you to live by: Will it excuse you that others are bad? |
A27038 | Or might you not have minded these things, even when you were about your labour, if you had but a heart to them? |
A27038 | Or rather have death, which is nothing, as the just Reward of it? |
A27038 | Or rather think him the more unfit for mercy? |
A27038 | Or will you now set your selves with all your might, to make preparation for so great a day? |
A27038 | See here thy own unholy soul, canst thou now say thou didst love me above all? |
A27038 | Shall every man be false to God, that hath any bait to entice him from him? |
A27038 | Should we lie, and say we did not? |
A27038 | Sin is no Being: and shall men be damned for that which is nothing? |
A27038 | Sirs, do you use when you are alone to think with your selves ▪ how certain and how dreadful it will be? |
A27038 | Speak truth, man, in the presence of thy Judge, was thy heart and mind set upon it? |
A27038 | THE next point in our method, is, to shew you, What will be the Evidence of the Cause? |
A27038 | THE ninth part of our work, is to shew you, What are those frivolous excuses by which the unrighteous may then endeavour their defence? |
A27038 | Tell me, is it so, or not? |
A27038 | The like must be Remembred in the very manner of our Duties; How diligently should a Minister study? |
A27038 | They that tryed them, found them the very Joy and Delight of their souls, and why could not you do so? |
A27038 | They were your slaves and drudges, and you refused to be his free servants and his sons? |
A27038 | Thou sure knewest that God was better then the world, and Heaven then earth; at least, thou wast told of it? |
A27038 | Thou ● newest that the soul was better then the body, and everlasting life more to be regarded, then this transitory life? |
A27038 | V. FOR the fifth particular, How will the sinners be called to the Barr? |
A27038 | VVhat the Accusation, and what the Defence? |
A27038 | W ● ll you not believe till you see or feel? |
A27038 | Was it not a Gross sin, to love the world above God, and to neglect Christ that dyed for thee? |
A27038 | Was it not also prepared for wicked men? |
A27038 | Was there no more in Gods intention when he elected some, then the manifestation of the riches of his glorious grace? |
A27038 | We must either condemn the Sentence of Jesus Christ, or condemn you: and is not there more reason to condemn you then him? |
A27038 | Were not Ministers as earnest with you every week to repent and amend? |
A27038 | What did men entice you with? |
A27038 | What else have you to do, but to provide for everlasting? |
A27038 | What if they threatned you with present Death? |
A27038 | What if we tell you 20 years together that you must dye, will you not believe us, because you have lived so long and seen no death coming? |
A27038 | What is this Divel that hath Angels? |
A27038 | What matter can be mentioned with the Tongue of man of greater moment? |
A27038 | What say you Sirs? |
A27038 | What say you Sirs? |
A27038 | What say you, Did not God tell you all this and much more? |
A27038 | What was there but your own wicked hearts that should make such a life seem grievous to you? |
A27038 | What would you have us say, if God ask us, Did you tell this sinner of the need of Christ, of the glory of the world to come, and the vanity of this? |
A27038 | What? |
A27038 | When was it prepared for them? |
A27038 | Where the enquiry is made to be, whether they have fed and visited him in his members, or not? |
A27038 | Whether their souls were brought back to God by Sanctification? |
A27038 | Who are these? |
A27038 | Why did you not so far then agree with them? |
A27038 | Will you do no more than you have done hitherto? |
A27038 | Will you resolve and promise in the strength of Grace, that you will faithfully and speedily endeavour to practise it, whoever shall gainsay it? |
A27038 | Will you take this for a good Excuse from your children or servants, if they abuse you? |
A27038 | Yea did not the very plain word which you heard read, tell you of these things? |
A27038 | Yea further, answer as in the presence of God: Didst thou Obey so far as thou d ● dst know? |
A27038 | Yea when he that dyed for you, will condemn you, shall we be more merciful then God? |
A27038 | Yea, and to do you no good, when we know that lyes will not prevail with God? |
A27038 | You forget what helps he afforded you to discover the wiles of Satan, and to vanquish the Temptation? |
A27038 | You have Ministers at hand ▪ why do you not go to them ▪ and earnestly ask them ▪ Sir, What must I do to be saved? |
A27038 | You have the Bible, and other good books by you: why do you not read them? |
A27038 | You see not God: will you not therefore Believe that there is a God? |
A27038 | You will then Remember, that to this end he both d ● ed, rose, and revived, that he might be Lord both of the Dead and the Living? |
A27038 | You would be afraid now to meet him in the dark; what will you be to live with him in everlasting darkness? |
A27038 | and can he not Govern it by true and righteous means ▪ what need God to say that which he will not do, to awe sinners? |
A27038 | and could you not have procured them to read to you, or to help you? |
A27038 | and did you obey as much as you knew? |
A27038 | and did you pray daily that God would lead you into the Truth? |
A27038 | and neglect him without whom you can not subsist? |
A27038 | and never do him one hours hearty service, but meerly to seek thy carnal self, and live to thy flesh? |
A27038 | and now and then bethink your selves soberly whether these are matters for wise men to make light of? |
A27038 | and plainly tell it you? |
A27038 | and serve thy flesh and lusts, though I told thee if thou didst so thou shouldst dye? |
A27038 | and that he was fain to rule the world by a Lye? |
A27038 | and the Revelation of his will to guide that Reason? |
A27038 | and think much of all that thou d ● dst therein? |
A27038 | and to banish all thoughts of returning to God, and to quench every motion that tendeth to their recovery? |
A27038 | and to suffer vile sinful dust to despise his mercy, and abuse his patience, and turn all his Creatures against him, without due punishment? |
A27038 | and to use means to sustain your own bodies and others, of purpose for this work, till it be happily done? |
A27038 | and we are almost at the barr, and it is so short a time to this Assize, what soul that is not dead will be secure? |
A27038 | and were you willing to know, even those Truths that called you out to self denyal, and that did put you on the hardest flesh displeasing duties? |
A27038 | and what answer you mean to make at that day? |
A27038 | and what you shall do? |
A27038 | and where was any surer ground for your confidence? |
A27038 | and whether the world will be then as sweet as now? |
A27038 | and whether this be the best preparation for your Tryal? |
A27038 | and whether time be no more worth to one that is so neer eternity, and must make so strict an account of his Hours? |
A27038 | and will not promote it as far as is in their power? |
A27038 | and would you have us bring your blood upon our own heads by a lye? |
A27038 | are your minds taken up with these considerations? |
A27038 | can we have any mercy on you, when he that made you will not save you, and he that formed you, will shew you no mercy? |
A27038 | canst thou deny but thou didst love this world before me? |
A27038 | from what? |
A27038 | hovv carelessly didst thou serve him? |
A27038 | hovv coldly didst thou vvorship him, or make any mention of him? |
A27038 | how earnestly should he perswade? |
A27038 | how fast it is coming on? |
A27038 | how many a soul that is now in heaven or hell, within a 1000 years dwelt in the places that you now dwell in, and sate in the seats you now sit in? |
A27038 | how shall I know whether I be ready or not? |
A27038 | how speedily is it come? |
A27038 | how unable then shall we be against Gods Sentence to Justifie you? |
A27038 | how unwearyedly should he bear all oppositions and ungrateful returns? |
A27038 | or might have done if you would? |
A27038 | shall God, and his Ministers speak in vain? |
A27038 | shall every Murderer or Thief escape hanging, because the Devil was too cunning for him in his Temptations? |
A27038 | shall he escape by telling the Judge that his sin was Nothing? |
A27038 | should you not have served him that so liberally maintained you? |
A27038 | was not Gods word so plainly written, that the unlearned might understand it? |
A27038 | was not Gods word sufficient Evidence? |
A27038 | was not heaven worth your labor? |
A27038 | were you afraid of being a loser by it? |
A27038 | what is a little time when it is gone? |
A27038 | what should be first sought after, Heaven or Earth? |
A27038 | what should we say if he ask us, Did not you tell them the misery of their natural state; and what would become of them if they were not made new? |
A27038 | when God is against you, whose side would you have us be of? |
A27038 | when he that entrusted you with the care of your children and servants, shall call you to a reckoning for the performance of that trust? |
A27038 | whether Christ and his Spirit were in them, or not? |
A27038 | why might not that at least have been spent about heavenly things? |
A27038 | why then did not these take as much with you as the other? |
A27038 | will God punish one sin twice? |
A27038 | will will you live to his dishonour who giveth you your Lives? |
A27038 | will you abuse him, by whom it is that you are men? |
A27038 | will you excuse your child or friend, if he would be false to you, upon as great enticements as these? |
A27038 | will you not hear so loud and constant calls? |
A27038 | will you not see so great a Light? |
A27038 | will you speak to his dishonor, that giveth you your speech? |
A27038 | will you therefore wrong God, because you see others wrong him? |
A27038 | will you wrong him by his own creatures? |
A27038 | with a little deluding fleshly pleasure for a few daies? |
A27038 | would you have believed one from the dead that had told you he had seen such things? |
A27038 | would you have the Jury or the Judge to take this for a good excuse? |
A27038 | would you have us lye to God, and say we did not? |
A27038 | would you spit in the face of your own Father, if you saw others do so? |
A27038 | would you think it a good excuse, if the rest should do the like, because of their example? |
A27038 | you are not troubled now at his presence ▪ and power your hearts, but will you not then be troubled at his presence, and tormenting power? |
A27029 | & c. against that sin that will not hurt the Elect that then lived? |
A27029 | & c. of things that can not hurt the Elect? |
A27029 | 2, and 3. against things that are so harmless? |
A27029 | 25 ▪ 〈 ◊ 〉 nolle punire or non punire a pardoning of sin? |
A27029 | 77,& c. for that which did them no hurt? |
A27029 | A ● d do they think, when we perswade them to Pray, that we perswade them to continue Impenitent? |
A27029 | And are all Christ''s threatnings against himself, which are against us? |
A27029 | And are they not required of us? |
A27029 | And are those usually the wisest: Who is the Judge, now in the Turks Dominions? |
A27029 | And can not we receive this plain Gospel, without spinning so many additional webs of our own? |
A27029 | And did he call Faith, Works? |
A27029 | And did not his Malice so work against Job, though God contradicted him? |
A27029 | And do they tell us with any agreement what Righteousness of Christ they call Imputed? |
A27029 | And doth not Paul most plainly and frequently say, we are Justified by it? |
A27029 | And first we must enquire what Covenant he is a Sponsor of? |
A27029 | And for whom is this s ● ● n so solemnly produced? |
A27029 | And here, will not each man have right to anothers House, Wife, Food, Goods, if they are but one Person? |
A27029 | And how few be there in the world, that embody not with some Sect or Faction, for the promoting of their Opinions? |
A27029 | And how few that do not over- vilifie and wrong those from whom they differ? |
A27029 | And how small a part of the Earth is so happy as to have the major part of the Clergy, wise, sound, honest and orthodox? |
A27029 | And if but one, which is it? |
A27029 | And if it be a Miracle, and as great a one as Christ''s Resurrection, How can any believer doubt at all? |
A27029 | And if this be no subordinate Righteousness, what doth the word signify so many hundred times used in the Scripture? |
A27029 | And if we are never the better for Love, Thanks, and Praises to God on earth, what the better shall we be for them in Heaven? |
A27029 | And is not Faith a humane Act? |
A27029 | And is not Satan the Accuser of the Brethren, and that before God? |
A27029 | And is not that ours which is within us? |
A27029 | And is that as great a Miracle as Christ''s Resurrection, that is wrought by so rational a means, used by man? |
A27029 | And is this Kingdom and Divine Nature, nothing but that which Christ did without us, imputed to be done by us? |
A27029 | And must we not be judged by this Law? |
A27029 | And now tell me, whether there were ever damnable Hereticks in the World, if these be none? |
A27029 | And of how ill a constitution is such a blind and partial conscience? |
A27029 | And shall it not be imputed to him? |
A27029 | And the other part of the Cause of that day, is, whether we have part in Christ, and the Merits of his Righteousness? |
A27029 | And therefore Christs Righteousness is ever connoted when we talk of Faith: For what is the very Specification of the Act but the Object? |
A27029 | And to take Righteousness to stand against Free Grace, if it be but our own? |
A27029 | And what do they exercise strictness for, by thier self devised terms of their Church- Communion? |
A27029 | And what is the meaning of all such Texts? |
A27029 | And what would such a Nation come to? |
A27029 | And whence is it that this sign of Election is prerequisite, but that Gods precept made it a duty, and the promise a condition? |
A27029 | And where he giveth Grace which causeth the Act it self, did God Promise, it before hand to that man any more than to others? |
A27029 | And where more erroneous, or more cruel? |
A27029 | And whether Faith in God the Father, and the Holy Ghost, do justifie? |
A27029 | And whether according to the Law of Innocency, he that had no sin or guilt of Commission or Omission, had not right to the Life there given? |
A27029 | And whether to affirm it be not to equal it with Faith? |
A27029 | And who think you will be Judge who shall suffer as Hereticks? |
A27029 | And why is Faith named if it have no part in the Sense? |
A27029 | And why would they have men read their Books, to do no good, and avoid no evil? |
A27029 | And will not Christians know that Work and Doctrine of Gods Spirit in them? |
A27029 | And will not Christians read the Bible? |
A27029 | And will not God reckon him righteous that is righteous? |
A27029 | And will not distinct personality continue to Men, as well as to Angels for ever? |
A27029 | And, whether we have Right to the Heavenly Inheritance? |
A27029 | Are Christ''s Graces his dishonour? |
A27029 | Are any works of man meritorious? |
A27029 | Are any works of man meritorious? |
A27029 | Are regenerate believers, under any guilt of any but corrective punishment, or should ask pardon of any other? |
A27029 | Are we not righteous by being one with Christ, as we are sinners by Vnion with Adam? |
A27029 | Are we not under the Law[ of Christ and Faith, and Liberty] to Christ? |
A27029 | As a sign? |
A27029 | As an Antecedent? |
A27029 | But how is it that God promiseth the Condition it self? |
A27029 | But if they defend them, they are Hereticks: For how else shall we know whether they deny not Fundamentals? |
A27029 | But is their chosen Metaphor[ of Going out, and Going to] an Act or no Act? |
A27029 | But it was their sin once, before it was Christs sin? |
A27029 | But stay a little: Is the condition promised to all that the conditional promise is made to? |
A27029 | But we have no such Righteousness a ● they thus feign; when the Question is, whether we are s ● nners? |
A27029 | But what Ignorance is it? |
A27029 | But what remedy? |
A27029 | But where doth the Scripture say so? |
A27029 | By this Rule, we shall judge none Hereticks, but Infidels; f ● r who will ● xpresly renounce Christianity but they? |
A27029 | Can any man judge 〈 ◊ 〉 hardly of men that overthr ● w all Religion? |
A27029 | Can that do no hurt to the Elect, that maketh such calamitous Confusions in the World? |
A27029 | Could ● e be Godly that said a ● d did so ● u ● h against the Truth, and so much to draw men t ● his Errors? |
A27029 | Did Christ redeem us from under his own Government, and the Law of Grace? |
A27029 | Did God send the Jews into Captivity to Babylon for sins that do the Elect no hurt; even for penitent Manasses''s sins? |
A27029 | Did Paul call himself mad against the Saints, unworthy to be called an Apostle, a wretched man, for that which did him no hurt? |
A27029 | Do they Excommunicate Christ for sin? |
A27029 | Do those Churches exercise Discipline upon such as are one Person with Christ? |
A27029 | Do those works save us that do not justify us? |
A27029 | Do you mean that guilt resulteth from Gods part of the Covenant, or from Adams, or from his Posterities? |
A27029 | Doth Christs Righteousness cause our Sanctification, in the same sort of Causality as it causeth our Justification? |
A27029 | Doth Satan overcome him, when ever he overcometh us? |
A27029 | Doth faith justify as a righteousness? |
A27029 | Doth he command a Father to correct Christ, when he commandeth him to correct his Children? |
A27029 | Doth he take Gods Word for his rule; or will he shame himself by saying that in all these God speaketh unfitly, and that he can mend his Language? |
A27029 | Doth it cure Atheism, Infidelity, Drunkeness, Lust, though all Preachers condemn them? |
A27029 | Doth not Christs righteousness cause our Sanctification in the same sort of causality as it causeth our Justification? |
A27029 | Doth not this opinion contradict every Article of the Creed, every Petition in the Lords Prayer, and everyone of the Ten Commandements? |
A27029 | For if Adam had merited his own glorification had not his works been both the meritorious cause, and the material? |
A27029 | For who should accuse us? |
A27029 | Hast thou been a Despiser of Government, a Despiser of thy Parents, a Murtherer, an Adulterer, a Thief, a Lyar, a Drunkard? |
A27029 | Hath Justification and Salvation the same conditions? |
A27029 | Have you read Islebius, that turned from Antinomianism to be a Papist Bishop, and helpt to rectifie Luther''s Phrase, by calling him to oppose him? |
A27029 | Have you read Luther on the Galathians? |
A27029 | He that doth righteousness is righteous? |
A27029 | He was not an antecedent surety, but a consequent? |
A27029 | Here comes in also the Controversie whether Repentance be any Condition of Pardon, or Justification? |
A27029 | How and why then is this called a Law of works? |
A27029 | How can faith and repentance give a right to the righteousness of Christ, which must first give us that faith and repentance? |
A27029 | How can faith or repentance entitle us to that righteousness of Christ which must first give us a right to themselves and all Grace? |
A27029 | How can that hurt any other Elect Person, that hurteth not the sinner himself? |
A27029 | How doth he bring us to God? |
A27029 | How far are we under the Law; and how far not? |
A27029 | How is that Habit quae Justificat, when they say only Reception by its Instrumentality Justifieth; and that''s only the Act? |
A27029 | How many Bishops and Conformists in England, have held, and written unjustifiable words about Justification? |
A27029 | How vain hath peaceable Dr. Wilkins attempt of an Universal Character proved? |
A27029 | I pass by the Controversie which Mr. Gataker most insisteth on, Whether to deliver from Death, and to give Life, be not all one? |
A27029 | I will tell you how; Ask him first, whether he believe the Fundamental Truth? |
A27029 | If all that Christ hath, be already ours, and we are as perfect as he, what can Duty, or more Grace, or Heaven, add to us? |
A27029 | If all the Ministers in England subscribe a detestation of gross ignorance and pride, do you think it would cure them? |
A27029 | If but to some, to whom? |
A27029 | If he say, yea: Ask him whether if he knew that his Consequence contradicted or subverted it, which of the two he would let go? |
A27029 | If it be no hurt to be mad, what is Bedlam good for? |
A27029 | If then he attained the design of Christianity, was he not a Christian? |
A27029 | If thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted? |
A27029 | In my Life of Faith, I have clearly explained it: And must I expect no Answer, and yet do all again? |
A27029 | In the Tenor or Mode of the Promise, and that maketh it it''s Condition: In what other respect do they( exclusively) feign it necessary? |
A27029 | In what sense is Christs Righteousness imputed to us? |
A27029 | Is Gods accepting Christs righteousness for us, the imputing of it? |
A27029 | Is Pardon and Justification perfect the first moment? |
A27029 | Is Pardon and Justification perfect the first moment? |
A27029 | Is Prayer only a Thanksgiving? |
A27029 | Is a man after his regeneration and Faith, ever obliged to any but temporal punishments, or need to ask pardon of any other? |
A27029 | Is any more necessary to the keeping or not losing our Justification, than to its beginning? |
A27029 | Is any one punished for pardoned sin? |
A27029 | Is any one punished for sin that is pardoned? |
A27029 | Is any thing plainer in all the Gospel? |
A27029 | Is faith, and is repentance no means? |
A27029 | Is future sin pardoned before? |
A27029 | Is glorifying God inconsistent with seeking to be saved? |
A27029 | Is his Law made for himself, that is made for us? |
A27029 | Is it a matter of boasting that God commandeth when he commandeth us to repent and believe the Gospel? |
A27029 | Is it no greater Mercy and Grace, to make us like our Saviour in Holiness, and Gods Image, and the Divine Nature, than not? |
A27029 | Is it no hurt accordingly to have the less of Glory in Heaven? |
A27029 | Is it no hurt to have Faith, Love, Desire, and Joy, weak, and to have still the remnants of unbelief, and other such like sins? |
A27029 | Is it no hurt to live and dye in terrible fear of Gods displeasure, and in doubts of our everlasting state? |
A27029 | Is it no hurt to lose some degrees of Love and Holiness, which we have had? |
A27029 | Is it not a vile abuse of his Grace, to contemn it, because it is our own? |
A27029 | Is it not as it is the Perso ● s Faith? |
A27029 | Is it not then too little, if it must be the Idem, and not the Aequivalens? |
A27029 | Is it not unjust to punish him that Christ died for, even one sin twice? |
A27029 | Is it possible, that that which is evil, and the greatest evil it self, can be in us, and done by us, and do us no hurt? |
A27029 | Is it the Fa ● and not the Person that is to be judged? |
A27029 | Is it to be the opposers of all Gods Laws? |
A27029 | Is it to make up any imperfection in the Obedience or Righteousness of Christ? |
A27029 | Is it true that Christs active obedience only meriteth Heaven for us, and therefore that only meriteth Sanctification? |
A27029 | Is it true that we must be practical Antinomians unless we hold that only Christs active righteousness merited grace and glory for us? |
A27029 | Is it worth their Zeal and Contention? |
A27029 | Is justifying Faith an act of the understanding or will? |
A27029 | Is nol ● e punire, or non punire,( not punishing) true pardon? |
A27029 | Is not Christs Righteousness ours, as our sins were his by imputation? |
A27029 | Is not Christs righteousness ours, as our sins were his, by im ● utation? |
A27029 | Is not the Preaching of the Gospel a means of mens believing? |
A27029 | Is not this Idolatry worse than Image- Worship, or than Anti- christianity? |
A27029 | Is not this to trust to works? |
A27029 | Is obedience a part of Justifying Faith? |
A27029 | Is sin worse than suffering, if it can do no hurt? |
A27029 | It is not for Christ to judge himself: It is not to judge God, whether he elected us? |
A27029 | It is not to judge, whether we were of the Seed of Adam, or whether we ever sinned? |
A27029 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? |
A27029 | Lastly, you ask, What Righteousness Faith is imputed to? |
A27029 | M ● st a believer any way plead his Faith, Repentance or Holiness to his Justification, or trust to them? |
A27029 | Must 〈 ◊ 〉 ever trust at all to his faith, repentance, or holiness, or p ● ead it any way to his justification? |
A27029 | No, nor so much hurt: But what need I more proof of this, than what Popery hath done these 800. or 900. years in the World? |
A27029 | Obj ▪ It is prerequisite as an Instrument? |
A27029 | Of what? |
A27029 | Or is it Law that we shall not be Ruled and Judged by? |
A27029 | Or is it[ that you may turn?] |
A27029 | Or is there any transgression, if no Law? |
A27029 | Or to be tormented with Stone, Collick, Convulsion, or any Disease; why will these Phanaticks seek to Physicians, use Medicines, and groan in Pain? |
A27029 | Or whether the Law of Innocency condemn us; And our sin deserve everlasting Punishment? |
A27029 | Or will you new mold it into an absolute Form? |
A27029 | Or ▪ will you say that it is no Covenant? |
A27029 | Should none pray but Reprobates, if others have no hurt to deprecate? |
A27029 | So we unless we utter words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? |
A27029 | That speaketh but the Order: But what Antecedent is it? |
A27029 | The Acts of Christ in the Divine and Humane Nature: Are these given us, and do we possess them in themselves? |
A27029 | The Cause of that day, will not be, whether Christ be a sufficient Saviour, or have made sufficient satisfaction? |
A27029 | The Law of Nature,( and so we say, The Civil Law, the Canon Law, Gods Law,& c.) Now the question is, what Covenant Christ was the Sponsor of? |
A27029 | The question then is whether every believer be one person with Christ? |
A27029 | The sum of all our Controversie is, what Righteousness believers have? |
A27029 | Then there is some degree of turning necessary as a condition to the promised special gift of the Spirit? |
A27029 | There is no man without many Errors: And do not all desire that others should take that for Truth, which they take to be Truth? |
A27029 | Those men were not Hereticks, but men fals ● y a ● cus ● d of Heresie: Why instance you in Papist Tyrants? |
A27029 | Thou art not an Adulterer, thou art not a sinful Person,( Why did Christ then justifie the confessing Publican?) |
A27029 | To him that hath, shall be given: may not Faith be the gift of God, and yet be the condition of Justification and Salvation? |
A27029 | Turn you at my reproof; behold I will pour out my Spirit to you; I will make known my Words unto you? |
A27029 | Was Dr. Tully a Non- conformist? |
A27029 | Was it no hurt to the Elect to be long the Devil''s Servants, and to have our Conversion so long delayed, as with many it is? |
A27029 | What Law is it that Paul calleth the Law of works which can not justify? |
A27029 | What Righteousness of Christ is it that is ours, and imputed to us; the Passive, the Active, the Habitual, or the Divine, or all? |
A27029 | What act of Faith is it that justifieth as to the Object? |
A27029 | What do these men preach for? |
A27029 | What do they gather Churches for? |
A27029 | What i ● Pauls drift in all his disputes about ● u ● tification? |
A27029 | What is Baptism, the Lords Supper, Confession, and Absolution then for? |
A27029 | What is God''s Governing Justice good for, in punishing sin, if it hurt not? |
A27029 | What is it that we are to repent of, if sin do no hurt? |
A27029 | What is it to be judged according to our works, or what we have done in the body? |
A27029 | What is it to be judged according to our works? |
A27029 | What is the meaning of Practical Antinomianism? |
A27029 | What is there in it besides matter( the subject and fundamentum) and form? |
A27029 | What is 〈 ◊ 〉 drift of St. James? |
A27029 | What need we more proof than so many Laws about Sacrificing and Confessing for forgiveness? |
A27029 | When his Reader hath read to him some parcels of our Writings, how knoweth he what he omitteth ▪ or what explications he never read? |
A27029 | When it is said that faith is imputed to us for righteousness is it faith indeed that is meant or Christs Righteousness believed on? |
A27029 | Where''s the Clergy so powerful as in the Roman Kingdom? |
A27029 | Whether Christs Righteousness be the Efficient, Material, or Formal cause of our Righteousness, or Justification? |
A27029 | Whether Grace be Grace, or Free, if it have any Condition? |
A27029 | Whether our performance of the Condition of Justification doth efficiently justifie us? |
A27029 | Whether that which is by Christs obedience, and by Faith, be the same? |
A27029 | Whether the Acceptation of Christs Righteousness be the Imputation of it? |
A27029 | Whether the Covenant of Grace, be made only with Christ, or with us also? |
A27029 | Whether the sufferings of Christ merit our freedom from nothing but what he suffered in our ● tead? |
A27029 | Whether we are justified by the Law of Innocency saying, Obey perfectly and live? |
A27029 | Whether we are lyable, by Guilt, to future Punishment? |
A27029 | Whether we should not be as righteous on Earth( even under Davids or Peters sin) as in Heaven? |
A27029 | Which justify no man? |
A27029 | Who k ● oweth mens minds but ● y th ● i ● Words? |
A27029 | Who shall condemn us, it is God that justifieth us? |
A27029 | Why are these men for Separation and Church- Discipline, if sin do no hurt? |
A27029 | Why censure they Conformists and others that differ from them? |
A27029 | Why did you not note this, and tell us whether you deny this also, as well as our Physical performance? |
A27029 | Why do Libertines labour to escape Prisons, Banishments, Fines, or Hanging for sin, if it can do them no hurt? |
A27029 | Why do Ministers Preach so much against sin, if it can do no hurt? |
A27029 | Why do men Plow and Sow, and Labour, and Eat, if Famine hurt not, and Labour do no good, because Christ hath done all? |
A27029 | Why do they not commend to us some better name for the same thing? |
A27029 | Why do we not take up with the three first Petitions in the Lords Prayer, if our own Interest be not next to be regarded and prayed for? |
A27029 | Why do you not say so then, not that it hath no Conditions, but that it is a conditional Promise equal to an absolute? |
A27029 | Why doth he Sanctify us, and bid us seek and strive to enter? |
A27029 | Why hath God put Fear into our Nature, if nothing can hurt us? |
A27029 | Why hurt we others by Self- defence ▪ and War, if nothing can hurt us? |
A27029 | Why is he called Least, in the Kingdom of God, who breaketh the least Commandement, and teacheth men so? |
A27029 | Why is it worse to be cast into the Sea with a Mill- stone, for scandalizing the least, if that scandal can not hurt them? |
A27029 | Why is man''s nature afraid of Devils, and the Serpents seed, if they can not hurt us? |
A27029 | Why is the Education of Children so great a Duty, and he that spareth the Rod, hateth his Child, if sin will do them no hurt? |
A27029 | Why make you so much Complaint against Vnreforme ● ness? |
A27029 | Why must Rulers be Just, and a Terrour to them that do evil, if sin do no hurt? |
A27029 | Why must fasting, and watchfulness, and resisting temptations be used against Lust, and other sin, if it can do no hurt? |
A27029 | Why pray they for Reformation, and Church- prosperity, and the Thousand Years Glorious State, if sin be so harmless a thing? |
A27029 | Why should we compassionate the poor, or sick, if sin do no hurt to them? |
A27029 | Why then should we exhort each other daily, lest any be hardened by this deceitfulness of sin? |
A27029 | Why was Christ''s Resurrection Preached by the Apostles, so much as the Proof of the Truth of Christianity, and not the Faith of every believer? |
A27029 | Will Heaven be against Heaven, and God against God to us? |
A27029 | Will it not be those that are uppermost, and get greatest strength? |
A27029 | Will you cast out Baptism by this Argument? |
A27029 | XVII Is Justifying faith an act of the understanding or of the Will? |
A27029 | Y ● u encour ● ge Heresie, by making it so hard to know a Heretick: May we not know them by their Doctrin ●? |
A27029 | and among Christians? |
A27029 | and be justified or condemned as we keep or break it? |
A27029 | and do we not profess them at present and promise them for the future? |
A27029 | and how from Scripture you prove the distribution? |
A27029 | and perfect or unperfect? |
A27029 | and so visible Christianity? |
A27029 | and to whom? |
A27029 | and what? |
A27029 | and whe ● her all the rest are the works which Paul excludeth from Justification? |
A27029 | and why Is it as a sign of Election? |
A27029 | if God account not a man a believer, can he be justified and saved? |
A27029 | or all these? |
A27029 | or any personal righteousness in subordination to Christs? |
A27029 | or only some and which? |
A27029 | that is, the matter of that meritorious righteousness: And why may we not say so of Christ? |
A27029 | trusting to the Imputation of his Righteousness?] |
A27029 | who is Judge in Muscovy, where Preaching is forbidden? |
A27029 | § 5 Whither need we to go for an instance of this unhappiness, but to our controversies about Justification? |
A26957 | & how cruel have we been to our selves& thee? |
A26957 | 8: doth all unworthy receiving make a man liable to damnation? |
A26957 | A way these silly simple childish thoughts; how like an inhabitant of this earthly sensual world dost thou reason? |
A26957 | After all this shall I again forsake thee, and deal falsly in thy Covenant? |
A26957 | And canst thou after all this doubt that the Father is not willing? |
A26957 | And canst thou not be read both Husband, Father and Lord, and all in his countenance? |
A26957 | And dare you live in such a state? |
A26957 | And do they not all sing, and joy, and triumph in it? |
A26957 | And doth he at once forbid and command the same thing? |
A26957 | And had rather be one of the holiest Saints, than of the most renowned prosperous Princes upon Earth? |
A26957 | And hast thou indeed forgiven me so great a debt, by so precious a Ransom? |
A26957 | And how will you then look and cry when God passeth sentence on you, and thrusts you down to Hell to bear the punishment of your sins? |
A26957 | And if Confidence in Christ be yet deceit, must I not say that thou hast deceived me? |
A26957 | And is not this all true? |
A26957 | And is this all? |
A26957 | And must I of all be thus censur''d? |
A26957 | And must his entertainment at first be no better than a stable or a manger could give him? |
A26957 | And must the Son of God be humbled thus? |
A26957 | And shall I not love thee, that hast thus loved me? |
A26957 | And should it not be sweeter to us that are the guests that feed upon it? |
A26957 | And that Love draw out by the sense of Love, might be all my life? |
A26957 | And was his birth, thinkst thou, so mean, whose Parentage was so glorious? |
A26957 | And what is this sordid corruptible flesh, that its desires and pleasures should call down my Soul, and tempt it to neglect my God? |
A26957 | And what needs his body be of a clear, white, thin, transparent skin? |
A26957 | And what though thou art unworthy of his love, if he will have thee and make thee worthy? |
A26957 | And when he hath made thee as he would, why may not he take thee to himself, and lay thee next his heart, and delight over thee everlastingly? |
A26957 | And will a mournful weed, a wet eye, and a cloudy brow, become thee at these times of Festivals? |
A26957 | And wilt thou not take the Cross and sollow me? |
A26957 | And yet, you careless secure Jews, can you think to escape when God comes to make inquisition for blood? |
A26957 | And, which useth to carry it in the time of trial, in your deliberate choice? |
A26957 | Angels are admiring these miracles of Love? |
A26957 | Are all the Members of the visible Church to be admitted to this Sacrament? |
A26957 | Art thou not in Covenant with me, as my Sanctifier, and Confirmer, and Comforter? |
A26957 | Away my unbelieving heart, what a stir is here to make thee believe a thing so evident? |
A26957 | Away with an Husband, Wife, or Child to me: Is he not more to me than ten Husbands? |
A26957 | Ay, but I was his Fathers enemy, and so no friend to him; or would he love an enemy? |
A26957 | BUT is he dead? |
A26957 | But doth he not tell thee, to put thee out of all doubt, this is my well- beloved Son, hear him, hear him: What''s that? |
A26957 | But doth it so please him? |
A26957 | But hast thou any ground to doubt them? |
A26957 | But hast thou not a whole Nation, yea Nations that do believe the same? |
A26957 | But his days were spent in poverty, meanness and disgrace; and can I, dare I, trust my soul with such a one, and take him to be the Son of God? |
A26957 | But how can it once be thought that envy should get a room in an heart that''s full of love, with which it swells, it bubbles up, and runs all over? |
A26957 | But how if in the end he prove a Prophet? |
A26957 | But how will you be able to rub your brows into so much confidence? |
A26957 | But is it only to remember that there was a Christ, and that he was crucified, and no more? |
A26957 | But is not this Sacrament more holy and dreadful, and should it not have more preparation, than other parts of worship? |
A26957 | But shall he love, and die in love, and thus be forc''d to leave me, because he lov''d me, and I not mourn the absence of my best Beloved? |
A26957 | But should we have no regard to the due celebration of these sacred Mysteries, and to the Minister, and communicants, and manner of Administration? |
A26957 | But tell me if thy unbelief hath any ground for it? |
A26957 | But were those wonders true and certain? |
A26957 | But what if my conscience be not satisfied, but I am still in doubt, must I not forbear? |
A26957 | But what should he do with a beautious body that must be so abased and abused as his was? |
A26957 | But where are my Clothes? |
A26957 | But where are my silken golden twists of Faith to hang the jewels of joy and love, and humility upon? |
A26957 | But whither, O whither, O ye blinded Jews, are ye dragging this my Lord? |
A26957 | But why a dream, poor wretched heart? |
A26957 | But why a dream? |
A26957 | But why did he love an enemy? |
A26957 | But why do I ask this question? |
A26957 | But why dost thou weep? |
A26957 | But why should I doubt that which is past all doubt? |
A26957 | But why thus necessary? |
A26957 | But will his Father yield to this? |
A26957 | But would the Son of God be hanged and crucified? |
A26957 | But yet it was as glorious: for did not a Star proclaim him born? |
A26957 | But yet, but what can Heaven love so much? |
A26957 | But you will say, What if still he can not be resolved whether he have true Faith and Repentance, or not? |
A26957 | But, Oh my Lord, what are those pains and gripes thou feelest, that brings forth these complainings? |
A26957 | Can I refuse thy blood when I have accepted thy self? |
A26957 | Can a Murderer of Christ be a small offender? |
A26957 | Come tell me, doth not Heaven look as though it was pleased with the offer of his Son? |
A26957 | Come, tell me, I say, tell me quickly, I must have an answer, Can this, and all this be true, and Heaven yet not be pleased? |
A26957 | Come, tell me, is not this thy language? |
A26957 | Could God be merciful at a dearer rate? |
A26957 | Could Love stoop lower? |
A26957 | Could my sin have done a more horrid deed, than put to death the Son of God? |
A26957 | Could they so victoriously conquer all my fear, silence all my doubts, allay the heats of a scorched and be- helled Conscience? |
A26957 | Did I not make thy seat a Paradice, and strewed thy paths with pleasure? |
A26957 | Did I not rejoyce over thee as a young man over his bride? |
A26957 | Did not the Prophets foretell his death, and such a death? |
A26957 | Didst thou not see him step off his Throne? |
A26957 | Do his looks bespeak him to be thy Father or thy Judge? |
A26957 | Do not all the Christian World eat and drink as often as they can the Symbols of this their dying Lord? |
A26957 | Do not the Angels admire the mystery of Redeeming Grace, that makes them so desirous to peep into it? |
A26957 | Do they not bear it as a badge of honour, and shall it be to thee as shame? |
A26957 | Dost thou not see all thy fellow- Christians to glory in that Cross, and in that Christ that died on it? |
A26957 | Fear not, I say, he will not ask thee, Friend, how camest thou hither not having on thy Wedding garment? |
A26957 | For it is impossible the Cup should pass: And can he, will he, dare he venture? |
A26957 | For what if his Face did want comliness, seeing it came so with tears and grief for thee? |
A26957 | God speaks,] Sinner, where art thou? |
A26957 | God speaks] Had I not told thee that sin would cost thee thy life, then thou hadst had some excuse: have I said it, and will the great God change? |
A26957 | Hadst thou not the blindness of the Jews, thou couldest not reason thus like them; but was it not necessary it should be so? |
A26957 | Half of this ado would find a heart for a little mire or dirt, or something else that is worse, and is not Christ better? |
A26957 | Hath my Lord forgot so suddenly that he was on earth, and that he sweat, and groan''d, and wept, and bled, as well as I do now? |
A26957 | Have I not sat and read, and read and wept viewing over the story; and could they forbear that with their watry eyes saw this scene then acted? |
A26957 | He said he will pay his life for thine; and doth not his Father bid thee hear him? |
A26957 | He spoke such chearing words of Grace, What do you want, my Friend? |
A26957 | He was not the Christ, thou sayest, but tell me why? |
A26957 | He was taken from prison and judgment, and who shall declare his generation? |
A26957 | His birth but mean and beggarly; no sooner born, but cradled in a manger; and could Heaven suffer this? |
A26957 | How could he be far from thee, who was one with thy self? |
A26957 | How could you find such barbarous hearts to triumph over a bleeding dying lamb, that was so innocent? |
A26957 | How couldst thou suspect thy Fathers love? |
A26957 | How dare you say you were ignorant of him, when you say you know both Moses and the Prophets, and they bear witness of him? |
A26957 | How dear payed my Saviour for that, which I might have avoided at a very cheap rate? |
A26957 | How good and pleasant is the unity of Bretheren? |
A26957 | How merciful, Lord, hast thou been to sinners? |
A26957 | How often did he cure your Lame? |
A26957 | How often have I told thee it doth please him and hast thou not believed? |
A26957 | How often should the Sacrament be now administred, that it neither grow into contempt nor strangeness? |
A26957 | How short our Sabbath- days? |
A26957 | How small a matter hath tempted me to that, which must cost so dear before it was forgiven? |
A26957 | How strangely dost thou glorifie thy mercy over sin that gave advantage to glorifie thy justice? |
A26957 | How strangly hast thou deserved and sought it? |
A26957 | How will you dare to speak a word for your selves to him whom you have nailed to a tree and crucified? |
A26957 | How will you do if this sin shall find you out? |
A26957 | How will you look him in the face whom you have spit on? |
A26957 | How wonderfully did he heal your Lepers, and those sick of the Palsie, yea of all manner of diseases? |
A26957 | I am too poor a match for the Son and heir of all things: But will he, can he suffer his Son to die to buy such a beggarly thing to himself as I am? |
A26957 | I answer, It is one thing to ask, what is his duty in this case? |
A26957 | I both saw and heard him speak the words; or shall I misdoubt his faithfulness? |
A26957 | I can not find it stir? |
A26957 | I had my Being from thee, and my daily Bread; and should I have requited thee with disobedience? |
A26957 | I know he is the Son of God he can not lye, but it is true? |
A26957 | I lookt just now, I see that door wide open: What''s this a spirit? |
A26957 | I must be gone, what shall I do in yonder hungry soul- starving world again? |
A26957 | I see my Lord looks towards them, and kindly chides their loving sorrow, Why weep ye, Oh ye Daughters of Jerusalem? |
A26957 | I was a creature, a worm, a fly, a nothing to him, and what need he have cared? |
A26957 | If God requires blood for blood, what will become of yours? |
A26957 | If both our hearts in love so well agree, What then shall separate my Christ from me? |
A26957 | Is it possible that such a damned wretch as I, could harbour such silken gilded thoughts of such love, grace, mercy and tenderness of the Son of God? |
A26957 | Is this a Court for Princes, or for Angels? |
A26957 | Is this a house, or is it a Palace? |
A26957 | It was his Father I did wrong, why did he not let me suffer? |
A26957 | It''s true, he might have gone without, but what if he would not, why should not Heaven have its will as well as thou? |
A26957 | May I not believe my senses? |
A26957 | May an ungodly Man receive this Sacrament, who knoweth not himself to be ungodly? |
A26957 | Methinks I feel my bowels turn, my spirits melt within me; was ever love like to his love? |
A26957 | Might I not have had an hundred that would have never done half so much for me as he hath done? |
A26957 | Must a sincere Christian receive, that is uncertain of his sincerity, and in continual doubting? |
A26957 | My God how dearly hast thou purchased my Love? |
A26957 | My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
A26957 | My Judge hath passed the sentence, I must die; and who can reverse the doom? |
A26957 | My Mother, Father, Wife or Child, can not help me: O who then shall? |
A26957 | No sooner must he begin to live, but must an enemy assault his life? |
A26957 | Now how to get them loose again, thou knowest not; this thou mightest by heed and care have prevented; but now what help? |
A26957 | Now put all these together, and tell me, canst thou doubt? |
A26957 | Now, will the Bridegroom come, and I am not ready? |
A26957 | O that I could Love thee as much as I would Love thee? |
A26957 | O were I certain thou wouldst ne''re doubt more, how freely should I make satisfaction? |
A26957 | Oh for a mountain to cover me: Oh whither shall I go, wither shall I flie? |
A26957 | Oh what a shew do these bright and glittering Saints make in mine eyes? |
A26957 | Oh what was I so long a reasoning about? |
A26957 | Oh where, where are they? |
A26957 | Oh why shouldest thou thus torment me? |
A26957 | Or can I accept my pardon at thy hands, and refuse the Seal thereof? |
A26957 | Or ever have a favourable thought of sin? |
A26957 | Or ever have a fearless thought of justice? |
A26957 | Or, what unworthiness is it that is so threatned? |
A26957 | Seeing he that doubteth is condemned if he eat, because he eateth not in Faith; for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin? |
A26957 | Shall God the answer make? |
A26957 | Shall I ever again have a dull apprehension of such Love? |
A26957 | Shall I mourn for him that''s just now past his state of mourning? |
A26957 | Shall I not love thy Servants, and forgive my Neighbours their little debt? |
A26957 | Shall it be said of the Prince of Glory, that he died and had the burial of an Ass? |
A26957 | Shall not such be blamed, but rather pitied? |
A26957 | Shall the Heavenly Angels be joyful, and thou sad? |
A26957 | Should not they weep when thou must bleed? |
A26957 | Speak sinner, was it not so? |
A26957 | Stay but a while, and thou shalt see him more; look up, my soul, come, tell me what thou seest? |
A26957 | THousands of thousands stand around Thy Throne, O God, most high; Ten thousand times ten thousand sound Thy praise, but who am I? |
A26957 | TO whom, Lord, should I sing, but thee, The maker of my Tongue? |
A26957 | Tell me ye fairest, what make you up so early? |
A26957 | Tell me, tell me, couldst thou have divorced thy self from all, and have taken this seemingly uncomely person for thy Lord, and only Husband? |
A26957 | Their love to us doth cause them to rejoyce, while they stand by and see our Heavenly feast? |
A26957 | Thou dost not see this, blame then thine eyes, and the infidelity of thy heart; shall it be less true, because thy base infidelity can not digest it? |
A26957 | Thy heart is base, and what of that, if he will mend it? |
A26957 | To exercise your Thankfulness, what could do more than so great a Gift, so dearly purchased, so surely sealed, and so freely offered? |
A26957 | To kill so kind a Friend, That made the Lord of Glory die, What might this act portend? |
A26957 | VVhat hath this world to do with my affections? |
A26957 | WHat is the Sacrament of the Lords- Supper? |
A26957 | Was I not as a Father to thee, the time thou lovedst me, and didst obey me? |
A26957 | Was ever Prince on Earth honoured with so great a Conquest? |
A26957 | Was it not filled with miracles and wonders? |
A26957 | Were not his miraculous Feasts more splendid than those of Princes? |
A26957 | What ails my heart? |
A26957 | What cloud or darkness dost thou see about the Throne? |
A26957 | What good got you to stand and laugh to see him sorrowful? |
A26957 | What if my pains and screeches were eternal? |
A26957 | What if my punishment was as great as Hell? |
A26957 | What is it then that I must call to mind when I think upon a bleeding and dying Christ, so as to affect my heart? |
A26957 | What is the particular preparation needful to a fit Communicant? |
A26957 | What made the Lord of Glory die? |
A26957 | What saith my Lord? |
A26957 | What saith my heart? |
A26957 | What should he do while he is in doubt? |
A26957 | What sign or token of displeasure canst thou at all discover? |
A26957 | What stickest thou at? |
A26957 | What then will you do when that great and terrible day of the Lord shall come? |
A26957 | What though now all tears, and sorrow, and sighing is done away, and he ceaseth to be any longer subject to our infirmities? |
A26957 | What, can God love no more than thou canst? |
A26957 | What, can you doubt my kind design? |
A26957 | What? |
A26957 | Where is the Conscience that but now was burning in me; But Oh, can not the presence of the Lord put me out of doubt? |
A26957 | Wherein lieth the sin of an Hypocrite, and ungodly person, if he do receive? |
A26957 | Whether his judgment of himself, do rather incline to think and hope that he is sincere in his repentance and Faith, or, that he is not? |
A26957 | Whither, O whither shall I go to find them out? |
A26957 | Why did he not send twelve Legions of Angels for his rescue? |
A26957 | Why did they proclaim his coming into the World, and sing for joy that there was good will in Heaven to men on earth? |
A26957 | Why doth he not send down fire from Heaven upon the heads of these his Sons enemies, and so consume them? |
A26957 | Why should he fear the grave, that had power over it? |
A26957 | Will he freely pardon all that I have done? |
A26957 | Will he hear the sentence, and quietly bear bolts, and shackles, and chains, which should have fettered me? |
A26957 | Will it not be said, thou dost not love him? |
A26957 | Will you excuse it with your unbelieving ignorance? |
A26957 | Wilt thou indeed give me to reign with Christ in Glory, and see thy face, and love thee, and be beloved of thee for ever? |
A26957 | Ye innumerable company of Angels,( yet servants at my Father will) why do ye rejoyce to see my prisoner sent to Hell? |
A26957 | Yea as much as thou wouldest have me Love thee? |
A26957 | Yet more than this, Doth he know it is impossible to get a reprieve from his Father and judge? |
A26957 | Yet to those Christians, who are in this case, and dare not communicate, I must put this Question, How dare you so long refuse it? |
A26957 | You askt a sign, and did he not give you both signs and wonders? |
A26957 | and another thing to ask, Which is the smaller or less dangerous sin? |
A26957 | and are resolved, that you will rather let go all, than your part in Christ? |
A26957 | and art thou not certain that it is the word of God? |
A26957 | and come so near him? |
A26957 | and did not a whole Host of Angels sing and shout it up for joy? |
A26957 | and must I dwell with him for ever? |
A26957 | and shall I get no nearer him, while I have a Saviour and a Head so near? |
A26957 | and shall he thus forsake the world, and die and then be laid in the grave, and I be denied the liberty of following him thither as a mourner? |
A26957 | and shall not I admire them? |
A26957 | and take me into his family and love, and feed me with the flesh and blood of Christ? |
A26957 | and that he must most assuredly drink the bitterest dregs of Death, more bitter than Devils or damned Souls in Hell has yet ever tasted of? |
A26957 | and thus reconcile his worthless enemies? |
A26957 | and to a Child at the burial of a beloved Father? |
A26957 | and what of that? |
A26957 | and what will you do when confusion shall thus take hold upon you? |
A26957 | and wilfully offended thee, and preferred the filth of this world and the pleasures of the flesh before thee? |
A26957 | and will God stoop so low to man? |
A26957 | and wilt thou love thy friend the worse, because he shares in sorrow with thee? |
A26957 | and wilt thou the while lye vexing thy self over a company of needless fears and scruples? |
A26957 | and yet shall I know him no better than thus? |
A26957 | are they not written in thy Bible? |
A26957 | believe him whatsoever he says, why, what saith he? |
A26957 | but he loved me; and could he love a prisoner at the Bar? |
A26957 | but how could that be when he saw my heart, and the enmity that was in it? |
A26957 | but must he at length be laid hold of by a traiterous Judas that he had once taken for one of his Apostles;& must he suffer all this? |
A26957 | could Heaven have suffered this? |
A26957 | could not the Saviour of the World save himself? |
A26957 | did he not conquer Devils, and therefore the Kingdom of Hell? |
A26957 | do not my head, eyes, arms, heart, breast, and the case of every joint and limb about me, witness the same? |
A26957 | dost thou not love me? |
A26957 | he was a stranger to me: why did he not let me die? |
A26957 | how can mans dull and narrow heart, be duly affected with such transcendent things? |
A26957 | how could he then save me? |
A26957 | how could the blessed God forbear to see his blessed Son thus wronged? |
A26957 | how idly dost thou question? |
A26957 | how weak are crawling Worms? |
A26957 | if they were not true, how came they into my mind, or how came they to stay? |
A26957 | is he my light, and life, and all my hope? |
A26957 | me that have so oft despised thy mercy? |
A26957 | methinks if thou didst love, thine heart should rather sympathize with his: He is singing, and shalt thou be sighing? |
A26957 | must Heaven, and so its love, be bound up to so narrow and contracted thoughts as thine are? |
A26957 | must I go? |
A26957 | must I leave this feast? |
A26957 | must he be also crowned with thorns, and must he sweat and bleed? |
A26957 | or Communicate? |
A26957 | or am I waking? |
A26957 | or are ye near one? |
A26957 | or could they, if but meer fictions, make such a change in my heart? |
A26957 | or did he not know so much? |
A26957 | or hast thou not sufficient reason to believe it to be so? |
A26957 | or how could he do it? |
A26957 | or thou dost envy his recovered glory that he had left, and now again hath taken? |
A26957 | or why do they so diligently attend thee by night and day? |
A26957 | shall I be saved from Hell and not be thankful? |
A26957 | shall I ever more slight such Love as this? |
A26957 | shall I learn no more that have such a Teacher? |
A26957 | shall it be granted to a Wife to mourn for the death of a beloved Husband? |
A26957 | shall it not overcome my Rebelliousness; and melt down my cold and hardned heart? |
A26957 | should I wish him back again? |
A26957 | speak out, my Soul; hath not the Prophet said as much? |
A26957 | surely thou art a sluggish spirit; what dost thou ail? |
A26957 | this is the Lord that came to spare your lives, yet your wickedness spared not his; and how at length can you think to escape with yours? |
A26957 | thou wilt not under- match, and therefore will not God his Son? |
A26957 | to pull out filthy souls from the jaws of lustful sensual flesh and blood? |
A26957 | to scoff and jeer to hear his lamentations? |
A26957 | was he not proclaimed the Son of God with voices from Heaven? |
A26957 | what answer will you make when all these truths are cleared? |
A26957 | what cursed rage was that to make such haste to fetch him vinegar and gall to prolong his life, to lengthen out his dolors? |
A26957 | what gasps and groans do I hear him fetch, as if his soul were strugling to get out? |
A26957 | what if I thought I could prize and love him more, and could promise the like for all his beloved disciples? |
A26957 | what is this? |
A26957 | what laugh you at? |
A26957 | what need was there for that question? |
A26957 | what not yet one word? |
A26957 | what pledges hast thou given to my staggering faith, in the works which prayer hath procured, both for my self and many others? |
A26957 | what should a Lamb do there? |
A26957 | where will you hide your selves for shame? |
A26957 | who have broken the Laws of him that made me, and on whom the whole Creation doth depend? |
A26957 | will not any serve that body that must be bruised and wounded as his was; nay, as it was necessary his should be? |
A26957 | will you then confess the fact, or will you deny it? |
A26957 | with what face can you do the first? |
A27064 | ( Can a Man speak plainer for Christs dying for all?) |
A27064 | ( for his attaining Life after by Christ, is nothing against his losing it in the first way?) |
A27064 | 22. if it were not a mercy, then Men did not sin against mercy in rejecting it, which who dare say? |
A27064 | 34. who is he that condemneth? |
A27064 | Again, is not Original sin the loss of Gods Image, and the pravity of Nature a Punishment for the first sin? |
A27064 | Also how could Christ condemn Pagans or any for not improving his Talents of Mercy, if they had none? |
A27064 | And I shall anon shew how it leads to Infidelity and other Sins, And after this, what Face of Religion is left, unsubverted? |
A27064 | And by Legislation or conditional Donation, make a free gift of Christ to all that will have him? |
A27064 | And can there be the effect without the cause? |
A27064 | And do not all the opposers confess that Christs Death was sufficient for All men? |
A27064 | And doth not God do more for Peter, than for Judas, for the Elect than the Reprobate, antecedently to their Faith? |
A27064 | And how can any Man prove Gods special love by the evidence of a false Faith? |
A27064 | And how can we consent to have Christ and so be united to him, except he first give himself to us on condition that we will consent? |
A27064 | And if God may do so in one, why not in others? |
A27064 | And if God shew this undeserved Mercy to a Manasseh, which he denyeth to a Pharaoh, is it not his free grace that makes Manasseh to differ? |
A27064 | And invite multitudes that will refuse; and yet compel but his chosen only to come in? |
A27064 | And is Christ an imperfect Saviour to all these? |
A27064 | And is it not fit for us to understand the same phrase used in the next Chapter save ● ● e as in the same Sense? |
A27064 | And is it not long of themselves if they never hear it, nor have any benefit by it? |
A27064 | And is it plainer in this than in its affirming that Christ died for All? |
A27064 | And it is hereby answered, that He can if that man Believe? |
A27064 | And must I still continue that groundless Act? |
A27064 | And of neglecting all the Duties which he might have been informed of? |
A27064 | And one would think none should doubt of the Minor: Whether it be any injustice in God, by his Law to oblige to punishment those that Christ Died for? |
A27064 | And so a fulfilling of that threatning? |
A27064 | And so have other sinners that be not fallen so far as he is? |
A27064 | And so make Hell thus far to be no Hell? |
A27064 | And so not attain the fruit of that Govenant thereby? |
A27064 | And so that in rejecting it they never were guilty of rejecting or sinning against any love or mercy? |
A27064 | And therefore if the effect follow not, the Law enquires, Who it is long of? |
A27064 | And therefore would not have been sufficient to save us, had it been possible for us to have believed in it, or had we actually believed? |
A27064 | And this God could not but accept,( consequenter ad Leges) For who can refuse the proper debt? |
A27064 | And through thy knowledg shall thy weak Brother perish, for whom Christ died? |
A27064 | And was it not sufficient materially after? |
A27064 | And what Divine, except Antinomians, doth deny Faith to be the Condition? |
A27064 | And what difference( as to their ransome) between most men, and Devils? |
A27064 | And what if all that they supposed of this Text had been true? |
A27064 | And what if it were so in some places? |
A27064 | And what is that Kingdom( here meant) but the Gospel? |
A27064 | And what other buying with a price can you here devise? |
A27064 | And what the better is he for whom it was never paid? |
A27064 | And why may we not as well say Christ Redeemed men to Salvation, that yet for rejecting it are not saved? |
A27064 | And why should they wonder at that, who deny it to be a Fruit of Satisfaction or Ransom, which is a more Universal cause then Election is? |
A27064 | And why then should we obey a King that is not our King? |
A27064 | And would he not have cried out on the offerer as a deceiver, and unjust and cruel? |
A27064 | Are none of their sins Original or Actual, nor any of their sufferings or disunion from Christ and Alienation from God, punishments to them? |
A27064 | Are those Dispositions Gods Gifts or not? |
A27064 | At least, not as any Redeemer or Friend of theirs? |
A27064 | But I have no knowledg whether he be either my Redeemer, or sufficient, or willing? |
A27064 | But because he asks, who dare say this? |
A27064 | But doth not God decree it? |
A27064 | But he never bid any man, examine thy self whether thou be redeemed, or whether Christ dyed for thee? |
A27064 | But how can the meer light of Nature discern Gospel Truths, without a supernatural Revelation? |
A27064 | But on what ground is this? |
A27064 | But what if their various acception were granted? |
A27064 | But who dare say that it is unmeet for God to give men such effectual grace as shall Infallibly cause them to Believe? |
A27064 | But why doth not God compel all to come in as well as some? |
A27064 | But will you say, it saith not for every man? |
A27064 | Can Men walk to Heaven by Faith without a Redeemer? |
A27064 | Can any man then believe that the tenour of the new Law or Covenant, is so much harder than ever was the Law of Works, as is before expressed? |
A27064 | Can any obligation dissolve or remit it self? |
A27064 | Can he have all his debt, and remit it too? |
A27064 | Can they make this? |
A27064 | Could God give them Christ as a Satisfier and Redeemer, who never had satisfied for them or redeemed? |
A27064 | Death and damnation; then if there be but a spark of Grace in us we begin to be of another mind, and to reason thus with our selves, what? |
A27064 | Did he send his Son that they might be saved? |
A27064 | Did not Christ bear the Curse of the Law for us, that he might Redeem them that were under the Law? |
A27064 | Did you ever see a rational man wounded in Conscience for not being an Angel, or not seeing God face to face, or not redeeming his own Soul? |
A27064 | Do not these men know that they vent all these confident zealous insultings, directly against the Scripture expressions, as well as against ours? |
A27064 | Do these men think that the unrenewed faculty hath need of no Grace but an object or perswasion from without, to cause it to believe? |
A27064 | Doth it any where except any one man, and say Christ died not for him? |
A27064 | Doth it follow that therefore he hath Ransomed the Irish, because he hath power to judg and destroy them, or use them in servitude? |
A27064 | Doth it not plainly say, that all things( else) are ready; when yet Faith in them was unready, for they would not? |
A27064 | Doth it not signifie a defect in our belief of the truth of Scripture? |
A27064 | Doth it say any where that he died only for his Sheep, or his Elect, and exclude the Non- Elect? |
A27064 | Doth it say, as plainly any where that he died not for all? |
A27064 | Doth not Christ himself expresly speak of not forgiving sin in this life or that to come? |
A27064 | Doth not Christ say to Hierusalem, How oft would I have gathered thee, as a Hen gathereth her Chickens under her Wings, and ye would not? |
A27064 | Doth not the Text plainly distinguish here between Faith and all the Benefits that by Faith we are partakers of? |
A27064 | Doth the Judg execute all the penalty; and yet forgive it? |
A27064 | Either he hath satisfied for me before I believe or not? |
A27064 | Even then when it openly discovereth it self false or is supposed so to do? |
A27064 | Examine your selves whether you be in the Faith, know ye not your own selves that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be Reprobates? |
A27064 | For how can the Omniscient, Immutable God, be suddenly surprized with a new purpose which never came into his mind before our being Believers? |
A27064 | For is this making all ready? |
A27064 | For the Question now is, Whether God can give Pardon to a Man for whom Christ hath not satisfyed? |
A27064 | For though a Law not promulgate can not oblige, yet the Question is, Who it was long of? |
A27064 | For what can any Law in the World require or any Lawgiver, in exactest justice, but that the Law be perfectly fulfilled? |
A27064 | For what have we to persuade us that Christ is the eternal God but plain Scripture? |
A27064 | For who will offer a gift to us to be accepted that it may be ours, if we have accepted it already? |
A27064 | God will so bless you, if you are willing or reject it not? |
A27064 | Hath Christ virtue to be derived for the saving of any that he died not for? |
A27064 | Hath every place that treats of proper Redemption such an addition? |
A27064 | Hath it not too plain a tendency to infidelity and disobedience? |
A27064 | Hath not the Prince here Ransomed all the Scots over whom he hath his Jus Dominii& Imperii? |
A27064 | He hath not said, either, if thou believe I will die for thee? |
A27064 | Hence you may see how to judge of the Controversie so much agitated between us and the Papists, Utrum Remissd Culpa remaneat poena temporalis? |
A27064 | How can he call any thing[ a way of Salvation wide enough] which presupposeth not Christs satisfaction for the person? |
A27064 | How can he say,[ There is enough in Christ for the Salvation of them all, if so be they will derive virtue from him by touching him by Faith?] |
A27064 | How can he truely say[ there is enough in the remedy] Which is as to them no Remedy? |
A27064 | How can it be said that by the sufficiency of his Ransome he is able to save them, for whom it is no Ransome? |
A27064 | How can there be enough in it, or how can it be any remedy, to heal all diseases, and deliver from all evils, before it have made satisfaction? |
A27064 | How can this man give us his Flesh to eat? |
A27064 | How could we believe in, or receive Christ as our Redeemer, who never Redeemed us? |
A27064 | How could we hear him as such, and call on him as such, or trust him as such,? |
A27064 | How could we obey Christ as our Lord- redeemer, who was not our Lord- redeemer? |
A27064 | How else should God judge the World? |
A27064 | How few then of the Elect themselves should do it? |
A27064 | How much doth it differ from the language of Men when they are pleading for Separation? |
A27064 | How will the divulging of these, glorify God? |
A27064 | I no where find the Scripture using that motive to perswade Men to believe, or to get assurance: But what must I do in the mean time? |
A27064 | I will not examine the truth of that now, but if it be true of them on Earth, why not also of them in Hell? |
A27064 | If God had spoke in so strange a language once in all the Bible? |
A27064 | If any say, God is not capable of injustice, if you should suppose the breach of his promise? |
A27064 | If every one in the World be intended, why doth not the Lord in the pursuit of this Love reveal Christ to all so loved? |
A27064 | If for some only, who then can be saved,& c? |
A27064 | If he have, how shall I know it? |
A27064 | If he procure by his Death no possibility of their Salvation, but induce a necessity of their deep condemnation? |
A27064 | If it had been said that they were washed in the blood of the Lamb, had it not been easie for the same wit to have found another interpretation? |
A27064 | If there be, what is that necessity? |
A27064 | Is Christ any readier for those he died not for, than for the Devils? |
A27064 | Is all this so with those in Hell? |
A27064 | Is it because Christ Dyed only for one, or that one only believed and the other refused Christ? |
A27064 | Is not Christ God? |
A27064 | Is not a man bound to mourn over him whom his sins have pierced before he knoweth himself to be Elect? |
A27064 | Is not he unjust that denieth him an acquittance and the cancelling of the obligation, who hath fully paid him all his due? |
A27064 | Is not punishment due to them both in this Life and that to come? |
A27064 | Is not that in high pride to prefer your own understandings before the wisdom of the Spirit of God, who indicted the Scriptures? |
A27064 | Is not the Gospel the savour of death to some? |
A27064 | Is not the Salvation of Men the Fruit of Christs dying for them? |
A27064 | Is the obligation fulfilled, and remitted or relaxed too? |
A27064 | Is there any contradiction more palpable? |
A27064 | Is there enough in that remedy to heal the Devils if they believed? |
A27064 | Is this Non- resistance or Willingness to Believe the Gift of God or not? |
A27064 | It is not hard to see the fair and harmonious consistency: But what if you can not see how two plain Truths of the Gospel should agree? |
A27064 | It is not therefore de materia debiti, that we enquire, but de formâ: Whether it were the same formally which we owed, and the obligation required? |
A27064 | Lastly, If all this were nothing as to the Regenerate, yet who ever said that God never punisheth any of his Elect while they are Unregenerate? |
A27064 | Let me imagine such a Dialogue as this between such a Teacher and a Sinner? |
A27064 | M. But Christ hath satisfied for all if they will believe? |
A27064 | Make Christ a Sacrifice for all, ready? |
A27064 | May he not do with his own as he list? |
A27064 | May it not be said of an Atheist ▪[ He denieth the God that made him,] as an aggravation of his particular sin? |
A27064 | May not God give power to those Devils which were the Gods of Damascus, really to smite Ahaz? |
A27064 | May not a Man by this dealing say what he will as the meaning of Scripture? |
A27064 | Men and Brethren what shall we do to be saved? |
A27064 | Moreover, Christ saith now, how oft would I have gathered you? |
A27064 | Must Men first believe without love that by the Mark of such a Faith they may have ground for love? |
A27064 | Must it not do that before it can heal any other disease? |
A27064 | Must not the application be first to God by satisfying him before it can be made to Man by believing? |
A27064 | Nay how can it be accepted before it is offered? |
A27064 | Negando enim causam negat affectum: Quaeris cur nulla supersit? |
A27064 | Nihil ergo rectius quam luisse pro nobis Christum poenas: num aliquas tantum, an vero omnes? |
A27064 | Nor of the quantity of Torment, for intension or duration? |
A27064 | Now I shall think it meet to stand the longer on this point, because the decision of the main Question[ Whether Christ dyed for all men?] |
A27064 | Now I would know of any man, would you believe that Christ died for all men if the Scripture plainly speak it? |
A27064 | Now if men have none of the Talents which Christ''s Death hath purchased them, how can he condemn them for abusing that which they had not? |
A27064 | Now what ground can a Minister have to press all Men to believe in Christ as their Redeemer, when they know he redeemed but the smallest part? |
A27064 | Now what is said against this? |
A27064 | Object But doth not God''s foreknowledge and decree make mens Salvation impossible, as well as Christs not Dying for them? |
A27064 | Only I say, when Christ died Millions of Men were actually saved: Did God send his Son to save them that were saved already? |
A27064 | Or are they called to make it? |
A27064 | Or deny an acquittance to him that dischargeth it? |
A27064 | Or did ever wise Judge absolve an offender on that ground? |
A27064 | Or his Redemption? |
A27064 | Or is there such a true Faith? |
A27064 | Or let me perish in my Sin, and State of nature? |
A27064 | Or only the Value, and not the same full debt? |
A27064 | Or rather for the most hainous aggravation of his fault? |
A27064 | Or rather, is it not spoken of the end of Gods Legislative Will, and so is meant of a conditional gift? |
A27064 | Or that he who is sanctified by the Blood of the Covenant, was one whose sins caused that Blood? |
A27064 | Or that the enjoyment of these may stand with the full execution of the sentence of the Law? |
A27064 | Or that this Man( Judas) is not delivered and saved as well as that( Peter?) |
A27064 | Or to cure his wicked nature? |
A27064 | Or to justifie him if he be accused as liable to punishment? |
A27064 | Or trust to his Blood for Justification, which was never shed for us? |
A27064 | Or what justice can refuse to acquit him that hath paid all that was due? |
A27064 | Or why the Prince should tell them, There remained no more Ransom for them when they were never ransomed at all? |
A27064 | Or would coming in serve turn without satisfaction? |
A27064 | Or would he not approve of his ow ● unbelief, and say, why should I have trusted such a one? |
A27064 | Or would their coming in make it, which was not before made? |
A27064 | Or, Who was the faulty cause that it was not Published? |
A27064 | Or, Why then should we hear that Prophet who was no Prophet to us? |
A27064 | Rather then Jesus Christ as Redeemer? |
A27064 | SOme think this Question whether Christ paid the Idem or Tantundem? |
A27064 | Shall we say that is not so which we see to be so, because we can not find why it is so? |
A27064 | Should a man in danger of Death do nothing for his own safety without a certainty of success? |
A27064 | Should not the least hope of probability( much more so high a probability) be enough to excite men to seek the saving of their own lives? |
A27064 | Sinner, Did you not tell me he satisfied only for the Elect, and that determined by name? |
A27064 | So Paraeus expoundeth it; sed quomodo hoc faciendo Christum denuò crucifigunt sibimetipsis? |
A27064 | Such Promises are not to all, nor Conditional: If they are, what is the Condition? |
A27064 | That he hath himself performed the condition of the new Covenant? |
A27064 | That is absolutely all? |
A27064 | That it is not of the quality of the suffering that we enquire: Whether Christ suffered the same kind of pain, or loss that we should have suffered? |
A27064 | That you may see I wrong them not, I will instance in one, learned, Holy Perkins: who hath writ more confidently against Universal Redemption then he? |
A27064 | That''s true, it was one cause, but how follows the consequence? |
A27064 | The General Question, Whether Christ Died for All Men, and not only for the Elect? |
A27064 | The proclaiming and offer of Christ as Redeemer, and of mercy in and with him? |
A27064 | The question is, Why these Men are not saved? |
A27064 | The work of Preachers is, the Ministry of teconciliation: And wherein lies it? |
A27064 | Then said the Lord of the Vineyard what shall I do? |
A27064 | This will be no excuse to the refusers: what if God had only invited all, and compelled none? |
A27064 | To you first God sent his Son Jesus to bless you, in turning every one of you from his Iniquities? |
A27064 | VVas it any proof that he would not judge Unbelievers because he came not to judge but to save the Elect? |
A27064 | What Law can require more then all? |
A27064 | What Man then will believe that it was called Holy, meerly from the Peoples professing to be Holy? |
A27064 | What can any creditor require, but the Idem, the very debt it self which the obligation did contain? |
A27064 | What can be required more then all? |
A27064 | What else is our distinction between Temporary Faith and saving? |
A27064 | What hast thou which thou hast not received? |
A27064 | What if he had suffered all to perish in their wilfulness? |
A27064 | What if it had been otherwise? |
A27064 | What is the Condition? |
A27064 | What is the cause that almost all the World live in security never almost touched for their horrible Sins? |
A27064 | What of that? |
A27064 | What other price than Christs blood doth God buy men with? |
A27064 | What will not the lust of contradicting persuade men to? |
A27064 | What''s this to the point? |
A27064 | When satisfaction to justice is unready? |
A27064 | Where is it then that the force of the Argument lyeth that would prove that all must needs have Faith for whom Christ Died? |
A27064 | Whether it be not for want of a right use of the means? |
A27064 | Who art thou that disputest against God? |
A27064 | Whose fault was it? |
A27064 | Why do we intreat them to be reconciled to God? |
A27064 | Why else may not we still use this Language, if it be true that it is the perpetual course of Scripture? |
A27064 | Why should we be thankful to Christ for Redeeming us, when he did not at all redeem us, Should we be thankful for nothing? |
A27064 | Will that justifie? |
A27064 | Will they say that he Died for the Non- elect, if they will believe? |
A27064 | Will you therefore deny one of them when both are plain? |
A27064 | Would so many doubts be raised, whether he mean the whole Army or part? |
A27064 | Would the New Covenant serve to pardon men without Christs Sacrifice and Satisfaction? |
A27064 | Wretch that I am? |
A27064 | Yea how can he urge any to rest on Christ at all? |
A27064 | Yea what if I said that strictly and directly men suffer not at all the penalty of the Law of Works? |
A27064 | Yes, it saith, He is the propitiation for the sins of the whole World? |
A27064 | You''l say, but is it of the whole World? |
A27064 | [ And will not an impartial Man ● ● en expound the same Phrase here in the ● ● me manner? |
A27064 | against the Arrians; and must we give up that argument for nothing? |
A27064 | all Elect to whom Paul speaks? |
A27064 | and Christ a stumbling stone, and Rock of offence? |
A27064 | and all such as I that never come to assurance? |
A27064 | and doth he at the same time perswade People to believe, that they were sanctified by the Blood of the Covenant,& c. if it were not true? |
A27064 | and for not believing in him to save them by his death, who never died for them? |
A27064 | and for whom it was shed? |
A27064 | and if he compel some, is that any wrong to the rest? |
A27064 | and should we make light of that which lay so heavy on him? |
A27064 | and to have said it was spoken but 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉, because they professed it to be so? |
A27064 | and will you by force of VVit thence prove that God made not all men? |
A27064 | and ye scorners delight in scorning and fools hate knowledge? |
A27064 | hath he not made thee and established thee? |
A27064 | if we will receive him( this is commonly confest:) now how can there be a receiving or accepting without a giving? |
A27064 | in many that fall away when Persecution ariseth? |
A27064 | is not he thy Father that hath bought thee? |
A27064 | must I need compulsion to accept of a Redeemer and Salvation with him? |
A27064 | or only for those that came forth? |
A27064 | or than if he had never died at all? |
A27064 | or whether thou be one of those for whom Christ dyed? |
A27064 | shall not the Judge of all the World do righteously? |
A27064 | the effects of his dying for them, when he did not dye for them? |
A27064 | to have the easiest place in Hell,& c. who dare say that none of all these are Mercies? |
A27064 | we have marks given in Scripture to know by, whether we are the Children of God or no? |
A27064 | whether by( Saviour) be not meant ▪( God the Father as the common preserver of his Creature, or of Mens natural lives)? |
A27064 | who art thou that disputest against God? |
A27064 | will not Conscience say another day, I perish justly, that would not be saved? |
A27064 | would that have been any ease to any? |
A27064 | yet did not God decree their not being so gathered? |
A26864 | & Quid recipit ut siat potens& efficax? |
A26864 | & an praemium sit debitum?] |
A26864 | & c. Doth the general Precept constitute this particular Ordinance as my duty? |
A26864 | & c. Was this Article in the Creed before Christs coming[ Except ye beleeve that I am he, ye shall die in your sinnes?] |
A26864 | & quomodo agit fides in hoc influxu causativo in Evangelium? |
A26864 | & quomodo haec potentia& efficacia fuit in fide? |
A26864 | ( Suppose he never Covenanted) or he that takes on him to consent or covenant in heart, when he doth it but in words, and wilfully dissembles? |
A26864 | ( wherein he yieldeth as much as I need) and, Whether the Covenant be Conditional? |
A26864 | 115 Whether the Sacrament seal the Conditional promise Absolutely? |
A26864 | Abrenuncias Diabolum, mundum& Carnem? |
A26864 | Ananias saith to Paul, Why tarryest thou? |
A26864 | And Cyprians, Quae ista obstinatio est, quae praesumptio, humanam traditionem Divinae dispositioni anteponere? |
A26864 | And can he be the efficient cause, and yet not effect? |
A26864 | And can this be unless it be also said that we made the Gospel? |
A26864 | And do you not seem to imply that man with God doth justifie himself, when you say[ Man can not justifie himself by beleeving without God?] |
A26864 | And doth this alone suffice? |
A26864 | And how can Mr. Bl call this Dogmatical faith, a covenanting? |
A26864 | And how prove you this? |
A26864 | And is Gods command insufficient to oblige us, till we oblige our selves? |
A26864 | And is he not the Anointed King of the Church; and therefore hath Legislative power? |
A26864 | And is it not as hard to discern the reason of this citation, according to your exposition as mine? |
A26864 | And is not the activity here mentioned, an activity in causing? |
A26864 | And so Soveraigns may give out Laws, and Proclamations under their hand and Seal? |
A26864 | And what is it to know, but to discern or understand a discernable, cognoscible, or evident object? |
A26864 | And what is the matter? |
A26864 | And what is this to the question between you and me? |
A26864 | And who is not ignorant in more points then one? |
A26864 | And who knoweth not that these went before the application of the water? |
A26864 | And why should these two be put in opposition? |
A26864 | And will he not use the principal part of his Prerogative? |
A26864 | And, what is the remote reason? |
A26864 | Are we poor worms, our own Gods and Lords, that we should be disobliged till we will be pleased to oblige our selves? |
A26864 | As if[ Byj signified only an instrument? |
A26864 | BUt do you take officium and conditio to be all one? |
A26864 | BUt is this certain? |
A26864 | BUt where''s your conclusion? |
A26864 | Believest thou this? |
A26864 | Between these two questions, What justifieth ex parte Christi? |
A26864 | But I thought the contest in your Dispute had been, Which is the justifying act of faith, and which not? |
A26864 | But Sir, what''s the cause of this sudden change? |
A26864 | But all the force of your Argument is from your dangerous addition, which, who will take for good Exposition? |
A26864 | But before the first question can be determined, the second must be raised and resolved,[ Utrum praestitit conditionem?] |
A26864 | But can we say so of the present Conclusion in question? |
A26864 | But doth that give you a liberty to assert what you list, or what can not be proved true, because all men see not the truth? |
A26864 | But how much might be said against this? |
A26864 | But if you ask on the offenders part, What it is that delivereth him as the condition? |
A26864 | But if you ask only, What it is on her part that is the condition of enjoying these Benefits? |
A26864 | But is the choice which he intimateth Real, as to the Act, and suited to the Object? |
A26864 | But knew you not that it is not the thing in Question? |
A26864 | But then how come you to say next, that it is Christs blood? |
A26864 | But though faith be not the instrument of our Justification, may it not be called the instrument of receiving Christ? |
A26864 | But what Covenant of God is t ● is? |
A26864 | But what if all this had been left out, and you had proved the Moral Law, the only Rule of duty? |
A26864 | But what is the meaning of your Minor, which you say is sealed? |
A26864 | But what is this to the matter? |
A26864 | But what is this to your major? |
A26864 | But what mean these strange words of[ Activity and power received] if the instrument be not active? |
A26864 | But what, is it another sort of them? |
A26864 | But who can tell what you mean by a communication of actions? |
A26864 | But why can not faith justifie unless it be working? |
A26864 | But will a nude and crude Assertion change mens judgements? |
A26864 | But you say, This is plain; to whom? |
A26864 | But, alas, how invisible is the Proof of this in all your Writings? |
A26864 | By what authority do you adde[ only] in your interpretation? |
A26864 | Can the Covenant require perfection, and not require sincerity, when sincerity is contained in perfection? |
A26864 | Can they be our Conditions and Gods too? |
A26864 | Can you hence prove, that accepting Christ as Lord, is not the condition of our Justification? |
A26864 | Can you prove the like,( yea and more) of faith, and will not? |
A26864 | Credis in Patrem, filium& spiritum sanctum? |
A26864 | Did not I acknowledge expresly as much imperfection as you here affirm of Paul ● s frame? |
A26864 | Did you indeed imagine that I had denied that? |
A26864 | Do you mean that you will read it there ready formed? |
A26864 | Do you not know how ordinarily even saving Faith it self is denominated from the Intellectual Act alone? |
A26864 | Do you not oft read in Divines of Justificatio Juris, vel Legis, as distinct from Justificatio Judicis, vel per sententiam? |
A26864 | Do you take the Precept de genere, to be equivalent to the Precepts de speciebus? |
A26864 | Do you think I know not a Cause and Effect are so related, that formaliter it is not an efficient before it doth effect? |
A26864 | Do you think Preachers yet be not bound to endeavour the sa ● ing Conversion of whole Nations? |
A26864 | Do you think that any act of faith is Justification? |
A26864 | Doth Christ bid us Baptize men into the name of the Father, Son, and Holy- Ghost; and would you have us do this before they profess their consent? |
A26864 | Doth God effect our Justification by the instrumentall, efficient causation of our faith? |
A26864 | Doth he that sealeth the major of this following Syllogism, seal the Conclusion? |
A26864 | Doth it follow that a Nation is not capable of sound faith, because they have it not? |
A26864 | Doth it follow that faith gives efficacy and power to the Covenant to justifie? |
A26864 | Doth it follow that therefore either faith makes it an in ● trument, or is an instrument it self? |
A26864 | Doth it not plainly imply that there are and must be positive Laws instituting a way of worship? |
A26864 | Doth not mutual consent expressed go before the sealing of the Covenant? |
A26864 | Especially when they finde us making this the main part of the Protestant Cause, what wonder ▪ if they judge our Cause naught? |
A26864 | For my self it is not much Matter: but must Gods Truth( for such I take it) stand as a Butt for every man to shoot at? |
A26864 | For none can forgive sins but God only, even to another: but who can forgive himself? |
A26864 | For who can imagine but that the young Popish Students will be confirmed in the rest of their Religion, when they finde that we erre in these? |
A26864 | For your Argument, I grant the Conclusion; and what would you have more? |
A26864 | Further, it''s considerable, what Righteousness it is that the Prophet there speaks of, whether universal or particular? |
A26864 | Have you a fuller evidence that you are a sincere Believer, then you have that, All sincere Believers are Justified? |
A26864 | He was justified by works: and the Scripture was fulfilled, which saith, he was justified by faith? |
A26864 | Here now if the Question be, What it is on his part that Redeemed her? |
A26864 | How do you make Faith and Repentance to be Conditions of the Covenant on our part, seeing the bestowing of them is part of the condition on Gods part? |
A26864 | How easily are all these affirmed? |
A26864 | How else could you next say, that they are guiltie of hypocrisie? |
A26864 | How ill is Soveraignty put in stead of the Soveraign? |
A26864 | How is faith more fitly called an instrument? |
A26864 | How many times over and over, do Christ and his Apostles promise pardon and salvation to all that believe in Christ, without distinction of believing? |
A26864 | How nakedly is it again affirmed, without the least proof, that our faith is Gods instrument in justifying? |
A26864 | How otherwise do these accord? |
A26864 | How then can we scire certitudinem, nisi sciendo aliquam Certitudinis Evidentiam? |
A26864 | I asserted, serve to warrant the Prophets comparison, without our denying the perfection of Being? |
A26864 | I can not blame the Reader if he be weary of this long Apolo ● ● ● ▪ and ask, To what purpose are all these words? |
A26864 | I told you this when I saw you, and you asked me, Whether Mr C. were against it? |
A26864 | IS not[ Righteousness] or[ Holiness] as Scriptural, as Logical, as plain a term, and as fit for Disputants, as[ Gospel- frame?] |
A26864 | If but sometimes, Why do you take it for granted that it so signifies here? |
A26864 | If divers, shew us what they are; and which part of its power and efficacy the Gospel receives from faith, and which from God? |
A26864 | If gracious Habits are properly called instruments of the soul, then so may other Habits: And why is not this language more in use among Logicians? |
A26864 | If it be askt What is it that Honoureth or Enricheth him? |
A26864 | If so, shew us the Chapter and Verse? |
A26864 | If they are the same, then God must convey justifying efficacy and power into faith first, and by faith into the Gospel: which who imagineth? |
A26864 | If you will have a Syllogism of Gods making, why did you not tell us when or where you found it? |
A26864 | In what Book that ever was written have these nice distinguishers proved their Doctrine by Scripture or sound reason? |
A26864 | In what sense is that called Outward? |
A26864 | Is Righteousness by the Law of works? |
A26864 | Is here ever a word for the Gospels receiving its efficacy to Justification by faith? |
A26864 | Is it all one to prove it and to be in order to prove it, to seal it and to be in order to the sealing of it? |
A26864 | Is it an Absolute and simple Proposition or Enunciation, as you express it? |
A26864 | Is it not against the nature and common use of Sealing ▪ that it should be in order before the Promise or Covenant? |
A26864 | Is it not enough that you take the Word to be a passive instrument of Confirmation and Conversion? |
A26864 | Is it only a consent to have God called thei ● God, and themselves named his people? |
A26864 | Is not a Covenant, Contract, Deed of gift, the most proper instrumental efficient cause of the duness of the thing given or conveyed? |
A26864 | Is not a praemiant or priviledging law, in the most strict and proper sense the Legislators instrument, effecting the debitum praemii vel privelegii? |
A26864 | Is not here a curious Doctrine of Faith and Justification? |
A26864 | Is not that to be a Cause and no Cause? |
A26864 | Is not the Potentia here meant, Potentia efficiendi? |
A26864 | Is not the Testament of a man the most strict and proper instrument of conveying right of the Legacy to the Legatary? |
A26864 | Is not this consent necessarie in our present case? |
A26864 | Is not this true of Moral operations as well as Physical? |
A26864 | Is not this true of moral operations as well as Physical? |
A26864 | Is taking a name, entering into Covenant? |
A26864 | Is that your Conclusion? |
A26864 | Is the Conclusion proved on the proof of one Proposition? |
A26864 | Is the act of faith the eye of the soul as distinct from sight? |
A26864 | Is the performer of the condition of[ Gratefull consent] no willing Agent, unless an efficient Cause? |
A26864 | Is there any thing in the whole world that can m ● r ● unfi ● ly be called a passive instrument, then the Covenant of Justification? |
A26864 | Is there not more inconvenience in saying that both the Grant is Conditional, and yet also that it is but Conditionally sealed? |
A26864 | Is this indeed the Controversie? |
A26864 | Is this your meaning, that my exceptions would hold, if faith were only mans instrument, or only Gods; but not when it is both? |
A26864 | It is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth? |
A26864 | It is pitty that the Reader should be troubled with so much, about so low a question, which of us two doth best express our meaning? |
A26864 | It is then those that are so, and are called so: But will it not serve, if they are so, unless called so? |
A26864 | Know ye not, that as many as were Baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death? |
A26864 | MR Baxter sayes, The great question is, whether they seal to the Conclusion, as they do to the major Proposition? |
A26864 | Moreover, did Christ in Instituting these Ordinances and Officers, do any more then was done before, or not? |
A26864 | Moreover, doth not the Scripture call Christ a Lawgiver? |
A26864 | Must I then differ from none? |
A26864 | Must any sound believer then be Baptised? |
A26864 | Must the Spirit needs be our instrument, because it is[ By] the Spirit? |
A26864 | Must there be such Liberty of opposing it, and none of Defending? |
A26864 | Nay doth not your arguing intimate that the believer is more assured that Christ is given to him, then that pardon is given him? |
A26864 | Next you say[ Why else is this Righteousness sometime called the Righteousness of faith? |
A26864 | No, nor with him neither? |
A26864 | Now I would know of him, whether God require them to make this engagement seriously, sincerely,& firmato animo, or not? |
A26864 | Now which of these perfections of Righteousness do you deny? |
A26864 | Now who knows not that salvation is made the Portion of Believers, Saints, Disciples? |
A26864 | O Death, where is thy sling? |
A26864 | O Grave, where is thy victory? |
A26864 | O that you had condescended so far to your Readers weakness, as to have deigned to shew him, Quomodo patitur Evangelium recipiendo? |
A26864 | ONe that had not read what I write, would think by your Answer, that I had made a doubt whether there be any Law made to Christ at all or not? |
A26864 | Or are the Pardon and Acceptance one compleat instrument? |
A26864 | Or do you mean that in the Institution, God gives you the materials, and you form it your selves? |
A26864 | Or else if the former were not quid notius, how could it be a fit medium? |
A26864 | Or if you took it for the whole Law of nature, is that the only Rule? |
A26864 | Or is it a Conditional one? |
A26864 | Or is it more fit to call the Traytors Acceptance, the instrument of his Pardon, then the Kings Act? |
A26864 | Or why may not James by concession preoccupate an objection? |
A26864 | Quanto s ● tius est ire aperta via,& recta, quam sibi ipsi flexus disponere, quos cum magna molestia debeas relegere? |
A26864 | Quid ergo? |
A26864 | Quid est igitur Credulitas vel fides? |
A26864 | Quid illius pallorem? |
A26864 | Quid lenioribus verbis ulcus publicum abscondam? |
A26864 | Saw you not this when you wrote it? |
A26864 | Shall I tell him that he dissembleth, and is not Willing? |
A26864 | So that when we must be justified, the Question will not be,[ Hast thou believed and obeyed perfectly?] |
A26864 | Sometimes the Righteousness of God which is by faith; but that it is a Righteousness which faith receives?] |
A26864 | Suppose you speak true, as you do, if you mean it only of Meriting our cleansing: What is this to our Question? |
A26864 | Tell us then what actual seeing and receiving is? |
A26864 | That faith is the instrument of Justification? |
A26864 | That is, that it is truly Righteousness? |
A26864 | That is, the real choice of such a Christ as is offered, and on such terms? |
A26864 | The Promise is to you and your children; arguing a Right to the Seal, from an Interest in the Promise? |
A26864 | The first question in judgement being[ An sit obligatus ad paenam, vel non? |
A26864 | The like may be said of Gods part? |
A26864 | These Mr. Cotton cals half promises( as who knows but the Lord may do thus and thus? |
A26864 | This must be your meaning, by your first words: But then which of these is the most principal cause, and which the subordinate? |
A26864 | Twisse saith, An audebit Arminianus aliquis affirmare Remissionem pec ● ● torum esse effectionem fidei? |
A26864 | WHat mean you by gathering it? |
A26864 | WHether you take holiness as signifying a Quality or Relation, there is no doubt but it hath its form, or else it could not have a Being? |
A26864 | What confusion is it to talk of the moral Law being the only Rule, when it is not one thing that is called the moral Law? |
A26864 | What if I should grant all this? |
A26864 | What is the Condition that you mean? |
A26864 | What is the second Commandment for the Affirmative part, but a general precept to worship God according to his Positive Institution? |
A26864 | What mean you to say Obedience and Valour was not their Justification? |
A26864 | What more proper to the truly sanctified? |
A26864 | What say you for matter of duty, to the positive Precepts of the Gospel? |
A26864 | What that Delivered her? |
A26864 | What that enriched her? |
A26864 | What that honoured her? |
A26864 | What then shall I resolve on? |
A26864 | What then? |
A26864 | What though the Word without faith is no instrument? |
A26864 | What''s that to this? |
A26864 | What? |
A26864 | What? |
A26864 | What? |
A26864 | When Christ saith to us,[ If a Brother repent, forgive him] here by[ Repenting] doth Christ mean plainly Repenting, or the profession of it? |
A26864 | When by the obedience of one many are made righteous? |
A26864 | When did Mr Pemble prove that the Word or other objects are passive instruments? |
A26864 | Whether a working faith only, and not a faith that is dead and idle? |
A26864 | Whether it be[ Accepting Christ as Lord] or[ the blood of Christ] that justifieth? |
A26864 | Whether the Sacraments seal the conditional Promise absolutely? |
A26864 | Who knows not that praemiare& punire are acts of a Law? |
A26864 | Who would have thought but you would rather have said[ Nor will God justifie man, unless his faith be the instrument of it?] |
A26864 | Why did you express a Conditional Gift, in Absolute terms, leaving out the Condition? |
A26864 | Why did you not give us one word for proof, that this Restipulation is a thing following Baptism? |
A26864 | Why did you not name one line where I do confound the parts of Christs Offices? |
A26864 | Why did you not offer some proof? |
A26864 | Why did you not shew some reason of this ill consequence? |
A26864 | Why do you still confound Christs real abode in us by his Spirit, with the relation we have upon Justification? |
A26864 | Why else should they call them such, had not they seemed to be such, and professed it? |
A26864 | Why is that? |
A26864 | Why should it be proper to Dying men to be Wise, and to Judge truly of this world, when all the living undoubtedly know that they must Die? |
A26864 | Why then do you intimate by your arguing as if I did not? |
A26864 | Why, but how can we that know not the heart, know here when our Brother repenteth? |
A26864 | Why, it is Gods only instrument of active Constitution of the dueness of the benefi ●? |
A26864 | Will all your Readers take your complaint for a demonstration of the errour of what you complain of? |
A26864 | Will you exclude also his Obedience, Resurrection, Intercession,& c? |
A26864 | Would you have no more? |
A26864 | Yet if any should in one Question include both, What on his part did save her from death? |
A26864 | Your Conclusion is, therefore this the Sacrament sealeth; what is this? |
A26864 | [ How holiness should be imperfect taken materially?] |
A26864 | and What justifieth, or is required to our Justification ex parte peccatoris? |
A26864 | and all the work that it doth on the souls of your hearers really? |
A26864 | and her taking him as Rich, or to enrich her, is the sole condition of her enriching? |
A26864 | and her taking him to Dignifie her, is the sole condition of her Dignity? |
A26864 | and if so( then which nothing more certain) are not these then so farre our righteousness against that accusation to be pleaded? |
A26864 | and is not all effection by action? |
A26864 | and so whether it be a mutual Covenant, and both parties be actually obliged? |
A26864 | and that this Restipulation is an essential part of the contract, called stipulation? |
A26864 | and that''s all that the Text saith: But may not the absence of faith hinder, unless when present it doth effect? |
A26864 | and the hand as distinct from receiving? |
A26864 | and what Death man should have dyed, in case Christ had not been promised? |
A26864 | and what on her part? |
A26864 | and what silken ears the Preachers of humility have themselves? |
A26864 | and whether Legal, consisting in absolute perfection; or Evangelical, consisting in sincerity? |
A26864 | and who knows what you mean? |
A26864 | and why not in this point as well as another? |
A26864 | and will judge by these of the rest of our Doctrine? |
A26864 | and yet no active instrument? |
A26864 | and, Whether the Obligation to Punishment be dissolved before we Believed, sinned, or were born? |
A26864 | and[ By what are we justified ex parte nostri?] |
A26864 | and[ Whom are we to judge such and use as such?] |
A26864 | aut utrum fides i d communicavit quod nunquam habuit? |
A26864 | but doth that prove him or his faith the efficient cause of his own pardon and Justification? |
A26864 | but whether it be so properly and indeed? |
A26864 | doth it follow that therefore it is the only Rule? |
A26864 | if it be so unquestionably proper? |
A26864 | illius maciem notas? |
A26864 | is he but a pretender to Hypocrisie, that takes on him a Christian, when he is none? |
A26864 | of Baptism, the Lords Supper, the Lords day, the Officers and Government of the Church,& c. Is the Law of nature the only Rule for these? |
A26864 | or any shew of advantage to your Cause? |
A26864 | or are they divers? |
A26864 | or doth Scripture use to divide Saints, as the Genus into two Species? |
A26864 | or onely unsound believers and Infidels that will promise to believe hereafter? |
A26864 | or only an offer which conveys not Right till it be Accepted on the terms on which its offered? |
A26864 | or should you have expected it? |
A26864 | or that, I take it to be meerly or primarily de fide, that Scripture is Gods Revelation? |
A26864 | or the conclusion conditionally, when only one of the Premises is of Divine Revelation? |
A26864 | or through our own meritorious Works? |
A26864 | or to be a sufficient Rule without them? |
A26864 | or why did God assign faith to this office? |
A26864 | or why should I be so vain as to stand to confute it? |
A26864 | or will not have it? |
A26864 | s ● y, It is a Repentance short of that which is saving, that is here required; I would he would describe it to us, and tell us wherein it is short? |
A26864 | say that we must not honour them, lest we mistake and give that honour to one that hath no right to it? |
A26864 | say therefore that none is obliged to forgive? |
A26864 | shall we Baptize them first, and ask them whether they believe and consent after? |
A26864 | those that are called professed Christians, and are not? |
A26864 | though they know not what Christ or Christianity is? |
A26864 | utrum eminenter an formaliter? |
A26864 | was there any mention of Absolute Granting? |
A26864 | what is it to our present question? |
A26864 | what reports spread abroad? |
A26864 | when I have professedly published the contrary, before those Arguments? |
A26864 | when yet you''l confess the Will is necessarily an Agent in this? |
A26864 | which he concludes in the Affirmative: The other, What faith justifieth? |
A26864 | yea from no Learned Divines? |
A26864 | 〈 ◊ 〉 you must feign the Word to be the passive instrument of Justification too? |
A26998 | 15? |
A26998 | 8. make such a stir to Correct the Latin? |
A26998 | Alexandria, Antioch, or Jerusalem, can never Err, or Apostatize, or be Invisible? |
A26998 | An Argument liker a Derision, than a serious Proof: Did not the Pope then Err, when Bishops and Councils have in vain called him to Repent? |
A26998 | And all that were for Images, and those that were against them,& c.? |
A26998 | And all that were for the Monothelites? |
A26998 | And are these out of the Church? |
A26998 | And are you sure that they are their Bones? |
A26998 | And ask them whether Pope, or Council, have ever yet written an Infallible Commentary on the Bible, or all such difficult Texts? |
A26998 | And did not Peters Faith fail as to part of that Victory, when he Curst and Swore that he knew not the Man? |
A26998 | And do not all the Lutherans keep them in their Churches? |
A26998 | And doth any Protestant Church deny this? |
A26998 | And hath God promised Virtue to all their Bones? |
A26998 | And have they not reason to challenge the sole Interpreting of it? |
A26998 | And his Spirit in his Prophets and Apostles to write and Record it? |
A26998 | And how know you that all were Saints that the Pope calleth so? |
A26998 | And how shall we know, when above twenty times there have been two Popes at once, which of them is the Right? |
A26998 | And if Peter had had such, what''s that to the Pope of Rome? |
A26998 | And if one can not live chastly without Marriage, and Parents command it, it is not a Sin to refuse? |
A26998 | And if the question be, Whether any Pope, Council or Church, understand all the Scripture without any Errour? |
A26998 | And if these men think otherwise, why must this Opinion more than Ten thousand such, be obtruded as necessary on all others? |
A26998 | And in what Sence do they give them the Eucharist? |
A26998 | And is he sure that all the people in the outer Court, prayed they knew not what, or in an unknown Tongue? |
A26998 | And is it not by his Law that God Governeth, and by his Gospel that Christ Saveth, and the Holy Ghost doth illuminate and Sanctifie? |
A26998 | And is it only Counsel and no Command, to Marry or not Marry, as it makes to Gods Glory or against it? |
A26998 | And is it so? |
A26998 | And is not the Christian World, the Church Vniversal? |
A26998 | And is not this the true Doctrine of all true Christians? |
A26998 | And is that Jesuit honest that feigneth this proper to the Protestants, where the Controversie is the same among themselves? |
A26998 | And is there any disputing where no principle is agreed on? |
A26998 | And is this on Sin? |
A26998 | And is this the Holy Catholick Church? |
A26998 | And must all these go to Hell? |
A26998 | And must we indeed believe, that the Popes Faith never failed, because Peters did not? |
A26998 | And must we not do so, if the World, the Flesh, and the Devil, say one thing, and Christ another? |
A26998 | And now what saith the Deceiver against all this? |
A26998 | And send his Son to Preach it? |
A26998 | And the Rhemists turn it into English? |
A26998 | And those that were against them? |
A26998 | And those that were against them? |
A26998 | And was as free from every Fault, Thought, Passion, Desire, Fear, Care, Trouble, Pleasure, Word and Deed as God commanded? |
A26998 | And what Knowledge is it, but Divine, of the Word and Law of God? |
A26998 | And what but flat opposition to Christ, should move these men to forbid one half of his Sacrament, which he calls the New- Testament in his blood? |
A26998 | And what if those Souls should prove to be in Purgatory? |
A26998 | And what meaneth the man to rail at them, that say So be it, instead of Amen? |
A26998 | And what the better then is their Church for their feigned skill and power, infallibly to decide difficult Scripture Controversies? |
A26998 | And when Baronius, Binnius,& c. tell us of famous Whores,( Marozia, and Theodora,) that made, and Ruled and unmade Popes, how was the World Governed? |
A26998 | And when General Councils accuse them of Errour, and Condemn them, which is to be trusted with our Souls? |
A26998 | And when they contradict and Damn each other, which of them must we believe? |
A26998 | And whether Popes and Priests Volumes are not as unskilfully written, as Gods, and as like to draw Men to Heresie and Sin? |
A26998 | And whether the Church of Rome, and the Christian World, be Words of the same signification in any Dictionary? |
A26998 | And whether your own Jesuits confess not that Rome shall do so too, in the Reign of Antichrist? |
A26998 | And who doubts but the Devil tells them that they shall thereby obtain everlasting Life? |
A26998 | And who is that Idolatrous persecuting Beast? |
A26998 | And why did so many Popes contradict each other? |
A26998 | And why do so many Comment on them? |
A26998 | And why doth God so aften call on Believers to Rejoyce, if they can not know whether they shall be in Heaven and Hell for ever? |
A26998 | And why have we all our Statutes, Records, and Law- Books, if the Lawyers and Peoples Memories would keep and deliver them without these? |
A26998 | And why must we know how much they know? |
A26998 | And why must we needs know whether ever such Souls appeared? |
A26998 | And why not Lutherans under Lutherans also? |
A26998 | And why not as well Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, or Jerusalem, the Mother Church? |
A26998 | And will you therefore slander the rest? |
A26998 | Are all workers of Miracles? |
A26998 | Are blind Worms fit to accuse God of Folly, and needless Work? |
A26998 | Are none of these Protestants? |
A26998 | Are not the Statues of Kings at the Exchange, the Stocks- Market, Chaering- Cross? |
A26998 | Are there no Images on our Coyn? |
A26998 | Are there none of their Shops in London, or Holland? |
A26998 | Are they not continued in most Church- Windows in England? |
A26998 | Ask them which way they know and keep their Traditions? |
A26998 | But I pray you tell me, whether the Pope and his Prelates, do not interpret Scripture by their own understandings? |
A26998 | But ask this Deceiver, Must the Church have none to Govern by the Sword? |
A26998 | But at least it''s true of the Calvinists or Puritans? |
A26998 | But did not the second Council at Ephesus Err? |
A26998 | But do Protestants say, that there is nothing in the Scripture hard to be understood? |
A26998 | But hath this man no Scripture,( against Scripture?) |
A26998 | But how shall all the poor People know what the Pope and Councils say and hold? |
A26998 | But perhaps he meant not that it is possible to keep all the Commands, for all our Lives, but for some short time? |
A26998 | But see the Heresies of Popery? |
A26998 | But suppose Christs blessing had been Crossing: With what Face do they feign Protestants in England, to be against Crossing in the Forehead? |
A26998 | But we must not hastily believe any thing that false accusers say? |
A26998 | But what are his Proofs? |
A26998 | But what if it were Lawful to Paint God? |
A26998 | But what is all this for, but to help Men to understand the Book? |
A26998 | But what is it that the Infallible Church can not make good, when they have once presumed to affirm it? |
A26998 | But what is the Man''s pretence for this erroneous Confidence? |
A26998 | But what proof have you of Virtue proceeding from Bones, till you see it by experience? |
A26998 | But what say we to the Sacrifice of the Mass? |
A26998 | But what? |
A26998 | But whether their Teachers must teach them to understand God''s Book, or to throw it away? |
A26998 | But why then are they against drinking his blood, when actually they draw it out by streams? |
A26998 | But why then do they not confirm their Canons by Miracles as the Apostles did? |
A26998 | Can Men obey God''s Law that know it not? |
A26998 | Can a Man judge without his own understanding? |
A26998 | Can any Man unriddle what this Deceiver meaneth? |
A26998 | Can any of your Casuists deny this? |
A26998 | Can such men believe that there are no Protestant Painters? |
A26998 | Can we bring any Controversie to a plainer issue, than to all Men''s common Senses, about due Objects and due Mediums? |
A26998 | Can you unriddle this charge? |
A26998 | Christ put his hands on Children, and blessed them ▪ And would he make men believe, that we deny Christs blessing them or others? |
A26998 | Did not the Council of Calcedon Err in their Opinion, when it determined that the Reason of Romes Primacy was because it was the Imperial Seat,& c.? |
A26998 | Did you never see Beza and others, Icones virorum illustrium, nor Mr. Samuel Clerk''s Lives with Images? |
A26998 | Do Kings and Prelates Rule Men, or Dogs, and Brutes? |
A26998 | Do all these serve for nothing to the Church? |
A26998 | Do none but Papists make or sell Pictures? |
A26998 | Do not their Commentaries tell the difficulty? |
A26998 | Do not their people assemble to their Mass? |
A26998 | Do not they say that the Marriage of Priests, Fryars and Nuns are Sin? |
A26998 | Do their ductile Followers that read it not, understand it better than those that study it Day and Night? |
A26998 | Do you Preach to Men, or Beasts, that have no understanding of God''s Law and Will? |
A26998 | Doth not all the Word of God cry down Ignorance, and cry up Knowledge, from End to End? |
A26998 | Doth not the Church Err then most damnably, that commandeth Murder, Treason, and most heynous Sin, and is the Leader of the Impenitent? |
A26998 | Doth not this Man judge all this by his own understanding? |
A26998 | Doth their Priest celebrate their Mass alone, out of the peoples sight or hearing, in a Sanctuary while they are in the outer Court? |
A26998 | Every Knave may pervert the Law of the Land to maintain his own ill Cause; and must the Law therefore be forbidden them? |
A26998 | For Example: If there were a doubt raised, Whether there be any such City in the World as Rome, Paris, Vienna? |
A26998 | For if he have heard such a Fool, did he ever read this in the Confessions of any Church? |
A26998 | God hath promised to preserve his Word in the Church: Ergo, the Church can not Err? |
A26998 | God saith Thou shalt not bow down to them, nor worship them: Where saith he, Thou shalt bow down to them, and worship them? |
A26998 | Had Cain and Judas such Angels, and all the Sodomites? |
A26998 | Had all the Debauched Popes of Anno 800, 900, 1000, skill Infallible to know Saints from Hypocrites? |
A26998 | Had both Stephanus, Formosus, Nicholas, and the foresaid Johns that denyed the Life to come,& c. the same Gift as the Apostles? |
A26998 | Have not the Holland Calvinists multitudes of Pictures? |
A26998 | He doth so, and how few deny it? |
A26998 | Here the Cheaters say to the Ignorant, If the Church hath been always Visible, where was your Church before Luther? |
A26998 | How do they offer his broken body and blood shed, any otherwise than Representatively, unless they kill him, and eat him when he is Dead? |
A26998 | How know we what hath been done of that kind in all the World to this day? |
A26998 | How little use do they feign such men to have of a pardoning Saviour? |
A26998 | If he do, how doth he supply the place of the Ideots, that are supposed should say Amen, and can not? |
A26998 | If not, Paul saith, How can he say Amen? |
A26998 | If not, is it because they can not, or because they will not? |
A26998 | If not, why did God write part of it himself? |
A26998 | If they Erred not in their Decrees, doth it follow that therefore they had no Errour? |
A26998 | If you mean the first, what presumptuous cruelty is it, to believe that all the Souls of the Fathers were in Hell, till the Death of Christ? |
A26998 | If you mean the last, what Protestants deny it? |
A26998 | In all Cajacius, and his Tribe? |
A26998 | In all Chrysostom, Austin, Cyril,& c? |
A26998 | In all Lombard, Aquinas, Bonaventure, Scotus, Ockam, Cajetane, and all the Tribe? |
A26998 | In all Suarez, Vasquez, Huctado, Albictine,& c? |
A26998 | In what Sence shall such say the Lords Prayer, Forgive us our Sins or Trespasses? |
A26998 | Inward Faith and Love which denominate them, are not seen by others, dare any deny this? |
A26998 | Is Abassia, America, Mesopotamia, Muscovy, Asia, Thrace, England, Scotland, Sweden, Denmark, no part of the World, yea, of the Christian World? |
A26998 | Is all this no Confession? |
A26998 | Is every man an Heir of Salvation, or one of Christs little ones, or under his promise? |
A26998 | Is here any mention of Crossing or Blessing with the Cross? |
A26998 | Is here ever a word of signing with the Cross? |
A26998 | Is it Necessary? |
A26998 | Is it a part of something else, or annihilated? |
A26998 | Is it any appointed means for God to work Miracles by? |
A26998 | Is it no matter of Faith with them, Whether it be Lawful or not, according to Gods Law, to kill men that believe their Senses, and to depose Princes? |
A26998 | Is it not a true Translation? |
A26998 | Is it not the Office of Teachers to Translate God''s Word into known Tongues, that the People may understand it? |
A26998 | Is not this a hainous Sin? |
A26998 | Is the Image of God and the Devil so like that none can know them asunder? |
A26998 | Is there any above a Beast, that doth not honour and praise Sun, Moon, Stars, Heaven and Earth, Sea and Land, as the works of God? |
A26998 | Is there no fiery Tryall of mistaken Doctrine, and of the Erroneous in this Life? |
A26998 | Is there nothing hard in all these Volumes? |
A26998 | It was a Hell of Joy and Comfort: Were Samuel, Elisha, Job, Daniel,& c. in Hell? |
A26998 | May not the Teacher and the Book, consist together? |
A26998 | May they not see Pauls meaning then, if they were but willing? |
A26998 | Must School- Boys be forbid to Learn their Grammar, because they must have a Teacher? |
A26998 | Must all be burnt and damned as Hereticks that are not of your mind? |
A26998 | Must he teach them the Book, or teach them without Book? |
A26998 | Must the people be forbidden to Read Gods Word, because some passages are dark? |
A26998 | Must they all believe their Parish Priest? |
A26998 | Must we be Mahometans under Turks, Persians, and Indians, and Papists under Papists? |
A26998 | Must we pray both to them that are in Purgatory, and for them also? |
A26998 | Must we take such then as Heathens and Publicans? |
A26998 | No Man in Heaven or Earth, was worthy to open the Sealed Books that John saw in his Vision: What then, must no Man therefore open the Bible? |
A26998 | No, not the man that hath had them both? |
A26998 | Nor in any of the Church- Windows? |
A26998 | Nor our Banners? |
A26998 | Nor the Dutch Quarry- Bricks for Chimneys, on which most of the History of the Bible is painted? |
A26998 | Nor the Puritans English Geneva Bible, with the Images of the Histories? |
A26998 | Or are none of these Books to be believed? |
A26998 | Or bow towards them, and say, It is not to them? |
A26998 | Or did Christ break his promise to all these? |
A26998 | Or if it be Councils that must be to us instead of Scripture, when they Damn each other, which must we believe? |
A26998 | Or must Men judge what is true or false, good or bad, by their own understandings? |
A26998 | Or must the Clergy have no such Government over them? |
A26998 | Or that Pastors may bless the people in his Name? |
A26998 | Or that both must be conjoyned as necessary to Salvation? |
A26998 | Or that he shall have Life, that doth the one without the other? |
A26998 | Or what likeness will ye compare unto him? |
A26998 | Or when other Priests, or Fryars contradict him, which of them must we believe? |
A26998 | Or will his undertaking or Damnation save those whom he mislead,& c.? |
A26998 | Paul calls it Bread after the Consecration, three times in the three next Verses: And would they have Burnt Paul for a Heretick? |
A26998 | Peter never Exercised any such Power; what mention is there of any Laws or Mandates of his to the other Apostles? |
A26998 | Psalm, the 145, and all the rest that Magnifie the works of God? |
A26998 | Reader, is it not worse than Infidelity that these Men teach, if they say that the Church hath not Erred? |
A26998 | Should the Jews have believed the Church, that Christ was a Blasphemer, Deceiver and Traytor, and the Apostles Seditious Fellows? |
A26998 | Speak out Deceiver; would you have all Men be of their Rulers Religion, or not? |
A26998 | Sure Heaven and Hell be not like; and yet are the Heirs of Heaven and Hell undistinguishable? |
A26998 | Surely we may well say to them as St. James, Shew me thy Faith by thy Works? |
A26998 | Tell me, whether Rome be all the World? |
A26998 | That is, that he is a true Christian, and hath Charity, and is an honest man? |
A26998 | That never see him, or any that hath seen him? |
A26998 | The King is no Physicain, or Philosopher, no Architect, Shipwright, Pilot,& c. but may he not be King and Ruler of all these? |
A26998 | The Prophets prophecy falsely, and the Priests bear Rule by their means, and my people love to have it so, and what will ye do in the end hereof? |
A26998 | The Question is, Which of the Rooms in the House is the whole House? |
A26998 | These are no matters of Faith with them? |
A26998 | They can neither read their Volumes, nor understand them, nor know which are authentick and true? |
A26998 | This is the first part of Preaching it: If not, why do they use Translations in the Church of Rome, the Septuagint ▪ and the Vulgar Latin? |
A26998 | To whom will ye liken God? |
A26998 | To whom will ye liken me, or shall I be equal, saith the Holy one? |
A26998 | Was Moses in Hell, that appeared in Glory on the Mount with Elias? |
A26998 | Was it no Error to reject the Gospel, and persecute the Apostles? |
A26998 | Was it no Error to take Christ for a Deceiver and Blasphemer, worthy to be Crucified? |
A26998 | Was it no Error when Aaron set them up the Golden- Calf? |
A26998 | Were all the Councils free from Errour that were for the Arrians? |
A26998 | Were there none such in the World, must we be put to prove where there were any Christians before Luther? |
A26998 | What King or Judge will take it for a Petition, for a man to talk- gibberish to him, or say he knoweth not what? |
A26998 | What Protestant Church ever said any such thing, as you falsly charge them with? |
A26998 | What Protestant Confessions have any such Article? |
A26998 | What Rule is there for the Infallible understanding the sence of all our Statute Laws? |
A26998 | What can be more shameless than this pretence, in Men that will not do it, nor ever did? |
A26998 | What can they devise against these plain words? |
A26998 | What hope of ending any Controversies with Papists, that agree not with us in the credit of Senses as Heathens do? |
A26998 | What if he be as very a Deceiver as the writer of this Touchstone, that doth but Cheat from the beginning to the end? |
A26998 | What if his Parishoners know him to be ignorant, or a common Lyar? |
A26998 | What if we obey him in Error, and Sin, will he undertake to be Damned for us? |
A26998 | What is all the Scripture for, and all our Religion, but to make sure of our Salvation? |
A26998 | What is it to proclaim Christ and Paul to be Fools, that could not speak Sense, if this be not? |
A26998 | What is profaining Gods Word, if this be not? |
A26998 | What is the Time, Times, and half a Time, with an Hundred such? |
A26998 | What mean these men by[ satisfying for Sin?] |
A26998 | What meaneth he by a private Spirit? |
A26998 | What melody would it be for all the Church to sing in as many Tunes as persons? |
A26998 | What then doth over- rule so many men to Tear the Church, to Murder so many Bohemians as they did,& c. for such a thing as this is? |
A26998 | What then? |
A26998 | What use is Scripture of to these men? |
A26998 | What, was Judas no lesser than the rest, that was a Thief and Traytor? |
A26998 | What? |
A26998 | Where hath God Commanded us to keep them, for the Virtue that proceedeth from them? |
A26998 | Where is there one word of God for this? |
A26998 | Where they tell us that Sola Petri Navicula, only the Popes Messengers escaped the Heresie? |
A26998 | Whether Christ and all his Preparations shall be lost? |
A26998 | Whether Hierom, Chrysostom, Austin, and all the Fathers, do not press Men and Women of all Ranks, to read or learn, and study the Scriptures? |
A26998 | Whether he that thus Condemneth God and his Law, and extolleth Man''s, be like to make good his accusation at God''s Barr? |
A26998 | Whether it is not Gods Word that we must all be Ruled and Judged by, and is the Charter of our right to Heaven? |
A26998 | Whether the Law was not darker than the Gospel? |
A26998 | Whether the man mean that they may be saved by Baptism without their Parents Faith? |
A26998 | Whether they have any History, Records, or any other way which we may not know as well as they? |
A26998 | Whether they writ not their Recorded Epistles to the Vulgar, even to all the Churches? |
A26998 | Which part is it that is the whole, or indefectible? |
A26998 | Who can say more against Free- Will? |
A26998 | Who could more ignorantly have stated a Controversie? |
A26998 | Whose Sacraments can we think are these? |
A26998 | Whose understandings else do they judge by, in Conclaves or Councils? |
A26998 | Why are not these forbidden? |
A26998 | Why are they not con ● ● ● ● ed to use it themselves, but they must force all others to it as necessary? |
A26998 | Why do they Baptize all, if they have no Sin? |
A26998 | Why do they compose all their Liturgies and Offices for their Churches, with Confessions of Sin; and Prayers for Forgiveness? |
A26998 | Why do they themselves write their pretended Traditions, if writing them were not needful? |
A26998 | Why doth God lay down so many signs to difference the Children of God from the Children of the Devil, if they can not be discerned? |
A26998 | Why else do these Priests force all men to confess their Sins to them, if men be such as never sinned? |
A26998 | Why may you not be contented to have a painted God your selves? |
A26998 | Why not also forbidden to Read Statutes, Canons, Fathers, Jesuits, Fryars, and the Loads of Papists Controversies? |
A26998 | Why take they it not at best, as part of their Works of Supererrogation? |
A26998 | Why then can not you keep your[ may] to your selves? |
A26998 | Will they stand to it, that their Church renounceth all worship of God in Holy Assemblies, save by the Priest alone? |
A26998 | Will you be jealous against those that bow not to a painted God, as God is jealous against those that do it? |
A26998 | Yet must we take his word instead of Gods? |
A26998 | You know, that the English Bishops practise Confirmation, and the Liturgy describeth it as I here do: And are the Church of England no Protestants? |
A26998 | agreed for the Popes deposing Princes that Exterminate not all out of their Dominions that deny Transubstantiation,& c. Was this no Errour? |
A26998 | all Kings and Nations must be subject to his Subject? |
A26998 | and by the Memories of all the Prelates and Priests that have pretended to be the Church? |
A26998 | and should we be forbid to read it? |
A26998 | are Catholick, be not as good Sence, as a Roman Catholick? |
A26998 | is Rome all the World? |
A26998 | must such things as these be disputed by Men that would be our Infallible Rule? |
A26998 | next the Sin of Lucifer and Antichrist, or rather plain Antichristianism it self? |
A26998 | nor when they went after the Idols of the Heathen, and worshipped in the High places? |
A26998 | or Babylon? |
A26998 | or the Ten- Horned, or Two- Horned Beast in the Revelations? |
A26998 | or whether there was ever such persons as K. James, K. Charles, Ludovicus 14 ▪ of France,& c.? |
A26998 | was to delight in the Law of the Lord, and meditate in it Day and Night? |
A26998 | what not in all the Canons? |
A26998 | yea, or of the best? |
A26998 | yea, that they ought not to endeavour to make it sure? |
A26862 | & that which hath had a great hand in turning many learned men from the Protestant Religion to Popery? |
A26862 | & upon the terms of the first severer Covenant? |
A26862 | 1 DOth not the Apostle say, that as touching the Righteousness which is in the Law, he was blameless? |
A26862 | 2. Who ever called Habits, or Dispositions, the souls Instruments? |
A26862 | 2. whether in his suffering and our escape the threatning of the Law was executed or dispensed with? |
A26862 | 27. what can be plainer? |
A26862 | 27. where( among other things) hee telleth you that Apud Romanos seu ferenda esset Lex, populus rogabatur an ferrivellet? |
A26862 | 39, 40, And must not they strive to enter in at the straight gate, and lay violent hands on the Kingdome of Heaven? |
A26862 | 4, 5, 6? |
A26862 | 5. that for these things sake cometh the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience? |
A26862 | 6, Do you not think that you may and must seek after the enjoyment of God in those beginnings and fore- tasts which are here to be expected? |
A26862 | A great question it is, Whether Remission and Justification be immanent or transient Acts of God? |
A26862 | Againe, doe you meane an habituall qualification or an Actuall? |
A26862 | Also doth not the Scripture bid us Repent, believe, and be baptized for the remission of sinnes; but not first to believe the Remission of our sinnes? |
A26862 | And Moses, because he had respect to the recompence of Reward? |
A26862 | And all that cloud of witnesses obey and suffer, that they might attain a better Resurrection? |
A26862 | And are not Precepts to put us on to dutie? |
A26862 | And can it be any other then the obtaining of the fruition of God in Heaven? |
A26862 | And do I after all this need to answer the Common objections, that it is mercenarie and slavish, to labour for salvation? |
A26862 | And hath not every duty its end even for our selves? |
A26862 | And hath that no hand in their Iustification, which giveth them right to the tree of Life? |
A26862 | And how will these mistaken Teachers help them to comfort? |
A26862 | And if Love be an Act of the same Will, and have the same Object with Consent, Election, Acceptance,& c. Why should it not then be the same Act? |
A26862 | And if dispensed with, how it can stand with the truth and justice of God? |
A26862 | And if so, whether his misery on Earth should have bin more then men doe now endure? |
A26862 | And if the righteous be scarcely saved, what shall become of them that thought it unlawfull to labour for salvation? |
A26862 | And if we are not one reall Person with Christ, then one what? |
A26862 | And is not earnest praying for life, pardon, and salvation, some proper kind of doing? |
A26862 | And is not this properly a condition required of the party if he will enjoy the thing promised? |
A26862 | And is remission and justification the immediate effect of Christs death? |
A26862 | And might he not conclude his Justification from that Willingness to obey? |
A26862 | And now the Question is, whether Christs suffering were the payment of the very debt, or of somewhat else in its stead? |
A26862 | And once more let me intreat you to consider, whether there be any hope of that mans salvation, who shall reduce this your doctrine into his practise? |
A26862 | And so whether the new Covenant do at all command us perfect obedience? |
A26862 | And that beleeving is needless, not only as to our Justification, but to any other use: For what need one thing be so twice done? |
A26862 | And then whether the new Covenant be not absolute? |
A26862 | And what Law( to speak properly) did binde him to them? |
A26862 | And what are the conditionall promises for, but to stirre us up to believe and to performe the conditions, that so we may enjoy the promised good? |
A26862 | And what death it is that perishing infants die, or that our guilt in the first transgression doth procure? |
A26862 | And what is that but to fear the losse of Heaven, or to fear Hell? |
A26862 | And what saith Grotius more then this? |
A26862 | And whether sinners may thence be encouraged to conceive some hope of a relaxation of the threatnings in the Gospell? |
A26862 | And whether the faithfull may not feare lest God may relaxe a promise as well as a threatning? |
A26862 | And whether the losse of Gods Image were part of the death threatned, or rather the effect of our sinne onely, executed by our selves, and not by God? |
A26862 | And whether those that seek not, and labour not for it, be not shut out? |
A26862 | And who dare say, that Faith hath such an influx into our Justification? |
A26862 | And why are the Threatnings but with the fear of the evill threatned to deterre us from the sinne, and to the dutie? |
A26862 | And why not to our entire continued justification on earth? |
A26862 | And why then should we think that we were immediately delivered from the guilt and condemnation? |
A26862 | And yet do you think you may not act or work for life and salvation? |
A26862 | And yet you know well enough, that this excuseth not you from your duty; and why then should it excuse you from using means for your soul? |
A26862 | Are not all these promises to wicked men? |
A26862 | Are you in Heaven already? |
A26862 | As 1. what death it was that Christ redeemed us from? |
A26862 | Besides, if any of these three could have been taken off, what need Christ have dyed? |
A26862 | But God dealeth with his Creature by way of legall government? |
A26862 | But I pray you tell me, Have you received all the life and mercy you do expect? |
A26862 | But all the question is, whether we may do it that we may live? |
A26862 | But doth it therefore follow, that Christ dispenseth then to none but those that are in him? |
A26862 | But how shall we know that? |
A26862 | But how then is Ahabs and Nineve''s humiliation accepted, and such other works of those that are not in Christ, seeing they are yet under the Law? |
A26862 | But how would you comfort such a one, that faith he can not beleeve? |
A26862 | But is not this Antinomianism, which you so detest? |
A26862 | But is not this conditionall promise made to them before they return? |
A26862 | But now St. Iames his question is, What is the Condition of our Justification by this Righteousness of Christ? |
A26862 | But the great Question is, Whether the Sacrament do seal to the conclusion also, That I am justified, and shall be saved? |
A26862 | But though Faith be not the Instrument of Justification; may it not be called the Instrument of receiving Christ who Justifieth us? |
A26862 | But what difference is there betwixt it and the Socinian Doctrin of Justification? |
A26862 | But when shall I take him for one that will not heare the Church? |
A26862 | But whether to this alone, is all the doubt? |
A26862 | But your doubt may be, whether they did not deserve damnation while they were in their unbelief for resisting Grace? |
A26862 | But, is our personal Righteousness perfect as it is measured by the New Rule? |
A26862 | By what Law? |
A26862 | Can Justice refuse to accept of such a payment? |
A26862 | Can any more be said of Faith, then that we are justified or judged to Life, both[ for] it, and[ according to] it? |
A26862 | Consider then, if even many that seek to enter shall not be able, whether they are like to enter that never seek? |
A26862 | Did ever any sober man make such a Covenant with Christ, as to promise him never to sin against him? |
A26862 | Did he not deall with him in rigorous Justice? |
A26862 | Did he obey a Law not yet made? |
A26862 | Did not Abraham obey because he looked for a Citie which had foundations? |
A26862 | Did not God give Cain a title to his Superiority and Government, and the Israelites Title to the Land of Promise? |
A26862 | Did not Paul therefore keep under his bodie, and bring it into subjection, lest when he had preached to others, himself should be a cast- away? |
A26862 | Do I need to apply this in the present case or can not every man apply it? |
A26862 | Do men enquire after that, and lament the want of it, which they are not willing to have? |
A26862 | Do not all that confesse themselves strangers on earth, plainlie declare that they seek another Countrie? |
A26862 | Do you all this in meer love, or thankfulnesse, or from obedience which hath no further end? |
A26862 | Do you not forget to make a difference betwixt earth and Heaven? |
A26862 | Do you not hereby insinuate an accusation of vanity at least against God and his Lawes? |
A26862 | Do you think you may act for your naturall life, to preserve it, or recover and repair any decayings in it? |
A26862 | Doe these men thinke that we are perfectly justified and saved already? |
A26862 | Doe you meane it is a qualification which he hath before the Promise is made to him? |
A26862 | Doth his Law threaten, or did we in our Covenant consent, that we should be condemned if ever we committed a gross sin? |
A26862 | Doth it not much confirm the world in their soul- cozening Faith? |
A26862 | Doth it not needlesly constrain men to wrest most plain and frequent expressions of Scripture? |
A26862 | Doth not almost all the Scripture for the doctrinall part consist of these? |
A26862 | Doth not he that never believeth break this Law or Covenant, and incur the penalty? |
A26862 | Doth not that clearely intimate, that Christ was not in the Obligation? |
A26862 | Doth this Act effect by suffering? |
A26862 | Else how could the Redeemed be by nature the children of wrath? |
A26862 | FRom all this you may gather part of the Answer to your next Question: why I except against the book called, The Marrow of Modern Divinity? |
A26862 | For if men do once beleeve, that it is not so much as a part of the Condition of their Justification, will it not much tend to relax their diligence? |
A26862 | For is not Faith a work or act of ours? |
A26862 | For is this Covenant made with Christ? |
A26862 | For it is one thing to ask, whether it binde upon the old Covenant terms? |
A26862 | For search the Scriptures impartially and consider, whether seeking Heaven be not necessarie to the obtaining of it? |
A26862 | For( as Aquinus) The Action of the principall Cause and of the Instrument is one Action: and who dare say, that Faith is so Gods Instrument? |
A26862 | Gods glory and your salvation, not disjunct, but conjunct, are all the businesse you have to look after: What do you live for? |
A26862 | Had Christ, think you, a hard heart to cure? |
A26862 | Hath not Christ redeemed your body also? |
A26862 | Have you all the grace that you need or desire in degree? |
A26862 | He promised and gave them both Prophets and Apostles; was it no promise or mercy, because they killed and persecuted them? |
A26862 | He states the question far otherwise,( and yet supposeth it the same) viz, whether Christ paid the Idem, or the Tantundem? |
A26862 | He that is not yet a sinner in the highest degree, is he not so far Righteous by a personall Righteousness? |
A26862 | How Faith and Repentance are both promised of God, and required of us; Can they be his conditions and ours too? |
A26862 | How can he call it, A gracious Acceptation, a gracious imputation, a free Application, if it were the same thing which the Law required that was paid? |
A26862 | How can the Act of Believing( which hath no other being, but to be an Act) be possibly a Passive Instrument? |
A26862 | How can you make it appear, that Do this and live is not the proper voyce of the Covenant of Works? |
A26862 | How commonly doth Scripture joyn his Offices together, calling him usually, Our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ? |
A26862 | How could Christ be the Mediator of the Covenant, if it were to himself, and not to us, that the Covenant were made? |
A26862 | How could the Precepts delivered by Moses( when the old Covenant was violated, and the new established) belong to that old Covenant? |
A26862 | How far this Grace is resistible? |
A26862 | How long will it be till all the curse be taken off the Beleevers, and Redemption have attained its full effect? |
A26862 | How many score places in the Psalmes and Prophet, doe mention promises and Covenants of God to ungodly Israelites? |
A26862 | How you will make it appear, that the new Covenant is not made with Christ only? |
A26862 | I desire him to tell me, whether he can prove that any mans sinnes are pardoned before they have accepted Christ for their Lord? |
A26862 | I pray you tell me, Do you ever use to pray or no? |
A26862 | If Christ have fulfilled the new Covenant for us, as well as the old, what need we do it again? |
A26862 | If Christ were before you, would you accept him, or reject him? |
A26862 | If Works be not then considered as part of the Condition; how then? |
A26862 | If he did, upon what conditions is that satisfaction enjoyed by us? |
A26862 | If he say, I am not willing: I should ask; Why then do you look after it, or regard it? |
A26862 | If it were granted that Christ did receive the Sacrament; yet he never did as an obedientiall Act to his own Gospell precepts? |
A26862 | If not, why may you not labour for that you have not, as well as be thankfull for that you have? |
A26862 | If sincere obedience be a part of the Condition, then what perplexities will it cast us into to finde out, when our obedience is sincere? |
A26862 | If such a word were in Scripture, will he not confesse it to be figurative, and not proper, and so not fit for this Dispute? |
A26862 | If the Law be relaxable, whether God might not have freely remitted the offence, and have spared his Son his satisfactory sufferings? |
A26862 | If we are called holy, because of an imperfect Holiness: then why not righteous, because of an imperfect Righteousness? |
A26862 | If you ask me further, Why did Christ chuse this rather then any thing else for the Condition? |
A26862 | In what sence doth the Decalogue belong to the new Covenant? |
A26862 | In what sence then is Faith said to be imputed to us for righteousness, if it be our Righteousness it self? |
A26862 | Is it lesse worth, or doth not God require it, or will he not give you leave? |
A26862 | Is it not a wonder that this lamentable Comforter should be so valued by the troubled spirits? |
A26862 | Is it not said, that no whoremonger, or unclean person, or covetous person,& c. shall enter into the Kingdom of Christ, or of God? |
A26862 | Is it not strange that Active justification should be perfected 5000. yeares before Passive justification is in being? |
A26862 | Is it not then a likelier way to procure their consent, to treat with them in prison, then to let them out, and then treat? |
A26862 | Is it onely for your body, or also for your soul? |
A26862 | Is it onely that you may be thankfull for life and mercie? |
A26862 | Is not this spoken to Unbeleevers? |
A26862 | Is this Law? |
A26862 | Isaac is Gods mouth in blessing Esau: Were all the Israelites godly, to whom the Land of Canaan was promised and given? |
A26862 | It is agreed, that removens impedimentum quâ talis, is Causa sine quâ non: And doth not the greatest part of a Phisitians skill lye there? |
A26862 | It yet remaines under dispute whether the Threat speak not de eventu, as to the sinne, though but de jure, as to the sinner? |
A26862 | Lastlie, how is it that you do not see, that by this Doctrine you condemne not all the Saints onelie, but even the Lord himself? |
A26862 | Lastly, Is not this excluding of sincere Obedience from Justification, the great stumbling block of Papists? |
A26862 | Let us first therefore resolve that Question, what they seal? |
A26862 | May not that be the end of your duties, care, fear, labour, watchfulnesse? |
A26862 | May you not else as well give the seals to wicked men as the Covenant? |
A26862 | May you not groan after him, and enquire, and turn the stream of your endeavours this way? |
A26862 | Might not Paul conclude of the sincerity of his Willingness to obey Christ, because he did the evill which he would not? |
A26862 | Most passages in Maccovius doe affirm but that Christ obeyed for us, as well as suffered for us; and who denyeth that? |
A26862 | Must I be put to prove that the Apostles and Christ himself were not mercenarie slaves? |
A26862 | Must not all that will have life, come to Christ, that they may have it? |
A26862 | Nay, hath not God put you upon farre more for your soul, then for your body? |
A26862 | Now is it such a legall slavish mercenary thing for a Christian to seek after the fruition of God? |
A26862 | Now let us consider, how it sealeth? |
A26862 | Now let us see, whether this were the same that Christ did suffer? |
A26862 | Now the Question is which of the parts of this Argument the Sacrament doth seal to? |
A26862 | Now what is it that makes the Covenant? |
A26862 | Now what transient Act this is, and what its immediate reall Effect, who hath unfolded? |
A26862 | Oh sweet and blessed End? |
A26862 | Or can it require any more? |
A26862 | Or doth Christ call us to such a Covenant? |
A26862 | Or for such a ● Action as the killing of his onely Son would have been? |
A26862 | Or have you as full a certainty of it hereafter, as you do desire? |
A26862 | Or if so, whether there should have bin any Resurrection of the body after any certaine space of time, that so it might suffer as well as the soule? |
A26862 | Or if you do, why may you not do as much for your soul, as for your body? |
A26862 | Or into any place or state of torment short of Hell? |
A26862 | Or that you might also improve them to some further advantage? |
A26862 | Or to be carefull that he may not be everlastingly deprived of it? |
A26862 | Or whence will they plead their Iustification at the barr of God? |
A26862 | Or whether Man may annihilate a Quality, though not a Substance? |
A26862 | Or whether all have sufficient Grace to beleeve, either given, or internally offered? |
A26862 | Or whether he hath at all made the Morall Law to be the preceptive part of the new Covenant? |
A26862 | Or whether hee should have lived such a miserable life for a season, and then be annihilated, or destroyed? |
A26862 | Or whether his soule should have bin immediatly seprarated from his body as ours are at death, and so be the only sufferer of the paine? |
A26862 | Or whether soule and body without separation should have gone downe quick together into Hell? |
A26862 | Or whether the Morall Law be continued only as the precepts of the old Covenant, and so used by the new Covenant, meerly for a directive Rule? |
A26862 | Perhaps you will say, was not Moses both? |
A26862 | Promises conditionall ▪ and Threats? |
A26862 | Question is, How it can stand with ▪ the Truth and Justice of God to dispense ▪ with his Threats? |
A26862 | Question is, May we not feare lest God may dispense with his Promises as well as his Threats? |
A26862 | Question is, whether sinners may not hence be encouraged to conceive some hope of a relaxation of the Threatnings in the New Covenant? |
A26862 | Question was, Whether the threatning was executed, or relaxed and dispensed with? |
A26862 | Seeing God hath promised us these which you call conditions, is not the Covenant therefore rather absolute, and more properly a promise? |
A26862 | Seeing you make faith and covenanting with Christ to be the same thing; do you not make him to be no reall Christian that never so covenanted? |
A26862 | Shall mans sinnes make Gods promises and mercies of lesse value? |
A26862 | Shall we come after him to do the work he hath perfected? |
A26862 | Shall we say therefore, that God threatned them with a Christ, rather then promised him? |
A26862 | So that if you ask me[ what is the formall Reason, why Faith Iustifieth?] |
A26862 | So that in what respect is our righteousnesse lesse excellent? |
A26862 | THerefore it is one thing to ask, whether the Covenant of Works be abolished? |
A26862 | That the Apostles dispute is upon the question, What is the Righteousness which we must plead against the Accusation of the Law? |
A26862 | The Promise is made to you and to your children? |
A26862 | The chiefe point of difference and difficulty lyeth higher, How the Righteousnesse of Christ is made ours? |
A26862 | The great Question is, of which sort is our Righteousness whereby we are justified? |
A26862 | The question therefore is, Whether Works do concur with Faith( as part of the Condition) in the very businesse of Justifying? |
A26862 | The time is neere when those future sins will be past also; what doth the Law require then? |
A26862 | Then this followeth howsoever, That they are righteous, and justified before they beleeve,( which what Scripture doth speak?) |
A26862 | There is evident a sincerity opposite to dissimulation: But a Morall or Theologicall sincerity there is not; Why is that? |
A26862 | They would all trust Christ for the saving of their souls, and that without dissembling, for ought any man can discern: Are all these men justified? |
A26862 | This being well considered, will direct you truly and punctually, where to find the very formall being and nature of Faith? |
A26862 | This is gracious acceptance, which Grotius maintaineth? |
A26862 | This is the Covenant that is made with us: and who dare say, that this is made with Christ; Or is this Covenant made to Christ? |
A26862 | This may help you to answer that question, Whether the Law without the Gospell be a sufficient Rule of Life? |
A26862 | This work must not be due, and so the performer not under the absolute soveraignty of another? |
A26862 | Thus we see in part the first Question resolved; what death it was that the Law did threaten? |
A26862 | To which I answer? |
A26862 | Turn over your whole Bible,& see whether it speak more of covenanting with Christ, or with us? |
A26862 | WHat one of our Church will maintain, that any one obtaines actuall Redemption by Christ without Faith? |
A26862 | Was not he the justifier here, who was the imputer of Righteousness? |
A26862 | What Scripture saith so? |
A26862 | What doe you take for such a renouncing of their Covenant? |
A26862 | What have we else to shew at Gods barr for our Justification, but the New Covenant? |
A26862 | What it was that Christ did suffer? |
A26862 | What saith Mr. Owen to any of this? |
A26862 | When I read this to be the tenour of the New Covenant[ Whosoever believeth shall be justified:] doth it not tell me plainly why Faith Justifieth? |
A26862 | When should He have risen? |
A26862 | When the Scripture saith, that Whosoever beleeveth shall be justified is it a learned Exposition which thus interpreteth it? |
A26862 | Where he learned, or how he can prove, that Justifying Faith is a believing that our sinnes are pardoned? |
A26862 | Whether Adams soule and body should immediatly have bin annihilated, or destroyed so as to become insensible? |
A26862 | Whether Christ did discharge this debt by way of solution or by way of satisfaction? |
A26862 | Whether Christ did first repeall that Law, and then re- establish it to other ends? |
A26862 | Whether Christs Lordship over all, do imply or prove his redeeming of all? |
A26862 | Whether Faith onely? |
A26862 | Whether God hath delivered things out of his own power in any kinde, by delivering them into the power of his Son? |
A26862 | Whether absolutely or conditionally? |
A26862 | Whether he cast away Gods image? |
A26862 | Whether it be any wrong to the redeemed themselves? |
A26862 | Whether it be not a wrong to the Redeemer, that the people whom he hath ransomed are not immediately delivered? |
A26862 | Whether that which is commonly called the Work of Conscience, be also from such an internall suasory work of the Spirit? |
A26862 | Whether the Precepts of the Gospel belong also to the old Covenant? |
A26862 | Whether the Precepts of the Gospel do belong to the Decalogue? |
A26862 | Whether the extolling of Christ the Mediator, or the restoring and saving of the offendors, were Gods more remote end, and principal intention? |
A26862 | Whether the redeemed are immediately upon the price payd, delivered from any of the curse of the Law? |
A26862 | Whether the reformation of the life doth not immediately even the same moment follow the hearts reformation? |
A26862 | Whether the sufferings of Beleevers are from the curse of the Law? |
A26862 | Whether the sufferings of the Elect before conversion are in execution of any part of the curse of the Law? |
A26862 | Whether then this Grace be Physicall or Morall? |
A26862 | Whether there be a Morall Suasion of the Spirit, distinct from the Suasion of the Word, and other outward means? |
A26862 | Whether this Authority and Dignity of Christ, be by Original Natural Right? |
A26862 | Whether this be not the subjection of the soul to Christ to be governed by him; and so a heart- reformation? |
A26862 | Whether this doctrine doth not tend to drive Obedience out of the world? |
A26862 | Whether to the Major, the Minor, or the Conclusion? |
A26862 | Why I call Christs Satisfaction the meritorious Cause, and the Causa sine quâ non? |
A26862 | Why I call the Gospell the Instrumentall Cause? |
A26862 | Why I do make affiance or recombency an immediate product of Faith, when it is commonly taken to be, the very justifying Act? |
A26862 | Why I make it only the Causa sine quâ non? |
A26862 | Why I make not Christs Righteousness the materiall Cause? |
A26862 | Why I make not Faith the Instrumentall Cause? |
A26862 | Why I make not the Imputation of it the formall Cause? |
A26862 | Why do I make sincerity and perseverance to be so near kin to Faith, as to be, in some sence, the same, and not rather distinct Graces? |
A26862 | Why do you single out the book called, The marrow of modern Divinity, to oppose in this point? |
A26862 | Why have you all the mercies of your life? |
A26862 | Why is the love of our selves, and desire of our preservation so naturall? |
A26862 | Wicked men have benefits by Christ, even those that are not in him so much as by a visible profession: And why then may they not have some promises? |
A26862 | Will you speak it to none but those who beleeve already? |
A26862 | Would not this love have Iustified? |
A26862 | Would you not have believers to esc ● ew evill and do good for fear of Hell, or for hope of Heaven? |
A26862 | Yet it is disputable whether these two last were directly contained in the threatning, or not? |
A26862 | Yet the former( as I have proved before& c.) is ours too, and our Righteousness too( though many Divines think otherwise:) but how? |
A26862 | Your 2. is[ whether Christ paid the same debt which was in the first obligation?] |
A26862 | [ Beleeve in the Lord Iesus, and thou shalt be saved: and if thou beleeve not, thou shalt be damned?] |
A26862 | and a third, whether as a meer Precept? |
A26862 | and another thing, whether the Morall Law be abolished? |
A26862 | and consequently him to be no visible Christian who never professed such a Covenant? |
A26862 | and is it not his purchase, and charge, and work to provide for it? |
A26862 | and make him pay the uttermost farthing? |
A26862 | and so you bring in a greater necessity of publique covenanting, then those who are for Church- making Covenants? |
A26862 | and the contemplating of it, and admiring it, be our main employment? |
A26862 | and then enquire how they seal? |
A26862 | and what not? |
A26862 | another, whether upon new Covenant terms? |
A26862 | as he was a sinner by imputation, and so had our transgressions upon him: but very ignorantly: For was God mercifull to him concerning the debt? |
A26862 | before the absolving sentence at the great Tribunall; or the possession of the Kingdome, for which we wait in Hope? |
A26862 | but placing it in Consent or Acceptance? |
A26862 | but why should we separate what God hath conjoyned? |
A26862 | if not from all? |
A26862 | if not, why will you labour, and eat, and drink, and sleep? |
A26862 | is it possible that any sober considering man can think so? |
A26862 | it may be you will say, you pray onely for Gods glory, and for the Church: But hath not God as much care of his Church and his glory, as of your soul? |
A26862 | or Works also? |
A26862 | or as the man to Christ, who is my Neighbour? |
A26862 | or by Donation? |
A26862 | or by Purchase? |
A26862 | or by which we are justified as the proper Righteousness of that Law? |
A26862 | or his own Law, and so obey himself? |
A26862 | or may you pray for other mens souls, and not your own, when you are bound to love them but as your self? |
A26862 | or of all alike? |
A26862 | or only afflictions of Love, the curse being taken off by Christ? |
A26862 | or only sincere? |
A26862 | or that Gods Word hath not prescribed us a slavish task? |
A26862 | or whether God took it from him for sin? |
A26862 | or whether it be not a promise of some extraordinary permanent happiness which they shall receive at their last and great deliverance by the Messias? |
A26862 | or whether it be only the substituting him to be Vicegerent to the Father? |
A26862 | or whether they are onely Concomitants to that Faith which effecteth the business without their assistance? |
A26862 | or who is the looser? |
A26862 | seu tollendae, rogabatur, an tolli eam placeret? |
A26862 | should not then the searching into it be our main study? |
A26862 | so what end have the prohibition else? |
A26862 | the last of which Grotius maintaineth? |
A26862 | utrum melius sit miserum esse quam non esse? |
A26862 | whether God only could annihilate it? |
A26862 | whether the threatning were not fully executed in Adams death? |
A26862 | why will you seek to the Physician when you are sick? |
A26967 | 1. Who knoweth not that Time can not be recalled? |
A26967 | 10. have we not all more need of monitors to humble us for doing so much lesse then our duty, then to be reprehended for being too diligent and exact? |
A26967 | 12. by the name of a Factious Schismatical Conventicle, and a meeting of Drunkards, or Gamesters, by a more gentle less disgraceful name? |
A26967 | 14. and this after they are baptized, and profess to believe in the holy Ghost as their Sanctifier? |
A26967 | 2. Who do you think is likest to understand Gods mind, and what is pleasing to him? |
A26967 | 3, 5, 6. minding the things of the flesh, and not the things of the Spirit? |
A26967 | 37. or take you out of the hands of Christ? |
A26967 | 6. though they confessed they had nothing else against him? |
A26967 | 9. nor say, What harm is in it? |
A26967 | Again, if two lie together, then they have heat; but how can one alone be warm? |
A26967 | Alas sirs, do you live as men that must live here no more? |
A26967 | Alas, sirs, how many questions of exceeding weight have you yet to be resolved in? |
A26967 | And a Communion of Saints in which you have undertaken to administer the Holy things of God? |
A26967 | And a Holy Church in which you have your station? |
A26967 | And are there not far more enemies to serious godliness among the Papists themselves, then among us? |
A26967 | And are you the men that would quench their zeal, and destroy the holy diligence which you should Preach? |
A26967 | And art thou afraid of having too much of this? |
A26967 | And dare you before the Sun, and under the Heavens of God, and in his Hearing, perswade men that the most Holy God is against Holiness? |
A26967 | And dare you gainsay the Lord and his Apostles, and concur with Satan, and the Pharisees and enemies of Christ? |
A26967 | And hast thou not an immortal soul to save or lose as well as they? |
A26967 | And how came holy Mr. Bolton to find so much work for these rebukes so lately in his time, as in his books you find? |
A26967 | And how do their Laicks here know what is a point of faith, but by the testimony of their Priests? |
A26967 | And how will Christ deal at last with his Enemies? |
A26967 | And if all these were down, wherein should the practice of Religion consist? |
A26967 | And is any of this a matter of controversie or doubt? |
A26967 | And is it not the way when we would draw the boat to the bank, to lay hold of the bank and pull, as if we would draw it to the boat? |
A26967 | And is there any controversie among Christians in any of this? |
A26967 | And is there any controversie among Christians in any of this? |
A26967 | And is there any thing in all this that any Christian can deny? |
A26967 | And is there any thing now left but Ignorance or Wickedness to stand up against thy speedy diligence? |
A26967 | And is there any thing of doubt or controversie in this? |
A26967 | And is there any thing to be compared with God and our eternal state? |
A26967 | And is this a matter of any doubt or controversie? |
A26967 | And is this any Schismatical or factious motion? |
A26967 | And let people see, that the Pulpit is to you but as a Stage, and that you believe not what you speak? |
A26967 | And must the Church be divided, and most be damned for not believing or submitting to a humane Ordinance? |
A26967 | And now I should conclude, I am loth to end, for fear lest I have not yet prevailed with you: What are you now resolved to do from this day forward? |
A26967 | And shall, we be idle that are engaged for Heaven? |
A26967 | And what a terrible account wilt thou have to make, when the seduction and transgression of all these sinners shall be charged upon thee? |
A26967 | And what an addition is it to your guilt, that you speak against God in his own Name? |
A26967 | And what estimation had Christs doctrine among the Scribes and Pharisees? |
A26967 | And what is the reason of your unbelief? |
A26967 | And what manner of persons should they be, in holy conversation and godliness, that look for such a life as this? |
A26967 | And why do you not commend the Good where you discommend the evil that is commixt? |
A26967 | And will I neither endure it, nor be quickened without it? |
A26967 | And will you in your Application, or private discourses, unsay all this again, and give God and your selves the Lye? |
A26967 | And will you tell God that he hath but dissembled with you, and told you that he is pleased with that which is not pleasing to him? |
A26967 | And wilt thou be a Traytor to Christ, in the name of a Messenger and Preacher of the Gospel? |
A26967 | And wilt thou be idle when eternal life ● ies on it? |
A26967 | And wilt thou teach them to hate Godliness, who hast undertaken before the Righteous God, to teach them to practice it? |
A26967 | Are not all Christians agreed in it? |
A26967 | Are not the people backward enough to the serving of God with all their might, unless you hinder them? |
A26967 | Are there any men of any party among Christians, or sober Infidels that dare contradict it? |
A26967 | Are there not Ale- houses to be supprest, and drunkards& riotous persons to be restrained; Preaching and Piety to be promoted? |
A26967 | Are you not ashamed thus to contradict your selves? |
A26967 | Are you not convinced that it is so? |
A26967 | Art thou a Preacher of the Gospel, and takest charge of the souls of men? |
A26967 | Art thou in a declined lapsed state? |
A26967 | Art thou in the darknesse of uncertainty concerning thy conversion, and thy everlasting state? |
A26967 | Art thou seeking to inflame thy soul with love to God? |
A26967 | Art thou willing to use the Might thou hast, and to have more, and use it if thou hadst it? |
A26967 | But because you have the faces to contradict the God of Truth, and to reproach that work which he commandeth, and to say, what needs so much ado? |
A26967 | But doth he think that man is seriously a Christian that is not more zealous for God and Religion, and the souls of men, then for himself? |
A26967 | But how were the Oratorians esteemed and used? |
A26967 | But if thou dost know it, how dost thou make shift maliciously to oppose it, without feeling the beginnings of Hell upon thy Conscience? |
A26967 | But is not your strict observation of the Lords day a controverted thing? |
A26967 | But perhaps you''l ask, May not a man be righteous over- mmch? |
A26967 | But shall it be so with thee whose eyes are opened, who seest the God, the Heaven, the Hell, which they do but hear of as unlikely things? |
A26967 | But what did he therefore fear or fly from God? |
A26967 | But what of that? |
A26967 | But will not Christ know his sheep, though he find them torn in a wolks skin? |
A26967 | But( you''l say perhaps) alas, what Might have we? |
A26967 | By what men on earth should God be eminently served& honoured, if not by Magistrates, whom he hath eminently advanced, impowred, and intrusted? |
A26967 | Can I do no better, when I know before hand, what different aspects diligence and negligence will have, to the awakened soul in the review? |
A26967 | Can I do no more for the Church of God? |
A26967 | Can I do no more for the souls of men? |
A26967 | Can I do no more that have so much help? |
A26967 | Can I do no more then this for Christ? |
A26967 | Can I do no more, that have loytered so long? |
A26967 | Can I do no more, that know not now but I am doing my last? |
A26967 | Can I do no more, when I am sure I can not do too much, and am sure there is nothing else to be preferred? |
A26967 | Can I do no more, when my salvation is the prize? |
A26967 | Can I love him no more? |
A26967 | Can it be expected that our Church should be better than the Family of Adam, that had a Cain? |
A26967 | Can not souls be damned without your furtherance? |
A26967 | Can your hearts bear it then, to hear and think, that you lost,& wilfully lost such an opportunity? |
A26967 | Canst thou look for this at the hand of God, when Nature and Scripture assure thee of the contrary? |
A26967 | Could I do no more, if I were sure that my salvation lay on this one duty? |
A26967 | Could I not do more, if my house were on fire, or my estate, or life, or friend in danger, then I do for my salvation? |
A26967 | Dare you as openly mock God for making these strict and holy Laws, as you do men for obeying them? |
A26967 | Dare you prefix a[ Thus saith the Lord] to so impious a speech as[ It is in vain to serve the Lord? |
A26967 | Did a Seneca see by the light of nature, so much of the necessity of seriousness and diligence, about the matters of the soul? |
A26967 | Do not they not judge Heaven to be less worth then Earth; when they will do less for it, and would have others to do so too? |
A26967 | Do you not find in your Repentings, that the change is more in your Will then in your Power? |
A26967 | Do you not your selves profess that you believe it? |
A26967 | Do you practise as aforesaid, according to the Principles and matter agreed on, or not? |
A26967 | Do you see your people so forward to do too much for Heaven, that you must pull them back? |
A26967 | Do your work as men that must work no more, and pray as men that must pray no more, when once the time of work is ended? |
A26967 | Dost thou look he should pervert the course of nature,& continue the spring and seed- time till thou hast a mind to sow? |
A26967 | Dost thou look to have Preachers sent after thee, to bring thee the mercy which thy contempt here left behind? |
A26967 | Dost thou not know whether thou be in a state of life or death? |
A26967 | Dost thou take on thee to go on the message of Christ, and then speak against him? |
A26967 | Dost thou talk of our differences about Forms and Ceremonies? |
A26967 | Doth it not teach all rational creatures in necessity to pray to God? |
A26967 | Examine your selves whether you be in the faith; prove your selves; know ye not your own selves, that Christ is in you except you are reprobates? |
A26967 | For him that did so much for me? |
A26967 | For what shall it profit you to win the world, and lose your soul? |
A26967 | For who are his enemies, but the Enemies of Holiness, of his Laws, of our Obedience, of his Image, and of his Saints? |
A26967 | Hast thou lost thy first desires and love? |
A26967 | Hast thou no where to walk or play thee, but at the brink of Hell? |
A26967 | Hath he made you Governours, and put the sword of Justice into your hands? |
A26967 | Hath prayer no other use but to move God? |
A26967 | Have I convinced you now, that God and your salvation are to be sought with all your might? |
A26967 | Have I nothing else to do with my time& labour, but plead cause of my own which God will so speedily and effectually plead? |
A26967 | Have you ignorant or ungodly neighbors, whose misery calls for your compassion, and relief? |
A26967 | Himself or you? |
A26967 | How basely should they esteem those transitory things, that are the food and felicity of the sensual world? |
A26967 | How can you make shift to Preach an hour, and not acquaint men with the Duty and Necessity of seeking God with all their Might? |
A26967 | How canst thou choose but perceive that the scope of the word of God is contrary to the bent of thy affections and suggestions? |
A26967 | How do I complain when affliction is up- me? |
A26967 | How durst you scorn the image of your Maker? |
A26967 | How easi ● is it to put a name of ignominy upon every person, and every duty? |
A26967 | How easie, but how unreasonable, and yet how unresistible is all this? |
A26967 | How fain would Satan find thee thus at death? |
A26967 | How fain would he have leave to blow out thy candle, before thou hast entred in ● ● the way of life? |
A26967 | How happy a bargain would they think that they had made, if at the dearest rates they could redeem it? |
A26967 | How importunately would they cry to God,[ O send us once again unto the earth? |
A26967 | How many a Sermon, or Prayer, or reproof, is made the matter of derision, and contempt, for some imprudent passages or deportment? |
A26967 | How patiently should they undergo contempt and scorn, and whatsoever man can inflict upon them? |
A26967 | How seriously should they speak of, and how industriously should they seek, such sure, such near, such endless joyes? |
A26967 | How studiously should they devote and refer all their time, and strength, and wealth, and interest, to this their glorious blessed end? |
A26967 | I know these tearms seem hard to flesh and blood( and should Heaven be the Crown and reward to them, that have undergone no tryal for it?) |
A26967 | I suppose this were true as you imagine, what''s this to you that serve God no way at all with any serious diligence? |
A26967 | IN the Preface: the Question resolved, Whether a Man may be saved in any Religion, that is serious in practising it? |
A26967 | If not, why hast thou not yet done with thy beloved sins? |
A26967 | If others do seem to love God when they do not, will you therefore not so much as seem to do it? |
A26967 | If the Righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? |
A26967 | If they could, what endeavours would there be used, when extremity hath taught them to value what they now despise? |
A26967 | If this kind of preaching or writing offend, could not I have avoided it? |
A26967 | If we be of many Religions, is not Popery then a humane Religion? |
A26967 | Is any thing more plainly commanded in Gods Word then praying with frequency, fervency, and importunity? |
A26967 | Is it Christ, or Satan? |
A26967 | Is it not a Holy Law and Gospel which you publish? |
A26967 | Is it not better mend my pace, and work on easier tearms? |
A26967 | Is it reason that we should do less for God& our salvation, then they do for sinful pleasure to damnation? |
A26967 | Is not Satan strong enough of himself? |
A26967 | Is not all this the express Command of God, and necessary to salvation? |
A26967 | Is not the corrupted heart of lapsed man averse enough to the matters of salvation, but you must make them worse? |
A26967 | Is not your strict observation of the Lords Day a Controversie? |
A26967 | Is there any thing controvertible in this? |
A26967 | Is there any thing controvertible, or which any Christian can speak against, in any of this? |
A26967 | Is there any thing that Protestants are not agreed of? |
A26967 | Is this believed and considered by the sleepy world? |
A26967 | Is this my love and compassion to my neighbour, my servant, freind or child? |
A26967 | Knowest thou the difference between God and man? |
A26967 | Might I nearly follow Christ in holiness, why should I grudge to bear his Cross, and to be used as he was used? |
A26967 | Must it not be tamed and mortified, or thy soul condemned? |
A26967 | Must not the flesh be crucified with its affections and lusts? |
A26967 | Must they think ill of food, and physick, and exercise, because they are infirm? |
A26967 | Nay how then shall he be God? |
A26967 | Nay, what can more aggravate them, then that they should be found in the professors of godliness? |
A26967 | Not worth so much as they do themselves for their filthy sins and perishing flesh? |
A26967 | Once more let us see the face of Mercy, and hear the tenders of Christ& of Salvation? |
A26967 | Or that your flesh was once provided with variety of delights, when it s turned to rottenness, and must be raised to torments? |
A26967 | Or to have been honoured and obeyed on earth, when you are under the wrath of God in Hell? |
A26967 | Quid interest quo quisque, vitio fiat imprudens? |
A26967 | See what a stir the proud ambitious person makes for less then nothing? |
A26967 | See whether you bring your opposition to a holy life; And dare not you stand to this? |
A26967 | Shall Christianity and Holiness be secretly reproached, because all Christians have some fault to be accused of? |
A26967 | Shall Health and Life be made a scorn, because there are few but have some distemper or disease? |
A26967 | Shall not the judge of all the world do righteously? |
A26967 | Shall they be able to calumniate under the threatnings of the Revenge of Heaven? |
A26967 | Should not the best things be best loved? |
A26967 | Sirs, will you say that any of this is our singular opinion, or matter of controversie& doubt? |
A26967 | That see how fast my Time makes haste, and know I must be quickly gone? |
A26967 | The Mariners could say to Jonah in their danger[ What meanest thou, O sleeper? |
A26967 | The Posts went from City to City — And what did the people think ye? |
A26967 | The Subject must obey; should not such worms as we, obey the infinite God that made us? |
A26967 | This is it that we intreat of you:& is there any matter of controversie in all this? |
A26967 | This is the business that I am sent to call you to; what say you? |
A26967 | This is the manner of Gods service that I perswade you to, and to no other: And is there any thing of controversie in this? |
A26967 | This is the service of God that we call you to: And can you say that there is any thing controvertible in all this? |
A26967 | This is the work that we call you to: And is there any thing that a christian can make a controversie of in all this? |
A26967 | This is your work: And is there any thing of faction, Schism or controversie in this? |
A26967 | Thou that never fearest too much money, nor too much honour, nor too much health, art thou afraid of too much spiritual health and holiness? |
A26967 | Till then l ● t them make merry in their deceits: who would envy the drunkard the pleasure of an hours swinish sick delight? |
A26967 | To call men factious, if they will not be of their faction? |
A26967 | To charge any man with Hypocrisie or Pride? |
A26967 | To lay snares for mens Consciences, and then accuse them for falling into those snares? |
A26967 | To make new Articles of faith, till they have transcended the capa ● ity of Divine and Rational belief, and then condemn us for not believing them? |
A26967 | To take the wisest man for self- conceited, because he is not of the accusers mind? |
A26967 | Unless you dare imagine that God hath erred, and the Rule it self is over- strict, and the Law is unrighteous: But then how shall God judge the world? |
A26967 | Was it for nothing that our Lord would not answer for himself when he was accused before Pilate? |
A26967 | Were not a beast less miserable, if this were all? |
A26967 | What Heathen that believeth that there is a God, doth not believe that Prayer to him is a necessary part of his worship? |
A26967 | What Might have we? |
A26967 | What a comfort it will be at death and judgement, to be able to say, I did my best, or loytered not away the time I had? |
A26967 | What can you find to Preach from the Word of God, that tendeth not to this holy diligence which you are against? |
A26967 | What have you to say now against this reverent manner of behaviour? |
A26967 | What reward had he among them? |
A26967 | What then will be the doom of the opposers? |
A26967 | What will ye now do? |
A26967 | What, thou that haste none( which should make thee tremble) art thou afraid of having too much? |
A26967 | When he puts me purposely on the trial, what I can do for his sake and service, Can I do no more? |
A26967 | When it is thy work to read the Scriptures, and meditate on them, dost thou not read thy doom, and meditate terrour? |
A26967 | When you come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand to tread my Courts? |
A26967 | Who deserveth all? |
A26967 | Who gave me all? |
A26967 | Who is the man, and what is his name, that dare contradict them, and can make it good? |
A26967 | Who seeth me in my duties and my sins? |
A26967 | Who should confound the d ● ● ders of a holy life but you? |
A26967 | Why do not you commend those that are not liable to your accusations, and encourage them in holiness, and draw others to imitate them? |
A26967 | Why hast thou not yet begun to live? |
A26967 | Why man, dost thou know what Holiness is? |
A26967 | Why sittest thou still, while thy soul is un- renewed? |
A26967 | Why standest thou idle, when thou art born for work, and all thy faculties are given thee for work, and thou art redeemed for work? |
A26967 | Will God be deceived by such siilly reasonings as these? |
A26967 | Will he renew thy age, and make the young again, and call back the hours that thou prodigally wastedst on thy lusts and idleness? |
A26967 | Will it not be time enough to be justified at the Bar and day of God? |
A26967 | Will you also in the Manner of your obedience, but go so far as all Christians are agreed in? |
A26967 | Wilt thou be dull and sensless on such an errand to the Living God? |
A26967 | Wilt thou do in the day- light, as they do in the dark? |
A26967 | Wilt thou hear and be converted in the Grave and Hell? |
A26967 | Wilt thou live awake, as they that are asleep? |
A26967 | Would I have God to come with the spur and rod? |
A26967 | Would you be soldiers on condition you may not fight; or fight, and yet have no opposition? |
A26967 | You are blind if you see not this: you are dead if you feel it not: what then will you do? |
A26967 | You are not afraid lest any man should pull down the Sun, or dry up the Sea, or overturn the Earth: And are you afraid that Man should conquer God? |
A26967 | You can not mock them out of their Pride and Covetuousness: And shall they mock thee out of thy Religion, and thy hopes of Heaven? |
A26967 | You say it is turbulent Pre ● isians that you strike, but what if Christ find but one of the least of his Brethren bleeding by it? |
A26967 | Your trust is great,& so is your advantage to do good; And how great will be your account,& how dreadful, if you be unfaithful? |
A26967 | [ And shall I not be taken for a mad man, if I should busie my self about such things that am now besieged? |
A26967 | [ But to the wicked saith God, What hast thou to do to declare my Statutes? |
A26967 | [ If a man die, shall he live( here) again? |
A26967 | [ To what purpose is the multitude of your Sacrifices unto me? |
A26967 | and Sectaries, if they will not unreasonably subject their Souls to them, and joyn with an imperious Sect, against the Catholick Vnity and Simplicity? |
A26967 | and all thy preparation for death and judgement is yet to make? |
A26967 | and go no faster, that have slept till the evening of my daies, when Diligence must be the discovery of my Repentance? |
A26967 | and in the awaking of your Will and Reason into act, then in the addition of meer abilities? |
A26967 | and is there any thing of doubt or controversie in all this? |
A26967 | and obey, and watch, and work no more? |
A26967 | and so much of the madness of spending words and time on trifles? |
A26967 | and that he that made his holy Law, is against the most exact obeying of it? |
A26967 | and that therefore you befool your selves for your sins& your neglects,& wonder that you had no more use of your understandings? |
A26967 | and the King of Saints is an adversary to sanctity? |
A26967 | and the greatest matters have our greatest care? |
A26967 | and what it is to have access to God? |
A26967 | and what should become of thee, if this were the day or hour of thy change? |
A26967 | and whether you will set your selves to do the work that you are Created and Redeemed for? |
A26967 | and will it pay you for your cost and labour? |
A26967 | and yet what is it good for? |
A26967 | but thou must be so cruel as to make others miserable also? |
A26967 | dare you go to men as from the Lord,& say[ You are too careful& diligent in his service? |
A26967 | decayed in grace? |
A26967 | for the peace and welfare of the Nation and our prosperity? |
A26967 | for the publick good? |
A26967 | if you will laugh at Hell till you are in it, must we do so too? |
A26967 | in praying for deliverance? |
A26967 | in suppressing sin? |
A26967 | is it not a Holy God that you are engaged to serve? |
A26967 | mnst we all be unbelievers with you? |
A26967 | or in promoting Works of publick benefit? |
A26967 | or is it a desirable work? |
A26967 | or of Christ, that had a Judas? |
A26967 | or of Noah, that had a Cham? |
A26967 | or that he will return the dead- born or mis- shapen Infant into the womb, that it may be better formed or quickned? |
A26967 | or that thou shouldest take my Covenant in thy mouth, seeing thou hatest instruction, and castest my words behind thee?] |
A26967 | or wilt thou be saved without holiness? |
A26967 | or with believers whether they should consider and lay to heart the weight& use of the things which they believe? |
A26967 | quid agam? |
A26967 | shall Freemen live as Satans slaves? |
A26967 | shall I now by trifling prepare such griping and tormenting thoughts, for my awakened conscience? |
A26967 | shall the living lie as still& useless as the dead? |
A26967 | that know it must be now or never: and that this is all the time I shall have, on which an endless life dependeth? |
A26967 | that lived so exactly; obeyed so perfectly; walked so inoffensively and meekly; despising all the baits, and honours, and riches of the World? |
A26967 | that plowing and sowing are not more necessary to your harvest, then the work of holiness, in this day of grace, is necessary to your salvation? |
A26967 | what a stir the covetous and the voluptuous make for a sweetned draught of mortal poyson? |
A26967 | what is more acute then the peal of corn? |
A26967 | what needs there so much ado for your salvation? |
A26967 | what powerful commands, what promises, what threatnings, what holy examples of exceeding diligence of Christ and his Apostles? |
A26967 | what quickning words shalt thou find in Scripture, if thou wilt but bring thy heart thither as one that is willing to be quickened? |
A26967 | what shall I do? |
A26967 | what shall be thy desire, if thou loath and fly from thy felicity? |
A26967 | what''s that to the message which we come about to thee, what is that to the business that we are preaching of? |
A26967 | when Heaven or Hell depend much on it? |
A26967 | when they are undone for ever if they be not speedily delivered? |
A26967 | whether you are ready to leave this world, and enter upon another? |
A26967 | whether you are truly sanctified? |
A26967 | whether you shall be saved when you die? |
A26967 | whether your sins be pardoned? |
A26967 | will God command the Sun to stand still, while thou rebellest or forgettest thy work and him? |
A26967 | will families be well ordered, and Church, or City, or Country well governed? |
A26967 | will not the comon distaste of Godliness in the world, sufficiently prejudice and avert them without thy helps? |
A26967 | will the careless sinners that I am bound to help, be converted and saved, with sitting still, and with some heartless cold endeavours? |
A26967 | will you do it, and do it seriously without delay? |
A26967 | wilt thou be glutting thee with the bait? |
A26967 | wilt thou be tasting of the poysoned cup? |
A26967 | — The Pharisees? |
A26987 | & fain get higher? |
A26987 | 1. WHO was it that I left behind, When I went last from home? |
A26987 | A clearer Light, which may God''s mind reveal? |
A26987 | A heart more fit to Meditate and Pray? |
A26987 | A stronger Faith to live on things above, Where endless Praise shall be the breath of Love? |
A26987 | After all this, canst thou my love suspect? |
A26987 | All this is just, Lord, I confess; I staid too long ere I came in: And how should healing grace do less, When I brought with me so much sin? |
A26987 | Am I not wise enough to use the Rod? |
A26987 | Am I the Jonas? |
A26987 | Am I the first that go this way? |
A26987 | And God deposed from his Throne, And humane generation cease? |
A26987 | And Justice should my Soul to torments fetch? |
A26987 | And O how easily could I confute All that against a holy life dispute? |
A26987 | And all my bones and heart in pieces shake? |
A26987 | And all my comforts peevishly reject? |
A26987 | And all these accusations undergo? |
A26987 | And call''d a precise fool or Puritane? |
A26987 | And can the Lord that is most just and wise, Found all man''s duty in deceit and lies? |
A26987 | And caus''d my only Son for thee to die? |
A26987 | And charge upon me all that I have done? |
A26987 | And cleave to Christ, whatever flesh could say? |
A26987 | And done thy Blood and Spirit so much wrong? |
A26987 | And doth not Reason bid thee then forecast, And value the least hope of endless Joyes, Before known vanities, and dying toyes? |
A26987 | And for a little purchas''d Golden Mines? |
A26987 | And hast thou no Desire or Will to this? |
A26987 | And hath not God more right to me? |
A26987 | And have I sense only to feel my woe? |
A26987 | And have no drink to quench my thirst but tears? |
A26987 | And have so often done amiss, And did my Covenants break? |
A26987 | And his dear mercy wrong? |
A26987 | And in delight and endless pleasure dwell? |
A26987 | And is it any loss To follow with my Cross, Till I attain the Crown? |
A26987 | And is that lost that''s sent to Heav''n before? |
A26987 | And is that sav''d that''s spent upon thy lust Or which must be a prey to thieves or rust? |
A26987 | And judged as an evil doer, And as a breaker of their Laws? |
A26987 | And keep my sorrows long? |
A26987 | And knew not how to scape the flames of Hell? |
A26987 | And love him perfectly world without end, More deerly than thou lov''st thy deerest friend? |
A26987 | And made thee long a higher state to reach? |
A26987 | And made thee long to know and love thy God? |
A26987 | And make the Pulpit but a Parrot''s Cage? |
A26987 | And make thee just and lovely, and approve thee? |
A26987 | And must the Love declar''d at such a rate, So vail''d by the suspicion of Hate? |
A26987 | And now what horrid darkness on my mind, Never before lamented did I find? |
A26987 | And numbreth with the Blest? |
A26987 | And overwhelm''d with doubts and horrid fears? |
A26987 | And reason only misery to know? |
A26987 | And sav''d thee from the Plagues thy Conscience fear''d? |
A26987 | And shall I know no breath but sighs and groans? |
A26987 | And shew thee that it''s better to be holy? |
A26987 | And strange to Angels, who attend On Man, and in his good delight; And, though unseen, do us defend; Ministring for us day and night? |
A26987 | And sweetest comforts dwell with broken bones? |
A26987 | And tell thee what it is that thou must mend? |
A26987 | And then, what duty thou hadst made my part? |
A26987 | And things that are for common wits too high? |
A26987 | And thou hast yet no pardon of thy sin? |
A26987 | And thus disquieted with fears? |
A26987 | And under Laws for every bit and cup? |
A26987 | And under pining sickness be content? |
A26987 | And use my creature as to me seems best? |
A26987 | And walk exactly, and God''s Laws obey? |
A26987 | And wean''d thee from thy former vanities? |
A26987 | And what are all their Orders and their Laws? |
A26987 | And what is Food and Physick for but Health? |
A26987 | And what though Death be painful? |
A26987 | And when I set up nothing else above Thee? |
A26987 | And while he thus subscribeth to thy Will, Knowingly crosseth it, and sinneth still? |
A26987 | And who can Number Stars above; When Saints so fast to Heav''n remove? |
A26987 | And why should he fear ill, Whom Love it self doth kill? |
A26987 | And wilt thou keep it? |
A26987 | And wilt thou now call up what''s past and gone? |
A26987 | And wilt thou pardon all the crimson sin, Of which my wilful heart hath guilty been? |
A26987 | And wilt thou suffer sinful unbelief, To banish Joy, and keep out all Relief? |
A26987 | And wilt thou the consuming fire defie? |
A26987 | And wouldst thou have thy riches in thy way, Where thou art passing on and canst not stay? |
A26987 | And yet must I be taken for thy Foe? |
A26987 | Are groans the only musick for thine ears? |
A26987 | Are these thy Candles? |
A26987 | Art thou not for all this to me a debter? |
A26987 | Art thou not in thy Saviour''s hand? |
A26987 | Art thou not passing to thy Crown, Through storms of pain, and floods of tears? |
A26987 | Art thou not sure to let go what thou hast? |
A26987 | Art thou not willing? |
A26987 | As if my heart were made of flint or steel? |
A26987 | As if this world of sin and strife, Were for my Soul a better place? |
A26987 | Beauty surpasseth all deceitful paints: What''s empty mirth to the delights of Saints? |
A26987 | Bless me thought I, what will this coxcomb do?" |
A26987 | But O how doleful is it to persist? |
A26987 | But dost thou not desire that God would love thee? |
A26987 | But doth not Love appear in thy Desire? |
A26987 | But how can I find favour in thy sight, That have sinn''d wilfully even in the Light? |
A26987 | But how unkindly was he there abus''d? |
A26987 | But since that time how am I tost? |
A26987 | But where''s that mirth when sorrows overtake thee? |
A26987 | But wilt thou take this, Lord, for true Consent, From a hard heart that can no more relent? |
A26987 | But, Whether after Flesh or Spirit you live? |
A26987 | Can I for ever be content Without true Happiness and Rest? |
A26987 | Can I mix night and day? |
A26987 | Can I rejoyce and bleed? |
A26987 | Can I rejoyce, when as thine angry Dart, Is piercing night and day my wounded heart? |
A26987 | Can I rejoyce, when thou dost Joy deny? |
A26987 | Can the same voice now pass so sad a doom, That from my sin so lately call''d me home? |
A26987 | Canst thou suspect I am against thy good, When I have prov''d my Love by streams of blood? |
A26987 | Come Lord, when Grace hath made me meet, Thy blessed Face to see: For if thy work on Earth be sweet, What will thy Glory be? |
A26987 | Conversing here among the Dead, And taken up with Dreams and Toyes? |
A26987 | Could''st thou expect to see no Seas? |
A26987 | Dar''st thou deny my Love and Grace, as none, Because that all the work is not yet done? |
A26987 | Destroy the Earth? |
A26987 | Disturbs our Peace, and feeds the gnawing Worm Turns our Tranquility into a storm? |
A26987 | Do I not Love Thee, when I Love to Love Thee? |
A26987 | Dost thou complain for grace,& wouldst not have it? |
A26987 | Dost thou consider what thy passion saith? |
A26987 | Dost thou delight to feel thy hurt and smart? |
A26987 | Dost thou delight to see me drencht in tears? |
A26987 | Dost thou not feel my Spirit still contend? |
A26987 | Dost thou remember whom thou speakest to? |
A26987 | Dost thou repent? |
A26987 | Doth God our ease and pleasure to us grudge? |
A26987 | Dwelling near Hell to day,& Heaven to morrow? |
A26987 | Enlarge my heart in thy Commands: Could I but love thee as I wish, How light would be all other bands? |
A26987 | Fool, as I was, I took its word, And chose what Flesh did recommend: How could I more have wrong''d my Lord? |
A26987 | For what man''s pow''rs were made, what is their use ▪ To what all means and mercies do conduce? |
A26987 | From House, and Goods, and dearest Friends? |
A26987 | From one that loveth thee no more than I? |
A26987 | God gave me Life: and shall I choose to die Before my time? |
A26987 | Hadst thou not rather have thy friends and store, Where thou maist dwell for ever, in the light Of that long glorious day that fears no night? |
A26987 | Hast thou found sweeter pleasures than Gods Love Is a fools laughter like the Joyes above? |
A26987 | Hast thou sinn''d more than raging bloody Soul? |
A26987 | Hast thou such sins as I can not forgive? |
A26987 | Have I long sought in pain, And would I not obtain, Joyful Eternity? |
A26987 | Have I no passions left but griefs and fears? |
A26987 | Have I not call''d thee from a life of sin, When thousands round about thee live therein? |
A26987 | Have I not lov''d thee from Eternity? |
A26987 | Have I not told thee I will pardon all? |
A26987 | Here are the sacred words: Here''s David''s Lyre: But where''s the quickening coelestial fire? |
A26987 | His tender Love and healing Grace refus''d? |
A26987 | How I and all should value precious Time? |
A26987 | How can that Saviour be against my good, That dy''d in love, and washt me by his blood? |
A26987 | How can that gracious Lord my woe desire? |
A26987 | How canst thou conquer Christ, And make his Promise void? |
A26987 | How cheaply kept I many Rare Divines? |
A26987 | How hath my Will deserved thy suspicion, When I have made Acceptance the condition? |
A26987 | How know I but the endless flames of Hell, May be the place where next my Soul shall dwell? |
A26987 | How many Saints are gone before? |
A26987 | How many enter every day Into thy Kingdom by this door? |
A26987 | How many guiltless creatures die, To be a feast or food for me? |
A26987 | How meet a course did thy wise Mercy take? |
A26987 | How much his creatures to their Maker owe? |
A26987 | How much is sinful Flesh my Foe, That doth my soul pervert, To linger here in sin and woe, And steals from God my heart? |
A26987 | How oft have I undrest me, And laid my Garments by, And dyed till the next day? |
A26987 | How precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | How shall I pay his Rent? |
A26987 | How shall I see my Landlord''s face? |
A26987 | How should we prize and seek the Joyes above? |
A26987 | How wise thy Methods to the Life above? |
A26987 | How? |
A26987 | I seek; I knock; thou find''st I have not done: Yet dost thou say, thy Day of Grace is gone? |
A26987 | I sinn''d and laugh''d; I lightly pass''d it over: Should God do so, and not his wrath discover? |
A26987 | If I the face of God must never see? |
A26987 | If a Worm''s fury seemeth hard to bear, Who dare before an angry God appear? |
A26987 | If life lay on it, wouldst thou turn again, For the winds blowing or a little rain? |
A26987 | If thou art weak, look upto Christ thy strength: He''l perfect what he hath begun at length: Is not his grace sufficient for thee still? |
A26987 | If thou wouldst grant the very thing I crave, And give me leave to chuse what I would have; Should it be lusts, or Sports, or Fleshly pleasure? |
A26987 | Is Earth become so excellent, That I should take it for my best? |
A26987 | Is Satan turn''d thy friend? |
A26987 | Is it not thine more in thy Fathers hand, Then when it is laid out at sins command? |
A26987 | Is it thy pleasure to behold my grief? |
A26987 | Is not Heav''n worth the bearing of a flout? |
A26987 | Is not mirth Fitter to warm a cold heart here on earth? |
A26987 | Is not that better which turns grief to peace, Than that which doth thy misery encrease? |
A26987 | Is there no spark of Love in this Desire? |
A26987 | Is this the language of a stable Faith? |
A26987 | Is this thy Patience, and thy Self- denyal? |
A26987 | Is this thy greatest love to thy dear Lord? |
A26987 | It looks and longs by distance pain''d: When wilt thou hear and send relief? |
A26987 | It''s I that sinn''d: these Sheep what have they done? |
A26987 | Knew all the Houses of the starry Sky? |
A26987 | Know''st thou not that which God himself hath spoken? |
A26987 | Look up and see, now VINES is gone; Are not the Stars the more by One? |
A26987 | Love still went on, and lined out my way, Hedging me in, lest I should go astray: Yet after this how oft did I transgress? |
A26987 | May I not there converse with thee? |
A26987 | May I not with my own do what I list? |
A26987 | More life and feeling? |
A26987 | Must I be daily on the rack of sears? |
A26987 | Must I be driven from my Books? |
A26987 | Must I be made the foot- ball of disdain? |
A26987 | Must I be pain''d and wronged, and not feel? |
A26987 | Must I be priviledg''d alone? |
A26987 | Must I before the Ruling Power, Be call''d with shame to plead my Cause? |
A26987 | Must I feel Sicknesses and smart, And spend my daies and nights in pain? |
A26987 | Must I feel nothing but thy smarting Rod? |
A26987 | Must I forsake the Soil and Air, Where first I drew my vital breath? |
A26987 | Must Lies and slanders me defame? |
A26987 | Must proud men''s malice blot my Name, With Epithets that are their own? |
A26987 | Nor feel no tossing wind or wave? |
A26987 | O could I mount thus to the Flames above? |
A26987 | O how should Preachers Men''s Repenting crave, Who see how near the Church is to the Grave? |
A26987 | Often and carefully I searcht my heart, Whether in Christ by Faith I had a part? |
A26987 | Or any wants which I can not relieve? |
A26987 | Or can I think of finding here That which my Soul so long hath sought? |
A26987 | Or can that hand that snatcht me from the flame, Tear me, and cast me back into the same? |
A26987 | Or doth Religion make a man a drudge? |
A26987 | Or dreaming Lovers Fancies could rehearse, In the most lofty and adorned verse? |
A26987 | Or ease and pleasant dwellings crave, Forgetting what thy Saints endure? |
A26987 | Or heat and cold? |
A26987 | Or knew the course and order of the sphears? |
A26987 | Or more his Love and Name offend? |
A26987 | Or no man Die until he please? |
A26987 | Or than Manasseh''s long and matchless flood Of Witchcraft, Rage, Idolatry and Blood? |
A26987 | Or the Creator should take down the Sun? |
A26987 | Or twist the highest joy with deepest sorrow? |
A26987 | Or were best skill''d in numbering past years? |
A26987 | Or what if I could fool away my time, In smooth and well composed idle Rhyme? |
A26987 | Our filial Evidences blasts and tears? |
A26987 | Reason''s the Rider; Sense is but the Horse: Which then is fittest to direct thy course? |
A26987 | Rejoyce and die? |
A26987 | Satan would fain at once thy Soul devour: What dangers dost thou walk in every hour? |
A26987 | Shall I be loth to see thy face? |
A26987 | Shall I be strange unto my Head? |
A26987 | Shall I draw back and fear the End Of all my Sorrows, Tears and Pain? |
A26987 | Shall grief and sickness leave but skin and bones? |
A26987 | Shall not thy Promises be all made good? |
A26987 | Should God be sleighted by a stubborn Heart, And not rebuke its folly by its smart? |
A26987 | Should I refuse those Joyes through fear, Which bounteous Love so dearly bought? |
A26987 | Sould it be Lordly Rule, or Earthly Treasure? |
A26987 | That I''le do this? |
A26987 | That Innocence may not be known? |
A26987 | That am so false and weak? |
A26987 | That canst not for his sake bear a foul word? |
A26987 | That did so much to save me from the fire? |
A26987 | That do the creatures wrath alone sustain? |
A26987 | That is constrained by Necessity? |
A26987 | That lately gav''st me a new life and breath? |
A26987 | That now I all disorder''d find, When to my self I come? |
A26987 | That shew''d me once thy reconciled face? |
A26987 | That stops not, either when I wake or dream? |
A26987 | The Heavenly Hosts world without end Shall be my company above: And thou my Best and Surest Friend: Who shall divide me from thy Love? |
A26987 | The Question is not, Whether Flesh do strive? |
A26987 | The World of Knowledge, Love and Joyes? |
A26987 | The stormy Rain an entrance hath, Through the uncovered top: How should I rest when showers of wrath Upon my conscience drop? |
A26987 | The voice with which thy Call thou didst begin, Was to convince me, and reprove my sin: I first enquired of thee, who thou art? |
A26987 | These are the drops; what are the streams above? |
A26987 | These are the seeds: what are the fruits above? |
A26987 | Think''st thou to find thy Love, before by Faith Thou''lt come to Me? |
A26987 | To heal thy Soul, and keep thee from Damnation? |
A26987 | To whom else should my sinful Soul have gone? |
A26987 | Unveiled fully to thy Saints above? |
A26987 | WHat mean impatient men to call it Pain? |
A26987 | Welcome friendly Death; What canst thou do to me,''That I have cause to fear? |
A26987 | What I? |
A26987 | What Statues, or what Hypocrites are they, Who between sleep and wake do Preach& Pray? |
A26987 | What can friends do, but make my grief their own? |
A26987 | What do men trade for but their lawful wealth? |
A26987 | What gain or pleasure would my knowledge be? |
A26987 | What good will sorrow do us? |
A26987 | What have I said? |
A26987 | What if I knew all these never so well? |
A26987 | What if I knew whether the Earth or Sun So swift and unperceiv''d a course doth run? |
A26987 | What if I prove an unconverted Wretch? |
A26987 | What if in Prison I must dwell? |
A26987 | What is Heaven to us if there be no Love and Joy? |
A26987 | What is each creatures specifying cause? |
A26987 | What is man''s business while he''s here below? |
A26987 | What is true Wit? |
A26987 | What poor, low, toyish work make frothy wits? |
A26987 | What though to Thee the creature nothing add? |
A26987 | What will it be to love Thee face to face, When thou appear''st so lovely in this Glass? |
A26987 | What''s Grace for, but to bring thee to Salvation? |
A26987 | What''s the Sun above? |
A26987 | When I have thus abus''d his grace; And have his Treasure spent? |
A26987 | When a poor Soul doth unto Thee aspire? |
A26987 | When all the while thou art a Son of Wrath, Who to Eternal Life no title hath? |
A26987 | When didst thou seek aright, and didst not find? |
A26987 | When in thy flow''ring Studies thou may''st dye, And be undone to all Eternity? |
A26987 | When prov''d I false unto thee? |
A26987 | When sport, and wine, and beauty do invite, Who is it whom such baits will not incite? |
A26987 | When thou canst with a word send full relief? |
A26987 | When thou wast ignorant, who did thee teach? |
A26987 | Whence 〈 ◊ 〉 I this complaining language hear, If neither want nor worth of grace appear? |
A26987 | Where are thy tender bowels? |
A26987 | Where is that Faith, and Hope, and Love, By which thou markest all thy Saints? |
A26987 | Where is the Spring that feeds this bitter stream? |
A26987 | Where should Jehovah''s battering Cannons play, But at the Fortress where his Enemy lay? |
A26987 | Where should the tent be put, but in the wound? |
A26987 | Where thou shalt be replenished with joy, And no disturbance shall thy Soul annoy? |
A26987 | Whether it''s best to live by Faith or Sight? |
A26987 | Whether the Saint or Brute be in the right? |
A26987 | Which brings us unto the Eternal Store, Of Joy and Glory in God''s shining face? |
A26987 | Which gently leads us to the Joyes above? |
A26987 | Which looks on such with pity from above? |
A26987 | While my unholy Soul, in fleshly thrall, Should be lamenting its own Funeral? |
A26987 | While wasting flesh doth stand at the pits brink? |
A26987 | Who can endure to be thus mewed up? |
A26987 | Who can love baseness, poverty and want? |
A26987 | Who dare his Soul for gain or pleasure sell, That lives as in the sight of Heav''n and Hell? |
A26987 | Who did convince thee of the worldlings folly? |
A26987 | Who love their Lives as well as I? |
A26987 | Who made thee love and chuse the scorned way? |
A26987 | Who made thee pray? |
A26987 | Who made thy sinful heart long to be better? |
A26987 | Who sav''d thee from the world''s deceits and lies? |
A26987 | Who taught thee to bewail thy heavy load? |
A26987 | Who would be playing at a childish game, While his own House is in a burning flame? |
A26987 | Who wrought that grace? |
A26987 | Who''s fittest to be Ruler? |
A26987 | Whose Wisdom''s best? |
A26987 | Why art thou, fainting Soul, cast down? |
A26987 | Why should I think of what will be to morrow? |
A26987 | Why should not Death then be a straiter Door, Than either that of Nature or of Grace? |
A26987 | Why should not fruit when it is mellow fall? |
A26987 | Why then, where is my Saviour''where''s his blood? |
A26987 | Why was I made man, but for man''s Salvation? |
A26987 | Why would we linger here when God doth call? |
A26987 | Will Friends turn Foes? |
A26987 | Will it then hold when Life and God forsake thee? |
A26987 | Will joyes agree with heavy sighs and groans? |
A26987 | Will not thy sweet prove bitter in the end? |
A26987 | Will these deriders stand to what they say, And own their words at the great dreadful day? |
A26987 | Wilt thou accept so vile a wretch as I? |
A26987 | Wilt thou be healed? |
A26987 | Wilt thou its Nature and its Use destroy, And then conceit thou dost it not enjoy? |
A26987 | Wilt thou not bear for him a scorners breath, That underwent for thee a cursed death? |
A26987 | Wilt thou not shortly sing another Song? |
A26987 | Wilt thou now frown me down to fears& death? |
A26987 | Wilt thou prefer thy self before thy God? |
A26987 | Wilt thou stand by and see my Soul thus sink? |
A26987 | Wilt thou tell Death and God, thou wilt not die? |
A26987 | Wilt thou thus shrink& shake in time of tryal? |
A26987 | Without which all had been in vain? |
A26987 | Woman, why weepest thou? |
A26987 | Would I in all my Journey have Still the same Inn and Furniture? |
A26987 | Would I long bear my heavy load? |
A26987 | Would I long sin against my God? |
A26987 | Would not an Antidote preserve thy heart? |
A26987 | Would not the worst of men be sav''d from Hell? |
A26987 | Would''st thou not Love God more? |
A26987 | Would''st thou not live with God in endless bliss? |
A26987 | Would''st thou not see his face in Glorious Light, And there sing Allelujah''s in his sight? |
A26987 | Wouldst thou not have a heart that can Repent, And hate sin more, and tenderly relent? |
A26987 | and I may not hate another? |
A26987 | and hear what Mercy saith? |
A26987 | and who thy prayer heard? |
A26987 | and whose Fidelity? |
A26987 | brutish flesh how long? |
A26987 | dost thou mean To cast me out into the deep? |
A26987 | greater heat of Zeal? |
A26987 | how much greater is my woe, That must God''s sharp displeasure undergo? |
A26987 | how precious is they Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | how precious is thy Love? |
A26987 | must I hate my self? |
A26987 | my God is Wise and Just; Hast thou not sinned? |
A26987 | or Rivers cease to run? |
A26987 | or can God changed be? |
A26987 | or death and life? |
A26987 | or pine in miserie? |
A26987 | or quietness and strife? |
A26987 | or unkind? |
A26987 | shall not my Heart be thine? |
A26987 | that have provoked thee so long? |
A26987 | thou or I? |
A26987 | thought I, where is these men''s brains and sense, Who care no more whither they go from hence? |
A26987 | to consider how The Earth is fixed, and the Plants do grow? |
A26987 | what Learning''s most sublime? |
A26987 | when as my brot her Must love me? |
A26987 | where is thy Victory? |
A26987 | where is thy poisonous sting? |
A26987 | where''s that grace? |
A26987 | whose should the honour be? |
A26987 | why dost thou make all this ado? |
A26987 | why dost thou me forsake? |
A26987 | why then dost thou crave it? |
A26859 | 13. they are Commanded to be Followers of their Guides? |
A26859 | 2,& 3. to reform themselves, if they had not Power to do it? |
A26859 | 20. by reason of the number of them? |
A26859 | 60 But wherein lay the different Cases? |
A26859 | All Christian Churches are tied by the common Divine Rule; and is not consent to that enough to make a Church? |
A26859 | All men are heterodox in some degree? |
A26859 | All the doubt is, what is meant by the same Canon or Rule? |
A26859 | And are not the Church of England Protestants? |
A26859 | And are they not several Families still? |
A26859 | And are you sure that none are understanding that be not as partially Censorious as you? |
A26859 | And do you think that the Greek Churches have not Power to govern and reform themselves, though they be not a National Church? |
A26859 | And doth your rule do otherwise? |
A26859 | And had not those as good right that were not under the Roman Empire? |
A26859 | And how little hold is there of them; if so many of the best of them will so easily change with the times? |
A26859 | And if all be resolved into the implicite belief of the Bishops, why not of the civil Rulers as well? |
A26859 | And is all necessary which is lawful? |
A26859 | And is it his Civil Laws for Church- Government that you mean, or the Clergies Canons, or God''s Laws? |
A26859 | And is it not a whole Church, if it be without a Form, which not God but Man is the Author of? |
A26859 | And is not Printing a far more Publick declaration, than speaking it in one Room? |
A26859 | And is not Union possible with such as Cyprian and the Carthage Bishops? |
A26859 | And is not this a worse usurpation than to make new Ceremonies? |
A26859 | And is the Controversy de nomine, Whether they might be called the Lydian Church, when we expected a satisfactory explication de re? |
A26859 | And is this in your judgment, a tolerable Plea for Separation? |
A26859 | And it is not much better to pretend that I or they were in all things of their mind: Doth the Assemblies judgment concern me any more than you? |
A26859 | And must we have no Union till we can in all things think as you do? |
A26859 | And now to your[ Why not?] |
A26859 | And now, is the Synods Judgment more ours or yours? |
A26859 | And of Man''s making, who can number the sorts that are and may be made? |
A26859 | And of the first sort, what Independent is there that holdeth not an Vniversal Church at least, besides particular Congregations? |
A26859 | And what be the common Tyes and Rules of Order which you mean? |
A26859 | And what if any Subjects think that the King is not Orthodox? |
A26859 | And what if they be under divers Kings( as the Bulgarians and Greeks were,) and yet ruled by one Ecclesiastick Authority and Law? |
A26859 | And when you ask,[ Is it for fear they should have none left to preach to?] |
A26859 | And who doth not distinguish between the Constitution and Administration, the Status and the Exercitium? |
A26859 | And who then is the great Nonconformist and Separatist, You or I; if this be your mind? |
A26859 | And why might it not be called the Lydian Church while it was a part of the Empire, as the African and other Countries were? |
A26859 | And will you own that for these, dissenters may be called Schismaticks? |
A26859 | And yet are you one that would have them all Silenced? |
A26859 | And you make it not intelligible, whether by the Rules of the Christian Religion you mean only the Divine Rule? |
A26859 | And ▪ Must they therefore Live without Sacramental Communion? |
A26859 | And, If this be true, Is it Schism to take such for none of our Pastors? |
A26859 | And, VVhat need have we to pray, Lead us not into Temptation? |
A26859 | And, if they seek Relief of Nonconforming Ministers, Publickly and Privately, Whether it be Sinful Separation? |
A26859 | And, is it not a Hindering of God''s Word? |
A26859 | Are all different modes of Worship enough to make our Party Separatists? |
A26859 | Are none of our Hearers more competent Judges than their Accusers, what profiteth their own Souls? |
A26859 | Are none of our hearers more competent judges than their Accusers what profiteth their own souls? |
A26859 | Are not the Laity, by your Canon to be denied the Sacrament, if they be not willing of your Episcopal Confirmation? |
A26859 | Are not the Laity, by your Canon, forbidden to Receive the Sacrament in another Parish? |
A26859 | Are not the Laity, that dare not Receive the Sacrament Kneeling, for the Reasons else- where mentioned, to be denied the Sacrament by your Rule? |
A26859 | Are these notifying Terms for a Definition? |
A26859 | Are these separating Schismaticks, that differ from each other? |
A26859 | Are they bound to Sin against their Consciences, or to leave their Children Unbaptised? |
A26859 | Are you sure, that the Independents take your Parishes for true Churches? |
A26859 | As if they that have Communion with your Diocesan- Church, must have Communion with no other? |
A26859 | At least, Who will think, that you may Judge them Separatists, or guilty of Schism? |
A26859 | Be the thousands of your Parish as wise that hear you not? |
A26859 | But do you understanding men know our hearts better than we? |
A26859 | But either this Synod were in the right or not: If not, why then will you follow them, or plead their testimony? |
A26859 | But if it be not the Laws of Usurpers in the Roman Empire by your measure? |
A26859 | But if it be omitting any thing else in your rule that maketh a separation, what is it? |
A26859 | But is the remedy impossible to the Imposers? |
A26859 | But is there no more in your Application? |
A26859 | But what abundance of Church- Forms, Supream and Subordinate may diversity of Magistracy make? |
A26859 | But what if the Law forbad you to preach at a certain hour — do you separate from the Church, if you miss your hour? |
A26859 | But what is all this de nomine to the Controversy? |
A26859 | But what is all this to the business of Separation? |
A26859 | But who shall judge whether the Bishops be Orthodox? |
A26859 | But, What is Man? |
A26859 | But, others do? |
A26859 | By what Law? |
A26859 | Can you tell so easily why it was done, and not tell that indeed it was done at all? |
A26859 | Christian Societies are of divers species: Do you mean Christian Civil Societies, Kingdoms, free Cities,& c. or Churches? |
A26859 | Did Robert Grosthead of Lincoln take this to be the greatest Sin save Antichrists, and do you take it for an Act Authoriz''d? |
A26859 | Did not you conform to them as much as I did? |
A26859 | Did our 18 or 19 years Silencing them, do that? |
A26859 | Did the Churches under the Roman Power exercise their great diversity in Liturgies and other accidents of Worship without right? |
A26859 | Did you not write to be understood? |
A26859 | Did you write this as a Confutation of any body? |
A26859 | Do not my Books which you cite, copiously express the contrary? |
A26859 | Do we condemn men that do not all that is lawful to do? |
A26859 | Do we not over and over tell Men, that the word[ Church] must be considered as equivocal, generical, and specifical? |
A26859 | Do we take[ the Holy Catholick Church] in the Creed for a particular Congregation? |
A26859 | Do you make Separation and distinct Communion the same thing, 〈 ◊ 〉 divers? |
A26859 | Do you mean all these? |
A26859 | Do you mean here by[ Rulers] the same as before by[ Laws] or what mean you? |
A26859 | Do you mean that a[ Church] hath but one Notion? |
A26859 | Do you not differ much more among your selves; as I before shewed? |
A26859 | Do you take Separation here in the same sence as before and after; or Equivocally? |
A26859 | Do you take all the Christians in the Turkish Empire to be one National Church, or not? |
A26859 | Do you think that he is a Separatist that meeteth not in the same Parish Church with you? |
A26859 | Do you think the Papists had not rather( with you) that we were Silenced, than that we Preach, who have been their greatest Adversaries? |
A26859 | Do you think there is no other Species of a Church, besides that which is Constituted by the Christian Magistrate as Head? |
A26859 | Doth any Man believe that it is in all these Texts taken in the same Notion( or sence)? |
A26859 | Doth bare Conforming make all this difference? |
A26859 | Doth it not allow the Sacred Scriptures? |
A26859 | Doth making a City or Kingdom dissolve Families? |
A26859 | Doth not our Practice( who go to the Parish Churches) shew our Judgments to the People if we said nothing? |
A26859 | For where was any separation made but upon such a pretence? |
A26859 | Had not they a right to govern and reform themselves variously as they did? |
A26859 | Have I flattered them? |
A26859 | Have I not said more against their faults than you have done, though not against their Duty? |
A26859 | Have not all Diocesan Churches power to govern and reform themselves? |
A26859 | Hooker doth, That if he be the Head of a Christian Church, it is necessary that he be a Christian? |
A26859 | How can I know whom to obey, or when I separate from the Form of Government, if I know not what it is? |
A26859 | How can you think that we can feel their censures, when we have so much worse to feel from the Canoneers? |
A26859 | How come some that I thought the wisest that I know of your Auditors, to say as I say, and lament your Case? |
A26859 | How dreadful and unsearchable are the Judgments of God? |
A26859 | How few Congregations are so happy as yours, if all your Auditors are so much wiser? |
A26859 | How many Hundred Congregations have Incumbents, whom the People never consented to; but take them for their Hinderers and Burden? |
A26859 | How prove you that it is lawful for such to use more suitable helps, though Men forbid it? |
A26859 | How then can you prove it True, that we Condemn them? |
A26859 | How then could you say,[ If this be true, the Church must be dissolved as soon as the Congregation is broken up]? |
A26859 | How then did you expect to be believed when our Books are in so many hands? |
A26859 | How would you have all these score thousands spend the Lords day? |
A26859 | I Answer First, How knoweth he the Negative that never heareth them, but like a separatist avoideth it as unlawful? |
A26859 | I ask''t you formerly, is it not Sacrilege, to Alienate( unjustly) Devoted, Consecrated Persons, and worse than to Alienate Lands or Monies? |
A26859 | I can not imagine what you will reply to this? |
A26859 | I think he is bound to do more good then they, and not authorized to do more hurt? |
A26859 | I. Q. I entreat you to tell me more plainly, which is the constitutive Regent part of a National Church? |
A26859 | If I should Preach to them all against separation, and for Prelacy, were it unlawful? |
A26859 | If Men can spare the Ministry, Why are they Maintained? |
A26859 | If a Usurper get Possession( as K. Stephen and many others,) is the National Church then dead or null? |
A26859 | If any in New- England had done it, is that our doing? |
A26859 | If men be wrongfully Excommunicate, are they thereby absolved from all publick Worshipping of God? |
A26859 | If men will ca nt over still, Who shall be Judge? |
A26859 | If not, how could the Christian Church in its best and purest times, pretend to reduce Bishops and Presbyters to a Lay- Communion? |
A26859 | If not; Is not difference in such Doctrines as great a difference, as using and not useing some of your Liturgick Forms and Ceremonies? |
A26859 | If the Act of Vniformity, or the Canons be your Religion, Do not they allow God''s Word? |
A26859 | If the Dean of St. Pauls be called the Parson of the Parish, and Preach to others that can Hear him, Will that serve the Needs of all the rest? |
A26859 | If they are needful for the Safety of Mens Souls, Must so many Thousands hazard their Souls for want of needful Help, lest they be called Separatists? |
A26859 | If this be unjust, is it Separation to be so Excommunicated? |
A26859 | If we prefer our Little interest, why do we not Conform? |
A26859 | If yea, than how much more would such Conformity to sin do it? |
A26859 | Is Authority vain, unless all the rest turn like to Atheists? |
A26859 | Is all the Matter, that We are Teachers, which the Law alloweth not? |
A26859 | Is any time or place allowed us to preach in? |
A26859 | Is every line and Ceremony Essential to the Church, and to each member? |
A26859 | Is every one a Separatist that differeth from you in Doctrine, in publick Preaching? |
A26859 | Is he a Separatist that liveth in your Parish, and ordinarily meeteth not in your Temple, but another allowed place? |
A26859 | Is it Papists, Arrians, Eutychians,& c. or only the Orthodox? |
A26859 | Is it Schism in France, and such other Countries, for the Protestants to Meet to Preach and Worship God, against the Wills of the King and Bishops? |
A26859 | Is it Schism, or Sinful Separation, to Disobey a Command about Religion, which no Man hath true Authority to Give? |
A26859 | Is it Schism, to Obey such Commands? |
A26859 | Is it Separation for men to Refuse ▪ Pastors that are Usurpers, and have no true Power over them? |
A26859 | Is it a sin to know when a man is in prison, or when his goods or books are distrained,& c? |
A26859 | Is it because they neither Separate from the Conformists, or Nonconformists? |
A26859 | Is it better let them hear none at all than that we preach to them? |
A26859 | Is it for fear they should have none left to Preach to? |
A26859 | Is it herefore unlawful, for any to teach them there, or receive them to pub ● ike Worship? |
A26859 | Is it not likely that in season they preach their judgment? |
A26859 | Is it only de nomine, or de re that you ask? |
A26859 | Is it true, that I totally or ordinarily forbear? |
A26859 | Is it unlawful to preach when forbidden, or worship God when forbidden, at Japon, Indostan, China, Turkie, France,& c. or only in England? |
A26859 | Is not the Separation of whole Churches much worse than of single Persons from one Church, when it is upon unwarrantable cause or reasons? |
A26859 | Is our Concent with the Universal Church, or your singularity from it, liker to Schism or Separation? |
A26859 | Is that Separating? |
A26859 | Is this it that you mean in your Description? |
A26859 | Is this nothing to our Case? |
A26859 | Is this the formal reason of separation? |
A26859 | Is this then any satisfying Definition? |
A26859 | It must needs be then against my will; and is none of my size to be endured? |
A26859 | It s true: But did they do well or ill before? |
A26859 | It''s lawful to have Communion with an ignorant Reader, or a drunken Priest( at least in your Judgment;) Is it therefore a duty to seek no better? |
A26859 | It''s lawful to have Communion with the French, Dutch, or Greek Church; must constant Communion be therefore a Duty? |
A26859 | Let that be the rule: who shall be judge whether it be sin or not? |
A26859 | May it not be a Parliament when the House is risen, tho it be only for the work of assembled Men that they are related and denominated? |
A26859 | May it not continue a School, when the Boys go home or play? |
A26859 | Men may be saved that hear not you: But how can they believe, unless they hear, or hear without a Preacher? |
A26859 | Must we not then Meet and Worship as we can, when you wrongfully Excommunicate us? |
A26859 | Must we repeat these things as oft as you accuse us? |
A26859 | Nay what Church is there to be named, that doth not assume this power to it self, without the least suspition of Sacriledge? |
A26859 | No doubt of that: But to what purpose is it? |
A26859 | Or do you take a Christian Kingdom and a Christian Church for the same, as the Erastians do? |
A26859 | Or is it that two National Churches may have different Accidents of Worship or Discipline? |
A26859 | Or which of them? |
A26859 | Or why not as the Papists on Pope and Councils? |
A26859 | Or, Have you proved, That I go by any other Rule? |
A26859 | Or, if they be your Rules, omitting that, Is not Vsing another? |
A26859 | Q. I intreat you tell me plainly, what you would have the many score thousands do on the Lords days, who can not hear in the Parish Churches? |
A26859 | Secondly, whether( if humane) its Power be from the Prince, or from the Consent of the particular Churches? |
A26859 | So farr as your accusation is untrue as to the fact, it''s but a further ill intimation to ask, why they do not that which they do? |
A26859 | So that you do no worse, than for Union, to prove our Union impossible: and who is it that makes it so? |
A26859 | Sure it is not to Refuse an usurper of the Kingly Power? |
A26859 | Teach us what to say to the Papists, when they shall accordingly say to us[ what though there was no Vniversal Pastor in the Primitive times? |
A26859 | The Duke of Brandenburghs Subjects judge him not Orthodox: Are they therefore absolved from obeying him in matters of Religion? |
A26859 | The word Heresie with a Papist, and the word[ Separation] and[ Schism] with some Conformists, seem to be terms of Art: But what Art is it? |
A26859 | Thirdly, what it is empowered to do? |
A26859 | This being past doubt, were the Universal Church Separatists? |
A26859 | This is true: and when said we otherwise? |
A26859 | Though you excel us, do all others so? |
A26859 | Till you tell us, how can we judge of our separation: what if an interdict silence all the Ministers in a Kingdome, must all obey? |
A26859 | V. Doth every disobedience to the King, and Laws, and Canons in matters of Religion, Government and Worship, make men Separatists? |
A26859 | VVhat are the Rules which we go by, which the Established Religion alloweth not? |
A26859 | Was Guildas a Separatist that told the Brittish Wicked Priests, That they were not Christ''s Ministers, but Traitours? |
A26859 | Was it a Divine Rule or a Humane? |
A26859 | Was there not this Agreement in the case of Cyprian and the Council, who persuaded the People to separate from Martial and Basilides? |
A26859 | We have been silent about eighteen years, while men have call''d to us[ What is it that you would have?] |
A26859 | Well; now what is the crime of separation? |
A26859 | Were all those Councils Separatists, that Decreed, That none shall hear Mass from a Fornicating Priest? |
A26859 | Were they not as much your Brethren as mine, and nearer to your Judgment? |
A26859 | Were you not willing to take notice of this? |
A26859 | What Cause have we all to VVatch and Pray, That We enter not into Temptation? |
A26859 | What Law of God bindeth all Men to stand to their Choice? |
A26859 | What Sacraments do you mean? |
A26859 | What a Case were Hungary, Poland, France, Germany, and the Greek Churches in, if this were true? |
A26859 | What a sad Case were the Christian World in, if we may lawfully have no other Pastors than Gentlemen and Princes choose for us? |
A26859 | What distinction of Communion is it that you mean? |
A26859 | What doth your National Church differ from a Christian Kingdom, which we deny not? |
A26859 | What harm will it do me, or them, if my Hearers go from me( as you say) to Dr. O? |
A26859 | What if culpably they would hear no other? |
A26859 | What if it be more then can be spared without the Churches wrong? |
A26859 | What if it be most, must most obey? |
A26859 | What if the fault which we blame some for, be their judging it unlawful to hear such as you? |
A26859 | What if we held that the Church were so called barely in relation to Publick Worship? |
A26859 | What if you by Calumny call my ordinary hearers Separatists, and they are not such? |
A26859 | What is it for? |
A26859 | What mean you by the[ Notion of a Church] which all Men know is an equivocal word? |
A26859 | What mean you by[ Forming] a Congregation? |
A26859 | What mean you then by reducing these Kingdoms back to Families, when they are Families still? |
A26859 | What shew is there of such a consequence? |
A26859 | What wonder if you shall do so? |
A26859 | What''s that to me, and all such other? |
A26859 | When Christ tells us how hard it is for the Rich to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven? |
A26859 | When there are 〈 ◊ 〉 many things which may distinguish? |
A26859 | Where then will you fix the notifying Character? |
A26859 | Whether Heathens, Infidels, Mahometans, Socinians, Arians, Macedonians, Eutkchians, Monothelites, Image- worshipers, Papists, Anabaptists, or who? |
A26859 | Whether the King, or a Sacerdotal Head? |
A26859 | Whether to Separate from such a Parish, be to Separate from a Church in the sense in question? |
A26859 | Which Party are the Schismatick? |
A26859 | Which of the Bishops thought it any Sin, in the Dayes of Usurpation, to forsake their Parish- Churches? |
A26859 | Who made You a more Reverend and Credible Judge of Separation, than Cyprian, and this Council? |
A26859 | Whom did we cast out of all Church Maintenance? |
A26859 | Whom did we ever forbid to Preach the truth? |
A26859 | Whom did we imprison? |
A26859 | Why ask you[ To what purpose should you resolve those Queries?] |
A26859 | Why do they not Preach it to them in their Congregations? |
A26859 | Why may not Divine Laws make a Church? |
A26859 | Why then do you tell me of what I have written against Separation? |
A26859 | Why then may they not make as many forms as there are Kingdomes, if not an universal Pope by the consent of most? |
A26859 | Why think you that it is worse than that so many be untaught? |
A26859 | Why will you so reproach your Church? |
A26859 | Will you own that yet they may in his name be imposed on the World? |
A26859 | Will you own them to be devised without Gods authority, and yet to be preferred to those that he instituted? |
A26859 | Will you own your Churches de Specie to be new, and yet appeal to antiquity? |
A26859 | Will your Logick prove, that we call it their fault to hear us; as if hearing us, and not hearing you, were words of the same signification? |
A26859 | With such not ● to Eat,] and[ From such turn away 〈 ◊ 〉 it I ● tolerable? |
A26859 | Would I have none taught the knowledge of Christ, but by my self? |
A26859 | Would you have Excommunicate Men, Communicate with you? |
A26859 | Would you think that all this intimated silence were an untruth against publick Testimony? |
A26859 | Yea, if your Church be but a Christian Kingdom, do not you cut off all from that Kingdom too, that refuse your Forms or Ceremonies or Subscriptions? |
A26859 | You Separate from My Auditory, and more than Separate; and I Separate not from Yours: Who then is the Separatist? |
A26859 | You say[ we deny the fact which is evident to all persons] and you speak of me: Is this true? |
A26859 | You will not tell me, because you can not tell me, how we shall know what Magistrates they be that have this trust? |
A26859 | [ But why then is this kept as such a mighty secret in the Breasts of their Teachers? |
A26859 | [ They generally yield, that our Parochial Churches are true Churches; and it is with these that Communion is required] Say you so? |
A26859 | [ Where are the Priscillians that have been put to death by their instigation? |
A26859 | and doth not more to make them to be of two Churches? |
A26859 | and have they not still a distinct Family- power to govern and reform themselves, tho not a Regal Power? |
A26859 | and how it cometh to be any great matter to separate from a Church- Form which God never made? |
A26859 | and how it is proved? |
A26859 | and that he was not Eximius Christianus, that would call them Priests, or Ministers of Christ? |
A26859 | and that the Chief Power was in them, to Choose the Worthy, or Refuse the Unworthy? |
A26859 | and that they were guilty of Sin, if they joyned with such Sinners? |
A26859 | and to dread the Spiritual Judgments of God? |
A26859 | and where? |
A26859 | and whether you mention it as the uniting Bond, or only as a Rule to some humane Rule? |
A26859 | and who hath the Power ever since? |
A26859 | and who is the Schismatick here? |
A26859 | and who must judge of their qualifications? |
A26859 | and, Why then of the Church- Power? |
A26859 | doth it follow that this Relation ceaseth as soon as the several Acts of Worship cease? |
A26859 | may we then lawfully Preach to them? |
A26859 | must the Church be still in infancy? |
A26859 | nor why you would intimate the contrary to your Readers? |
A26859 | or a Christian more than a heathen? |
A26859 | or do they lose their Right to all Church- Communion? |
A26859 | or not willing that others should take notice of it? |
A26859 | or to make them all do that which they think to be unlawful? |
A26859 | or, Prefer such pastors as Refuse them? |
A26859 | or, any other to receive them, if they dare not Receive it from a Non- Preaching Minister at Home? |
A26859 | we do it by no other rule but the Scripture; and doth not the Church require that the Scripture be a Rule? |
A26859 | what Informers, what indictments, what prosecutions, what invectives are equally against all these aforesaid? |
A26859 | what more natural than to propagate our like? |
A26859 | what though many things in discipline and worship be changed since? |
A26859 | why may not they also be called One Church, as the Moscovites are now called part of the Greek Church? |
A26859 | why must you disturb the peace of the Church by reducing things to the infant State? |
A26859 | yea, and think this impertinent to the business? |
A27054 | & 17. what have you but our common Catechism truths? |
A27054 | 1. Who have poisoned the Church and souls with more errors and more palpable, than the Papists who are most against Toleration? |
A27054 | All sin, and all discord is contrary to our desired concord, and is our reproach: But shall no sinners therefore be endured? |
A27054 | All the doubt then remaining is, whether your terms or those desired by us, are the true way of Love and Concord? |
A27054 | All will say, Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
A27054 | And Men will be inquisitive, By what Authority Subject Presbyters, and Diocesan Bishops and Churches were introduced after Scripture- times? |
A27054 | And as if his Flock which then was but a few hundreds must be no greater, when the Kingdoms of the world are become his Kingdoms? |
A27054 | And as the beloved Apostle saith, that GOD IS LOVE as a name which signifieth his essence, why may not the same be said of souls, which are his Image? |
A27054 | And briefly as to the rest, there is no Calvinist believeth that ever all the Churches will receive the Lutherane Consubstantiation or Church- Images? |
A27054 | And can it be expected that in such a world, particular Christians should be sound without their personal differences? |
A27054 | And could it then be expected that all Christians be of the same opinions in all things? |
A27054 | And doth not all this intimate the necessity of a Union of minds? |
A27054 | And had not the Holy Ghost skill to speak even things necessary in tolerable intelligible phrase? |
A27054 | And how can Christ make his Church, without uniting the members? |
A27054 | And how can we do the works of Love without Love? |
A27054 | And how come we to know that they were righter than the rest, that had it not? |
A27054 | And how doth he believe in Christ that believeth him not to be God, which is most eminently essential to him? |
A27054 | And how doth this Concord make it differ from a discordant odious noise? |
A27054 | And how many several species of Christianity( or faith) may be made in the world? |
A27054 | And how shall all these be able so to travel? |
A27054 | And is Piety and Christianity none of that? |
A27054 | And is there now any cause of discord here? |
A27054 | And it was not by these means, but by better causes, notwithstanding these diseases: so that as we answer the Question, Whether a Papist may be saved? |
A27054 | And must this be the only way of Universal Peace? |
A27054 | And pre ● ume to charge them all with so great Error, as not to know the terms of Christian Concord, nor the way of Universal Peace? |
A27054 | And that Christs true Flesh was broken, and his Blood shed by himself in the Sacrament, before it was broken and shed on the Cross? |
A27054 | And that Diocesans and subject Presbyters be but humane Institutions, and therefore Men may again change them? |
A27054 | And that instead of a Commemoration he offereth a real present Sacrifice for the quick and dead? |
A27054 | And the Western Christians so divided among themselves? |
A27054 | And then what wonder if the sacred office was corrupted to the doleful detriment and danger of the Churches, when the choosers were but such as these? |
A27054 | And was it in a set form of unchangeable words, that all these Articles( or Expositions) were carried down till now, or not? |
A27054 | And was it not so, and worse under the Popes and their Prelates? |
A27054 | And was there then no pardon of sin? |
A27054 | And was this discussed in any of these Councils? |
A27054 | And what blessings had that part of the Clergy been, that now have left their Names and History to reproach and shame? |
A27054 | And what greater blessing as a means to universal Reformation could be given men, than an universal common language? |
A27054 | And what is the property of Babel but division and confusion of tongues? |
A27054 | And what need a Council to declare that which all the Church did hold before, and was in possession of? |
A27054 | And where will they find that Land on Earth that will answer their expectation, and can and will receive them all? |
A27054 | And whether every Church of the lowest species must have a Bishop? |
A27054 | And which part was it that kept this Tradition? |
A27054 | And who can think that Erastianism, deposing the true use of Church- Government, as it hath begun, will not still more divide than heal? |
A27054 | And who knoweth not that disagreement proveth ignorance and errour, in one party at least? |
A27054 | And whose blood is safe, while such blood- sucking Leeches are taken for the Rulers of the world, and the Physicians of Souls? |
A27054 | And why may not Christs own Laws serve for Church Union? |
A27054 | And why should we be more impatient with this man, than with that? |
A27054 | And why that, rather than any of the rest? |
A27054 | And will the Christian world any more agree in such absurdities, than in a Quakers of Familists professing, that he speaketh by Inspiration? |
A27054 | And will want of a Sacrament then frustrate all? |
A27054 | And yet how little is this laid to heart? |
A27054 | And you may adde a fourth, Whether Archbishops be necessary to it,( not disputing now the lawfulness of any of all these?) |
A27054 | And, alas, how great a number live in our Churches never excommunicated nor publickly admonished who lye in such sins and will not repent? |
A27054 | Are all damned that were born since? |
A27054 | Are any two men in the world then of one Religion, any more than of one visage or slature,& c? |
A27054 | Are men liker to hate you, or to plot rebellions for being gently used as men, or cruelly like slaves or dogs? |
A27054 | Are not Parents pleased to see their children prosper, and every one delighted in the wellfare of his friend? |
A27054 | Are they all Lutherans, or Calvinists,& c? |
A27054 | Are they all Papists? |
A27054 | Are they all of the Greek Church, or Armenian, Abassine,& c? |
A27054 | As he is the Teacher of the Church, did he never teach them so necessary a thing, as what essential Church- unity is? |
A27054 | Be asked, Were there not like to be then greatest Choice upon the extraordinary pouring out of the Spirit? |
A27054 | But alas what crabbed and contrary fruits, how soure, how bitter do many distempered Christians bring forth? |
A27054 | But have they ever( even at Munster) made any such horrid slaughters in the world as the great enemies of Toleration have done? |
A27054 | But how hath this Tradition been carried on, and kept right? |
A27054 | But if Copies and Translations differ and err, how can we make them our rule of judgment? |
A27054 | But suppose some difference had been in their sence, was it any renouncing of Christianity and such as cut them off from Christ? |
A27054 | But what are the terms and means of such a union? |
A27054 | But what is it that is necessary to the being and validity of baptism? |
A27054 | But what man thinks that it is so with all Error or Faults? |
A27054 | But what then, must all subscribe to, if not to all the Bible? |
A27054 | But why then is the world still unconverted, when all true Christians have this love? |
A27054 | Can a wise Physicion( a true Peace- maker) find out no remedy which may better avoid the foresaid evils? |
A27054 | Can all the Canons in the world attain more Concord and higher ends than these exprest? |
A27054 | Can he build his house, and never set the bricks, stones or timber together? |
A27054 | Can he prove that the Apostles were ever baptized? |
A27054 | Can you make a Clock or Watch, without adapting and uniting the parts? |
A27054 | Children may dye before they can be baptized, and are they by that natural necessity damned? |
A27054 | Did he ever hear them, and confute their Reasons? |
A27054 | Did not all the strife of Emperors for the power of investing Bishops, signifie this much against the Popes opposition? |
A27054 | Did they all receive Laws, Ordination or Officers from Rome, or from its Emissaries? |
A27054 | Did they ever murder 200000 people that lived peaceably at once, as the Frish Papists did? |
A27054 | Do we not see that husband and wife are pleased by the Riches and honour of each other, because their Vnion maketh all to be common to them? |
A27054 | Do you so debase and disgrace your selves and your religion, as to think or say that it can not prosper if any be but suffered to speak against you? |
A27054 | Doth he believe, That Prisons or Flames will make men of one Affection? |
A27054 | Doth it become absolutely necessary to Salvation, just at that Age, and not before? |
A27054 | Doth not the Scripture say, That the Holy Spirit dwelleth in Believers? |
A27054 | Doth not this imply, that after- times that might make so great a change, may also do the like in other things? |
A27054 | Doth the work of Christ afford you no more comfort, than shall leave you thus burdened if any will but gainsay you? |
A27054 | First, If it refer to the Person of the Receiver, how can the Holy Ghost dwell in any man, and not dwell in his person? |
A27054 | For what is a Church, but many Christians united and associated for Church- ends? |
A27054 | For what should hinder him? |
A27054 | Have you any other measure or test? |
A27054 | How easily may Hereticks creep in under such phrases as several men put several sences on? |
A27054 | How fair and easie is the way to Heaven among true Loving and agreeing Christians? |
A27054 | How few Countries are just of our mind? |
A27054 | How few Subjects must such a Prince expect to have, that will cut off all that are not of one intellectual complexion? |
A27054 | How it is to be used for the service of Christ and good of the Church? |
A27054 | How it is to be used towards all men as men in society? |
A27054 | How much less then hath he left the essentiating terms of Church- unity unprescribed? |
A27054 | How much of the designs of Satan and his agents have lain in dividing the servants of Christ? |
A27054 | How unanimous were the Sodomites in assaulting the house of Lot? |
A27054 | How unlike Christs Ministers or Christians do you speak? |
A27054 | If I am for Organs, for Images, for Crossing,& c. what hurt is it to let others meet and worship God without them? |
A27054 | If by Writings, why are they not cited, seen and tryed? |
A27054 | If ever you let them out of prison, will they not come out more alienated by exasperation? |
A27054 | If it was Rome only, then they had a Faith different from the rest of the Churches; And how shall we know that they are not as true and sound as Rome? |
A27054 | If many Notes ordered and united made not Harmony, what were the pleasure of musick or melody? |
A27054 | If not, why should you conclude that ever they will be? |
A27054 | If these be bred up in the same house, will they therefore have the same knowledge and conceptions? |
A27054 | If they say, that at least for the first six hundred years all the Church was governed by the Pope? |
A27054 | If this forcing course were now generally taken, how many Kingdoms would fare the better for it? |
A27054 | If this man had Rulers that differed from him, as much as he doth from the Nonconformists, would he, and could he, presently change his judgment? |
A27054 | If you think all must be united in any of these wayes, which of them is it? |
A27054 | In general, What are the true and only terms of Church- Vnion and Concord, and what not? |
A27054 | Is Gods Word worse than Popery? |
A27054 | Is it not better that in Congo, China,& c. Christianity is tolerated, than that they had all continued of their One Religion? |
A27054 | Is it that they all unite in Cephas( Peter) or in One Patriarch or Pope? |
A27054 | Is not that Promise true, That whoever believeth, shall not perish, but have everlasting life; and that the pure in heart shall see God,& c? |
A27054 | Is the Church now United in any of these terms or ways? |
A27054 | Is the Scripture as insufficient as the Papists make it, without their supplemental Traditions or Decrees? |
A27054 | Is there any thing in the nature of the thing so to perswade men? |
A27054 | Is there any thing in the world that ever came down to us by more certain, uniform, consenting tradition? |
A27054 | Is there no better way to the Churches concord, than that which must cast out either such men as you or I, and that so many? |
A27054 | Is there not Truth enough in all the Bible in intelligible words necessary to salvation and Church Communion? |
A27054 | Is this the sense of their having the Power of the Keys? |
A27054 | It is confessed that the Lords Supper is for Confirming Men in the Faith they had before: And are not both the Sacraments of the same general nature? |
A27054 | It is one question what is necessary to the justifying of the Priest, before the Church? |
A27054 | Let us not therefore judge one another any more? |
A27054 | Much less can they bring any pretense of it for the first three hundred yeas: Had they any Meeting in which they agreed for it? |
A27054 | Must not Reason be regarded? |
A27054 | Must they all be Papists? |
A27054 | Must they all be of the Greek opinions? |
A27054 | Must we write the same things as oft as Men arise that will repeat the Arguments so oft confuted? |
A27054 | No man will be exact in Justice till he do as he would be done by: And who can do that who Loveth not his neighbour as himself? |
A27054 | Nor my Dispute of Ordination Twenty Years ago written, and yet unanswered? |
A27054 | Or did they ever use Emperors as Henry the fourth and fifth, and Frederick were used? |
A27054 | Or forty thousand if not( as some say) twice as many, as they did at the French Massacre? |
A27054 | Or he that hath no Election but the Kings or the Patrons, nor other proved Consent of the people? |
A27054 | Or if he have but the minor part? |
A27054 | Or if the major part be against him? |
A27054 | Or if three neighbour Bishops be for him and ordain him Bishop, and many more be against it, or forbid it? |
A27054 | Or that any of these are congruous terms of Concord, and that the same that doth not heal, will heal them? |
A27054 | Or that honest men can lye, and say that they assent to what they do not? |
A27054 | Or that they adhere to men with greater estimation? |
A27054 | Or think it hard, that any can profit more by another, than by me? |
A27054 | Or to pay their debts, or their taxes, tythes and other dues? |
A27054 | Or were the uncircumcised Children in the Wilderness none of the Church? |
A27054 | Or were they not before true Christians? |
A27054 | Or which way shall particular persons there remedy it, they can not send to Europe for Ordainers? |
A27054 | Or why should I be against it? |
A27054 | Or will it be taken for certain to all Men, because it is so to some of clearer understandings? |
A27054 | Other men can read as well as Popes and Councils: If unwritten, was it by publick Preaching, or private Talk? |
A27054 | Seeing Christ was not baptized till about thirty years old, was he not Holy, and the Churches Head before? |
A27054 | THe contentions of the world here call us to resolve these several doubts, 1. Who it is that should have the power of the sword or Magistracy? |
A27054 | That St. Paul here writeth not only to the laity, but to all the Roman Church? |
A27054 | That the Eastern and Southern are separated from both? |
A27054 | That the Greek Church condemneth the Western, and the Western them? |
A27054 | The Lutherans cry down the toleration of Calvinists: What need I name more? |
A27054 | The Popes and his Cardinals may say they are a General Council; but who will believe them? |
A27054 | The next cursing difference arose about ● question whether Christs body on earth was corruptible or no? |
A27054 | The same Apostle sharply reprehendeth the faults of the Galatians; But what is it for? |
A27054 | The use and honor of it kept up, while man is man? |
A27054 | The word[ Personal] I have heard used by none but this, and such Accusers: But what he meaneth by it, who can tell? |
A27054 | Then how shall we know to whom he gave this power? |
A27054 | Though Sacraments under the Gospel convey greater benefits, can he prove that it placeth greater necessity of them, than the Law did? |
A27054 | UNITY giveth us a part in all the Joyes of earth and heaven: And what then is more desireable to a Believer? |
A27054 | V. And how should these Patriarchs unite all the Church? |
A27054 | Was all the Church under him before the Turks conquered the Greeks? |
A27054 | Was it by Writing, or by Word? |
A27054 | Was not their Authority more unquestionable than theirs that should come after? |
A27054 | Were Women damned that were not circumcised? |
A27054 | Were not Infants in the Covenant of Grace, before Circumcision entered them, into the Covenant of Israels peculiarity? |
A27054 | What are the necessary terms of continuing it? |
A27054 | What are the terms necessary for the continuance of Church- Communion? |
A27054 | What are the terms necessary to the Office and Exercise of the Sacred Ministry? |
A27054 | What are the terms necessary to the office and exercise of the sacred Ministry? |
A27054 | What are the terms of entering into Christian Catholick Church- Vnity and Communion? |
A27054 | What harm will it do me, if an hundred of my Parish hear and prefer another man, by whom they can profit more than by me? |
A27054 | What if the Succession have been interrupted long ago in Armenia, Egypt, Syria, or elsewhere? |
A27054 | What is necessary to the Constitution, Administration and Communion of single Churches? |
A27054 | What is our unity but our Love to others as our selves? |
A27054 | What is the conquest of an Army, but the routing and scattering of them? |
A27054 | What is the strength of an Army but their UNITY? |
A27054 | What needeth there more proof than mans incapacity and the experience of so many Generations? |
A27054 | What proof hath he of Sacraments( besides Sacrifices) before Abraham''s days? |
A27054 | What then? |
A27054 | What work would this Man make for Rebaptizers, if all the Protestan ● s of all Nations must be Re- baptized, that have not the foresaid Ordination? |
A27054 | When the Bohemians were so persecuted by warrs? |
A27054 | When they suffer by you, will they like you or your opinions the better for hurting them? |
A27054 | When your presumptuous Ordination is discovered to be Null, must all the People be Re- baptized? |
A27054 | Where hath this Traditional Faith been kept till now? |
A27054 | Where then is the difference but in words, one speaking of the Abstract( Deity) which the other never meant? |
A27054 | Where will hereticating, cursing and persecuting stop or end? |
A27054 | Whether Diocesan Bishops distinct from Archbishops be necessary to it? |
A27054 | Whether Parochial Episcopacy be necessary to it? |
A27054 | Whether any Bishops Ordination be valid that holdeth not his Power from the Pope? |
A27054 | Whether he be a true Bishop or Presbyter that the King alloweth not or forbiddeth? |
A27054 | Whether he be a true Bishop that is not Canonically ordained by three Bishops? |
A27054 | Whether he be a true Bishop that is not chosen or consented to by the people and Presbyters of his Church? |
A27054 | Whether he be a true Bishop that is ordained only by Presbyters? |
A27054 | Whether he can prove that it is not Anabaptistry, to baptize all again that are baptized in the Reformed Churches, that have no Diocesanes? |
A27054 | Whether he may be a true Bishop or Presbyter that hath no Ordination? |
A27054 | Whether the Ordination of hereticks be null? |
A27054 | Whether the Ordinations of prohibited, degraded or excommunicate Bishops be null? |
A27054 | Whether the Pastoral Office be necessary to Church- unity? |
A27054 | Whether this first Church- species may not consist of many Congregations, yea, many hundreds or thousands? |
A27054 | Which of the controversies of contenders, or what nice opinions are there decided or propounded? |
A27054 | Which? |
A27054 | Who could much hate and persecute those that Love them, and shew that Love? |
A27054 | Who could stand out against the convincing and Attractive power of Uniting Love? |
A27054 | Who knoweth not that ever read any Metaphysicks, how many senses the word[ One] or[ Vnity] hath? |
A27054 | Who will break the Egg to get the Chicken before it is ripened by nature for exclusion? |
A27054 | Why did Abraham think there had been Fifty righteous persons in Sodom? |
A27054 | Why did not the Apostles do it themselves, if they would have it done? |
A27054 | Why then did so many Councils condemn it? |
A27054 | Will all Christians agree that every Priest must first make his God, and then eat him? |
A27054 | Will all agree that the Assemblies pray in an unknown tongue? |
A27054 | Will all agree to their Image- worship? |
A27054 | Will all the world ever agree to the Dominion of one Usurper? |
A27054 | Will men that really have any religion forsake it for fear of any thing that you can do against them? |
A27054 | Will not Christians be the same as now? |
A27054 | Will they all agree, That all the Senses of all men are deceived, who think that they see and taste Bread and Wine, and there is none? |
A27054 | Will they all believe the Monster of Transubstantiation? |
A27054 | Will your way of violence make this better or far worse? |
A27054 | Would it be nothing to a mother if all her children, or to a friend if all his friends, had all the prosperity and joy that he could wish them? |
A27054 | Would such usage win himself to love the judgment and way of those that he suffered by? |
A27054 | You would have the Church Articles, at least for the Tolerated, in Scripture phrase: And what''s the phrase without the right sence? |
A27054 | [ The Church of the Armenians, and Ethiopians, and Indians, and the rest which the Apostles converted, are not under the Church of Rome?] |
A27054 | and another before God? |
A27054 | and another before God? |
A27054 | and another question what is necessary to the validity of baptism to the receiver before the Church? |
A27054 | and how divided and quarrelsome are the Religious sort? |
A27054 | and how hard is it where divisions and contentions take place? |
A27054 | and how the same thing in several respects may be said to be One or Two? |
A27054 | and to interdict Kingdoms, and oppress Princes and People, and may do so again: And have the People no remedy against them? |
A27054 | and what are the causes of abscission either by apostasie or excommunication? |
A27054 | and what are the lawful Causes of abscission or Excommunication? |
A27054 | and what greater plague since Adams sin hath befaln mankind, than the division of tongues? |
A27054 | and what multitudes every where agree in Ignorance and enmity to the godly? |
A27054 | and when? |
A27054 | and whether I should persecute him, and undo him? |
A27054 | and who would believe that he were a happier Teacher than Philosophers? |
A27054 | as hindering communication, and propagation of the Gospel? |
A27054 | in encouraging some and tolerating others, and keeping peace among them all? |
A27054 | nay what more inclineth men to think that other mens opinions are false, than to feel that their practice is hurtful? |
A27054 | or because a self- confident Imposer vevehemently asserteth it? |
A27054 | or now do? |
A27054 | or rather must it not be he, or such as he, that must be the standard of that one Religion to all? |
A27054 | or that he must communicate alone without communion with the People? |
A27054 | or that he must worship Bread and Wine as his God? |
A27054 | or that these are the terms of Christianity and Church- membership? |
A27054 | or the worse? |
A27054 | or to the Doctrine, Example, and Spirit of Christ? |
A27054 | or why dost thou set at naught thy brother? |
A27054 | or would he falsly profess a change, lest he should not be of one Religion with his Prince? |
A27054 | so do we answer the Question, Whether such Churches may have prosperous Concord? |
A27054 | that A SOUL IS LOVE? |
A27054 | that is, how the parts must be united? |
A27054 | the rest not being allowed or called to choose? |
A27054 | to Humane Interest? |
A27054 | too extensive, or too intensive? |
A27054 | too large, or too near a Union of minds? |
A27054 | what can be more contrary to Nature? |
A27054 | what did the Councils of Ephesus, Constantinople, Chalcedon, and many others, by their Anathemas? |
A27054 | what then if all the world were as near and dear to us as a husband, a child, or a bosome friend? |
A27054 | when France and England have been censured and Interdicted by him, and obeyed not his Interdicts? |
A27054 | when Rome it self hath so oft driven him away? |
A27054 | when Spain it self hath been accused of such Heresie? |
A27054 | when for many Ages most of Italy hath been a Field of warr, and fought against him? |
A27054 | when most of Germany stuck to the Emperours, and despised the Popes? |
A27054 | where? |
A27054 | whether I should rejoice with him in his joy, and mourn with him in his sorrows? |
A27054 | whether I should speak well or ill of him behind his back? |
A27054 | who are they that are wiser to reform it? |
A27054 | would it not be our constant pleasure to think of Gods blessings to them, as if they were our own? |
A26977 | ( And shall we lose your favour, by forcing you to lay by your Opposition as to all the rest?) |
A26977 | ? |
A26977 | An Genus definiri possit? |
A26977 | An individua possint definiri? |
A26977 | An pars Logica definiri possit? |
A26977 | And Reader, what Reason bound me to confine this Case, to one only sort of Justification? |
A26977 | And a Mans Sence is no way known but by his expressions: The question is then, Which is the necessary Phrase which we must express our sence by? |
A26977 | And against the Reformed? |
A26977 | And are all these one Terminus, or hence one name then? |
A26977 | And are not all these set together enough to prove, that we justly own all asserted by these Texts? |
A26977 | And are we not all agreed of all this? |
A26977 | And as Justification is taken for the Justifiers Action; why is it not as well to be denominated from the Terminus ad quem, as à quo? |
A26977 | And as to the Phrase, Doth this Doctor, or can any living Man find that Phrase in Scripture,[ Christ''s Righteousness is imputed to us]? |
A26977 | And can he have need of Sacrifice or Pardon, that is reputed never to have sinned( legally)? |
A26977 | And can you find no fairer a shift for disagreement? |
A26977 | And do you mean any more by[ OVRS]? |
A26977 | And do you think that he differeth from me in any of these Propositions, or how this sin is derived from Adam? |
A26977 | And do you think you know better what of mine is Elaborate, than I do? |
A26977 | And have I not then good Company and Encouragement not to change my Mind? |
A26977 | And have all my Readers already told you their Judgment? |
A26977 | And have you brought more Witnesses? |
A26977 | And how many make Forgiveness no part of Justification, but a Concomitant? |
A26977 | And how unable is my weak Understanding, to make his words at peace with themselves? |
A26977 | And if one of us be mistaken, must your bare Word determine which it is? |
A26977 | And if we be as Righteous as Christ, are we not as amiable to God? |
A26977 | And is it any wonder if you have many such Mistakes in your disputes of Justification, when you are so heedless about a matter of Fact? |
A26977 | And is not all this beyond denial with Persons not studiously and learnedly misled? |
A26977 | And is not he a weak Man that can not talk thus upon almost any Subject? |
A26977 | And is not this plain English? |
A26977 | And is not this true? |
A26977 | And is that so? |
A26977 | And is this it in the Application that your Zeal will warn Men of, that we must in this take heed of joyning with the Papists? |
A26977 | And is this the great difference between Papists and Protestants, which I am so loudly accused for not acknowledging? |
A26977 | And is à Lege Mortis, either from all the Obligation to Obedience, or from the sole mal ● diction? |
A26977 | And may we not go to God in our Names as Righteous? |
A26977 | And see you not that this is a lis de nomine, and of a name of your own introduction for illustration? |
A26977 | And should not those many Significations be distinguished as there is Cause? |
A26977 | And to contradict the common way of those with whom he joyneth? |
A26977 | And to shew the World that even where their keenest Adversaries condemn them, and draw Men from them, they do but justifie them? |
A26977 | And what hath he against this? |
A26977 | And what is imputed but Righteousness? |
A26977 | And what''s the dangerous Errour here? |
A26977 | And when will he prove that these two Sorts, or Parts, or Acts, may not be at once transacted at the same Bar? |
A26977 | And whence can a Relation be more fitly named, than from the fundamentum, whence it hath its formal being? |
A26977 | And whether this easie stating of Controversies, without more Explication or Distinction, be worthy an Academical Disputant? |
A26977 | And who is not Orthodox, himself being Judg? |
A26977 | And who knoweth what Law he meaneth, whose Maledictory Sentence Justification absolveth us from? |
A26977 | And who will thus dispute of the Definition and Causes of them, Efficient, Material, Formal, Final? |
A26977 | And why must your Pupils be taught so to conceive of so great a business, in it self so plain? |
A26977 | And why so? |
A26977 | And will you make any believe that Definition of Justification is none of these Works of Art, which depend on humane Skill? |
A26977 | And yet must we not be allowed Peace? |
A26977 | Are Logical Definitions the necessary Way to Heaven? |
A26977 | Are not Faith, Works, Just, Justice, Justification, words of divers senses in the Scripture? |
A26977 | Are not all these Reconcileable? |
A26977 | Are these things reconcileable? |
A26977 | Are they Malefactors so far as they agree with you in Doctrine, and are you Innocent? |
A26977 | Are they acquainted with all the[ Words that should make it intelligible?] |
A26977 | Are we any way Justified by our own performed Righteousness? |
A26977 | Are we reputed innocent in Christ, as to one part only of our lives,( if so, which is it?) |
A26977 | Are we reputed our selves to have fulfilled all that Law of Innocency in and by Christ, as representing our persons, as obeying by him? |
A26977 | Are you serious, or do you prevaricate? |
A26977 | Are you sure that all or most Words now, Latine or English, have the same, and only the same use or sense, as was put upon them at the first? |
A26977 | Are you sure that it was Publick usage, and Imposition from whence they first received their being? |
A26977 | Ball, and multitudes such are visible still among us? |
A26977 | But I deny your Consequence: How prove you that it is none when applyed therefore? |
A26977 | But Reader, Why may not I denominate Justification ex parte principii? |
A26977 | But alas, what is Man, and what may Temptation do? |
A26977 | But as to the question, Have we kept the Law of Innocency? |
A26977 | But can his Righteousness be Ours no way but by the foresaid Personation Representating? |
A26977 | But did I ever deny that it is[ by Faith alone and without Works]? |
A26977 | But doth he here then agree with himself? |
A26977 | But doth he know but one sort of Law of God? |
A26977 | But doubtless, many that seem killed by such Blows as some of yours, are still alive? |
A26977 | But here is no Second mentioned: Is it in the nature of the things[ Justification, and Inherent Holiness]? |
A26977 | But how is he so made? |
A26977 | But if we must needs denominate from the Terminus à quo, how strange is it that he should know but of one sense of Justification? |
A26977 | But is a Man absolved( properly) from that which he was never guilty of? |
A26977 | But may it not be, by Faith alone in one sense, and not by Faith alone in another sense? |
A26977 | But not to punish is one thing and to Reward is another? |
A26977 | But sure, none at Oxford are in danger of taking me for an Oracle? |
A26977 | But what if I had known( as I do not yet) what sort of Justification he meaneth? |
A26977 | But what if all Divines were so agreed? |
A26977 | But what if the word[ Justification] had been found only as he affirmed? |
A26977 | But what is this Forum? |
A26977 | But what is this pronunciation in mente Divina? |
A26977 | But what proof of the consequence doth he bring?] |
A26977 | But what''s all this to the Phrase? |
A26977 | But what''s this to your Case? |
A26977 | But where is it written? |
A26977 | But where is that Est internum vel externum? |
A26977 | But which of these is it that we must needs name it from? |
A26977 | But who be these Men, and what be their Names? |
A26977 | But whose phrase is Justifying Works? |
A26977 | But why is the first Justification called Private? |
A26977 | But yet it will not serve: what is yet wanting? |
A26977 | But you say,[ Are perfect Contradictions no more than a difference in Words? |
A26977 | By what Law can he impose on me what to hold? |
A26977 | Can not I as easily say thus against you? |
A26977 | Could you have found that Phrase[ Christ''s Righteousness is imputed], why did you not recite the words, but Reason as for the sense? |
A26977 | De re, is not our Guilt of nearer Parent''s Sins such which you and all that you know( now at last) confess? |
A26977 | Did I ever say, that I differed not from you? |
A26977 | Did Mr. Gataker agree with Lucius and Piscator, when he wrote against both( as the extreams)? |
A26977 | Did Mr. Wotton, and John Goodwin, agree with Mr. G. Walker, and Mr. Roborough? |
A26977 | Did you Confute, or once take Notice of any of these? |
A26977 | Did you never teach your Sholars this,( in what words you thought best?) |
A26977 | Do I not expresly say, It is the Phrase that is not to be found in Scripture, and the unsound sense, but not the sound? |
A26977 | Do I say here that Scripture mentioneth not Imputed Righteousness, or only that strict sense of it? |
A26977 | Do all ordinary Believers by the use of the Scripture, know how to define? |
A26977 | Do any sober Men deny it, and charge God with Error or Untruth? |
A26977 | Do not I, with as great Confidence as you, lay Claim to the same Company and Concord? |
A26977 | Do not Logicians make true defining one of the surest signs of clear and accurate knowledg? |
A26977 | Do not you here proclaim, that Papists and Protestants differ not about the necessity of Good- works to Justification? |
A26977 | Do the meanest Christians know how to define Justification, and all the Grace which they have? |
A26977 | Do they not hold that Justification is more than an Absolution from the Maledictory Sentence of the Law? |
A26977 | Do you difference them Quoad ordinem, as First and Second? |
A26977 | Do you grant it of them Disjunctively, and yet maintain the contrary of them Conjunct? |
A26977 | Do you mean that I began with you? |
A26977 | Do you mean the words or the sense of Justification( as you call it) by Works? |
A26977 | Do you mean[ Rank Good- Works with Inherent Holiness, and not with the First Sanctification, and you then do widely differ from the Papists]? |
A26977 | Do you not invite me thus herein to be a Papist, when they rank them no where but, as you say, the Protestants do? |
A26977 | Do you think( for I must go by thinking) that he holdeth any other Derivation than this? |
A26977 | Doth Mr. Lawson, in his Theopolitica agree with you, and such others? |
A26977 | Doth he think that the Law of Innocency, and of Moses, and the Law of Grace are all one, which Scripture so frequently distinguisheth? |
A26977 | Doth not Christ say, By thy words thou shalt be justified? |
A26977 | Doth not Mr. Cartwright here differ from those that hold the Imputation of the Active Righteousness? |
A26977 | Doth not the Holy Ghost say, That a Man is justified by Works, and not by Faith only? |
A26977 | Doth not the World know, that Heathens and Christians, Papists and Protestants, are Agreed on this general Rule? |
A26977 | Doth the Scripture sufficiently reveal such Definitions to all? |
A26977 | Doth this Law,[ He that believeth not shall be damned] damn Believers? |
A26977 | Faith alone, and not Faith alone? |
A26977 | Faith with and without Works? |
A26977 | For we say that Faith was reckoned to Abraham for Righteousness: How was it then reckoned? |
A26977 | Forum Divinum est ubi Deus ipse judicis partes agit,& fert sententiam secundum leges a se latas? |
A26977 | Had it not been a Vanity of me, Should I in that sheet again have repeated, how I and the Papists differ about Justification? |
A26977 | Had you not been better, have silently past it by? |
A26977 | Hath every Man incurred the Curse by Moses Law that did by Adams? |
A26977 | Have I not now proved that he erreth and complyeth with the Papists? |
A26977 | He is near that justifieth me, who will contend with me? |
A26977 | His Liberavit nos à Lege Mortis, I before shewed impertinent to his use, Is Liberare& Justificare, or Satisfacere all one? |
A26977 | How blind are some in their own Cause? |
A26977 | How can God accept him as just, who is really and reputedly a Sinner? |
A26977 | How easie is it to challenge the Titles of Orthodox, Wise, or good Men to ones self? |
A26977 | How easie is it to talk at this rate for any Cause in the World? |
A26977 | How far is he One person with us? |
A26977 | How few? |
A26977 | How frequently is Chrysostom by many accused as favouring Free- Will, and Man''s Merits, and smelling of Pelagianism? |
A26977 | How greatly do you dishonour your self,( and then you will impute it to me) by insisting on such palpably abusive Passages? |
A26977 | How many call on me for Retractation? |
A26977 | How much more then doth Learning to Mens salvation, than Grace? |
A26977 | How prove you that? |
A26977 | How shall we know that they grew not into publick use from one Mans first Invention, except those that( not Publick use, but) God Himself made? |
A26977 | How then came you to be so much better at it than I? |
A26977 | How then can Man be justified with God? |
A26977 | I tell you, I know not what your Judgment is, nor know I who is of your Mind? |
A26977 | I would such as you made not the Doctrine of Justification too little Practical? |
A26977 | If all are without Faith, Love, Justification, Adoption, who can not give a true Definition of them, how few will be saved? |
A26977 | If all the debt of our Obedience be paid, why is it required again? |
A26977 | If he do confess the Guilt, and deny it necessary, when will he tell us what is the Contingent uncertain Cause? |
A26977 | If he do not, why doth he call on me to prove it? |
A26977 | If not, against what or whom is all this arguing? |
A26977 | If not, is this Doctor more to be blamed for making them better than they are, or for making us worse? |
A26977 | If yea, Why do you excuse your Trudging, and why would you select a Suspended Book, and touch none that were Written at large on the same Subject? |
A26977 | Is Christ and each Believer one political person? |
A26977 | Is Christs Righteousness OVRS as it was or is His own, with the same sort of propriety? |
A26977 | Is Christs Righteousness OVRS? |
A26977 | Is Christs Righteousness OVRS? |
A26977 | Is Christs Righteousness imputed to us? |
A26977 | Is it Christs Divine, Habitual, Active or Passive Righteousness which Justifieth us? |
A26977 | Is it Christs Righteousness, or our Faith which is said to be imputed to us for Righteousness? |
A26977 | Is it any more than the Name ORIGINAL that you are so heinously offended at? |
A26977 | Is it as dangerous as you frightfully pretend to take it aliunde? |
A26977 | Is it here the Words, or Sense, which you accuse? |
A26977 | Is it like that any Dunce that is diligent, should Write no more Schollar- like at Sixty years of Age than at Thirty? |
A26977 | Is it not a doleful case that Orthodoxness must be thus defended? |
A26977 | Is it only, The Doers shall be Absolved from the Maledictory Sentence,& c.? |
A26977 | Is it that vain, blind, maimed, unmeasurably procacious and tumid Reason of the Cracovian Philosophers? |
A26977 | Is not all this talk of single Person, and Monarch in Divinity, and Appeals, the effects of a Dream, or somewhat worse? |
A26977 | Is not here sad defining, when neither of these are the Scripture- Justification by Christ and Faith? |
A26977 | Is our Controversie de re, or only de nomine, of the sense of the word Justifie? |
A26977 | Is the change of the sense of Words a strange thing to us? |
A26977 | Is the formal Relation of Righteous as an accident of our persons, numerically the same Righteousness? |
A26977 | Is the meaning only, I will not absolve the wicked from the Maledictory Sentence of the Law( of Innocency)? |
A26977 | Is the sense,[ How can Man be absolved from the Maledictory Sentence of the Law?] |
A26977 | Is the sense,[ No Man living shall be absolved from the Maledictory sentence of the Law? |
A26977 | Is there a Law, and unalterable Law for the sense of Words? |
A26977 | Is this Disputing or Reasoning? |
A26977 | Is this a denying of Christ''s Righteousness imputed? |
A26977 | Is this absolving him from the Curse of the Law? |
A26977 | Is this defending the Scripture, expresly to deny it? |
A26977 | Is this distinction our proof of your accurateness in Method, and Order, and Expression? |
A26977 | Is this mode of Teaching worthy a Defence by a Theological War? |
A26977 | Is this the way of vindicating Truth? |
A26977 | Justificatio Justificati( passive)? |
A26977 | Justificatio, Justificans( active sumpta)? |
A26977 | Mr. Tombes, and Mr. Danvers, for what I have Written for Infants- Baptism: The Papists for what I have Written against them: And how many more? |
A26977 | Must that Name be shamed, by appropriating it to such as this Doctor only? |
A26977 | Must we needs proclaim War here, or cry ▪ out, Heresie, or Popery? |
A26977 | None that ever I heard or read of: Who knoweth not that the Papists take Justification for Inherent Holiness? |
A26977 | Not so: Can not God pardon sin, upon a valuable Merit and Satisfaction of a Mediator? |
A26977 | O Juniors, Will not such deceiving Words save you from my Deceits? |
A26977 | O Sir, had you no other work to do, but to Vindicate the Church and Truth? |
A26977 | Of this also I fully said what I held, and he dissembleth it all, as if I had never done it: And why must I prove more? |
A26977 | Or Justitia? |
A26977 | Or any to the contrary? |
A26977 | Or can you not understand words, that plainly thus Distinguish? |
A26977 | Or did I ever deny any of this? |
A26977 | Or doth nothing but Confusion please him? |
A26977 | Or every Man fallen under the peremptory irreversible condemnation which the Law of Grace passeth on them that never believe and repent? |
A26977 | Or first and chiefly, They shall be judged well- doers, so far as they do well, and so approved and justified, so far as they do keep the Law? |
A26977 | Or known in the Church for five thousand years from the Creation? |
A26977 | Or only of that intollerable sense of it? |
A26977 | Or rather, first, rub your Eyes, and tell us what is the Controversie? |
A26977 | Or rather,[ How can he be maintained Innocent?] |
A26977 | Or that I Retracted any of the Doctrine of Justification, which I had laid down? |
A26977 | Or that each of them hath not its Malediction? |
A26977 | Or the Cure is none when the Medicine is applyed? |
A26977 | Or why must I prove any more? |
A26977 | Or will it not abate Mens reverence of your disputing Accurateness, to find you so untrusty in the Recitation of a Man''s words? |
A26977 | Quid Justificationem vocat Paulus hoc loco? |
A26977 | Quid est, Propter Justificationem nostram? |
A26977 | Quomodo Justificatur Homo coram Deo? |
A26977 | Such Imputation of Righteousness, he saith, agreeth not with Reason or Scripture: But what Reason meaneth he? |
A26977 | That one, or those many? |
A26977 | The Papists minds sure, may be better known by their own Writings, than by mine: The Council of Trent, telleth it you: What need I recite it? |
A26977 | The Papists place Good- Works before Justification, that is, Inherent Holiness; and the Protestants more rightly place them before Inherent Holiness? |
A26977 | The Question is, only what or whose it is, Christ''s or our own? |
A26977 | The Scholar asketh, may I not refer the case to the standers- by, and wash my face if they say, It was no Fire? |
A26977 | There was a Disputant who would undertake to conquer any Adversary: When he was asked, How? |
A26977 | Therefore here the Question is, Whose judgment I shall take as most probable? |
A26977 | They agree not of the sense of the word[ Justifie,] and of the species of that Justification which Paul and James speak of? |
A26977 | This is true and well: But are we no where Justified by Faith but in Conscience, till after Death? |
A26977 | Was he mistaken in reciting the great differences about their Senses of Imputation of Christs Righteousness, if there were none at all? |
A26977 | Was not Abraham our Father justified, by Works? |
A26977 | Was not Bellarmin, or some of the Papists and the Socinians, as great Malefactors, with whom( as you phrase it) you put me in the Cub? |
A26977 | Was not Camero, Capellus, Placeus, Amyrald, Dallaeus ▪ Blondel,& c. Reformed? |
A26977 | Was not Christ as our Mediator perfectly holy habitually, and actually, without Original or Actual Sin? |
A26977 | Were not Wotton, Bradshaw, Gataker,& c. Reformed? |
A26977 | Were not all the Divines before named Reformed? |
A26977 | Were not of late Mr. Gibbons, Mr. Truman, to pass many yet alive, Reformed? |
A26977 | Were you bound to have read it in that sheet, any more ▪ than in many former Volumns? |
A26977 | What abundance of Protestants do place Justification only in Fogiveness of Sins? |
A26977 | What doth Inherent Holiness differ from the First Sanctification? |
A26977 | What greater advantage will they desire against us, than to choose us such Advocates? |
A26977 | What is the Difference between your Treatise, in the part that toucheth me, and that of Mr. Eyres, Mr. Crandon, and some others such? |
A26977 | What is wanting? |
A26977 | What is wanting? |
A26977 | What kind of Readers do you expect, that shall take this for rational, candid, and a Plea for Truth? |
A26977 | What meaneth a distinction between[ First- Justification,] and[ Inherent Holiness]? |
A26977 | What saith the Scripture? |
A26977 | What signifieth the[ First] then? |
A26977 | What would this do but more offend you? |
A26977 | What yet is the Matter? |
A26977 | What''s the reason you have not hitherto directed us to the particulars of your Recantation; what, when, where? |
A26977 | What? |
A26977 | When Mr. Danvers, and Multitudes on that side, Reproach me daily for Retractations, and you for want of them? |
A26977 | Where did I ever say, that I had Recanted? |
A26977 | Where, and when? |
A26977 | Whether Accidents may be properly defined? |
A26977 | Whether Definitio Physica( as Man is defined per Animam, Corpus& Vnionem) be a proper Definition? |
A26977 | Whether Definitio objectiva be properly called Definitio, or only Formalis? |
A26977 | Whether a true Logical and Physical definition should not be the same? |
A26977 | Which of these meaneth he? |
A26977 | Which of us hath brought the fuller Proofs? |
A26977 | Who knoweth what a Temptation they may make of such passages to draw any to Popery? |
A26977 | Who shall condemn? |
A26977 | Who would desire a sharper or a softer, a more dissenting or a more consenting Adversary? |
A26977 | Who would have thought but this was his drift? |
A26977 | Why did not Conscience at the naming of Calumnie say,[ I am now committing it?] |
A26977 | Why may not these two parts of one Man''s Cause be judged at the same Bar? |
A26977 | Why should you and I dispute thus about Matters of Fact? |
A26977 | Will none of your Readers see now, who cometh nearer them, you or I? |
A26977 | Will not this Man of Truth and Peace, give us leave to be thus far agreed, when we are so indeed? |
A26977 | Will you bear with the diversion of a story? |
A26977 | Wotton, and Mr. Balmford, and his other Adversaries, of the same Opinion in this? |
A26977 | Yea, or Adoption either? |
A26977 | Yes, if Gallus, Ambsdorfius, Schlusselburgius, and Dr. Crispe, and his Followers, be the Church? |
A26977 | You do not sure: But is it that I began with the Churches, and you were necessitated to defend them? |
A26977 | You will deal with it but as the application of that Rule to the Definition of Justification? |
A26977 | Your urgent questioning here[ Do you not mean your self?] |
A26977 | [ If it derive in a direct line from the first Transgression, and have its whole Root fastened there, what then? |
A26977 | [ In Legal Justification( saith he) taken precisely, either there is Remission of sin, or not: If not, What Justification is that? |
A26977 | and that I take it for an Injury, because I ▪ Retracted them? |
A26977 | and that the Scripture mentioneth no other? |
A26977 | and that we are made Righteous in foro otherwise than to be just in our selves, and so Justifiable in foro, before the Sentence? |
A26977 | in other Points, but only those of[ High and difficult speculation]: And do you deny it there? |
A26977 | or as to all? |
A26977 | or do Protestants take the Sentence to be Constituting or Making us Righteous? |
A26977 | or, How can he be clean that is born of a Woman? |
A26977 | saith, Quid vanius est quam Justum arbitrari, qui Legem non impleverit? |
A26977 | was it in the ancient Creeds and Baptism? |
A26977 | which you can never answer: But if my Doctrine put you upon this Necessity, what hindred you from perceiving it these twenty years and more, till now? |
A26977 | who devised it? |
A26977 | — Next he saith, Scripture is silent of the Imputed Righteousness of Christ; what a saying is this of a Reformed Divine? |
A26885 | 3.18, 19 and admire him and his mercies, and devote your selves to him and be ruled by him? |
A26885 | 4. Who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A26885 | A great matter indeed in comparison of eternal life: And must you not lose them shortly whether you will or not? |
A26885 | Against all these bonds and healing principles and helps, will you be dividers? |
A26885 | All the question is, What Mind that is that all should be One in? |
A26885 | All the question is, What Spirit this is? |
A26885 | Among the unsanctified there are as many Ends and Interests as Men: For every one of them hath a self to Please: And then what Unity can there be? |
A26885 | An ● are not all the Profane of the sam ● Opinion? |
A26885 | And are they not in the pow ● r of God? |
A26885 | And as long as this great division is unhealed, what other means can bring us to any happy Unity? |
A26885 | And can not they be content with a Ministerial power, to proclaim and promote the Laws of Christ, and according to these to guide his Church? |
A26885 | And can we ever be agreed with our Natural enemies? |
A26885 | And do I need to tell you that the ungodly covetous worldlings are of the same mind? |
A26885 | And do not the most of the ungodly deny him in their hearts? |
A26885 | And do they think that we know not what adding and chopping and changing they have made with their Mass Book? |
A26885 | And do you think these will ever take one course? |
A26885 | And how happy would this be for the troubled Church? |
A26885 | And how is it possible for m ● n to agree that walk by such contrary Rules as these? |
A26885 | And how is it possible for men of such contrary affections to be agreed? |
A26885 | And how is it possible for these to be United? |
A26885 | And how many do the ungodly make to themselves, while they depart from the Lord Christ? |
A26885 | And how then can we expect that they should have peace with us? |
A26885 | And how then should we live in Peace with such? |
A26885 | And if this were not the Opinion of the ungodly, how could they put off Conversion, and say, Its time enough hereafter? |
A26885 | And if you say,[ What the ne ● rer shall we be for Agreement in the other things? |
A26885 | And in good sadness, would you have all the world be such as you? |
A26885 | And is this a Unity and peace to be desired? |
A26885 | And is this so great a comfort to you, to be dead among the living, and to be heirs of hell in the midst of them that are heirs of heaven? |
A26885 | And must such as these be our only Judges? |
A26885 | And shall this be called Vnity, that leaveth you at so sad a distance as this? |
A26885 | And shall we all Agree in the Practice of this much? |
A26885 | And shall we but Agree all in the Practice of this much? |
A26885 | And shall we thus continue a division that doth prognosticate our Everlasting division? |
A26885 | And should Paul have turned a fool again, and be deceived and disobedient again, to Ag ● ee with the rest of the deceived world? |
A26885 | And should we obey God or men? |
A26885 | And then should we not measure our Causes by it now? |
A26885 | And w ● ll you 〈 … 〉 much of thediff ● ren ● ● y ● ● rselves, as to be the only r ● ● users? |
A26885 | And what Unity is this? |
A26885 | And what if by your parts and moral vertues, you are some way helpful to the Church? |
A26885 | And what is this but actually to deny it? |
A26885 | And what less do all ungodly men, that believe it not heartily, and will not obey it, but deny it in parts, and refuse subjection to it? |
A26885 | And what man can reveal the things that God hath purposely concealed? |
A26885 | And wherein? |
A26885 | And which now do you think in reason is the fitter, that you turn to the godly, or they to you? |
A26885 | And who can break away from the upholding arms of Almighty power? |
A26885 | And who then do you think is likest to be the cause of our distractions and divisions? |
A26885 | And why will you be of that way and company, that you will wish at last you had not been of? |
A26885 | And why will you not be of the mind that you will be shortly of? |
A26885 | And will you lay the blame of this upon Religion, which the Devil and the secret enemies of Religion do perform? |
A26885 | And will you say therefore that the dead corps is happyer then the living? |
A26885 | And will you stick at this, in the cause of God and your salvation? |
A26885 | And will you think ever the better of Ignorance, or ever the worse of Learning for this? |
A26885 | And will you yet say that our Divisions are long of our Religion, or of Christ the author of it? |
A26885 | And withal what abundance of differences would be new made? |
A26885 | And would you have us be contented with such an Agreement as this? |
A26885 | And would you have us believe you that there is no danger in a fleshly life? |
A26885 | And would you have us stark mad to forget so soon our former sorrows, and turn to a h ● e that hath cost us so 〈 ◊ 〉 already? |
A26885 | And would you wish us to break so solemn a Covenant? |
A26885 | And would you wish us to come and joyn with you in a way that you hope to forsake your selves, and in a way that you purpose hereafter to Repent of? |
A26885 | And would you wish us to undo our s ● lv ● s everlastingly for your ● ri ● ndship? |
A26885 | And yet would you have us again forsake him? |
A26885 | Are Ministers unwilling that their people should all agree in holiness? |
A26885 | Are not all the ungodly against the Scripture? |
A26885 | Are not you in danger of damnation as much and an hundred times more then they? |
A26885 | Are our distances from one another broken into pieces enow or not? |
A26885 | Are there not convictions at the bottom, that the diligent heavenly Christian whom thou reproachest, is in a safer condition then thy self? |
A26885 | Are these like our differences with ungodly men? |
A26885 | Are we cut into shreds enow, and great enough, and our spirits bitter enough or not? |
A26885 | Are you able to save us from the wrath of God? |
A26885 | Are you willing to lay by passion, and scorn and hatred, and bitterness, and come to a treaty about the matter? |
A26885 | As if God did deny his Grace to any of you, but those that forfeit it by wilful sin? |
A26885 | BVT suppose we should be Vnited in the Spirit, and Agree in Holiness, do you think this would heal the Divisions of the Church? |
A26885 | BVt may not a Profession of the same Faith procure a sufficient Vnity among us, though all be not Saints, and savingly regenerate? |
A26885 | But can you say so of your turning in to us? |
A26885 | But is it so with the ungodly? |
A26885 | But perhaps some of you will say, What need you make so many words about a matter that no bo ● y doth deny? |
A26885 | But perhaps you will say,[ Why are they not then more fully agreed?] |
A26885 | But the Question is, What Holin ● ss and Godliness is? |
A26885 | But what dang ● r would you be in if you should turn to us? |
A26885 | But why do we not agree in the diligent avoiding of such a dreadful misery, and using our best endeavours to escape it? |
A26885 | But why do you not agree in the hateing, and forsaking, and beating down of these sins? |
A26885 | But will you agree in the practice of this mortification? |
A26885 | But will you all agree with us in the practice of these things? |
A26885 | Can a man that hath one spark of humility left in him, desire that his will may be a Law to all others, in doubtful or indifferent things? |
A26885 | Can not they allow Christ this part of the Soveraignty, to make Laws for his Church? |
A26885 | Can they expect a Unity of the Spirit with these? |
A26885 | Can two wal ● together except they be agreed? |
A26885 | Can you expect that God should acquaint such with his truth, that are so false to it? |
A26885 | Can you think it possible to have Unity, as long as you will not Unite in God? |
A26885 | Could the worst of you all have the face to make such a motion as this? |
A26885 | Dare you on the one side, despise your weak Brother now for esteeming ● hese days above the rest? |
A26885 | Do I mourn in secret, to see so many divisions and subdivisions? |
A26885 | Do not the Godly still differ about Church- Government, and Orders, and Ceremonies?] |
A26885 | Do not the godly differ among themselves? |
A26885 | Do the Quakers or Papists change us all to their opinions by their books or preaching? |
A26885 | Do we not see that they are more contentious, and divided into partyes, and make more stir about Religion then any others? |
A26885 | Do you hate them, and yet cry out against Divisions, when your hearts are thus divided from God and his servants? |
A26885 | Do you know sin is the worst and most dangerous thing in the world, and yet will you not let it go? |
A26885 | Do you know that God is best, and yet will you not Love him better then the world? |
A26885 | Do you know that Heaven is the only happiness, and yet will you not seek it more then earth? |
A26885 | Do you know that an holy life is best, and yet will you be unholy? |
A26885 | Do you know what kind of men those were that are called Saints, and Holy- dayes were kept in remembrance of them? |
A26885 | Do you not believe it to be best and necessary? |
A26885 | Do you not feel your minds strange to him, your hearts draw back from him, and find by his strangeness to you that there is a division? |
A26885 | Do you not read Christ ● elling you, that its impossible to deceive the Elect? |
A26885 | Do you not remember how Iehosaphat had like to have sped by a friendship and confederacy with Ahab? |
A26885 | Do you not yet know that the Churches Unity is a Unity of the Spirit, and of Holiness? |
A26885 | Do you take the word of God for your Rule or not? |
A26885 | Do you think that its long of our Religion, that we disagree? |
A26885 | Do you think that this were a wise combination? |
A26885 | Doe you not see that the most godly are all in pieces, as well as others? |
A26885 | Either the Godly must become ungodly, or the ungodly must become Saints and godly: Which must it be? |
A26885 | Else what need so many Acts to restrain them from sports and other profanation of it? |
A26885 | For all the Popish cavils at its difficulty, and mens divers expositions, yet how soon should we be agreed? |
A26885 | For what good will it do to Agree today, and to break it or bewail it tomorrow? |
A26885 | Hath true Christianity and Holiness such abundance of advantages against division, and yet will you be guilty of it? |
A26885 | Have not you immortal souls to save or lose as well as they? |
A26885 | He is not worthy the name of a man, that denyeth this: And shall we a ● l Agree now in the Practice of this much? |
A26885 | How certainly then would God forsake the world, as a man would be gone from roads and serpents? |
A26885 | How comes it to pass th ● n that here is never a one of you near two hundred years of age? |
A26885 | How comfortably should I spend the few remaining dayes of my pilgrimage among you, if you would but all be brought to this? |
A26885 | How commonly do they think that all is woon, and is currently their own, that they can but defraud the Minister of? |
A26885 | How compassionate is he to them in their infirmities? |
A26885 | How easie would all his studies and labours be, if they were but sweetned with such success? |
A26885 | How fe ● use to instruct and admonish the families, and help to prepare the ● for death and judgement? |
A26885 | How happy for the offended distracted world? |
A26885 | How long halt ye between two opinions? |
A26885 | How long have they been perswading you to set up Reading, and Catechizing and constant fervent prayer i ● your families, and yet it is undone? |
A26885 | How long have your Teachers been labouring in vain, to bring you to the hearty Love o ● God, and heaven, and serious holiness? |
A26885 | How much less should we make an Agreement to go the certain way to Hell, and to joyn together in damning our own souls for ever? |
A26885 | How plainly did this appear in our la ● wars? |
A26885 | How quickly then would earth turn Hell, and the flames of the wrath of God consume it? |
A26885 | How tender was Christ even of his little ones that believe in him? |
A26885 | I come upon a treaty with you, to see whether you will become One with us, and be reconciled or not? |
A26885 | I suppose you''l say, It grieves you also? |
A26885 | If it were in my power to cause all contenders to Love those that they contend with as themselves, do you think I should not soon agree them? |
A26885 | If one of you will go to York, and the other to London, how can you possibly go one way? |
A26885 | If the difference be that we use not the Common Prayer Book; doth that make a different sort of worship? |
A26885 | If you could have Vnity without the Sanctifying Spirit, why are you then Baptized into the name of the Holy- Ghost as your Sanctifier? |
A26885 | If you do, why then doth it not Rule you, and end the difference? |
A26885 | If you say, Why then are not all admitted to take it Kneeling? |
A26885 | In a word, our difference with the ungodly, though they will not confess it and speak out, is plainly this, whether Heaven or Earth be better? |
A26885 | Is it contrary either to Wisdom or Honesty for you to turn unfeignedly to God, and to become a sancti ● ied godly people? |
A26885 | Is it like the same Book that it was before the changes made by Gregory the great? |
A26885 | Is it not a shameful self- condemning to keep Holy- dayes for the dead Saints, and to hate and rail against the Living? |
A26885 | Is it not such that have been the principal causers of our late Divisions? |
A26885 | Is it not the same sort of worship if we say the same words, or words to the same sence, either on the Book or off it? |
A26885 | Is it not time think you to sound a retreat to our foolish wars? |
A26885 | Is it possible that such an heart as this can be in the breast of the worst on earth? |
A26885 | Is it that we say not at every time the very same words? |
A26885 | Is the Church of England dead? |
A26885 | Is the Scripture the Law of God or not? |
A26885 | Is there any danger in turning to God, and living an holy heavenly life? |
A26885 | Is there no Remedy for so great a misery, when yet our poor ungodly neighbours m ● y heal it if they will? |
A26885 | It s against Nature, seeing he is the Center, and the Head and Fountain of Life: And what good would it do you to be one with us and not with him? |
A26885 | Let us set the Word of God before us, and take the best helps on both sides to understand it, and let this decide the case with us: What say you? |
A26885 | May not Arbitrators make use of a Law to decide a controversie, before it come to the Jud ● e? |
A26885 | May not you study the W ● rd of God, and call upon him in prayer, and se ● your selves for heaven as well as they? |
A26885 | Must I and my servants be reproached with thy crimes?] |
A26885 | Must not subjects understand a Law to live by it, though they be not Judges? |
A26885 | Must we not be judged by this Law? |
A26885 | Must we yield to you; or should you 〈 ◊ 〉 away to us? |
A26885 | Nay darest thou desire that none but such should have liberty to Preach or Worship in the Church? |
A26885 | O could we but all Agree against this make- bate, this great disturber and troubler of the world, what Peace might we enjoy? |
A26885 | O how sweet and pleasant a life is it to see brethren dwell together in such an holy Unity as this? |
A26885 | O if the Word of God might be the Rule, how quickly should we be agreed? |
A26885 | O say they, where is your Church of England now? |
A26885 | O that we were but all agreed in this much? |
A26885 | O what a joyful day were this, if I could this d ● y bring you to this Holy Unity and Agreement? |
A26885 | Oh what abundance of differences are ended upon the day of true Conversion? |
A26885 | Oh what use have we for those precious hours, for surer, greater, and more needful things? |
A26885 | One is as the fire, still bending upward; the other as the earth or stone, still bending downward to the earth: And how can these agree together? |
A26885 | Or if you had such Devilish hearts within you, as to desire such an Agreement as this, can you think that all the godly would yield to it? |
A26885 | Or should we be so much worse then mad, as to yield to you if you did desire it? |
A26885 | Our differences with you are, Whether Heaven or Eath is chiefly to be loved and sought after? |
A26885 | Polutheism, which is the feigning of many Gods, is a most damnable errour: And how many Gods have all that are ungodly? |
A26885 | Shall we all agree now in the practice of this? |
A26885 | Shall we app ● al all to Christ, and try our differences by his revealed word? |
A26885 | Shall we be so ● ad as to venture our selves on such words as these against the Word of the Ruler of the world? |
A26885 | Shall we then without any more ado agree all upon a life of Holiness? |
A26885 | Shall we wholly resign our selves and all that we have to God? |
A26885 | Should not God be your master as well as theirs? |
A26885 | So I may say to all the ungodly, Why trouble you the Church, and hinder Vnity? |
A26885 | So do the bruit beasts, and so do their Persecutors: Will it make you happy to be called by the name of Christians? |
A26885 | So what Union between the sensual world and the sanctified Believer? |
A26885 | Surely a man of any humility would think with himself, Am not I also imperfect in knowledge? |
A26885 | Tell me also you that are drunkards or unclean, would you have all the world become drunkards and unclean for Unity with you? |
A26885 | Tell me, you that are covetous and proud, would you have all the world become proud and covetous to Agree with you? |
A26885 | Tell us th ● refore wh ● t you me ● n by it, ● n ● who those be that you tak ● to be the Godly sanctified people? |
A26885 | The Devils have a Unity of Nature, and some order and accord in Evil; for if Satan be divided, how can his kingdom stand? |
A26885 | The Question now that we are treating about, is, whether we shall all agree together to be godly? |
A26885 | The dead can not be United to the living: who will be married to a dead corpse? |
A26885 | The unsanctified have indeed the name of Christians: but what is that to the nature? |
A26885 | There can be no true Christian Vnity but in Christ the Redeemer and Head of the Church: For how can the members be United but in the Head? |
A26885 | They cry out against the Ministry and others that fear God, as Ahab did to Elijah, Art thou he that troubleth Israel? |
A26885 | To what purpose should I mention any more particulars, till we see whether you will Unite and agree in these? |
A26885 | Unless we can create light in them, as well as reveal the truth to them, what good can we do them? |
A26885 | Was the Book of Canons, or the Book of Common Prayer, or the Ceremonies Essential to the Church of England? |
A26885 | We all kn ● w we should ● e Holy and Godly, and n ● ne should be ung ● ● ly; who doubts of this? |
A26885 | We are willing of Concord with you; but we are loth to be damned with you: And do you blame us for this? |
A26885 | We have renounced the flesh, the world and the devil; and should we turn to them aga ● n for Peace with you? |
A26885 | We have shewed you the word of God for it; and fourty times mo ● e we could easily shew you ▪ And shall we believe you or such as you before God? |
A26885 | We know your way to be of the Devil and 〈 ◊ 〉 flesh; and is it honest then to joyn with you in it? |
A26885 | We live not on one sort of food; how then can we accord together? |
A26885 | Well the ●, it lyes next before us in order to enquiry, What One Religion and Way we must be of? |
A26885 | Well then; What Unity can we have with those that are not in Christ? |
A26885 | Were you but once here in pieces among your selves, what a scorn would you be to all the ungodly? |
A26885 | What Common- wealth will Unite with them that defend their enemies and rebels? |
A26885 | What Judge would you have? |
A26885 | What Union can there be between a block and a man; or a beast that hath but a sensitive life, and a man that hath a rational Soul? |
A26885 | What Unity and Agreement can there be? |
A26885 | What caused the Donatists separation of old, but the scandals in the Church: and the receiving of such upon repentance into Communion or ministry? |
A26885 | What concord between light and darkness? |
A26885 | What good doth the Sun to a man that is blind? |
A26885 | What hath caused so many to turn separatists in England, but seeing so many ungodly persons in our Churches and Communion? |
A26885 | What honesty is in such persidiousness? |
A26885 | What if thy weak Brother dare not receive the Sacrament unless he Kneel in the act of receiving it? |
A26885 | What if thy weak Brother pray upon a Book, darest thou therefore despise him? |
A26885 | What is the danger? |
A26885 | What man dare affirm that he understandeth every word of the Holy Scripture? |
A26885 | What need had Ministers else to sue for their Ty ● hes? |
A26885 | What s ● curity can you give us that we shall scape damnation if we turn ungodly? |
A26885 | What say you now, would you have Unity or Division? |
A26885 | What say you, wretched Souls, can you deny it? |
A26885 | What say you? |
A26885 | What say you? |
A26885 | What the nearer an Agreement should we be? |
A26885 | What then is the cause of this sad division in our Parishes? |
A26885 | When we ask them why they do not set up the practice of Discipline, which they so unanimously plead for? |
A26885 | When you despise a Holy life, are his thoughts like your thoughts? |
A26885 | Where do ● h the ● cripture command them to it, any mor ● then you? |
A26885 | Where know you a Parish in England, that hath no disagreements in matters of Religion? |
A26885 | Whether Grace and Holiness, or sin and carelesness be the better? |
A26885 | Whether Vnity in the Profession of one Faith, Government and Worship, may serve turn? |
A26885 | Whether you have not as much cause to be afraid of sin as they? |
A26885 | Who is it then that hath changed their worship? |
A26885 | Who made them Law- givers to the Church of Christ? |
A26885 | Who will trust such men as you, that will go against their own knowledge and confessions? |
A26885 | Who would dispute whether Infants should be baptized, with a man tha ● knows not wh ● ● Baptism is? |
A26885 | Why dost thou judge thy brother? |
A26885 | Why might not all our Parishes agree on such necessary, honourable and reasonable terms? |
A26885 | Why then doth he invite all, and tender them his saving mercy, and send his messengers to command and importune them to this holy Concord? |
A26885 | Why then will you not all agree to do thus? |
A26885 | Why, if you can agree no better with your selves, how can you agree with us? |
A26885 | Will Magistrates, and Ministers, and people joyn together, to banish it out of Town and Countrey? |
A26885 | Will you fly to Christ with broken bleeding hearts, for safety from sin, and wrath, and Hell, and set more by him then by all the world? |
A26885 | Will you go to dispute or debate the case with one of these? |
A26885 | Will you resolve that 〈 ◊ 〉 shall be so? |
A26885 | Will you study with all Saints to comprehend his Love? |
A26885 | Will you undertake to stand between us and his displeasure? |
A26885 | Would it hurt or hazzard you to forsake your sensual ungodly lives? |
A26885 | Would you have Peace or no Peace? |
A26885 | Would you have us to be all of one mind and way, or not? |
A26885 | Would you see the summe of all my charge in order? |
A26885 | You are agreed I hope that God is to be obeyed rather then men, or then the flesh and the Devil? |
A26885 | You call for Unity: Y ● u talk for Unity, and against sects and divisions: Do you mean as you speak? |
A26885 | You complain that the world is of so many minds: Would you have them all reconciled and of one mind? |
A26885 | You see your godly ne ● g ● bours in possession of this priviledge: And may not you have it if you will? |
A26885 | You talk against being of so many Religions: Is it the true desire of your hearts that we should be all of one Religion? |
A26885 | You tell us with many great complaints of the many differences and divisions that are among us: but shall we Agree so far as we are agreed? |
A26885 | You will make and apprehend it to be your Interest to go contrary to us: And what Agreement can there be, where there are contrary Interests? |
A26885 | You would not sure wish us to Agree to our own destruction, and to make a bargain with you that we may all joyn together in cutting our own throats? |
A26885 | [ But how can you tell that these things were not in use in Gregories daies, when you have kept nothing unchanged which he was used to?] |
A26885 | [ For God hath received him] As if he should say, Dare you despise or cast out him that God receiveth? |
A26885 | [ Whi ● h way went the Spirit of the Lord from me to speeak unto thee?] |
A26885 | [ Why hast thou troubled us? |
A26885 | and Heaven be as dear to you as to them? |
A26885 | and are you in good sadness, or are you not? |
A26885 | and can not he pr ● s ● rve th ● m if he please? |
A26885 | and his Law your Rule as well as theirs? |
A26885 | and ignorant souls that never knew it? |
A26885 | and let them he ● r the Reasons why the godly dare not, and can not come over to their negligent ungodly course? |
A26885 | and may I not be mistaken? |
A26885 | and natures at such enmity to Unite? |
A26885 | and shall it be our Rule? |
A26885 | and so in effect, whether God be God, and man be man? |
A26885 | and so try who it is long of among them, that they ar ● not of One mind and way? |
A26885 | and so what should hinder but we might all be one? |
A26885 | and so whether we should choose Salvation or Damnation? |
A26885 | and that all should agree in so safe a path? |
A26885 | and that we had never concord since you bore sway? |
A26885 | and therefore whether your own Necessity doth not call aloud to you, to Vnite with them and to do as they do? |
A26885 | and to go with you in that loose ungodly way which you will wish your selves that you had never known? |
A26885 | and what Religion that is that all men s ● ould agree in? |
A26885 | and what if thy Brother pray without Book, darest thou therefore judge him? |
A26885 | and what is our distance, and what course must be taken to make us One? |
A26885 | and whether Christ be Christ and shall be our Christ? |
A26885 | and whether God be God and shall be our God? |
A26885 | and whether the Holy Ghost shall be our sanctifier? |
A26885 | and whether we should live as men or as beasts? |
A26885 | and would you not fain have an Agreement, if it might be, through all the world? |
A26885 | and yet will you not agree in this? |
A26885 | darest thou therefore despise him? |
A26885 | how happy for your own souls? |
A26885 | must the godly turn drunkards, and worldlings, and hate ● s of godliness to have Peace with you? |
A26885 | or Christ and Belial? |
A26885 | or forb ● d y ● u any more then them? |
A26885 | or righteousness with unrighteousness? |
A26885 | or the Schollars but in their Teacher? |
A26885 | or the Subjects but in their Soveraign? |
A26885 | or whether we shall live after the flesh and Rule our selves, against the Will and Word of God? |
A26885 | or why dost thou set at naught thy brother? |
A26885 | or would be tyed to it, and carry it about? |
A26885 | poor carnal wretches, do you hate the godly, and yet would you have Unity with them? |
A26885 | shall we all agree to say we are Christians? |
A26885 | th ● ● let your people go about their l ● bours as an Ox to the Yoak, without calling upon God? |
A26885 | that is, shall we agree in heart and practice, so far as we are agreed in opinion and profession? |
A26885 | we shall all stand before the judgement seat of Christ? |
A26885 | we were once Agreed with you, and God constrained us to break that Agreement: and shall we renew it again? |
A26885 | what must we be Ruled by such and such? |
A26885 | what terms shall we agree upon? |
A26885 | what would you give now to be certainly told the only way to Unity and Agreement? |
A26885 | what''s the matter? |
A26885 | when you revile his servants, and scorn his yoak and burden as too heavy, are you then of the mind of Christ? |
A26885 | which do you think in your Consciences is the way? |
A26885 | will you stand to the Word of God? |
A26885 | would you have all Holiness and heavenly- mindedness banished out of the world, because you have banished it from your selves? |
A26885 | would you not have us all of one ● i ● d, and of one Religion? |
A26885 | 〈 ◊ 〉 you keep off death, and 〈 ◊ 〉 diseases, and live here in heal ● h and wealth for ever, whether God will or no? |
A26860 | & c. and at Alexandria under Peter, Meletius, Paulinus, Flavianus, and so oft in other Schisms, and Nullities? |
A26860 | ( To pass forty other Sects) when Rome Excommunicated, yea and prosecuted the Novatians, did it compel them to obey? |
A26860 | 1. Who but the Devil was the gainer of Pope Victor''s Excommunicating the Asians about Easter- day? |
A26860 | 10 D ● d the mutual damnations of the Phantasticks, Iustinian''s and G ● mas party, and the Corrupticolae, force either to obedience? |
A26860 | 3. Who made their office, and by what power? |
A26860 | 3. Who will judg, but the Excommunicator, what is unsinful as to his act? |
A26860 | 4. Who chose and called them to it? |
A26860 | 6 ▪ How far Communion with them that silence hundreds of faithful Ministers, and set up in their stead —& c. is lawful? |
A26860 | 60. saith he, But where do they find, that God ever gave Bishops, Presbyters and Deacons? |
A26860 | 8 neither are nor can be subject to Gods Law, instead of a holy Catholick Church and Communion of Saints? |
A26860 | 8. baptized into? |
A26860 | 8. refuse Baptism till they were satisfied by proof, that the Baptizers were rightly called Ministers? |
A26860 | And Sir, what should I get, should I give a Voluminous Answer to all your books? |
A26860 | And among all the erroneous and contradicting Councils called General, how shall all Christians know which of them to obey? |
A26860 | And by what Authority? |
A26860 | And did not Atticus, Sisinnius and Proclus win more by allowing them their own Communion, and living with them in love and peace? |
A26860 | And did not Christ by that Spirit make Pastors and Teachers, as is before proved? |
A26860 | And did not Christ promise, his Spirit to his Apostles, for the performance of their Commissions? |
A26860 | And did not the Apostles faithfully perform their trust? |
A26860 | And did you think that your roteing over the name to them that deny the thing, would make a wise man change his Religion? |
A26860 | And doth every Baptizer baptize to himself, or to his Bishop? |
A26860 | And doth he not know that it is the species of Bishops that we differ about? |
A26860 | And doth he not see, that by this he also subverteth his foundation of Prelatical power also, as having no better institution than the Priesthood? |
A26860 | And doth not Dr. Stillingfleet take it as the Introduction of Popery, to hold a Constitutive Regent Church- Government, National, or Catholick? |
A26860 | And how can I know by the bare general name, when Dr. Stillingfleet denieth any such thing? |
A26860 | And how prove they their jugding- power? |
A26860 | And how prove you it? |
A26860 | And if I must have Communion with none that''s guilty of Schism, with what Church or Bishop should I joyn? |
A26860 | And if he did not, 1. Who did? |
A26860 | And if it be not divinely established, men may alter it; and what is all this stir about, to keep up their Domination? |
A26860 | And if men made Bishops and Presbyters in specie, may not man unmake them? |
A26860 | And if men made them, how come they to be essential to the Church? |
A26860 | And if so, is his Prelatical mode of Ordination more necessary than actual Baptism? |
A26860 | And if their Sacraments be invalid, what a case is Italy, Spain, France, yea and England in? |
A26860 | And if these be unnecessary, what doth the man plead for? |
A26860 | And is a false approbation of a man that wanteth Essentials, more necessary than having them? |
A26860 | And is all this a Virtue in you? |
A26860 | And is all this such a small or easie matter as he seems to intimate? |
A26860 | And is it no Sin or Slander for you to condemn so many Millions falsly, even the purest and holiest of the Churches on Earth? |
A26860 | And is it the People, or the Bishops, that now keep East and West in mutual damnations? |
A26860 | And is not your own word fitter to tell your minde? |
A26860 | And is the first baptized man among them, a Church himself? |
A26860 | And is there any need to open the Bible to know it? |
A26860 | And is there any one that knoweth what humane Language is, that knoweth not that almost all words have various significations? |
A26860 | And it will be so, while the thing is unfeasable; who will be hated to do no good? |
A26860 | And of this how can any one be uncapable, that is but capable of understanding the common dealings of the world? |
A26860 | And shall we still stretch our sense against the plain words, when the Parliament long after hath rejected such an Exposition? |
A26860 | And the true nature and use of the Sacraments themselves? |
A26860 | And then we shall soon see whether it be possible for our Diocesans to do it, or any considerable part of it? |
A26860 | And then where is his regular succession from the Apostles? |
A26860 | And then who are those Governours of the Church that he talks of, that must judg? |
A26860 | And were not those Commissions to gather, and settle his Churches, and teach them all that he commanded them? |
A26860 | And what a reason brings he, That the practice lasteth only for this life, and therefore,& c? |
A26860 | And what great good will it do the world, to tell them how grossly you abuse the Chuch, and how confidently and voluminously you err? |
A26860 | And what if the intention of the Supreme, and of the Diocesan are contrary? |
A26860 | And what if these Inferiours that make Popes, Primates, or Councils, by Intention would take down half their power? |
A26860 | And what need there is of Definition to explain them? |
A26860 | And what need we more than common experience? |
A26860 | And when is it that their Christianity ceaseth for want of the other Sacrament? |
A26860 | And when so great a part of Christians as are the Iacobites, Abassines,& c. own Dioscorus, and condemn that Council to this day? |
A26860 | And whether they may put down the Preaching part, the Praying part, the Sacraments, or which of them? |
A26860 | And whether they now take the Bishops and Church of France for Papists? |
A26860 | And whether they took Gerson, Cusanus, Cassander, Erasmus, for Papists, or not? |
A26860 | And who be the men that have this Office- changing- power, that we may know whether, and how far, and how long we are bound to obey them? |
A26860 | And who but the Pope must call that General Council, preside, approve,& c.? |
A26860 | And why are not they Schismaticks for disobeying a General Council? |
A26860 | And why do they abuse the name of the Keys, as if it were the cause of that which it is no cause of, but is done only by the Magistrates Sword? |
A26860 | And why doth the man talk only against different practice? |
A26860 | And why is he not also a Physician, Musician, Pilot,& c. because he may do the like by them? |
A26860 | And why not next, all Christians to cease hearing, and praying, if so forbidden? |
A26860 | And why not, if he must do all that the Governours require, or nothing divers to them? |
A26860 | And will you be angry with me, for not believing that God is such a one, as will for ever hate and damn in Hell the souls that loved him above all? |
A26860 | And yet must we have Universities? |
A26860 | And, O that they would tell us, what Churches they be that they live in communion with? |
A26860 | Are all Teachers? |
A26860 | Are all these less than the abuse of Liberty by Inferiors, in Praying, Preaching, or Disorders? |
A26860 | Are not many actual practices grounded on circumstances? |
A26860 | Are not many of those circumstances obnoxious to great mutability? |
A26860 | Are not ordinary Governours the competent Iudges of their actual change? |
A26860 | Are they all this while the children of God, or of the Devil? |
A26860 | As for the Question, Whether you are a Papist, what obligation lieth on me to decide it? |
A26860 | As if the wisest and best man had right to the Crown or Church- power? |
A26860 | As if you should ask, How we prove that Teaching is essential to a Schoolmaster or Tutor? |
A26860 | Besides the sub- urbicarian Assemblies ▪ 4 ▪ And how many Presbyters used still to be with the Bishop in the same Assembly? |
A26860 | But 1. if they change Gods Laws, or instituted Church- forms or Government, may they not change their own? |
A26860 | But as to the Thing, what is it more than I have described? |
A26860 | But did God determin ● of three? |
A26860 | But hath he yet proved that a true Minister of Christ hath no necessary work but thus to administer Sacraments? |
A26860 | But how proveth he that Presbyters( and Bishops) are not Pastors or Teachers? |
A26860 | But if he mean it only of Church- Governours, how come they to have so absolute a power more than Civil Magistrates? |
A26860 | But it seems let them never so falsely expound Scripture, their own intentions still shall prevail against all the word of God? |
A26860 | But what if a Council of many Nations, called General, gainsay the National? |
A26860 | But what if the National Synod gainsay the Provincial? |
A26860 | But why answer you not what we have said against it? |
A26860 | But why then did the Canons of 1640. in the Et caetera Oath, swear the Clergy never to consent to change? |
A26860 | But ● f this Hypothesis be none of his Adversaries, but come out of the Meal- Tub, or forge of Inventers, what shall such men be called? |
A26860 | Can he devise any other sort of power in the Ordainers, than I have named? |
A26860 | Can not the best believer go to Heaven, if all your Priests will but deny him the Sacrament? |
A26860 | Can they justly baptize the adult, and not teach them the great Articles of the Creed which they must profess? |
A26860 | Can you bring all the sinners about us to repentance, by excommunications? |
A26860 | Can you prove that the rest did any 〈 ◊ 〉 celebrate than preach? |
A26860 | Did Augustines rejection of the Britains, and the Britains and Scots long refusing Communion with the Romanists, compel either party to obey? |
A26860 | Did Cyril''s Counsel against the Ioannites win them, or harden them? |
A26860 | Did all these plead for damning Schism, against all title to salvation? |
A26860 | Did any man but Christ send forth the Seventy? |
A26860 | Did ever Protestant preach this Doctrine, That there is no appeal from the supreme Prelates, to God? |
A26860 | Did he by this become a damned Schismatick, or lose his Covenant- right to salvation? |
A26860 | Did it compel them to obedience? |
A26860 | Did it overthrow all Government of the world to appeal from these to the ● cripture? |
A26860 | Did not Christ and his Spirit in the Apostles, institute so much as the Church- essentials? |
A26860 | Did our Bishops make the universal Law, which stablisheth the Office in the world? |
A26860 | Did the Excommunicating of Leo Isaurus, Constantine, and the rest of the Iconoclasts, compel them to obey? |
A26860 | Did the Excommunicating of the Albigenses and Waldenses, bring them to obedience? |
A26860 | Did the Excommunicating of the German Protestants, and Queen Elizabeth, and the English Protestants, bring them to obedience? |
A26860 | Did the Excommunications of the Emperours, Frederick, Henry,& c. and their adherents, as the Venetian Interdict, compel them to obedience? |
A26860 | Did the Excommunications of the Monothelites compel them to obedience? |
A26860 | Did the Popes Excommunicating of the Goths in Spain and and other parts, compel them to obey him? |
A26860 | Did we devote our selves to Patrons in our Ministry, or to Diocesans, or immediately to God? |
A26860 | Do not Bishops generate their Species, and make Bishops their equals? |
A26860 | Do not baptizing Presbyters( and Lay- men say, Turtullian and the Papists) assure men of salvation, though they should not hear of a Bishop? |
A26860 | Do not many millions understand the common dealings of the world that understand not the Gospel? |
A26860 | Do not the Bishops believe this, and therefore will not trust to their excommunications at all without the Sword? |
A26860 | Do the children beget the fathers, and yet may not Presbyters propagate their species? |
A26860 | Do they give it as Masters and Owners, or only as the Donors Ministers? |
A26860 | Do you not better know your self? |
A26860 | Do you think men can change their judgment, meerly because they are commanded, or excommunicated? |
A26860 | Do you think that Thieves have killed as many men as Wars have done? |
A26860 | Doth any living man know all lawful things to be such? |
A26860 | Doth any of our actions here last longer than while they are doing? |
A26860 | Doth he not know by how good reason the Schools oblige Disputants, first to explain their Terms? |
A26860 | Doth he not know, that Government commandeth duty, as well as forbiddeth the contrary? |
A26860 | Doth not the Church of England tell us, that Councils have erred,& c? |
A26860 | Doth not this set man so far above God, or equal with him, as will still tempt men to think that more are Antichristian than the Pope? |
A26860 | Either Ordination, and Collation of Church- power, must be given by Superiors, or by Equals: if by Equals, why may not Presbyters make Presbyters? |
A26860 | For I have flesh and blood, and who can choose but have a little partiality for that way which all his worldly interest pleadeth for? |
A26860 | General Councils) be both obeyed? |
A26860 | Had the Pope Excommunicated the Africans in the long fraction in the days of Aurelius and Austin, would it have compeled them to obedience? |
A26860 | Hath he said a word to prove that Pastors and Teachers are not ordinary Officers, contrary to the common judgment of the Church in all ages? |
A26860 | He adds, How can subjects preserve their due Subordination to their Superiors if they practice differently? |
A26860 | He adds, They may find some actual practices; but will they call that a Charter? |
A26860 | He will say, I may disobey the Provincial? |
A26860 | How can they prove that Preaching is at all any essential part of the Office? |
A26860 | How contrary is this to the Doctrine of the Council of Carthage in the Epistle in Cyprian, of Martial and Basilides; and to many honest Councils? |
A26860 | How contrary is this to the common Christian Doctrine, that we must obey none that command us to sin against God? |
A26860 | How easie is it to tell you or any man, that you speak contradictions? |
A26860 | How many Sects say, Say as we say, and do as we do, and follow us, or you can not be saved? |
A26860 | How many such instances may I give you? |
A26860 | How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? |
A26860 | How shall we know which Council to obey? |
A26860 | How will this stand with the Judgment and practice of the Apostles, that said, Whether it be meet that we obey God, or man, judg ye? |
A26860 | I pray you, where was that? |
A26860 | If Baptism undoubtedly save, at what Age doth the effect cease? |
A26860 | If Christs works be saving, whose work is it to make so light of mans damnation? |
A26860 | If Clergy- men, who were they? |
A26860 | If Gloucester Clergy and People had chose another when Goodman, a Papist, was Bishop, which was the Bishop? |
A26860 | If I prove that Papists have no such Authority as you plead for, are all their Baptisms and Ordinations null? |
A26860 | If Lay- men, was it Christians or Infidels? |
A26860 | If a man study, and pray, and endeavour to the utmost, to know the truth, and you say, that yet he erreth, will a censure cure his understanding? |
A26860 | If all these be little tollerable differences, why may not we be tollerated? |
A26860 | If by Superiors, then who shall give the Pope his Power? |
A26860 | If copious discourses to the contrary will not hinder such busie disputers from such inhumane slanders, are they meet to be disputed with? |
A26860 | If divers, I have communion with many Bishops that I am not subject to ▪ If the same, how many must each man be subject to? |
A26860 | If he say, that they give the Office- power; I ask, Is the controversie about the word[ Give] or the Act? |
A26860 | If it be so, how many such Papal Councils, arrogating such power, have been false Prophets? |
A26860 | If men, was it Clerg- ymen or Lay- men? |
A26860 | If not, how ca ● e the Reformed Churches to justifie their Reformation? |
A26860 | If not, whether the Church of England be all the Catholick Church in their account? |
A26860 | If the King command Taxes, Military service,& c. may we disobey, and call it Passive obedience? |
A26860 | If the National, why not a Provincial against them? |
A26860 | If the former? |
A26860 | If there be none above them, either God or Inferiours give them their power? |
A26860 | If they say with Peter, If all men deny thee, I will not; how shall I know that they say true? |
A26860 | If they were faultless, what need had they of us? |
A26860 | If thus much of Christs Laws and Institutions may be altered by Prelates, how shall we be sure that all the rest is not also at their will and mercy? |
A26860 | If yea, What is the difference between the said Papists Church- Form and Government, and that which these call the Church Catholick, and Dispute for? |
A26860 | If yea, Whether the Reformed Churches be not as worthy of their communion? |
A26860 | If you say as Binnius, that all Councils have just so much power as the Pope giveth them, how shall we know that this is true? |
A26860 | If you say that he may not delegate the whole work, de specie, but a part; I ask which part? |
A26860 | If you say, To what purpose is all this? |
A26860 | If you say, we must obey that which is Orthodox, who is the Judg? |
A26860 | Insomuch that Paul thanks God that he baptiz ● d few of the Corinthians, because God sent him not to baptize, but to Preach the Gospel? |
A26860 | Is a baptized praying believer out of the Communion of Christs Church, though he doubt of Diocesans, or Patriarchs? |
A26860 | Is accusing, proving? |
A26860 | Is communion and subjection all one with him, or divers? |
A26860 | Is it any wonder if such Principles be called Antichristian? |
A26860 | Is it like to signifie more here than in the Doctrine of Justification, when it is so oft said that we are justified by faith? |
A26860 | Is it no contradiction to say, that the Sacrament is Gods means of giving Sanctification? |
A26860 | Is it no other? |
A26860 | Is it not against the sense of all mankind, even the common Light of Nature, where utter Atheism hath not prevailed? |
A26860 | Is it then done? |
A26860 | Is not Omission against Government as well as Commission? |
A26860 | Is not the universal visible Church, consisting of all professed Christians, Headed only by Christ, the only universal Church visible in the world? |
A26860 | Is not this pretended authority and inspiration that of Prophets, as different from meer Teachers and Guides by Gods Law already made? |
A26860 | Is there no Communion with this as such? |
A26860 | Is this the rate of these mens wise disputations? |
A26860 | May not men be baptized in Turkey, or among other Infidels, or Indians, where there is no Church? |
A26860 | May not my writing be as much mistaken by you? |
A26860 | May we forbear, sobeit we do not the contrary? |
A26860 | May we plead Gods Authority against a King, and not against the Prelates? |
A26860 | Must all be baptized again that they baptized? |
A26860 | Must none in Rome, Italy, Spain, France,& c. practise contrary to their Governours? |
A26860 | Must we take th ● ● r own words for all that Popes, or Prelates c ● ● im? |
A26860 | Must we therefore obey men without appeal to God, if they forbid us all duty, and command all sin? |
A26860 | Nay, how can they celebrate the Sacraments without Preaching or Teaching? |
A26860 | Nay, if they were so blind as to intend them power to pull down themselves, may they not recall it? |
A26860 | Nor in China, Iapan,& c? |
A26860 | Now ad rem, can we disagree how far this constraineth the unwilling? |
A26860 | Or can you prove on ● Bishops Ordination a Nullity? |
A26860 | Or did he mean that God will justifie us for any Villany that we shall do in obedience to the Supreme Clergy? |
A26860 | Or did he think that by appealing to Gods judgment, we challenge them there to dispute with us? |
A26860 | Or do they continue in Hell to love him, while he hateth and tormenteth them? |
A26860 | Or doth it so little concern us, as that we may not so much as plead it for any practice forbidden us by superiours? |
A26860 | Or if you think any other be the highest, who makes them such? |
A26860 | Or that all external solemnities are of the same necessity? |
A26860 | Or the good Emperour, Valentinian, who died unbaptiz ● d, but taken by Ambrose for a blessed man? |
A26860 | Or to the General Council, if it be greatest? |
A26860 | Or was it not( say some Historians) the murder of about two Millions, that solitudinem fecit, quam vocarunt pacem? |
A26860 | Or what is your own way of remedy? |
A26860 | Our Parents( mostly) were never Ordained Bishops, or Priests: Must not Children therefore hear them, and believe them( fide humanâ)? |
A26860 | Our first question is, What the Pastoral Office is, and especially Discipline? |
A26860 | Plainly, Reader, do you know the difference between the Senate of Rome or Venice, and the Assembly at Nimmegen, Ratisbone, or Frankford? |
A26860 | Reproach ● ng those Magistrates as Contemners of Religion, who will not punish us as Deceivers, as if it were not you that is the Deceiver? |
A26860 | Scripture will shame him, and men may make new Species of Church- Pastors, and unmake, or alter them; and how many, or how oft, who knows? |
A26860 | Shall not all the actions of men in this world be examined and judged of by Christ hereafter? |
A26860 | Some other may say, What''s your case to many others? |
A26860 | The Church- men that I hear from, despise it, and say, What is Mr. Dodwell to us? |
A26860 | The question is, Whether these that have Communicated, should yet be baptized? |
A26860 | Then did the Church, or Kingdom of England well, to disobey, or forsake the Roman Power, that was over them? |
A26860 | Then why may not the Bishops put down Presbyters, if they make the Species, or make as many Species as they please? |
A26860 | There may be divers Bishops in one City or County; which of these mean you? |
A26860 | They have decreed deposing Kings, absolving Subjects from their Allegiance, adoring Images,& c. And what is it that yet they may not do? |
A26860 | This man minds me of the saying of an Atheistical Ph ● sician, What needs there all this Preaching and stir? |
A26860 | Was it not Atticus and Proclus love and lenity that ended that division? |
A26860 | Was it not by appealing to Scripture against the visible Church Rulers, that were commonly against them? |
A26860 | Was it the Holy Ghost which was in the imposing Apostle or Prelate that was given by him, and out of him into the Ordained? |
A26860 | Were not P ● pes, Council, Prelates, and Priests against them, for the far greatest part? |
A26860 | Were not our Martyrs rather Rebels, that died for disobeying an Absolute Power? |
A26860 | Were not that to call him worse than the Devil, whom they do not love? |
A26860 | Were they all that while without any promise of salvation, or ordinary hope? |
A26860 | What Papists, Quakers, Anabaptist, Separatists,& c. are compelled to any good by the Bishops denying them the Sacrament? |
A26860 | What a task will it be for Mr. Dodwell to tell us what state the baptized are in till they receive the Lords Supper? |
A26860 | What can you take the Office to be that includeth not Teaching? |
A26860 | What if in France I had sworn obedience to their Bishops, and after see that it was an unlawful Oath, quod materiam, am I bound by it till death? |
A26860 | What if it be once said that[ 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉,] when many other Texts expound it? |
A26860 | What if the Bishops only forbid us to confess Christ, to come to Church, to Pray, to give Alms, to do any good? |
A26860 | What if the King and Law command the contrary? |
A26860 | What is it? |
A26860 | What is the Vnion and necessary Communion of the Catholick Church, according to this accusing Defender? |
A26860 | What proof was ever given of this? |
A26860 | What self- contradiction and confusion would some men rather run into, than grant Christ to be Christ? |
A26860 | What''s become then of his doctrine of obeying the Episcopacy of the place where we live? |
A26860 | What? |
A26860 | When did you prove that actual giving the Sacrament was essential to a Bishop or Presbyter? |
A26860 | When the Orthodox Excommunicated the Arrians, did it force them to obey? |
A26860 | When they got almost all the Bishops for them, and Excommunicated and destroyed their Excommunicators? |
A26860 | When we are for one sort of Bishops, and against another? |
A26860 | Where can they find such a Charter for the power of Presbyters in Scripture as they speak of? |
A26860 | Where do you find that ever any one in the New Testament was ordained a Mass Priest, or Sacrament Priest, and not a Teacher? |
A26860 | Whether false Prophets were not grievously threatened among the Iews; and whether Christ did not command us to beware of false Prophets? |
A26860 | Whether he be not a false Prophet( worse than a false teacher) that falsely pretendeth to that which is proper to a Prophet? |
A26860 | Whether the French, Spanish, Italian, Greeks, Nestorians, Jacobites, Copties, Abassines, be in their Communion, or not? |
A26860 | Whether their Commands be not null, as contrary to Gods? |
A26860 | Whether then an ignorant Oath to obey such Usurpers, repented of, do bind to obey them still? |
A26860 | Whether they destroy not the ancient order of particular Churches( Bishops) and Discipline? |
A26860 | Whether they took the Councils of Constance and Basil for Papists? |
A26860 | Who giveth the Archbishop of Canterbury his Power? |
A26860 | Whose Intention is it that giveth power to the Pope, if he be greatest? |
A26860 | Why is not Ignatius confuted if he erred? |
A26860 | Why is not every King a Bishop, for he may appoint men to do a Bishops work? |
A26860 | Why should you expect that I should say you are none? |
A26860 | Why then are the openly wicked so numerous? |
A26860 | Why was not Diocesan Episcopacy in the Creed, if the belief and obedience be necessary to salvation? |
A26860 | Will he take that love from them when they die? |
A26860 | Will they not reply, And shall not the Bishop then he damned instead of us, as well as instead of the silenced Preacher? |
A26860 | Will you tell the King so to his saace, that before his Coronation no act is valid that he doth? |
A26860 | Would he make men think that I take him to have most authority or power, that hath the best gifts? |
A26860 | Would they not laugh at you, or pity you? |
A26860 | Would you have men believe that external solemnities are necessary to the Right of Heart ▪ Covenanters before God, as to salvetion? |
A26860 | Would you have thought that ever a man should publickly use such a Cothurnus among the Learned? |
A26860 | and all be damned Schismaticks that turn to better? |
A26860 | and how few Subjects would it leave the King? |
A26860 | and how shall they believe if they hear not? |
A26860 | and how shall they hear without a Preacher? |
A26860 | and in what order and cases? |
A26860 | and it be known that our National Church is gainsayed by the far greatest part of the Bishops in the world? |
A26860 | and must so much riches and honour maintain this much? |
A26860 | and must the Holy Ghost be given by the Bishops for this? |
A26860 | and the great and many benefits to be received? |
A26860 | and the great and many duties to be done? |
A26860 | and to make Mahometans think that they are Saints in comparison of us, and that Christians are an unholy sort of men? |
A26860 | and what error so great that a former may not introduce? |
A26860 | and while they defend their practices, and pretend Divine authority for them? |
A26860 | and will the general name here explain each parties sense? |
A26860 | and yet may a man be validly a Bishop, and the Key keeper of Heaven that believeth not that there is a God, a Christ or Heaven, and so professeth? |
A26860 | and yet that keeping men from it is the means? |
A26860 | are you serious? |
A26860 | how great would the number be? |
A26860 | if not the whole( by self- contradiction?) |
A26860 | in a state of damnation, who was not baptized till near his death? |
A26860 | is it a damning sin not to feed, cloath, and visit in Prison one of Christ''s little ones? |
A26860 | no men judged according to their works, or for any thing done in the body? |
A26860 | nor in Turky neither? |
A26860 | or did they regard it? |
A26860 | or that to Rule is essential to a Ruler; or to give Physick essential to a Physician? |
A26860 | or which is it that they may alter, and which not? |
A26860 | what may men come to? |
A26860 | when in the days of Philippicus they had a Council, saith Binnius, of Innumerable Bishops? |
A26860 | whether I hold a power in the Church to deny men the Sacrament that would have it? |
A26860 | which is to make Christians of Christians? |
A26860 | which must I obey? |
A26860 | which of you was to blame to meddle with the Word till you had skill in Causes, to understand it without a Definition? |
A26860 | — that it should with any man living be a controversie, Whether one Bishop be sufficient for all this? |
A26911 | & c. And doth not the Canon yet disable them from bringing them to hear a Sermon at the next Parish Church, when they have none at Home? |
A26911 | & c. Is the word Church here taken for no Christians longer than they are Assembled? |
A26911 | 15. and 23,& c. How can you pray for a Reformation of that which you think needeth none? |
A26911 | 27. prove, that all Nations in the World might devote their Children unto God, with the same assurance of acceptation as the Israelites? |
A26911 | 6. when there were none?) |
A26911 | A Pope is one that claimeth Soveraignty over all the Church on Earth: Doth he do so that taketh none for his Flock, but Consenters? |
A26911 | Again I ask, Shall any man escape punishement by such a plea of mercy? |
A26911 | Alas, how little know you what the Conformity is which you defend? |
A26911 | Am I also a Rebel, Traytor, and no Christian, if I refuse? |
A26911 | And are not the London Ministers able good men, that would do it if they could? |
A26911 | And are not these made Judges of the sense of the Law? |
A26911 | And can you think that after all this, they meant to leave it to the particular Bishops, whether there should be any Uniformity or not? |
A26911 | And did you ever know a Child Baptized without any Sponsor? |
A26911 | And do not Papists, and Turks say, that No Law against God is in force? |
A26911 | And do you not plead for it openly, declaring that you Assent and Consent to all things contained in it, and prescribed by it? |
A26911 | And doth not this imply, that else he should not come? |
A26911 | And doth the Acts, being placed first, make it no Appendix? |
A26911 | And doth their Government therefore contain no evil? |
A26911 | And hath the Church and Cause of holy Discipline lost so much of your prayers too? |
A26911 | And here he talks of the Corporation Oath, and exclaimeth[ Is this the way of curing Church Divisions? |
A26911 | And how can the Incumbent know in such Parishes what they are? |
A26911 | And how is it possible this can be amended rebus sic stantibus? |
A26911 | And how is that proved? |
A26911 | And how many such have you known in London excommunicated, or openly suspended? |
A26911 | And if my Dissent do not Unchristen me, why doth the People''s Unchristen them? |
A26911 | And if none be proper, what is it for him to be Great and One Law- giver to his Church? |
A26911 | And if we begin to roul down the Hill, how little know we where to stop? |
A26911 | And is all this fit Work for two or three singular Men? |
A26911 | And is such a Man Unconverted? |
A26911 | And is this the Power of the Keys or Excommunication? |
A26911 | And is this the true and only way of Concord? |
A26911 | And know you not that a Bishop hath no power against the Canons? |
A26911 | And may not one profess any thing at that Rate? |
A26911 | And must not you be a Non- conformist in the Diocess of any such Bishop as these? |
A26911 | And must we be punished for Conforming? |
A26911 | And shall any Wise Man follow such quick Changes? |
A26911 | And should this be nothing to you, who call on us to reverence the Old Conformists? |
A26911 | And that all are against it as with us that are against Diocesan Prelacy? |
A26911 | And they have caused the Act of Elizabeth, to be bound with this Book, as it was with the Old: And doth this infer two Books from two Acts,& c? |
A26911 | And to what purpose then do you write for Conformity, when one Lye must not be told to save our Liberty? |
A26911 | And were it put in the end, were it not the same thing? |
A26911 | And what can constrain an unwilling person to understand? |
A26911 | And what drew you to begin with Reordination( which none of the Antient Non- Conformists are put upon?) |
A26911 | And what good would so much Conformity do the Church? |
A26911 | And what if you had proved the Salvation of all wicked Christians Baptized Infants? |
A26911 | And what may not one thus say and swear? |
A26911 | And what reason have we to surmise that they were not sound Believers? |
A26911 | And what then? |
A26911 | And what then? |
A26911 | And what will not some Men affirm? |
A26911 | And what''s this then to the sense of the Article in question, that speaks of all Baptized Children? |
A26911 | And which shall stand, one or both, and how far? |
A26911 | And who can manage an ill cause without somewhat that is too like it? |
A26911 | And who can not pretend such scruple? |
A26911 | And who doth any thing which needeth no repentance or amendment? |
A26911 | And who hath equal Power with them? |
A26911 | And who is so wise as to speak wisely at all times? |
A26911 | And who knows how to define and bound your[ Reasons of Suspicion?] |
A26911 | And who will not pretend it, when that will justifie them? |
A26911 | And why do so few Conformists so use it? |
A26911 | And why may you not say so of any Untruth? |
A26911 | And why talk you of the Surplice, and omit the main Question, Whether we may consent to the Liturgy, Preface and Rubrick, which impose it as they do? |
A26911 | And why was this so much disclaimed before? |
A26911 | And would not so many good men amend it, were it possible? |
A26911 | And yet can you assert that they are distinct Orders, when the Power of Ordaining is made the chief part of the Bishops Order? |
A26911 | And yet do I err? |
A26911 | And yet he before said himself, that the unwilling can not be Pastor and Flock: And is not this the same? |
A26911 | And yet shall so sober a man tell us, That subscribing the Old Act, is subscribing the Old Book? |
A26911 | And yet the Magistrate may make me a Pastor to the Parish? |
A26911 | Are not Monarchy, Aristocracy, and Democracy, three Forms, contrary to unity of Form; though Humanity, Piety, and Regiment, be the same in all? |
A26911 | Are not all Ministers to subscribe to Administer the Sacraments in no other Form than the Liturgy? |
A26911 | Are not true Christians saved? |
A26911 | Are not two thousand Ministers silenced, and more, that pleaded Mercy to themselves and others, for the reason of their Non- conformity? |
A26911 | Are these Contents part of the Book? |
A26911 | Are they not still members of the Parish- Church? |
A26911 | Are those then admitted, that through Prophaneness desire not God- Fathers? |
A26911 | Are we not then concluded against Conformity by the Bishop''s judgment, by your own Rule? |
A26911 | Break the Law and Canon, and say you did it in Mercy and kept it, and try whether you will pass for a Conformist? |
A26911 | But by such stretches what words may not Protestant or Papist take by an Exposition of his own making? |
A26911 | But could you think this should convince me, that know it to be false? |
A26911 | But do you take a Bishop here for the same as a Presbyter, or as a species of Presbyters, or as a superiour to Presbyters? |
A26911 | But how shall I know whether every Stranger that cometh in be a Christian, or was ever Baptized? |
A26911 | But in answer to, Where read we in Scripture of the Chancellor''s Office? |
A26911 | But is not the Appendix part of the Book? |
A26911 | But is this obeying him, and his Church and Successors? |
A26911 | But our question is not what the Ordinary will do, but what the Law and Canon bind him and you to do? |
A26911 | But the question is, Whether you Assent to it,( or more?) |
A26911 | But the question is, whether they may be Consented to, and approved? |
A26911 | But were not Parents formerly disabled from keeping Children and Servants from spending much of the Lord''s Day in Dancing? |
A26911 | But what Law of the Church is it that you thus perform? |
A26911 | But what if I knew that multitudes do not so, doth it make them of that Church because they should consent and do not? |
A26911 | But what if it be a Man that consenteth not but thinketh he doth, or yet doth not know? |
A26911 | But what is this to Conformity? |
A26911 | But what obligation is on me to baptize all the Children of those that take me for none of their Pastor? |
A26911 | But what will not Men talk for? |
A26911 | But when did you prove that every professing sign is used to the same use in specie, as the covenanting dedicating Symbol of the Cross is? |
A26911 | But wherein is it? |
A26911 | But who shall be judge at some Years after? |
A26911 | But whose reputation is it that you rest on? |
A26911 | But why did you avoid the Order of my Book''s Objections? |
A26911 | But why did you not give some answer to my express proof of the contrary? |
A26911 | But yet is it true? |
A26911 | But you might have known that we will not believe you: Why then should you thus put us off with your bare word? |
A26911 | Can not many with the Pastor better govern one Parish, than one Chancellor can many Scores, or Hundreds? |
A26911 | Can not we thus say any thing required, and mean what we list by it? |
A26911 | Can the Church more plainly speak the sense of her Liturgy? |
A26911 | Can we serve them in a Prison any better than Non- Conformists may? |
A26911 | Can you say all these words if no Sponsor be there? |
A26911 | Can you tell what every Subscriber to this day thought? |
A26911 | Could you have more evidently confuted your self? |
A26911 | Did any one Church on Earth receive a Pastor by the Magistrates imposition for the first 300 Years? |
A26911 | Did he institute Baptism and his Supper, as a meer Man, or a meer Minister? |
A26911 | Did not he say before, that the Man can not be their Pastor without his own and the Peoples consent? |
A26911 | Did not the Orthodox Churches commonly refuse Bishops, which Valens, and such Erroneous Emperors set over them? |
A26911 | Did the World ever here this Doctrine before? |
A26911 | Did they that declared it contrary to Law, declare that men may resist it by Arms? |
A26911 | Did you dream that all these take Laymens Baptizing for null? |
A26911 | Did you ever consider the Text? |
A26911 | Did you ever in your life know a sinner brought to a repentance seemingly unfeigned by them? |
A26911 | Did you ever read the Conference at Hampton Court? |
A26911 | Did you not thus keep the end of the Law when you Preacht at Warrington? |
A26911 | Did you think that a credible profession of true Christianity, is not a credible profession of Conversion? |
A26911 | Did you think that this was the meaning of the Liturgy, that all Infants are saved, when it saith All the Baptized? |
A26911 | Did you think you spake to the Case? |
A26911 | Did your Learned, Pious, Moderate Bishop, excuse you for that plea? |
A26911 | Do all such as are afore described, make such a credible profession of true Christianity? |
A26911 | Do or can Bishops by Visitations know the People and their Cases of a thousand, or many hundred Parishes, so as to hear and judge them? |
A26911 | Do they commonly resist unlawfully Commissioned Souldiers by Arms? |
A26911 | Do they declare their Assent to all things contained in the Book, and mean only the Service which they must say? |
A26911 | Do they swear Obedience to the Fore- man and his Successors?] |
A26911 | Do they that extirpate Presbytery, or Democracy, extirpate all? |
A26911 | Do you believe that a Lay- Chancellor, who you confess hath not the power of the Keys, doth or can well execute them? |
A26911 | Do you believe that this is the Species of subjection, which is meant in the Book and Oath? |
A26911 | Do you confute me by repeating my one words? |
A26911 | Do you consider what you say? |
A26911 | Do you know how many have been Fined and sent to Goal for Preaching, though they pleaded for it Mercy to Mens Souls? |
A26911 | Do you not know how unlike their Courts are to fit a sinner for absolution by true Repetance? |
A26911 | Do you not now dwell in London? |
A26911 | Do you think Worshiping in the high Places, was worse than this? |
A26911 | Do you think none of them would do it, if they thought it a duty, and the lawful and safe way of Discipline? |
A26911 | Do you think their Parishes have no scores or hundreds of Brutists, Atheists, Drunkards, Fornicators, or other scandalous sinners? |
A26911 | Doth he say, and unsay in the next Lines? |
A26911 | Doth it follow then, that because Men( yea, any Man) may make a professing Sign of his Mind, that Man( yea, every Man) may make a new Sacrament? |
A26911 | Doth not the Church Command that no Parent be God- Father to his own Child, and no Questions or Answers be used but the words of the Liturgy? |
A26911 | Doth not the Liturgy make the God- Fathers Office necessary? |
A26911 | Doth not this Instance prove Mr. Cheyney, to be a mistaking Expositor of the Church- Government, the Bishops themselves being Judges? |
A26911 | Doth that prove them Ministers too? |
A26911 | Doth the Canon that forbids Men to go from their own Parish Churches, extend to the Bishop? |
A26911 | Doth the Command of subscribing the thirty nine Articles contain no more, but to be Orthodox? |
A26911 | Doth the prescript of the Oath of Supremacy and Allegiance, impose no more than to be Loyal? |
A26911 | Few God- Fathers have propriety in them: How then will their devoting prove their Salvation? |
A26911 | For what should hinder them when it is their interest? |
A26911 | Had it been my duty to pronounce you excommunicate, because the Chancellor decreed it? |
A26911 | Have I in the Books, cited by you, so largely told you what I mean, and must you print the Question before you will take an Answer? |
A26911 | Have we so many Books of Ecclesiastical Policie, if there be no Political Society that is a particular Church? |
A26911 | Have you read Dr. Hearne, Mr. Digs, Mich. Hudson, Mr. Welden, Dr. Arnway,& c? |
A26911 | His first Question is,[ Do we take you to have the just qualifications of a Pastor?] |
A26911 | His second Question is,[ Do we take you to be duly ordained?] |
A26911 | How doth the Minister know that they come not, who knoweth very few of his Parishoners? |
A26911 | How is the Bishop one of the Parson''s Flock, and the Parson one of the Bishop''s Flock, both at once? |
A26911 | How oft have I told you, that I am laying nothing to the Charge of others, but excusing our selves? |
A26911 | How prove you that none of these are Dogs or Swine? |
A26911 | How prove you that? |
A26911 | How will the Parson practice his Conformity, who consenteth when he putteth any one from the Sacrament, to certifie the Ordinary within fourteen Days? |
A26911 | How will you prove that they judge all true Ministers whom they Tolerate? |
A26911 | I ask you, Where is the Priest authorized to do it? |
A26911 | I ask, Whether you would not have c ● ● led this a Sacrament? |
A26911 | I askt him, By whom that Child had right more than any other Heathen''s Child? |
A26911 | I think most of England are unconfirmed; if they desire it, what keepeth them from it? |
A26911 | I would but know whether Men may make New Sacraments of the Covenant of Grace, or not? |
A26911 | If Consent be not expressed, how shall it be known? |
A26911 | If Legislation, the chief part of Supreme Government, be common to him and Bishops, why is not that Royally Common? |
A26911 | If Rebels rise in Arms against their Rulers, but yet renounce Rebellion, how are they to be expounded? |
A26911 | If Rulers command men to marry their own Sisters, and yet say, That they abhor Incest, may one justifie this because they are against Incest? |
A26911 | If Socinians renounce all that is against God''s Word, and yet command you to renounce Christ''s Godhead, may you do it? |
A26911 | If before, then must they have trial of him, or take all for( Faithful) that are ordained by a Bishop? |
A26911 | If but some, what the better are we for your Discourse, if you tell us not how to know them? |
A26911 | If it be not, must I sin when the Magistrate bids me to save him from Persecuting me? |
A26911 | If not, how can you say you do? |
A26911 | If not, must I write it again as oft as you will bid me? |
A26911 | If not, what is it that makes a Member, and how are the Pastors special Flock truly known to him from others? |
A26911 | If so, Then they are false: If not, How shall we know what is or is not part of the Book? |
A26911 | If such be allowed in this Case, why not in all other like it? |
A26911 | If that be ill, how will it justifie Lay- Chancellors? |
A26911 | If the Church in three Books express her sense, must I not set all together, and take them in all? |
A26911 | If the People, we are wheeled about to that which is resisted: And then, When is it that they must judge, before they receive him, or after? |
A26911 | If the word Church may be taken for a Transient Assembly, doth it follow that there is no other? |
A26911 | If they are not, Whether dwelling in the Parish make a Christian a Member of the Parish Church? |
A26911 | If they be Members, to whom shall we present the Bishop for not coming to Church, or for his Crimes? |
A26911 | If they be conceived and born Innocent, what need have they of Baptism for Remission of Sin? |
A26911 | If this Brother mean otherwise, what meant he by saying, that No Man can be a Pastor to a People against their will? |
A26911 | If three sorts excepted limit you not from excepting more; What can do it? |
A26911 | If yea, how many? |
A26911 | If you mean Christ''s Order, we must do it: If you mean the Churches, where shall we find it? |
A26911 | If you say to God, as you do to us,[ What more would we have?] |
A26911 | If you will confound Indulgent Connivance, and Conformity, must we do so too? |
A26911 | If your wrangle be de re, do you deny their continued Relation? |
A26911 | In what Synod did they declare it? |
A26911 | Is Christ any Man''s actual Saviour whether they believe in him, and accept him or not? |
A26911 | Is he in the right, page 96. that this Course would make Bishops, and Arch- Bishops, and Chancellors, stand in awe of the Priests? |
A26911 | Is impeaching a Delinquent, taking Arms against the King''s Commission, if unlawful? |
A26911 | Is it all Magistrates, or some only that have this Power, and Jesus Christ chooseth us Pastors by? |
A26911 | Is it like that any would bring their Children to Christ to be Blessed, who did not believe in him? |
A26911 | Is it not called An Act for Uniformity, and imposeth all the heavy Penalties on purpose to procure Uniformity? |
A26911 | Is it not contained in the Book? |
A26911 | Is it of no use, when the use is named in the Preface? |
A26911 | Is it the same sort of Excommunication and Absolution which belongs to the Pastor and to a Lay- man? |
A26911 | Is it to himself? |
A26911 | Is it[ Your Children are pure to you, as your Meat is?] |
A26911 | Is not all prescript of Means an addition to the Precept De fine? |
A26911 | Is not the Church Universal Christ''s Kingdom? |
A26911 | Is not the Imposing of the Cross expresly in the Book? |
A26911 | Is not the imposing Precept[ contained in the Book] yea, and is it of no use? |
A26911 | Is not this also Equivocation? |
A26911 | Is subscribing to that Act, subscribing to the old Book? |
A26911 | Is that old Act, the old Book? |
A26911 | Is the Body part of the Head? |
A26911 | Is the Book part of the Preface, or Contents, or Index, if these go first? |
A26911 | Is the House part of the Porch, or the Porch part of the House? |
A26911 | Is the Ordinariness the satisfying Character, who is not to be Excommunicated? |
A26911 | Is the mode and disorder none of the[ All?] |
A26911 | Know you not how they write against such different Administrations, as destructive and intolerable? |
A26911 | May I Lye about any other things? |
A26911 | May not the Pope say to the first Protestants, Never such a Protestation was made before? |
A26911 | May you not then say what you list, which you think should have been commanded you, and suppose it the meaning of the Command? |
A26911 | Must all receive Lutherans, or Socinians, or Anabaptists, or such like Pastors that live under Imposing Princes of those minds? |
A26911 | My belief of your unfeigned honesty makes one at last pity you, and wonder when you add[ What more would you have?] |
A26911 | My first question is, Which way the Child cometh to have right to Baptism, any more than all the Infidels Children in the world? |
A26911 | Next as a meek Questioner, he askt me, Why I will not baptize their Infants, if I take them for Christians and Parishioners? |
A26911 | No man in the Town is forbid to be present: Doth it follow that any man giveth title to the Child who may but be present if he will? |
A26911 | Nor can I know so much as whether he be Christened, or be indeed a Parishioner? |
A26911 | Nor do they ask, Whose Child it is? |
A26911 | Of all the worthy Parish Incumbents in London, who did you ever hear once do it? |
A26911 | Or be not a Heretick Excommunicate by other Churches? |
A26911 | Or can you have such Answers? |
A26911 | Or do they[ Consent to the use of all,] and take an Article of Faith to be put in for no use? |
A26911 | Or do you conclude that all think what you think? |
A26911 | Or had not the Churches then rightly called Pastors? |
A26911 | Or if I am able to do the Office of a Pastor but for 500, and thousands more will come and claim it? |
A26911 | Or the Lords, and Commons, and Judges, though they changed not the Species, but set up others in their steads? |
A26911 | Or to such Churches as are but tolerated among Papists Parishes? |
A26911 | Or to the Countries that yet are not settled into Parish Churches? |
A26911 | Or why put you me so oft to repeat it? |
A26911 | Or will you tell them that swear to amend it, that it''s well enough already? |
A26911 | Or would it be here meet to write a Treatise to answer this your Challenge? |
A26911 | Particularly about the Corporation- Declaration? |
A26911 | Reynolds, and many other Protestants against the Papists? |
A26911 | Saith he[ I would but ask Mr. Baxter, what is it that you mean by Associated by consent?] |
A26911 | Soon said, but where''s the proof? |
A26911 | That it is Jesus Christ that made this the Office of the Magistrate? |
A26911 | The Law forbids me to say, They are, and therefore I say it not: But if you say, They are not, Dare you undertake to answer for them? |
A26911 | They may escape the Gaol by flying their Country, as you do: But what shall they do with their Wives and Children? |
A26911 | This can not be denyed: And is not this giving of the Holy Ghost more than man must now pretend to imitate? |
A26911 | To your Seventh I answer, What would have plainer than the express Assertion of the Contents themselves? |
A26911 | True: But is it their meaning de genere, or de specie, or individuo? |
A26911 | V. WHether Mr. Baxter''s Doctrine and Principles concerning particular Churches be sound and good? |
A26911 | WHether it be certain by God''s Word, that Infants Baptized dying before Actual Sin, be undoubtedly saved? |
A26911 | WHether may Unconverted ones within the Church, demand and receive the Lord''s Supper? |
A26911 | WHether the common sort of ungodly Christians, are to be cast out of the Church by Penal Excommunications, and used as Excommunicate ones? |
A26911 | We are glad that the old prohibitions of Afternoon Sermons and Lectures, are not yet revived: But how few Parishes have such Lectures comparatively? |
A26911 | Were all the Iews saved because they were a holy Nation? |
A26911 | Were not Parish Ministers chosen by the Bishops and People, and not by Magistrates for 1400 Years in all known Churches in the World? |
A26911 | What Alchimy is this? |
A26911 | What Heresie may not be brought in by a false Translation? |
A26911 | What Order is it that binds us to this? |
A26911 | What Schismatick doth condemn so many Christians and Churches, as this Censure? |
A26911 | What a dangerous Error hath he detected? |
A26911 | What a sleep have I been in these 50 Years,( since I have been Ordained it''s 41 Years) that never could hear or read of any such thing? |
A26911 | What an unpleasing talk is it to be put on a defence against such an Opponent? |
A26911 | What can be plainer? |
A26911 | What did the Parliament to any such purpose? |
A26911 | What else are Men to be Converted to? |
A26911 | What if I think it is a Sin to be obtruded on dissenting unwilling People? |
A26911 | What if Travellers be that day of the Church? |
A26911 | What if a Man disown only the Pastor of that Church? |
A26911 | What if a Man doubt whether a Lye or Perjury be Sin in such a case? |
A26911 | What if he remove his Dwelling? |
A26911 | What if he will not joyn with them in the Liturgy, or Mode of Worship there used? |
A26911 | What if that Church be Nestorians, or Eutychians, or Papists, and he separates from them, or they cast him out? |
A26911 | What if the Parish have 60000, or 40000 Souls, and I am not able to do a Pastor''s Office for 500? |
A26911 | What if the Parson Excommunicate the Bishop, and the Bishop the Parson both at once, what a Case are they in? |
A26911 | What is Family Power to the Church? |
A26911 | What is the Law that giveth you any such power? |
A26911 | What need we more than experience? |
A26911 | What practice is it that you mean? |
A26911 | What reason did you think we have in such an Historical Assertion, to believe your bare word? |
A26911 | What shall we do then by your Useful Error? |
A26911 | What then? |
A26911 | What then? |
A26911 | What words can be so bad, that a man may not feign in Charity a good sense of? |
A26911 | What''s this to the Primitive Churches that were not Parishes? |
A26911 | What, and yet Conform? |
A26911 | What, is he against Parish Churches after all this? |
A26911 | What? |
A26911 | When he is forbid, and the Minister forbid to suffer it? |
A26911 | When, and how did they ever declare any such Agreement? |
A26911 | Where found you that[ None else?] |
A26911 | Whether I will or not? |
A26911 | Whether Mr. Baxter''s Doctrine and principles concerning particular Churches be sound and good? |
A26911 | Whether are the Bishops that dwell in the London Parishes( or others) Members of the Parish Church where they dwell? |
A26911 | Whether is the Bishop, or the Parish Priest there the higher Power, or Governor? |
A26911 | Whether it be certain by Gods word that Infants baptized dying before actual sin be undoubtedly saved? |
A26911 | Whether may unconverted ones within the Church demand and receive the Lords supper? |
A26911 | Whether the Act of Uniformity be any part of the book to which we are required to give our consent? |
A26911 | Whether the Bishop that is Excommunicated by the Parson out of the Parish Church, be cast out of the Universal? |
A26911 | Whether the common sort of ungodly Christians are to be cast out of the Church by penal excommunication, and used as excommunicate ones? |
A26911 | Whether we may assent to the Preface for justifying all that was in the Book before? |
A26911 | Whether we may declare our Consent that none should be admitted to the Communion, till he be confirmed, or desirous and ready to be confirmed? |
A26911 | Which is liker Tyranny, not to pretend to Government over any but Volunteers, or to say, I will Govern you whether you will or not? |
A26911 | Who will not pretend it? |
A26911 | Why did you neither name the Bishops, nor the Time, or Place, or Witness, by which it might be proved the common sense? |
A26911 | Why did you not answer the two Instances which I gave out of the Bishop of Lincoln''s excellent Manuscript? |
A26911 | Why do you limit it to[ faithful Ministers] who must judge of their Faithfulness and Qualifications? |
A26911 | Why obtrude you on us such things unproved? |
A26911 | Why said you before, that the Power of the Keys belongs to the Pastors,& c? |
A26911 | Why then did you pass by the answering of my Book concerning their part? |
A26911 | Why then, was that Case free, and ours of the Cross not free? |
A26911 | Why took you no notice that it is the Books Imposition of this, which you must consent to, and not only the Practice? |
A26911 | Why, did you think your bare word should serve for this? |
A26911 | Will you better understand me if I write it again than you did before? |
A26911 | Would they not have ten thousand scandalous Sinners sometime to try and exhort to Repentance in one, or few Days? |
A26911 | Would you by this rate of Argument convince us? |
A26911 | Yea, a Church with you is only a present Assembly: What if these persons assemble not, or but twice or thrice a Year? |
A26911 | You add, If the Printer, or any other through oversight bind up the Apocrypha, and put in the Contents of the Holy Bible, is it a part of it? |
A26911 | You rightly call your self The Non- conforming Conformist; for you plead for it and against it, in the same Lines? |
A26911 | You say, Where is it forbidden? |
A26911 | You say,[ The Act it self implieth it; for else, what use is there for Laws and Parliaments? |
A26911 | You should not thus become an Incendiary, by pretending things that you will not first understand: Where do I say what you affirm? |
A26911 | [ Prove( say you) that there is any one thing in the Book, which may not in the course of Conformity be godly used?] |
A26911 | after what we have said of it to Mr. Tombes? |
A26911 | and Quo jure? |
A26911 | and also the answering of any chief intimated reasons( while yet I did but intimate some few disclaiming argumentations?) |
A26911 | and did your Excommunicators call it Conformity? |
A26911 | and how few have Catechizing? |
A26911 | and which must obey? |
A26911 | and will not all this convince us what it meaneth? |
A26911 | as Hearers, and Learners, and Candidates,& c. Do I not then honestly perform the Law? |
A26911 | hath said against it? |
A26911 | is,[ If we take you alone for our Pastor?] |
A26911 | must he therefore do it that he may Preach without Persecution? |
A26911 | of Church Government? |
A26911 | or all the Patrons present? |
A26911 | or other Churches, may have Communion with him, or not? |
A26911 | or that Being Strangers, they know no harm by him? |
A26911 | or the Family part of the Porter? |
A26911 | or the Kingdom part of the King? |
A26911 | our of that particular Congregation? |
A26911 | where Parishes are so great that the Parson can do no such thing on one of a Multitude, nor doth so much as know them? |
A26911 | who despaireth of proving any thing in the world, if he can not prove that? |
A26911 | why do you tell us, that you take them as you remember them, without the Book, and satisfie your own conscience, while you seem to answer the Book? |
A26911 | why then did you not thus awe your Bishop and Chancellor? |
A26911 | will he prosecute the Bishop to himself, or to his Chancellor? |
A26931 | 1. Who knoweth not how great an advantage Education hath, to form mens judgements to almost any thing, how bad soever? |
A26931 | 2, yea, Calcedon,& c.? |
A26931 | 28 without making any mention of Peter or the Pope? |
A26931 | A man consisteth of a soul and a body of flesh and blood: Did sense perceive any of this in the Angels? |
A26931 | Ad hominem; Do not the Papists forget themselves here, and contradict their other suppositions? |
A26931 | Alas, how little a part of the world were the Christians at first, and are the Papists now, in comparison of the Heathens, then and now? |
A26931 | Alas, what was Judaea( less than England) to all the world? |
A26931 | All the antient Fathers and Catholick Church were for Transubstantiation; and are you wiser and in a safer way than they? |
A26931 | And I pray you, How shall the unlearned be sure that the Translations are true as to the sence? |
A26931 | And after this to cry up Vnity, and cry down Schism, what abominable hypocrisie is it? |
A26931 | And alas, how many have given them this scandal? |
A26931 | And are all these so mad as to cast away their souls upon a senseless contemptible Religion? |
A26931 | And are not other Christians More than the Papists? |
A26931 | And are not the Protestants as Learned as the Papists? |
A26931 | And are there not far Greater Emperours and Princes Mahometans than any that are Christians? |
A26931 | And are you determined out of the said Scriptures to instruct the people committed to your charge? |
A26931 | And as to a strict syllogistical form, do you understand that best? |
A26931 | And by this doctrine what bloody inhumanity is become the brand or Character of your Church? |
A26931 | And did not their Fathers know what their Fathers held? |
A26931 | And do Crab, Binnius, Surius, Caranza,& c. prove what one Council said by the authority of another, or by the Records themselves, yet visible to all? |
A26931 | And do all Papists know their own Hearts or Minds, but no Protestants? |
A26931 | And do they not all venture their souls upon that Religion? |
A26931 | And do they not take that for the true Religion on which they trust their souls? |
A26931 | And for all this, the wit of man can hardly devise What Reason they have to do it? |
A26931 | And have not all these souls to save or lose? |
A26931 | And have not all these souls to save or lose? |
A26931 | And have not we the same Writings of Fathers and Councils as you have? |
A26931 | And have you been a true Christian, and lived according to this Vow? |
A26931 | And how do all your unlearned persons know that you give them not only the true sence of the Scriptures, but of all your Councils or Traditions? |
A26931 | And how have you been sure since then, when Pope Sixtus, and Pope Clement have made so many hundred alterations or differences? |
A26931 | And how know you that the Pope and your Superiours err not in a matter of fact? |
A26931 | And how oft the major Vote hath gone against the sense of the far greater number of the House? |
A26931 | And if God can do this naturally, why not supernaturally? |
A26931 | And if in Councils, the Major Vote must carry it; Why not in the Judgement and Tradition of the Real body of Christs Church? |
A26931 | And if it were not so, How could any such substance be known? |
A26931 | And if the Popish Tradition seem regardable to them, Why should not the Tradition of twice or thrice as many Christians be more regardable? |
A26931 | And if there be no Bread neither, there is no breaking it: Can that be broken which is not? |
A26931 | And if you have been so treacherous and unwise, as to prefer a bruitish transitory pleasure, before Gods Love and the Joyes of Heaven? |
A26931 | And indeed great sins Cry for great Vengeance: And what Greater than for Mind, Will and Life to be forsaken of God? |
A26931 | And is it a true or a false appearance? |
A26931 | And is the Ceremonial Law of Moses therefore your Religion? |
A26931 | And it''s like that will be the longest liver? |
A26931 | And must we have none but Infallible or Prophetical Expositors? |
A26931 | And must we suppose mens minds to be changed in their sleep, when the awe or the oratory of other men change them? |
A26931 | And our question is, Whether the Intellect in this first Perception be deceived, or not? |
A26931 | And therefore if he can, will you conclude against all faith if once he do it? |
A26931 | And this is like to be many years work, for men that have other business: And how know you that we shall all Live so long? |
A26931 | And to this day, are not four sixth parts of the whole world( at least) Heathens and Idolaters? |
A26931 | And what a thing by this do you mak ● Gods Grace to be? |
A26931 | And what could make them think it the antient faith, if it were not so? |
A26931 | And what evidence must that be? |
A26931 | And what if you add[ to a Prophet or Apostle]? |
A26931 | And what is their use? |
A26931 | And what possibility then have you of Believing? |
A26931 | And when a Papist can but shew their Novices one such palpable error in the Writings of a Protestant; What sad work will he make with it? |
A26931 | And when shall he be restrained from hindering Christs Gospel, and the Peace and Concord of the Christian world? |
A26931 | And when they know few or none of another mind, how should they know what they are? |
A26931 | And why are all required to subscribe them? |
A26931 | And why have you such great diversity of both? |
A26931 | And why then do your Translators( as Montanus and others) still differ from that Vulgar Latine? |
A26931 | And will not any man conclude, that he that can lye in one case, can lye in more? |
A26931 | And will you turn Sadducee ▪ Atheist or Infidel because you can not confute their Sophistry? |
A26931 | And yet doubtless all these advantages are not sufficient to disprove the follies of Heanism, nor the badness of their Religion? |
A26931 | And yet must we suppose, that men come thither all of one mind? |
A26931 | And yet will so much less serve to support the credit of senseless Popery? |
A26931 | And, alas, how great advantage have they made of our late calamitous Civil Wars, and manifold scandalous Rebellions? |
A26931 | Are not Christs promises and the Conditions the same? |
A26931 | Are there no Essential Constitutive parts of your Religion, more necessary than the Integrals and Accidentals? |
A26931 | Are you able when it cometh to tedious Volumes to examine them, and find who is in the right? |
A26931 | As if the question be, Whether a Shilling be Silver or Money? |
A26931 | Bishop Bramhall reckons the Papists to be about the fifth part of Christians: Suppose they be a third part? |
A26931 | But I pray tell me, How know you that the Church and Fathers did so believe? |
A26931 | But Whether there remain any Bread and Wine? |
A26931 | But above all, I would know of you, what you mean by the Catholick Church, whose proposal is necessary to the being of faith? |
A26931 | But did you never hear him give any Reasons against our Religion? |
A26931 | But doth not sense say, Here is Bread and Wine? |
A26931 | But how come so many among us in England to turn Papists of late years, where Popery is discountenanced by the King, Parliament and Laws? |
A26931 | But how know you that the present Church doth say so, that this was the faith of the antient Church? |
A26931 | But if sense be deceitful, how know you that you ever read such Decrees? |
A26931 | But is not Christianity the same Thing now as it was at the beginning? |
A26931 | But the question is now only, Whether Bread or Wine or sensible substance be here? |
A26931 | But whether you are a truly Penitent, Converted sinner; and whether yet you are true to your Baptismal Vow and Covenant? |
A26931 | But why should I give counsel to men that will not thank me for it, and that obstinately refuse much better? |
A26931 | But, alas, What work shall I shew you when I come to open their bewildring uncertainties? |
A26931 | Can you hold it, and not know what it is? |
A26931 | Can you stay so long unresolved without injury to your soul, till he and I have done writing? |
A26931 | Could he but prove an Institution of his Papacy as evidently, who would not be his Subject? |
A26931 | D. But is there no hope of ending these lamentable differences, and removing the scandal of Infidels hereby? |
A26931 | D. But suppose that they err in this one point, they may for all that be in the right in all the rest: Who is it that hath no error? |
A26931 | D. But what if I have not Loved God, and obeyed him, above my flesh? |
A26931 | D. But what shall they do with following Councils, especially that at Trent, which say the same? |
A26931 | D. But why speak you nothing of their denying the people the Cup? |
A26931 | D. But you said also, that the Present Church and its Tradition is against Transubstantiation, as well as the Antient: How prove you that? |
A26931 | D. I must needs profess, that the Question which I would have debated, is, Which is the True and Safe Religion? |
A26931 | D. I would know whether the Papists or the Protestants be the True, and safe Religion? |
A26931 | D. Tell me then, how it cometh to pass that so many Princes, Nobles, Learned men, and Religious can be so marvellously deluded? |
A26931 | D. What then if I find but one point false in the Protestants Religion? |
A26931 | Dare you say that all your Church, or any one man, even the Pope himself, doth understand all the Scripture? |
A26931 | Did I ever say, that the eye may not be blinded, or the understanding distracted? |
A26931 | Did any of the Primitive Christians baptize men into the name or subjection of Peter or any Apostle? |
A26931 | Did not they know what their Fathers held? |
A26931 | Did these Councils all go to bed of one mind, and rise of another? |
A26931 | Did you ever understand what the Protestants Religion is? |
A26931 | Do they not too much magnifie the common work( and consequently the office) of a Priest, above the work of a Pope or Prelate, who seldom consecrate? |
A26931 | Do they talk of Antiquity? |
A26931 | Do they talk of Greatness, Empire, Acts and Learning? |
A26931 | Do they talk of Vniversality and Consent? |
A26931 | Do we not know the Course of the Parliaments of England of later times? |
A26931 | Do you know all the Logical forms of arguing, all Moods and Figures, and all the fallacies? |
A26931 | Do you know that there is any Earth or Water, or any corporal substance in the world, or not? |
A26931 | Do you know what it is to be a Christian? |
A26931 | Do you lay your faith and salvation upon plausible discourses? |
A26931 | Do you not find that you condemn your selves? |
A26931 | Do you not grant this? |
A26931 | Do you not know that almost all the world was then Heathen and Idolaters? |
A26931 | Do you not think that the Common Religion of the Heathens is very unworthy for any wise man to venture his soul upon? |
A26931 | Do you think we know not how little reason you have to say, that the Council at Laterane spake the sense of all the Church? |
A26931 | Do you think we know not that all the Papists are not past the third or fourth part of the Christian world? |
A26931 | Do you think we never read the History of the Council of Trent? |
A26931 | Doth your Tradition tell you that the ancient Churches did baptize men into a subjection to the Pope? |
A26931 | Else why did he never once pretend to give us either an unerring Commentary or Translation? |
A26931 | Every one of you saith, I am of Paul, and I of Apollo, and I of Cephas, and I of Christ: Is Christ divided? |
A26931 | For it is as certain that we have as many degrees of our understanding many Texts of Scripture? |
A26931 | Had you then Infallible Translators? |
A26931 | Hath Christianity no Constitutive special Essence, but only the Genus of Divine Revelation which is common to that with all other Divine Revelations? |
A26931 | Hath Christianity no Essence? |
A26931 | Hath not a Christian now the same definition as then? |
A26931 | Hath not education a great hand in this? |
A26931 | Have Papists any surer and more satisfying evidence for you, than sense? |
A26931 | Have not all these Christians souls to save or lose? |
A26931 | Have not they souls to save or lose as well as you? |
A26931 | Have you any way of perception of corporal substances but by sense? |
A26931 | Have you no description for it, but that It is Divine Revelation proposed by the Church? |
A26931 | Have you obeyed God more than the desires of your flesh? |
A26931 | Have you preferred the Kingdom of Heaven before all the pleasures, honours and riches of this world? |
A26931 | Have you read Dr. Challoner of the Catholick Church? |
A26931 | Have you sincerely submitted to the healing saving Doctrine, Law and example of Christ, and to the sanctifying motions of his Holy Spirit? |
A26931 | How can a man that is a sinner do such Miracles? |
A26931 | How come so many Princes, Nobles, Learned men, and whole Nations to be Papists? |
A26931 | How come so many among us at home of late inclinable to Popery? |
A26931 | How know you that God hath any revelations? |
A26931 | How know you that they are not forgeries, or since corrupted? |
A26931 | How little are they as to the first, to the Heathen Empires? |
A26931 | How long will Princes and Prelates, Learned and Unlearned be deluded by him, or fear Power? |
A26931 | How much a few men of more than ordinary parts and interest, can do with the rest? |
A26931 | How much less dare you say that any of you perfectly understand all the Councils, which are the rest of your Religion? |
A26931 | How shall I be sure that he saith it? |
A26931 | How then will they prove that one is spoken properly, and the other figuratively? |
A26931 | How to help them off their Councils? |
A26931 | How was all the Greek Church for many hundred years sure of the soundness of the Translation called the Septuagint? |
A26931 | How was the Latine Church sure of the soundness of their Translation before Hierome amended it? |
A26931 | How will you ever know which one of all these is in the right]? |
A26931 | I grant that it is unknown to us, how far Christs Glorified body may extend? |
A26931 | I grant therefore, that our senses are no Competent Judges, Whether Christs true body be in the Sacrament? |
A26931 | I pray you tell me; Did you ever meet with any of them that doubt of another life, or of the Immortality of the soul? |
A26931 | I pray you what then is the Religion of all the unlearned Protestants, who know not a word of the Originals? |
A26931 | I tell you, This is my meaning, when I say, I am a Protestant: and can you tell my meaning better than my self? |
A26931 | I will stand to their own judgements in this, Whether all their foundation and faith be not uncertain, if any one Article of their faith prove false? |
A26931 | If I see your picture or statue, is my sense deceived if I take it not for a living man? |
A26931 | If Something, Why may it not be defined, and differenced from all false Religions? |
A26931 | If True, then there is Bread and Wine: If false, it is a false sign: And what is that false appearance which God maketh a Sacrament of? |
A26931 | If an Anabaptist, why not an Antinomian? |
A26931 | If an Independant, why not an Anabaptist? |
A26931 | If by books, How know you that there is a book, but by sense? |
A26931 | If by preachers words, How know you that there is a preacher, or a word but by sense? |
A26931 | If he can do it only on the bread and wine present, how near must it be? |
A26931 | If he have, Why can he not do it now? |
A26931 | If it be All, how impious and cruel are they that would never do it to this day? |
A26931 | If one Text of Gods word were false, and you would say, You may believe all the rest save that, how will you ever prove it? |
A26931 | If otherwise, why may he not change all the bread and wine in the Shop or Cellar where he cometh, intending consecration to an ill end? |
A26931 | If our Baptism have not all that is essential, why do you never rebaptize Protestants when they turn to you? |
A26931 | If so, What need you say a Council is the Church? |
A26931 | If that General Council decreed Transubstantiation, what could move them so to do, if it were not the faith of the Church before? |
A26931 | If they say that the species of Bread and Wine is the sensible sign, what mean they by that cheating word[ species?] |
A26931 | If you do, tell us how you know it but by the ● erception of sense presenting it to the Intellect? |
A26931 | If you say that the Council saith it, How shall I know that there is a man or ever was a Council, or a Book in the world? |
A26931 | If you say, But who should take him down, if it might be done? |
A26931 | If you were never a true Christian, you were never a true Protestant: And then what wonder if you turn Papist? |
A26931 | If your reason be good, how much more will it hold for the Heathens, than the Papists? |
A26931 | Is Baptism altered? |
A26931 | Is Christianity Nothing? |
A26931 | Is a mans Act of faith, Gods Word or Revelation? |
A26931 | Is it All the Scriptures, or but some part, that your Pope or Councils can Infallibly both translate and expound? |
A26931 | Is it not strange that an Infidel receiveth as verily the real flesh and blood of Christ as a Saint, and yet not the benefits or effects? |
A26931 | Is it the Scripture in the Original, or in the Translations, which you say is your Religion, Law or Rule? |
A26931 | Is not Christianity your Religion? |
A26931 | Is not here express proof? |
A26931 | Is not the Bible at least Part of your Religion? |
A26931 | Is not this a marvellous power of Miracles, which becometh like a nature to them, as the power of speaking is? |
A26931 | Is not this plain? |
A26931 | Is the Creed no part of your Religion? |
A26931 | Is there either Quantity, Colour, Smell, Taste,& c. of Wine? |
A26931 | Is your Garment to be called Cloth, or a Cloak? |
A26931 | It I see it moved, is my sense deceived if I take it not for any other than a moving Image? |
A26931 | It is a Miracle of these Miracles, that there should be as many Miracle workers as Priests in the world: How many thousand are they in France alone? |
A26931 | It is but Whether any Infidels may be saved? |
A26931 | It is one Question, What is the Christian Religion? |
A26931 | It s non- sence if it have no accusative case that it respects? |
A26931 | Lord increase our faith? |
A26931 | May not we be Christians, and saved by the same Constitutive Causes which made men Christians, and saved them in the primitive Churches? |
A26931 | Must I therefore forsake it all as false? |
A26931 | Nay, à fortiore mark how you teach the Infidel to inferr? |
A26931 | No nor that you have certainty which are the true Copies of them all? |
A26931 | One Kingdom almost all Greek Christians and another Papists, and another Lutherans, and another Reformists,& c? |
A26931 | Only all the question is, Whether it be indeed a sign of the mind and will of God or not? |
A26931 | Or any that are no Christians? |
A26931 | Or did they not know what their Fathers faith was? |
A26931 | Or do you not perceive, that you have broken your promise with me, and brought a friend of darkness, who cometh purposely to hide the truth? |
A26931 | Or doth not reverence the Judgement of the Wise?) |
A26931 | Or is all Divine Revelation essential to it? |
A26931 | Or is the Pope the Church? |
A26931 | Or only the greater part? |
A26931 | Or was it not the same Divine Religion which the first Church( whether Council or Practicers) received without the Tradition of Council or Practicers? |
A26931 | Or whether the Sea ebb and flow, till you know the Causes of it? |
A26931 | Or will you not rather take him to conquer, who hath the last word? |
A26931 | Our question I tell you is Whether the Religion of the Protestants be Infallible? |
A26931 | Our question is now whether our professed objective Faith be true and sufficient? |
A26931 | P. And how do you prove all or any of these? |
A26931 | P. But how can you think to please God and be saved, if you be not of the same faith as the Church hath alwayes been of? |
A26931 | P. Do you think that our Divines knew not what they said, when they say that to believe without Evidence maketh faith meritorious? |
A26931 | P. Gods Revelation is surer than our senses? |
A26931 | P. Is it a safe Religion which you your self describe? |
A26931 | P. V. If God should say to you[ Your senses are in this deceived; Here is no bread or wine or sensible substance] Would you not believe him? |
A26931 | P. Why then do you call the thirty nine Articles the Articles of your Religion? |
A26931 | Panem accepisse, fregisse; to have taken Bread, and having given thanks, to have broken? |
A26931 | Queret an teneatur quispiam a ● internum Divinae fidei actum, quem nec semper fortasse in eius potestate situm novimus? |
A26931 | R. And are not Greeks, Armenians, Syrians, Abassines and Protestants, all Christians as well as they? |
A26931 | R. And do you not know that( though it arose not till about six hundred years after Christ) much more of the world is Mahometan than Christian? |
A26931 | R. And what is it that such men would have to put them out of doubt? |
A26931 | R. Are your Superiours that told you so, the Church? |
A26931 | R. But Christ is the Saviour of his body: Are not those of the Church who are saved, or in a state of salvation? |
A26931 | R. But are the Ethiopian Christians out of the Church? |
A26931 | R. But do you not hold and say, that out of the Church there is no salvation? |
A26931 | R. But what is the Vniversal Church whose Practice is made sufficient instead of, or without a General Council? |
A26931 | R. Did you hear the Council say so? |
A26931 | R. Do not your own Writers say, that a General Council and Pope may err in matter of fact? |
A26931 | R. Do we need thus to ramble round about, as if we would doubt of the thing till we know the Causes of it? |
A26931 | R. Do you mean the Pope without a General Council, or a General Council without the Pope? |
A26931 | R. How know you that there is any word of God, but by your senses? |
A26931 | R. How then do you make your Churches proposal to be the necessary point to be Explicitely believed of all? |
A26931 | R. I need not repeat it: Do you not Agree with us in this? |
A26931 | R. I pray you mark D. that he would perswade you that he knoweth my Religion better than I do my self? |
A26931 | R. Is it by the Perception of sense that you deny it? |
A26931 | R. Is it not a matter of fact, what this or that man said, and what doctrine the Church at such a time did teach and hold? |
A26931 | R. Is it the Clergy only, or the Laity only; or must it be both? |
A26931 | R. Must it be All the Church, without any excepted? |
A26931 | R. Still what mean you by the Church? |
A26931 | R. Was it an Article of faith before? |
A26931 | R. Who is it that you now call the Church which tells you so? |
A26931 | R. Why said your Author before, that Infidels were not formally out of the Church who are invincibly ignorant? |
A26931 | Shall not he that was a Christian then, be saved if he were now alive? |
A26931 | So if all our senses be false in this instance, how shall we know that they are ever true? |
A26931 | So that the Controversie is, Whether it be any substance at all which by those accidents we perceive? |
A26931 | Such awe and terror from the power of the Chief? |
A26931 | Such cunning contrivances to get the majority of Votes? |
A26931 | Suppose the question were, Whether it be water or not, which all mens senses see in Rivers? |
A26931 | Symmachus,& c. when it is certain that in many things they were all unsound? |
A26931 | Tell me else, if sense be false, how you know that there is a Man, or Pope, or Priest in the World? |
A26931 | That which children receive, if it be not disagreeable to their sensible interest, how commonly and tenaciously do they follow? |
A26931 | The Case which you told me you were in doubt of, and desired satisfaction in, was Which is the True and Safe Religion? |
A26931 | The Pope is not the Church: And he may err in a matter of fact: What then is the Church that tells you certainly what the Council of Trent decreed? |
A26931 | There are more Agreed for Mahomet( a gross upstart deceiver) than are agreed for Christ: And doth that make it certain that they are in the right? |
A26931 | Upon these terms, what end will there be of any Controversie, or what evidence shall ever satisfie man? |
A26931 | WHat is the Protestants Religion, and what the Papists? |
A26931 | Was Agabus Prophesie of Paul, or Pauls of the event of the shipwrack,& c. essential to Christianity? |
A26931 | Was Paul Crucified for you? |
A26931 | Was it from the Church that the first Church received it? |
A26931 | Was it then the Universal Church? |
A26931 | Was not the Roman Empire, and Alexanders before that, far Greater than any Christian Prince hath now? |
A26931 | Was this Pope then( or the Roman Church) Universal? |
A26931 | We are not yet come to the question, Whether Christs Body and blood be here? |
A26931 | We trusted that this had been he that should have delivered Israel? |
A26931 | Were I to be believed? |
A26931 | Were it ever the truer for that? |
A26931 | Were they not all of the same mind the day before they did it? |
A26931 | What Interest of their own did engage them to it? |
A26931 | What can be plainer? |
A26931 | What concord hath Christ with Belial — and what agreement hath the temple of God with Idols?] |
A26931 | What could make all the Pastors of the Church think that this was the true faith, if they did not think it was the antient faith? |
A26931 | What disgrace is it to a man that besides Head and Heart, he hath fingers, and toes, and nails and hair? |
A26931 | What hold you of that? |
A26931 | What hope of Concord with the Papists? |
A26931 | What if I should pretend the like as to his Religion? |
A26931 | What if we all agreed to say that there is no Bread in the Sacrament after Consecration? |
A26931 | What is it that he brake? |
A26931 | What is left to satisfie you, if you give so little credit to the common sense of all the world? |
A26931 | What need you dispute of the Protestants Religion, if we have as many Religions as persons? |
A26931 | What point of their Religion? |
A26931 | What will you do to confute an adversary, but drive him to deny a certain principle? |
A26931 | What would you have more plain and full? |
A26931 | When Christ cometh will he do more miracles than these which this man hath done? |
A26931 | When no man can be sure that he rightly understandeth all the Scriptures? |
A26931 | Whence is it that the whole Empires and Kingdoms of Pagans are all of one mind; and the Kingdoms of Mahometans of another? |
A26931 | Where doth God say it? |
A26931 | Whether Papists have any more Infallibility than others? |
A26931 | Whether it do so by the Protestants? |
A26931 | Whether it have any Constitutive Vniversal Head or Monarch besides Christ? |
A26931 | Whether men may be blamelesly ignorant of the Law of Nature and the Decalogue? |
A26931 | Whether the falshood of one Article prove the Papists foundation false? |
A26931 | Whether the same may be both in Heaven and on earth? |
A26931 | Which is the True Rule of Faith, Will and Practice; that which is held to be such by the Protestants: or that which is held to be such by the Papists? |
A26931 | Why call you Opinion faith? |
A26931 | Why do not you your selves put the name of the Pope into your words of baptism? |
A26931 | Why do you trouble the world thus with your noise about Believing the Proposals of your Church, if a man can not know whether he believe or not? |
A26931 | Why should I expect that you should read what I shall write, if you will not read what''s written already? |
A26931 | Why then do you reprobate them, and deny that which they decreed as of faith? |
A26931 | Why then is not your argument here as good for Mahometanism as for Popery? |
A26931 | Why then may not we know what is in them as well as you? |
A26931 | Why then should their sense be called the sense of all the Christian world? |
A26931 | Why then will not your argument hold against them as well as for them? |
A26931 | Will you be deceived as oft as men can but agree to deceive you? |
A26931 | Will you deny all your senses, and the senses of all the World, as oft as you can not answer him that denyeth them? |
A26931 | Will you limit the power of the Almighty? |
A26931 | Will you not believe that there is a Sun, till you know what it is made of? |
A26931 | Will you save all the Anabaptists, that are baptized at age? |
A26931 | Will you say that God can not make Quantity, quality, site,& c. without substance, because we can not? |
A26931 | Would not this prove also as many Religions as persons among your selves? |
A26931 | Would you have plainer words? |
A26931 | Yea, sometimes fighting it out unto blood( as Dioscorus and Flavianus case doth shamefully evince?) |
A26931 | [ What dost thou, O procacious Academick? |
A26931 | and Sirmium, and divers at Constantinople disallowed, and those at Constance and Basil,( where were many times the number of the Council at Trent)? |
A26931 | and a sect and faction, All the Church? |
A26931 | and can such persons, and so many, be so mad and senseless? |
A26931 | and do they not lay all their hopes of Heaven upon it? |
A26931 | and not, Whence is their name? |
A26931 | and such carnal dependances and respects to their several worldly interests? |
A26931 | and that they did so in Condemning Pope Honorius and in other Cases? |
A26931 | and when your believer is uncertain, even of Christianity it self? |
A26931 | and will you be of that mans faith, whom you can not confute? |
A26931 | are all Prophets? |
A26931 | are all Teachers? |
A26931 | either, soul, flesh or blood? |
A26931 | else why do Caranza, Crab; Surius, Binnius, Nicolinus,& c. give give us such various Copies? |
A26931 | no more than Whether an Angel be in this room? |
A26931 | or Lord we believe; help our unbelief? |
A26931 | or any such thing in the appearance of a dove? |
A26931 | or at least of living together like Neighbours without seeking each others blood or ruine? |
A26931 | or by other means? |
A26931 | or can perfectly and infallibly translate each word? |
A26931 | or only both agreeing and conjunct? |
A26931 | or that Christianity is not a Religion which may be defined? |
A26931 | or to whom Christ said, Why are ye afraid O ye of little faith? |
A26931 | saith,[ Which of the Saints hath left us in Writing the words of invocation, when the Bread of the Eucharist, and the Cup of blessing are shewed?] |
A26931 | that there is a Book or Voice, or any being? |
A26931 | through faith in Jesus Christ? |
A26931 | when it can not come into the Intellect but by the sense? |
A26931 | when the Priest worketh so many Miracles more than they? |
A26931 | when they have such shameful Contentions? |
A26931 | when we see and they all confess that they deny all our senses? |
A26931 | when you have no Divine Infallible Translators? |
A26931 | ☞ This is the Grand difference between the Papists and all other Christians in the World, What the Catholick Church is? |
A26962 | & c. If they were written in the beginning, where be the Books? |
A26962 | ( And shall not Protestants forgive those that will not hear such, or as bad?) |
A26962 | ( But is not the Cup of the substance, as truly as the Bread?) |
A26962 | ( What of those that could not read, or that were condemned as Hereticks of Infidels?) |
A26962 | ( or of the Pope?) |
A26962 | 2. Who chargeth you of putting your Whole trust in Images? |
A26962 | 28. expresly promise that he that believeth( according to Baptism, in the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost) shall be saved? |
A26962 | 8. and Sixtus 5. reform the vulgar Latine by Memory or by Books? |
A26962 | A Pope one year, and a Council another? |
A26962 | After Nicolas the Fourth( saith he) there was no Pope for two years and a half( where was the Church then?) |
A26962 | Alas poor ignorant Man, if you believe this your self? |
A26962 | Alas, who shall bear the charge of the Conquest at the Antipodes, and who shall answer for all the Blood? |
A26962 | An ignorant Woman set upon Christ, just as you pervert all holy discourse, with turning all to[ Which is the true Church?] |
A26962 | And 2. what if now the major part of the Church should prefer the Bishop of Constantinople? |
A26962 | And A. Bishop Usher, Bishop Hall, Bishop Davenant, and many more of late? |
A26962 | And alas unfaithful Man, if you believe it not and yet dare say it? |
A26962 | And answer what is there charged on you? |
A26962 | And are not all these more than the Testimony of one Sect alone? |
A26962 | And are not these Councils your very Religion? |
A26962 | And can I believe in Christ, and not believe that there is a God that sent him? |
A26962 | And can I believe this, and not believe that we are all sinners, and that sin deserveth that punishment which Christ came to save us from? |
A26962 | And do not General Councils bring in Novelties? |
A26962 | And do they not differ among themselves, as all in pieces about the Point? |
A26962 | And do you not call these four Books the four Evangelists? |
A26962 | And do you think you can love God better in the Fire of Purgatory Torments, than if he took you unto Christ in Paradise? |
A26962 | And doth not Baptism enter us into the true Church of Christ? |
A26962 | And doth not the Gospel contain and describe Christianity? |
A26962 | And even as to Government, why did he never so much as send his Deputies to govern the Abassins for so many hundred years? |
A26962 | And had Basil and Chrysostome, and all others that varyed, as divers Religions as Liturgies? |
A26962 | And had he no Memory of them before he was Pope? |
A26962 | And had the Universal Church then any one Head? |
A26962 | And he knoweth which side his Bread is Buttered on? |
A26962 | And here give me leave to repeat what I have oft written: What wonder is it at any Mans turning Papist? |
A26962 | And here you may see, that when the Question is, Whether a Papist may be saved? |
A26962 | And how I shall prove that they gave such a Testimony? |
A26962 | And how lamentably ignorant they kept the People? |
A26962 | And how large a Law is all the Bible, and all your Councils Decrees, and Oral Traditions, set together? |
A26962 | And how must I believe that Christ hath given the Pope this Infallibility or Power? |
A26962 | And how shall they be certain that they are of the right Church, when they are uncertain who is the Head whom they must be subjects to? |
A26962 | And how small a part of the Universality of Christians are the Papists? |
A26962 | And if I talk with any of my Neighbours and ask him what he believeth, have I any more than a single Doctors opinion? |
A26962 | And if all the Decrees of Councils be as necessary to be the Symbol of Faith, why were they not all made up into a Creed? |
A26962 | And if the greater part of Christians may so forsake the Apostolical Tradition, why may not the Pope of Rome and his Council? |
A26962 | And if these Councils were not your Universal Church representative, where shall we think to find it? |
A26962 | And is he not the Author of our Faith? |
A26962 | And is not this all that you cry out against us for? |
A26962 | And is not this way very suitable to the end? |
A26962 | And is that a certain Proof that it is Apostolical? |
A26962 | And must it be All of them, or but Part? |
A26962 | And now is not here a Riddle hard enough to pose the wisest? |
A26962 | And now let us see whether your way be better and surer than this of ours is? |
A26962 | And of divers Pretenders which is he that hath the proofs of a true title? |
A26962 | And shall they meet in a General Council of Kings to chuse one? |
A26962 | And the Question will recur, How I shall know them to be Infallible? |
A26962 | And then how can there be a Bishop of Rome, when there is no Rome? |
A26962 | And there I have desired you to tell us, whether your Grandfather, or his Priest, was Infallible? |
A26962 | And was it then as hard a matter as you make it, to know what Faith was necessary to Baptism,( in the Person at age, or the Parent of Infants?) |
A26962 | And were not the Disciples called Christians shortly after, as words of the same signification? |
A26962 | And what came the Church to when it had such Heads? |
A26962 | And what if these bid Subjects kill their Kings, would it not be sinless and meritorious by this Rule? |
A26962 | And what or who is that Accepting Church? |
A26962 | And what? |
A26962 | And where was their uninterrupted Succession all this time? |
A26962 | And who can tell what other mens capacities and opportunities have been? |
A26962 | And who hath the Power of Electing? |
A26962 | And who is it that hath that ordaining Authority? |
A26962 | And who knoweth what they are? |
A26962 | And who or what is this Real Church, that must be first known to be thus impowered and infallible: Is it some few, or many, or must it be the most? |
A26962 | And who they were that were those Infallible Witnesses? |
A26962 | And who would then believe you, if you said,[ But the Unwritten Word it can not alter?] |
A26962 | And why do you dishonour your own Relations so, as to make so bad a Description of them? |
A26962 | And why do you not cause the Baptized to recite and profess all these Councils Decrees, but only the old Christian Creed? |
A26962 | And will you say then, that he that believeth Explicitely the whole Bible can not be saved without believing also your pretended Traditions? |
A26962 | And you knew how hard it is to disprove you: For who shall judge what is the opinion of the Vulgar? |
A26962 | And you mistake the Puritans, if you think they are not for this Government: Why else take they the Oath of Supremacy? |
A26962 | Are they in the Memory of the Pope only? |
A26962 | Are they not such as other Christians can read and understand as well as you,( or an illiterate Pope?) |
A26962 | Are they such as have no Love to God as God, no delight in Holiness, no Heavenly Minds? |
A26962 | Are you more impartial in your search? |
A26962 | As if your Servant should instead of his work play at Cards most of the day, and ask you[ How you prove it unlawful?] |
A26962 | At least he would preserve some of his Friends in health and immortality on Earth? |
A26962 | Be not General Councils themselves approved or reprobated at the pleasure of the Pope? |
A26962 | Believe that which I never once thought of? |
A26962 | But are they not certain Novelties that you would impose on us under the colour of Antiquity? |
A26962 | But because you shall find us reasonable, we will tell you, that we consent to General Councils where the Pope consenteth not? |
A26962 | But can you think, Sir, in good earnest, that Popery tendeth more to fill Men with the Love of God, than our simple Christianity doth? |
A26962 | But do you not here and in your former description quite contradict your self, when you charge them as neglecting inherent righteousness? |
A26962 | But if it be in other Mens Memories that your unwritten Traditions are kept, in whose is it? |
A26962 | But if most did not favour them, how did they ascend to so great power? |
A26962 | But is this Monarch the Head in Civil Government, or only in Ecclesiastick? |
A26962 | But must your Pope be obeyed as Supreme but in the Vacancy of General Councils? |
A26962 | But still you tell us what great things your new Religion doth consist of, and what great cause you had to turn from the Puritans to the Papists? |
A26962 | But the best is, it is at the Pope''s will, whether ever there shall be a General Council more? |
A26962 | But the insuperable difficulty is, How must I believe that the Pope hath this Infallibility? |
A26962 | But this is but Implicite Faith? |
A26962 | But were you bred among Puritans, and yet talk so ignoranly and falsly? |
A26962 | But what if it was so with you, will that allow you to belie so many others? |
A26962 | But what is commonly necessary your Learned Church- men can not tell us, no not the Pope or Councils? |
A26962 | But what place is there for any doubt, when Christ himself did institute Baptism, and describe it? |
A26962 | But what were the Popes doing all this while? |
A26962 | But who can give one definition, or the same marks of men that are really of so many minds? |
A26962 | But who was it that put in that into the Charge? |
A26962 | But why should you take the Word in so narrow a sense? |
A26962 | But will this serve the turn to salvation, to believe that the Pope and his Council are Infallible? |
A26962 | But would you have any one past seven years old believe you, that writing is of no more use to Memory for conservation of Antiquities? |
A26962 | But you have Conversed with more of them than I have done? |
A26962 | But you''ll say, that if he dwell at Avignion, he may be called Bishop of Rome? |
A26962 | But, Sir, if the Pope be S. Peter''s Successor, is not his Apostolick office as Universal as his Monarchy or Ruling office? |
A26962 | By any written word which granteth it? |
A26962 | By whom? |
A26962 | Can he take the Votes of all the Christian World? |
A26962 | Can we believe in Christ, and not believe that he is God and Man, that he dyed, rose, and ascended into Heaven, and will judge us at last? |
A26962 | Can you decide the Controversies about the Decretals, published by Isidore Mercator, by Tradition? |
A26962 | Could Pope Eugenius ever forgive the Universal Church, as it''s called, that is, the great General Council which in vain condemned and deposed him? |
A26962 | Could the Bible have been kept as well in Memory as by Writings? |
A26962 | Could you love God better in this Life, if he tormented you in the Fire, than if he give you comfort by his mercies? |
A26962 | Could you think that a Man could be saved without Love and good works? |
A26962 | Dare you preach this at Rome? |
A26962 | Dare your Church say that every word revealed must be believed Explicitely of necessity to Salvation? |
A26962 | Did Possevine, and Sixtus Senensis, and such others, Correct Books by Oral Tradition, or by Books? |
A26962 | Did all that the Apostles Baptized, believe all the Apocrypha and all the Decrees of your Councils, and your Oral Traditions? |
A26962 | Did he not preach the Gospel? |
A26962 | Did not Christ oft tell us what it is to be his Disciples? |
A26962 | Did not those four Men write Christ''s Doctrine as well as his Life? |
A26962 | Did the ancient Fathers and Catechists teach all those to the Catechumens before they Baptized them? |
A26962 | Do Mass- books, and your daily Masses, all deceive our Eyes and Ears? |
A26962 | Do all your Priests themselves, or one of an hundred, understand them all, or know what they are? |
A26962 | Do not Bellarmine, Costerus, and many of your Writers profess that the Scriptures contain all things ordinarily necessary to Salvation? |
A26962 | Do not the Fathers as much agree that Peter was first Bishop of Antioch? |
A26962 | Do not your unlearned Multitude join in your Latine Prayers? |
A26962 | Do they go thither for a new miraculous Revelation of an old Tradition left with the whole Church? |
A26962 | Do variety of Liturgies make various Religions? |
A26962 | Do you go to Tradition, or to Books, to decide any Controversie now of the various readings? |
A26962 | Do you know of any one Nonconformist that hath published any dissent to what I have written? |
A26962 | Do you know what men Bishop Jewel, A. Bishop Grindall, and many more of old were? |
A26962 | Do you not confess that all other Churches may erre besides the Roman? |
A26962 | Do you not consider what power the Clergie had every where got with the People? |
A26962 | Do you yet know no difference between the orbis Romanus, and the orbis universalis? |
A26962 | Doth every Papist Neighbour carry them all in his brain, more certainly than in Books? |
A26962 | Doth not this deserve a Fagot with you? |
A26962 | Even holy Augustine saith[ Drunkenness is a mortal sin, si sit assidua, if it be daily or constant;( what, not else?) |
A26962 | Even then, when you blame others as dealing so by the Papists? |
A26962 | For alas, how can all or any in the world know what is necessary to make a Pope? |
A26962 | From Christ, or otherwise? |
A26962 | God saith, Judge not, that ye be not judged; and who art thou that judgest another mans Servant? |
A26962 | Have we a Catholick Church with two Heads? |
A26962 | Have you as full notice now of the Acts of James, John, Matthew, Thomas, Bartholomew,& c. without Book, as you have of Paul''s by the Book? |
A26962 | Have your Oral superadded Traditions more Evidence of Truth than the Bible, or more Evidence of Necessity to be believed? |
A26962 | How can any man say that Nations and Countries are to be rejected as Hereticks, unless the single persons guilty were tryed and heard? |
A26962 | How can you tell then by the name of a Puritane, what to charge any single Person with? |
A26962 | How else did you quiet your Conscience in such a state of Hypocrisie? |
A26962 | How fast is yours? |
A26962 | How loose is ours? |
A26962 | How many hundred Priests must this Parish have, if all should thus confess all sins of Commission and Omission? |
A26962 | How much happier were they when they never heard of his Name? |
A26962 | How must men become Papists? |
A26962 | How ordinarily doth Cajetan, and others of yours, reject( deservedly) the Expositions of Fathers? |
A26962 | How prove you that the Heathens ordinarily did so? |
A26962 | How shall every poor man( or any man) know which is the judgment of the major part? |
A26962 | How shall we be sure of their exemption from such danger? |
A26962 | How shall we ever know it? |
A26962 | How then come the Councils of Constance and Basil for such Doctrine to be unapproved or reprobate Councils? |
A26962 | I had hoped there had been few such left in England: Even Crisp and Saltmarsh, were scarce so erroneous: And were you such a one? |
A26962 | I rather think the Calumny is, that[ his mind and heart may be wholly taken up with worldly desires?] |
A26962 | I told you your memory faileth you: Why did you before then describe the Puritan as so well qualified within, and desiring after more? |
A26962 | If Aquila or Priscilla Converted a Sinner, such a one saved a Soul from Death, though Peter did it not; nor his Authority was known to such a one? |
A26962 | If Fathers and Sons could keep them unwritten in memory a thousand years, why not 1100, and why not 1600? |
A26962 | If Implicitely, that is, Virtually as it is in some General Proposition, what is that General? |
A26962 | If Not, Then I must believe the Infallibility of other Hearers of the Apostles, before I can believe the Pope''s? |
A26962 | If any of these ways are valid; then six men or five may be chosen at once by the several ways: And where is the proof? |
A26962 | If by Oral Tradition, whose must that be? |
A26962 | If by the written Word, then I must believe that that Word is true, before I can believe that the Pope is made Pope or Infallible by it? |
A26962 | If every General Council add new Articles( or many) quoad nos, who knoweth when they will have done? |
A26962 | If from Christ, can I believe that the Pope hath Power from Christ, before I believe that there is a Christ, that hath such Power to give? |
A26962 | If it have more Evidence of Necessity, what is it? |
A26962 | If it must be Part, how shall we ever know which part it must be? |
A26962 | If not from Christ, tell me which way, and why I must believe it? |
A26962 | If not, do you not delude your Relations, by drawing them to build their Faith on a fallible man, or upon nothing? |
A26962 | If not, where are they kept? |
A26962 | If not, why may not you prove as ill Keepers of it as they? |
A26962 | If one way only be valid, the rest were invalid: And how shall we prove which? |
A26962 | If so, must it be Word or Writing? |
A26962 | If so, why was not the Popes Name, rather than Christs, put into Baptism and the Creed, or at least with Christs? |
A26962 | If some Bishops ordain one, and some another, and so twenty( as they long did divers in many years Schism) which of these is the true Pope? |
A26962 | If the Place prove not the Succession, tell us, if you can, what doth? |
A26962 | If the major or the melior, how shall it be ever tryed and known in a division? |
A26962 | If then you have no more to shew than they, where is your Title? |
A26962 | If there be a necessity of having them in writing now, was there not the same necessity to former Ages? |
A26962 | If we dispute with a Papist, and cite the Scriptures, they ask us presently, who shall be Judge of the meaning of them? |
A26962 | If yea, how, came he by it more than all those Churches? |
A26962 | If you ask me, how could he blind Men so far as to make such a change? |
A26962 | If you say, Yea; Then will you call this Christianity, to believe in the Pope, and not in Christ? |
A26962 | Is any of their Books or Traditions elder than the holy Scripture? |
A26962 | Is his Answer, the Faith of your Church? |
A26962 | Is it not a Novelty for the publick Prayers of the Church to be ordinarily made in a Tongue not understood by the generality of the People? |
A26962 | Is it not a meer deceiving trick to word your own Accusations so in the Protestants name, as you know you can easilyest plead, Not Guilty? |
A26962 | Is it not strange that so many Doctors in so many Ages, all remembring them, would none of them ever write them down? |
A26962 | Is it that All that God revealeth is true? |
A26962 | Is it that the Church is the Ministerial Keeper of the Sacred Doctrine as delivered? |
A26962 | Is it that we have not read the Papists writings? |
A26962 | Is it the Election? |
A26962 | Is it your Objective or your Subjective Faith that we are disputing of? |
A26962 | Is memory sufficient to have preserved to us the Statures of the Land, without Books and Records? |
A26962 | Is not Popery a Religion of Bondage and Servitude, consisting mainly in Terrour, and its superstitious effects? |
A26962 | Is not a truly baptized Person a Christian? |
A26962 | Is not our Saviour, and our Sin and Misery relatives? |
A26962 | Is not part of it too much? |
A26962 | Is not that a point of your Faith which the General Councils affirm? |
A26962 | Is not this Heresie, or worse, with you? |
A26962 | Is not this the difference? |
A26962 | Is the Pope Universal Apostle or Teacher? |
A26962 | Is their Tradition yet written in any of their own Books, or not? |
A26962 | Is this to believe a thousand things which a man never knew or heard of? |
A26962 | Is this your common Judgment? |
A26962 | It is not because it is a Divine Revelation: For so you confess all the Bible to be? |
A26962 | It''s like you have: But is that the reason of my mistake? |
A26962 | Martyr and the rest that turned from you, know them? |
A26962 | May I say therefore that this is other mens belief? |
A26962 | May not one alter some one word in every Verse of any Chapter in the Bible, and then protest, that not one of all those Verses is in the Bible? |
A26962 | May not one of your Priests lye as well as all the Greek, Abassine,& c. Churches? |
A26962 | Nay why may we not expect that you lay by your Book Catechisms, your Office Books, your Controversie Books, and teach your People all without Book? |
A26962 | Nor any of his Apostles have left it us on Record? |
A26962 | Now could not Grotius easily have produced such Papists as these, as having said as gross things as you recite? |
A26962 | Or did they suddenly forget them all when they turned Protestants? |
A26962 | Or do not your Doctors, without any Decree of the Church, use to debate it as a free opinion? |
A26962 | Or do you mean, that men may be saved without Christianity, but not without Popery? |
A26962 | Or how must he be chosen? |
A26962 | Or is all left uncertain because it is written? |
A26962 | Or is it that the Church de eventu shall never corrupt, alter, or lose, this word, or any part of it? |
A26962 | Or shall they fight it out, till one have Conquered all the rest? |
A26962 | Or that they took Jupiter,& c. to be nothing but the Image, and not a Coelestial Power? |
A26962 | Or who must be he? |
A26962 | Perhaps you will pretend for it the Doctrine of Justification by Faith alone? |
A26962 | Reader, doth not this tell you whence much of our late Atheism and Infidelity cometh, and what it tendeth to? |
A26962 | S. Augustine was one that subscribed the foresaid Letter: and were such Men like to be seduced by Aurelius? |
A26962 | So if the Printer have some Errata in each Leaf of your Book, may you not protest that not one Leaf of it is yours? |
A26962 | So that no man can be a Believer that is not first certain of the Papists Miracles( and how can millions know them, when they see them not? |
A26962 | Some will say, we see the Madness of this Popery, but how then do you say that the faith must be received, if not from the Church? |
A26962 | Sure all this is past dispute; where then is the difficulty? |
A26962 | That( as in the Japan persecution of the Christians) all the neighbour- hood must be Sworn to detect them? |
A26962 | The truth is, saith Brierwood, Divide the known World( and alas how much is unknown?) |
A26962 | Their Altars have lighted Tapers on: Do you not deserve to be burnt your selves, if you will not burn Candles on your Altars? |
A26962 | These we all agree in, if this will serve the turn? |
A26962 | Those Lay men that were put in full possession unordained were no Popes; and where then is the Succession? |
A26962 | To what impudence will interest and faction carry men? |
A26962 | Unless the unhappy man can forgive all others, and not himself? |
A26962 | Was not Isidore Pelusiota a Father? |
A26962 | Was not he much overseen, or did grosly prevaricate, that drew up this Charge? |
A26962 | Was the Athenian Philosophy propagated and preserved better by Memory, or by Books? |
A26962 | We confess our Faith is not so big as yours? |
A26962 | Were you deluded by such Antinomian conceits as you describe, and took that for Puritanisme? |
A26962 | What Foundation, but the words of your Priest or Grandfather, have you for your assurance? |
A26962 | What Infallible wight then is it that we must first believe the Pope to be, before we believe him to be Pope? |
A26962 | What a Sot was he to think that any Pope would ever be sick, or sore, or dye, if he could forgive all temporal punishment? |
A26962 | What a multitude of Writers have better cited your practice and confuted it? |
A26962 | What a number of reprobated Councils were there? |
A26962 | What an advantage possession and St. Peters name were? |
A26962 | What are all your Libraries for at the Vatican, Florence, Paris, and in each Learned Mans House, if Books be so useless and unintelligible? |
A26962 | What are most of your Tasks of Pilgrimages, Penances, and abundance such, but the effects of servile fear? |
A26962 | What is a Man but his Wit? |
A26962 | What is it that is your advantage, and what is our disadvantage? |
A26962 | What was the Creed, the Symbolum fidei used for, if not to distinguish the Faith of the Christian Church from Infidelity, Heresie, and all without? |
A26962 | What wonder is it that you that were no better a Puritan than you describe, are turned Papist? |
A26962 | When Pope Coelestine himself falsly urged the Nicene Council for Appeals to Rome, contrary to Augustine and the Carthage Council? |
A26962 | Where then was the Papacy under such? |
A26962 | Where was this Tradition kept before, that was so hard a Controversie till now? |
A26962 | Whether Pastors only, or the People? |
A26962 | Whether of some one Church, or of all the Churches? |
A26962 | Whether the Papists Religion be better than ours, as bigger? |
A26962 | Whether the Pope be Head but in the Vacancy of Councils? |
A26962 | Whether you will take all these into the Essentials of Christianity, or not? |
A26962 | Which way do they think that they came by it? |
A26962 | Who are those men that have the Power of chusing S. Peter a Successor? |
A26962 | Who can tell then what is your Faith? |
A26962 | Who did bewitch you so grosly to contradict the whole Tenour of the Gospel? |
A26962 | Why are all your Councils written? |
A26962 | Why do you write to your own Relations, if writing be so un- intelligible? |
A26962 | Why is it not so then with all the rest, the Abassines, the Armenians,& c. and the Majority of Christians? |
A26962 | Why is not the Stoicks, and Epicureans, and others, as fully known now as Aristotles and Plato''s, if Memory without Books could have done? |
A26962 | Why is your One Church no more One in answering this Question? |
A26962 | Why then are we devoted in Baptism to the Holy Ghost? |
A26962 | Why then do you deny them this, and make them to be as out of the true Church and state of Life? |
A26962 | Why were the Gospels written then? |
A26962 | Why would you by temerity go about to deceive your Relations, and other Readers, by talking to them against that which you did not understand? |
A26962 | Would so necessary a Fundamental of Faith have been so much silenced? |
A26962 | Yea many Writers, that the Creed hath all that is absolutely to be believed? |
A26962 | Yea some, that it hath more than all? |
A26962 | Yea, one that saith he was a Puritan, and an University Student? |
A26962 | Yea, or the Common- Law without any Records or Book Cases? |
A26962 | Yea, that it was six hundred years and more before the Churches in one Empire used all one and the same Liturgy? |
A26962 | You Instance[ If he commit Fornication it is but a Venial Sin] Do You hold that any of your approved Councils have defined it to be a Mortal Sin? |
A26962 | You tell us over and over of our receiving this and that from our Fathers and Grand- Fathers? |
A26962 | You that profess you were a Puritan, must needs be judged to tell us what a one you were your self, when you tell us what they are? |
A26962 | Your Relations were not at the Council of Trent, or Florence, or Laterane: How shall they be sure what the Pope and Council agreed on? |
A26962 | [ I pray you what room hath the Catholick Church now in the habitable World?] |
A26962 | a Sancta Clara on our Articles hold that the Particular Belief of Christ himself, or the supernatural Articles of the Creed are not of necessity? |
A26962 | a Sancta Clara) that the Belief in Christ is not necessary to all? |
A26962 | and Whether a Papist be a Heretick? |
A26962 | and all the Decretals? |
A26962 | and for some hundred years, that every Church used what the Bishop pleased? |
A26962 | and it is He and his Pleasers that refuse the most General Councils and Tradition? |
A26962 | and it was Decreed to be so used by all? |
A26962 | and so many written by those before and after him, to prove the Gospel, and none of them hit on this Method, nor write at large to make it good? |
A26962 | and so whether he be a Believer indeed, or not? |
A26962 | and that he pardoneth sin, reneweth Souls by his Spirit, and will give us life hereafter? |
A26962 | and that none can be saved but Saints? |
A26962 | and the ancient Fathers commonly, made it a Tradition, and Practice of the whole Church? |
A26962 | and whether the man had all these? |
A26962 | and whether we have yet half the Christian Faith, or not? |
A26962 | and who can have the comfort of an unknown Religion? |
A26962 | and why is the Creed differenced from them all to this day? |
A26962 | as a Physician, or Medicine and a Disease? |
A26962 | as if they held no Holiness necessary but Imputative? |
A26962 | at least of your Religion? |
A26962 | but if Gods anger remain on us, what help can the pride of the West bring us? |
A26962 | if he do but believe the Infallibility of your Church? |
A26962 | must all be desirous to understand it, if they can not? |
A26962 | no more Righteousness, Peace, and Joy in the Holy Ghost? |
A26962 | nothing almost but fear and its effects? |
A26962 | one of the Fathers? |
A26962 | or because such a name as Johannes Persidis is found at Nice? |
A26962 | or bound to be so? |
A26962 | or by Oral Tradition? |
A26962 | or how shall Christians be known to others, or themselves? |
A26962 | or is it all? |
A26962 | or pass any Sentence of Deposition, or Suspension against them? |
A26962 | or put any other into their places? |
A26962 | should we never have found one word for this speedy way of decision, to appeal to the Church of Rome? |
A26962 | so much complained of in his time:) and then think you justifie all, if you can say, How prove you this or that unlawful? |
A26962 | that are pervices the Vicars of Christ? |
A26962 | though the same Person believe not in God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, nor any of the Articles of his Creed, no not a Life to come? |
A26962 | was it not your self? |
A26962 | what Election? |
A26962 | what Ordination? |
A26962 | what Qualification? |
A26962 | would he never have told the Church of Rome of their Mistris- ship and Infallibility above the rest? |
A26871 | ( Truly or falsly) and think by that to make them odious? |
A26871 | 1 Are those men lovers of Love and Concord who purposely make use of pardoned acts to keep the Kingdoms wounds still open? |
A26871 | 16. whom meaneth he? |
A26871 | 24 What harm doth Godliness and Conscience do you in other men? |
A26871 | 32, 33, 35. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect? |
A26871 | 36. be our case, to eat our own Flesh, and be drunken with our own Blood as with sweet Wine? |
A26871 | 38. Who do you think it is that Christ meaneth, when he saith, I send you as Lambs among Wolves? |
A26871 | Alas how great, and how uncureable? |
A26871 | Alas, Lord, why must the Churches be left in such hands? |
A26871 | And Hatred tends to Hurtfulness: What plotting and labouring is there in the world, to ruine and destroy each other? |
A26871 | And are not the greater number of European Bishops known Papists? |
A26871 | And are not you such Separatists from all the world, saving the Assembly where you meet? |
A26871 | And are the Protestant Reformed Churches free from fleshly, worldly, wicked men? |
A26871 | And are these such good and pleasant fruits as should entice us to change our master, work and hopes, for this, and worse that followeth it? |
A26871 | And are they all in the right? |
A26871 | And are they odious corrupters of Religion, who omit no part of Religion, but only humane indifferent things? |
A26871 | And are those Separatists from your Church, who only separate from that which is no part of your Church or Worship? |
A26871 | And at the same time hate Purity and Holiness? |
A26871 | And can we have a higher, purer pattern? |
A26871 | And can you reconcile all this to our Oath of Supremacy, and the Canons that establish it, renouncing all forreign Iurisdiction? |
A26871 | And can you think that he loveth you, or that his Service against God is better than Gods; or his reward better? |
A26871 | And can you wonder here if men fluctuate in uncertainty? |
A26871 | And did not the present Nonconformists shew the same judgment 1660 and 1661 in their treaty? |
A26871 | And did the Apostles offer God so odious a worship as deserved hatred and destruction? |
A26871 | And do not many come to your assemblies? |
A26871 | And do sinners need to be blamed for obedience? |
A26871 | And do they not by this confute their own accusations? |
A26871 | And do those that you accuse do more for their Salvation? |
A26871 | And do you at once accuse them as sinners and hate them for obeying God, and sinning no more? |
A26871 | And do you hate men for being such as you have vowed to be your selves? |
A26871 | And do you not see in Print what Mr. Tombes the Anabaptist wrote long ago to perswade his followers to your communion? |
A26871 | And do you think he will justifie his Enemies, that hated, accused and condemned his Servants? |
A26871 | And do you think it is the love of Money, and Lust, and Sport, or Gluttony, or Drunkenness that is his Image? |
A26871 | And do you think such actors are an honour to your cause? |
A26871 | And do you think to baffle him? |
A26871 | And doth not this shew what men we have to do with; and that it is somewhat else than non- conformity which such men hate? |
A26871 | And had not you your Ministerial power from it? |
A26871 | And hath Christ left Religion so uncertain a thing? |
A26871 | And have you heard it proved? |
A26871 | And he that knows it knows that it Sentences all such to Jail if they be seen in your Churches? |
A26871 | And how far must this go? |
A26871 | And how is that? |
A26871 | And how shall any know where it is, unless he try and judge his Rulers Commands by the Laws of God? |
A26871 | And how shall we know that the major part of the Clergy are the best and soundest, when we see that the major part of the Laity is usually the worst? |
A26871 | And how the French Massacre and Murders of Kings, and the horrid Inquisition set all our Parliaments against you? |
A26871 | And how the Murder of 200000 in Ireland drove many thousands into the Parliaments Army that else would not have gone? |
A26871 | And if England may not suffer such, why should any other nation suffer them? |
A26871 | And if God command it, and you condemn it, do you not condemn God? |
A26871 | And if so, is it not God whom you accuse and reproach? |
A26871 | And if the rest of the Christian world be not bound by them( in Greece, Ethiopia, Armenia, Syria,& c.) Why are we? |
A26871 | And if they are as wicked as you say, why do you not prosecute them for such wickedness? |
A26871 | And if this be it, and this it which you hate, are you not haters of God? |
A26871 | And if you hate or oppose that holy obedience to God which you profess, after all this, what must be the portion of such hypocrites? |
A26871 | And if you need no such reproof or stop, why should you think others need it? |
A26871 | And if your infancy here begin with such destructive zeal, what will you do when you are at full growth? |
A26871 | And is God so easily deposed? |
A26871 | And is it consistent with reasonable modesty to go about to make the World believe that the Protestant Doctrine is less loyal than yours? |
A26871 | And is it honourable openly to serve the Devil? |
A26871 | And is it now any wonder that the people say as they are taught? |
A26871 | And is not he the absolute Soveraign? |
A26871 | And is not that to be devilish and hated by God? |
A26871 | And is there no hope of prevailing with English men to live together in peace? |
A26871 | And it were an addition to the health and welfare of the one, which is gotten by Conquest from the other? |
A26871 | And must the world have one Soveraignty to make Laws for them? |
A26871 | And must there be as many Religions as Kings and Laws will make? |
A26871 | And rejoyce to be Christ Servants for their defence continually: And is it not Devils then and their Servants and Souldiers that are against them? |
A26871 | And shall the strict obeying of Gods known Laws render men odious among professed Protestants? |
A26871 | And shall they after this be called Separatists for not coming in? |
A26871 | And shall thousands suffer for other mens deeds? |
A26871 | And shall we trust that you can answer for us, or save us? |
A26871 | And so we must be as bad as they? |
A26871 | And so whether all the Corporations of England are free from — And for what it is that God hath singled them out for Judgment? |
A26871 | And that the people should not suffer a Heretick to reign? |
A26871 | And to ease the pain which we must undergo? |
A26871 | And to think how openly you serve the Devil, and do his work? |
A26871 | And what Mr. Nye wrote to perswade the Independants to come to your Churches? |
A26871 | And what horrid cruelty is this? |
A26871 | And what is it that you offer us instead of all that we must part with? |
A26871 | And what is the subject of our( formerly weekly and now daily) News Books? |
A26871 | And what is there amiss in the Word or Work of God, and in a serious godly life, that should make us be against it? |
A26871 | And what man in his wits knoweth not that Prelates and Priests are much at the will and power of the Princes under whom they live? |
A26871 | And what shift will you make at home to quiet Conscience in your selves? |
A26871 | And what though the Subjects of Forreign Power fear no Violence, are all the rest( that is, the Protestants) of the Kingdom inconsiderable? |
A26871 | And what would you have more? |
A26871 | And when so few of you ever so much as worship God in your Families, by Prayer, or read the Scripture, or Catechise your families? |
A26871 | And where must we stop? |
A26871 | And whether I am not bound in charity to think that the sequestred Royalists put a good sence on it, when they took it? |
A26871 | And who continueth them, and for what? |
A26871 | And who or what are you that would reason, mock or affright us from a life of obedience to God? |
A26871 | And who shall be our Rule, if we forsake God and his Word? |
A26871 | And why are those charged with them that never were so accused and proved guilty? |
A26871 | And will any thing that you can give us, be better than Heaven to us? |
A26871 | And will he give up his Scepter to a scorner, a drunkard, or a persecutor? |
A26871 | And will men worship God any better among Heathens or Infidels, or others? |
A26871 | And will they not then be the Major Vote? |
A26871 | And will you be revenged for this on such Protestants that medled not in it? |
A26871 | And will you yet stir up all the Land to fear and hate you? |
A26871 | And would they not all that are Ministers Preach there if they could have leave? |
A26871 | And yet do you accuse them, and hate them most for not sinning? |
A26871 | And yet is there any Enmity or Disagreement? |
A26871 | And you your selves keep holy days for many Saints: And will you at the same time hate and hurt those that endeavour to imitate them? |
A26871 | And, is such a blasphemer meet for humane Society, who will accuse his Maker? |
A26871 | Are all the Wars of Italy, Germany,& c. against Princes and Emperors, for the Pope, forgotten? |
A26871 | Are any hurt by this? |
A26871 | Are not things indifferent variable as Countreys and Ages are? |
A26871 | Are not your foresaid Council Canons which are your Religion, visible? |
A26871 | Are there any two in the whole world, that are not ignorant, and that differ not about many greater matters than things indifferent? |
A26871 | Are there no unfaithful and unskilful Ministers? |
A26871 | Are they wiser men than they that have made us another rule or worship? |
A26871 | Are you greater than God, and more to be feared? |
A26871 | Are you more merciful than God, and would save us from some hurt that he would do us? |
A26871 | Are you not your selves in your baptism Vowed and Devoted to God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, renouncing the world, the Flesh and the Devil? |
A26871 | Are you sure you can make God believe you, that these men are as bad as you affirm? |
A26871 | Are you sure you can overcome him? |
A26871 | Are you truer than God, and more to be believed? |
A26871 | Are you wiser than God, and dare you give him the lie, that we should believe you before him? |
A26871 | Are your wills and lusts and appetites a better law? |
A26871 | As if it were the interest of the nobler and the Servile parts to weaken or destroy each other? |
A26871 | As many as will live godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer Persecution,& c. Who do you think all this is spoken of? |
A26871 | As to your Church communion, can you blind mens eyes, that they shall not read, what the old Nonconformists have written to perswade men to it? |
A26871 | But again, do you believe that most, or all that you keep in, are wiser and more knowing than those that you cast out? |
A26871 | But are not they for Monarchy in the state? |
A26871 | But by whom did they die? |
A26871 | But how few men are alive that had any hand in those miserable Wars? |
A26871 | But if they are such an absolutely necessary rule as you pretend, why do not teachers preach them to us daily as they do the Sacred Scriptures? |
A26871 | But if this be the true cause why do you cull out those that have least sin to fasten your accusations of sin upon? |
A26871 | But the Question is, Whether they may not be thus brought to concord by consent? |
A26871 | But they are Schismaticks, and Separate from the Church; and is not that a damnable sin? |
A26871 | But what need they make such a stir with their Religion: What need they any more than go to Church and live obediently and be quiet? |
A26871 | But what''s all this to the poor Priests? |
A26871 | But what''s this to Councils when there are none? |
A26871 | But who is it that they separate from? |
A26871 | But why did not the people do so all this while? |
A26871 | Can a man believe a thing to be a wicked errour meerly because the Canon saith so? |
A26871 | Can he not answer you? |
A26871 | Can not we have Life, Liberty, Peace and Love without things indifferent? |
A26871 | Can we return him more than his due? |
A26871 | Can you do none of this, and yet will you venture a War against God? |
A26871 | Christ came into the world to die for sin, to shew Gods hatred of it: And would you have us wilfully to commit it, and to despise his Blood? |
A26871 | Dare any man of Self- knowledge and Conscience say, that all your Worship is not more faulty, than is the omission of a Form or Ceremony? |
A26871 | Dare any man that believeth there is a God, say, that man can Love him too much? |
A26871 | Did Christ take Mans Nature, and die to save them, and will he now turn on Satans side against them? |
A26871 | Did the Apostles or first Churches banish any on such accounts? |
A26871 | Did the Holy- Ghost by them write an infallible Rule for all things necessary in Religion? |
A26871 | Did they worship God in an odious, intolerable manner? |
A26871 | Do not all Churches require obedience to their Orders? |
A26871 | Do not the Imposers say that all which they add is no part of Religion, but things indifferent? |
A26871 | Do they forsake the Assemblies before they are excommunicated? |
A26871 | Do they not profess Union and Communion with the whole Catholick Church on Earth? |
A26871 | Do you call them the things Indifferent, and then call it a wicked errour to hold them sinful? |
A26871 | Do you call them to Church and reproach them for not coming, and seek to ruin them for it, and now accuse them for coming? |
A26871 | Do you do all this without any purpose or hope to drive them to conformity? |
A26871 | Do you know all the persons whom you accuse? |
A26871 | Do you know any that doth Gods will better than it''s done in Heaven? |
A26871 | Do you lay men in Jail by it, and yet think it must be unknown? |
A26871 | Do you not in your daily hypocritical devotions condemn your selves by your own tongues? |
A26871 | Do you not know that Nature is vitiated by sin, and Man is now backward to God, and all that''s good and holy? |
A26871 | Do you not know that the Devil is the great Accuser of the Brethren? |
A26871 | Do you not pray that Gods will may be done on Earth as it is done in Heaven? |
A26871 | Do you not pray that the rest of your lives may be Pure and Holy? |
A26871 | Do you not reverence the Church for some hundred years after Christ, which imposed no Liturgies, but left every Pastor to use his own Prayers? |
A26871 | Do you not use to say that all men are sinners? |
A26871 | Do you suffer as much for reviling Preachers, as we have done for Preaching? |
A26871 | Do you think that Man is a creature that needs to be blamed for loving or obeying God too much? |
A26871 | Doth God make bad Laws? |
A26871 | Doth it never affright you to find the Devils nature in you, as hating the Divine or holy nature which is in faithful Godly men? |
A26871 | Doth not our King expect that his Bishops obey him? |
A26871 | Doth not the Canon shew that the Church would not have them come in, when they cast them out? |
A26871 | Doth the difference of Cathedral and Parish Worship break Peace; or of those Churches that have Organs and Altars, and those that have none? |
A26871 | Doth the same Liberty to the Dutch here hurt any body, or break Peace? |
A26871 | Doth this signify any dislike of their omitting Gods worship? |
A26871 | Doubtless you know that you are sinners: And how think you to be justified at the Bar of God? |
A26871 | God hath in wonderful mercy given us peace from forreign Enemies? |
A26871 | God is merciful; and will he save none but Puritans, or precise zealots? |
A26871 | God needs us not: His Laws are all made for our good? |
A26871 | Had you not rather have a son that takes Disobedience, Whoredom, Gaming and Drunkenness for sin, than one that makes no Conscience of them? |
A26871 | Had you rather die a Dives or a Herod, or a Lazarus or a Paul? |
A26871 | Hath he left his Servants to the will of man, to use them how they will, or cast out of his Church whom they will? |
A26871 | Hath he made any such Laws? |
A26871 | Hath not God printed on mans nature such a sense of the difference between Good and Evil, as that all Laws and Government are founded in that sense? |
A26871 | Have any Judicatures proved them guilty of any such crimes against God or Man? |
A26871 | Have not the forecited writers truly cited them and multitudes of your Doctors which may better inform men? |
A26871 | Have the particular persons been heard speak for themselves, and give the reason of their actions? |
A26871 | Have you any better Master to serve than God? |
A26871 | Have you not greater sins your selves than those whom you accuse? |
A26871 | Have you not observed that all parties have faln by forcing multitudes to be their enemies by seeking to destroy or hurt them? |
A26871 | Have you particular matter against them to make good this charge? |
A26871 | He came by his Doctrine, example and grace to bring man to holy obedience: And do you hate men for the same, and yet call your selves Christians? |
A26871 | He came to destroy the works of the Devil; and will you plead for them? |
A26871 | How exceeding dear a love hath God and our Redeemer exprest, to all holy, obedient believers? |
A26871 | How many more such acts have they done? |
A26871 | How? |
A26871 | I pray tell men of brains and sense, for what it is that you would have men Excommunicated, and laid in Jail or Fined, if they Conform not? |
A26871 | If I like your Liturgy better than any in the Bibliotheca Patrum, is that separating from all Churches that use the rest? |
A26871 | If Princes, how many minds are they of through the world? |
A26871 | If a Subject neglect paying some excise, or using Bow and Arrows, will you forbid him paying any thing, or serving the King at all? |
A26871 | If a man fail in paying his Landlord some odd act of Service, will you make a Law that he shall pay nothing at all? |
A26871 | If every man shall follow his own fancy, what Order will there be? |
A26871 | If he be God, he is of absolute Power; and should he not then be obeyed? |
A26871 | If he be God, he is perfectly Good, and mans chief Benefactor; and should he not then have our chiefest Love? |
A26871 | If he be God, he is perfectly Wise; and should not perfect Wisdom govern us? |
A26871 | If it be an European Council, who shall call them, and who shall judge whether it be equal, and so far General? |
A26871 | If it be not in Doctrine what is it? |
A26871 | If it be the Bishops that must be the common rule of our Religion, what Countreys and Ages doth this rule serve for? |
A26871 | If it were Prelates, of how many minds are they through the world, and how bitter in condemning one another? |
A26871 | If so, do you not tell him how to judge of you, and even crave him to condemn you? |
A26871 | If suffering may not alter them, why do you use it on them? |
A26871 | If the Italians, French, English,& c. are all disagreed, how many and which Councils we must obey, can all poor people know which is in the right? |
A26871 | If the first be the way, what Kingdoms must it be in? |
A26871 | If they do too much in obeying God, why do Canon- makers impose such abundance on them, as if God had not imposed enough? |
A26871 | If they excommunicated or ruined you for this, who do you think were guilty of the Schism? |
A26871 | If this were not so, who makes the Pope? |
A26871 | If yea, where was it? |
A26871 | If you did suffer for Whoredom, Drunkenness, Blasphemy is that for Christ or righteousness? |
A26871 | If you think they do too much, search the Scriptures, and see whether it be not less than God commandeth? |
A26871 | If you will not part with your Life or Estate when another desires you, why should we part with Heaven for ever, and choose Hell at your desire? |
A26871 | In what Countreys is it that your Rule holds, that Rulers must be thus far obeyed in Religion? |
A26871 | Is Sin and Sensuality a better employment than his Service? |
A26871 | Is a mans Judgment absolutely in his power? |
A26871 | Is falshood, lying and dissembling beseeming them that say they are of a Church out of which none can be saved? |
A26871 | Is it God that sets the parts of the same body in a hatred and War against each other? |
A26871 | Is it a better life to love a Whore, or to please Lust and Appetite, than to love God? |
A26871 | Is it a greater trouble to live in hope of Heavenly Glory, than to live in the despair either of a Sadducee or a Rebel? |
A26871 | Is it in China, or Pegu, or Indostan, or Turky? |
A26871 | Is it individual persons that you mean, by whom it''s proved? |
A26871 | Is it no change of our Church Government to bring us under a forreign Jurisdiction? |
A26871 | Is it no where but in Britain? |
A26871 | Is it not a shame to your devilish cause and you, to see men live in one mind and die in another? |
A26871 | Is it not perjury than to endeavour any alteration of it? |
A26871 | Is it their Local absence? |
A26871 | Is money or fleshly pleasure better than God and Heaven? |
A26871 | Is not all that enough? |
A26871 | Is not everlasting glory worth the cost of a holy life? |
A26871 | Is not the Ministers skill and faithfulness of great importance to mens Salvation? |
A26871 | Is that better worship? |
A26871 | Is the worship that Peter and Paul used worse than irreligiousness and infidelity? |
A26871 | Is there any but Christ to judge and justify you? |
A26871 | Is your flesh and lust a better master? |
A26871 | It is God that justifieth: Who is he that will condemn them? |
A26871 | It is not of you, that are fleshly, worldly, ungodly men; Who Persecuteth you for righteousness sake? |
A26871 | It''s more foolish than to blame a sick man for working or eating too much that can do neither? |
A26871 | Know you not that Christ, and his Apostles and all the Martyrs were as deeply charged, and put to death as Malefactors? |
A26871 | Let us try first whether you will do far less at our request? |
A26871 | Must Kings choose us a God? |
A26871 | Nineteen parts in Thirty of the Earth are Idolaters and Heathens: And do I need to say, how ignorant, wicked and miserable they are? |
A26871 | No man understandeth all the Bible: And are many Laws and Books more necessary than Gods? |
A26871 | Of Turks and Christians; of Wolves and Sheep, that I say not of Devils and Men? |
A26871 | Or also in France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Poland? |
A26871 | Or are you better than God, that you can make a better choice for your selves and us? |
A26871 | Or can it be too dearly bought? |
A26871 | Or chuse whether we shall have any God, any Christ, any Bible, any worship of God, and so any Heaven? |
A26871 | Or could you have taught God to amend the Bible, or to govern better? |
A26871 | Or do you not say this of whole Congregations assembled to worship God, of whom you know not one of many? |
A26871 | Or do you think to fight against his Servants, and bribe him to be on your side, and forsake them to your rage? |
A26871 | Or how shall we know which is right but by the Word of God? |
A26871 | Or is it at Geneva, Holland, or the Presbyterian Countreys? |
A26871 | Or is it certain that the Papists Bishops are sounder than our Protestant Bishops, because they are more? |
A26871 | Or is it in Italy, Spain, Poland, Silesia, Bavaria, or France? |
A26871 | Or is it not an odd thing for to excommunicate men first, and then accuse them for not coming to Church? |
A26871 | Or is it not damnable hypocrisy to pray for that which you hate, and hate all men that desire and endeavour it? |
A26871 | Or is it not only for worshiping God contrary to the Kings and Prelates Laws? |
A26871 | Or is it only a general malicious Accusation? |
A26871 | Or is it only in England, Scotland and Ireland? |
A26871 | Or is it possible to believe Gods Judgment, and Hells Punishment, and yet to hate those that do their best according to Gods own Counsel to escape it? |
A26871 | Or is it that they dislike somewhat in your Forms of Worship? |
A26871 | Or is their Worship intolerable? |
A26871 | Or is their course better than to worship God as Peter and Paul did? |
A26871 | Or must all men be for the God and Religion of his King? |
A26871 | Or shall all Subjects judge of Kings capacities? |
A26871 | Or so mutable that General Councils of Prelates may be still increasing it? |
A26871 | Or to hold a man in a Consumption from going up the Hill too fast? |
A26871 | Or was Gods Word derided and taken for no reason? |
A26871 | Or was it when the Devil and the Flesh made you mad or drunken in ignorant malice? |
A26871 | Or were they condemned unheard? |
A26871 | Or why should other Countries endure them, if they be not to be endured in their own? |
A26871 | Or will it make Hell tollerable? |
A26871 | Query, Whether all these Souldiers be not Traitors to the King or Emperour? |
A26871 | Roman Councils? |
A26871 | Shall the Throne of Iniquity have fellowship with God, that frameth mischief by a Law, to make sin common and allowed? |
A26871 | Such corrupters there may be as are worse indeed: But what is it that they corrupt Religion in? |
A26871 | Sure unconscionable Servants and Debtors are more troublesom than they that fear God and believe that injustice is a damning sin? |
A26871 | They are willing to do all required in Scripture by Christ and his Apostles: And were they Rebels and Rogues? |
A26871 | They subscribe to all the Bible, and the ancient Creeds? |
A26871 | This is the very tenor of the Gospel: And would you wish men to damn their Souls for nothing? |
A26871 | To lose Heaven, and suffer Hell for ever, and all to avoid a pure and holy life? |
A26871 | To serve and worship God no otherwise than Peter and Paul did, and than God prescribeth is enough to render us unworthy to live on English Earth? |
A26871 | Was it in the womb? |
A26871 | Was it not a council that deposed Ludovicus Pius? |
A26871 | Was it not by the accusation and witness of Papists? |
A26871 | Was it the rule where Princes and Prelates were Arians, or Nestorians, or Eutychians, or Monothelites, or Papists? |
A26871 | Was there any Church before your reformation? |
A26871 | We have had experience of both ways, and would you have us mad against our experience? |
A26871 | What Spirit ruleth thee? |
A26871 | What Worship is it that they offer God contrary to Law? |
A26871 | What a bloody motion is this? |
A26871 | What are the French Protestants now prosecuted and ruin''d for? |
A26871 | What cloven foot hath entred, and expelled concord? |
A26871 | What do you love and seek your selves? |
A26871 | What else have we to do in the World? |
A26871 | What great contempt of the Body and the World, did the Platonists, the Stoicks and the Cynicks profess? |
A26871 | What hurt doth their praying do you; or their preaching, while they are responsible for any ill Doctrine? |
A26871 | What if they dare not Swear and Drink as you do, doth this do you any harm? |
A26871 | What is it but the Serpentine enmity that maketh you hate those that never hurt you? |
A26871 | What is it think you, God hath not hands and feet, and bodily parts as we have? |
A26871 | What is that odious sin? |
A26871 | What is there in Love and Obedience to God that should make it detestable, or make us miserable? |
A26871 | What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy Conversation and Godliness? |
A26871 | What mean you to do with Conscience, your own, and ours, and other mens? |
A26871 | What monstrous cruelty is it in you to wish poor Souls to do that which God hath told us they shall be damned for? |
A26871 | What must be the cure of Malignity? |
A26871 | What separation do you mean? |
A26871 | What shall we then think of them that would bring in Popery? |
A26871 | What would you have these Ministers and People do? |
A26871 | What? |
A26871 | When began you to be stronger than God? |
A26871 | When it is so hard to teach the people things necessary, few and plain? |
A26871 | Which is the more ungodly omission? |
A26871 | Who hateth, revileth or imprisoneth, or fineth you, for living godly in Christ Jesus? |
A26871 | Who hath these 22 two years manifested most desires of Peace? |
A26871 | Who kindled all the hellish flames of thy malignity and mad divisions? |
A26871 | Why are they not these twenty years accused of Preaching false Doctrine, and proved guilty and punisht for it, if they are such? |
A26871 | Why do they differ from their Neighbours, and judge all carnal that be not as Scrupulous as they? |
A26871 | Why do you never find fault with men for being too strong, too healthful, too rich, too great, but only for being too obedient to God? |
A26871 | Why do you not ingenuously plead your cause against us, so as may satisfy an understanding Conscience, before you seek our destruction? |
A26871 | Why do you play your game under board, and behind the Curtain? |
A26871 | Why do you take on you to believe in Christ, if you be against holiness, and for sin? |
A26871 | Why will they be righteous over much; will not less ado bring men to Heaven? |
A26871 | Will Christ banish them from his Kingdom? |
A26871 | Will God ever bless a prophane rabble( or Gentry) to be the honour and strength of the Church, against the Religious that desire a Reformation? |
A26871 | Will no Patrons chuse such? |
A26871 | Will not all the world be forbidden to worship God, if all as bad as this be forbidden? |
A26871 | Will not this perswade the people that all is true that is said of your intended cruelty, and make them fear you, as so many Leopards or Wolves? |
A26871 | Will not this project perjure England? |
A26871 | Will they not say, if the young Serpents can so easily sting, what will the old ones do? |
A26871 | Will you follow this Rule in France or Spain? |
A26871 | Will you give the poor all your Lands and Estates? |
A26871 | Will you run into Fire or Water, or set your own houses on fire when any will but desire it? |
A26871 | Will you undertake to answer for it at the bar of God, if we are charged with an ungodly, fleshly life, or omitting our necessary duty? |
A26871 | Would you have God judge of them as you do? |
A26871 | Ye shall be hated of all men for my names sakes; Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousness sake? |
A26871 | Yea the Papists honour the very Bones and Relicks of their dead Saints? |
A26871 | You are worse than man- eating Cannibals? |
A26871 | You''ll say, It is Christians: True: But is it Hypocrites? |
A26871 | and must he be believed? |
A26871 | and that he hath malice and craft enough to say as bad as you can say, by the best of men? |
A26871 | and were they proved insufficient? |
A26871 | and why it is no more remedied? |
A26871 | and yet are they unsufferable rogues that worship God but according to that rule? |
A26871 | from ignorant malignant cruel Enemies to Truth, and Piety, and Peace? |
A26871 | or any better work to do than he commandeth, or any better thing to seek and hope for than he hath promised? |
A26871 | or do you thus accuse whole companies of men? |
A26871 | or have they more of Gods Spirit, and more authority in religion? |
A26871 | or hypocrites, how few then do you make to be saved, if God be true? |
A26871 | or in Infancy when you could not go? |
A26871 | or only since? |
A26871 | or too much honour him, or obey him? |
A26871 | so they may in others Forms, with whom yet they profess Communion: And in what is it that they shew dislike or separation? |
A26871 | to omit all worship of God and live like Atheists, or to omit only so much of the Liturgy as the Apostles used not? |
A26871 | what a Map of Hell is the greatest part of Earth? |
A26871 | what great change is here of their judgments? |
A26871 | when thousands can not answer a necessary question of the Creed or Catechism; nor know who Christ is, and how he saveth us? |
A26871 | would they not perjure the Kingdom? |
A27062 | 1. Who should be first served, God or Man? |
A27062 | 11. yea when he that died for you will condemn you, shall we be more merciful than God? |
A27062 | 12. and shall redeemed Sinners make light of them? |
A27062 | 16. what then is he that sets light by Christ? |
A27062 | 18. and would you have us bring your Blood upon our own Heads by a ● ie? |
A27062 | 2. Who are his Angels? |
A27062 | 25. where the Enquiry is made to be, whether they have sed and visited him in his Members or not? |
A27062 | 29. then they cry out, Sirs, what shall I do to 〈 ◊ 〉 saved? |
A27062 | 4. how unable then shall we be against God''s Sentence to justify you? |
A27062 | 6. trembling and astonished Paul cries out, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? |
A27062 | 9. and we are almost at the Bar, and it is so short a time to this Assize, what Soul that is not dead will be secure? |
A27062 | A merciful Judg will hang a Man for a Fault against Man: By proportion then what is due for Sin against God? |
A27062 | All the Death and Calamity which you see in the World, comes from the Anger of this merciful God: why then may not future Misery come from it? |
A27062 | And can you think that you shall not hear of this again, and pay for it one Day? |
A27062 | And could you think that it was the Will of God that you should mind your Bodies more than your Souls, and this Life more than that to come? |
A27062 | And did it not seem as unlikely to you, that his Word should be false? |
A27062 | And did you think 〈 ◊ 〉 basely and blasphemously of God, that he would ● sify his Word, lest such as you should suffer? |
A27062 | And do you think you shall not hear of this? |
A27062 | And if my Will were not free, how could I choose but sin? |
A27062 | And is it not Reason that it should go worse with contemptuous Sinners, than with those Creatures that never sinned? |
A27062 | And is it not just with God to make these Fiends their Familiars in Torment, with whom they entertained such Familiarity in Sin? |
A27062 | And is not Christ worth the seeking? |
A27062 | And is not Hell worse than the ● ● ardest Way to Heaven? |
A27062 | And might you not have gone where a pow ● ● ful Minister was, with a little pains? |
A27062 | And must you not much more use diligence in much greater Things? |
A27062 | And now their time is past, what is it? |
A27062 | And shall not the Judg of all the Earth judg righteously? |
A27062 | And should Men be imitated, be they many, or be they few, in such a Course as this? |
A27062 | And should not a Matter then that so concerneth thy self, go near thy Heart, and awake thee from thy Security? |
A27062 | And the Judg may thus expostulate with them,[ Did all these Mercies deserve no more Thanks? |
A27062 | And was it wise or equal Dealing, to prefer your Lusts before that Glory? |
A27062 | And was not Heaven worth the enduring of a Scorn? |
A27062 | And were you not as earnestly perswaded by God to forsake Sin and serve him, and yet that would not prevail with you? |
A27062 | And what did God entice you with? |
A27062 | And whose threatning should you have chiefly feared? |
A27062 | And why did you not hearken to God that enticed you the other way? |
A27062 | And why is this so? |
A27062 | And why then might not Godliness have been your Ease and Recreation? |
A27062 | And will you wilfully sin, and think to escape because God doth not hinder you? |
A27062 | Are all that hear me this Day certain they shall be saved? |
A27062 | Are you no more near or dear to your selves, than to make light of your own Happiness or Misery? |
A27062 | Are you resolved to let them go? |
A27062 | Are you turned your own Enemies? |
A27062 | Are your Minds taken up with these Considerations? |
A27062 | As a Man, what art thou but a Worm to God? |
A27062 | At least it doth God no harm, and therefore why ● uld he do us so much harm for it? |
A27062 | But I have not Power of my self to do any thing that is good: what can the Creature do? |
A27062 | But are you excusable if he do not? |
A27062 | But consider well, Was not God''s Word so plainly written, that the Unlearned might understand it? |
A27062 | But how easily will God make them know the contrary? |
A27062 | But how shall Heathens be judged by the Law of Grace, that never did receive it? |
A27062 | But how shall Insants be judged by the Gospel, that were uncapable of it? |
A27062 | But if Christ have satisfied for my Sins, and died for me, then how can I justly suffer for the same Sins? |
A27062 | But if Men will not hear, and there be no remedy, who can help it? |
A27062 | But seeing thou art also guilty of those special Sins which he never shed his Blood for, who shall deliver thee from that Accusation? |
A27062 | But the last Question which must decide the Controversy will be, whether we have performed the Condition of the Gospel? |
A27062 | But what if the Way to Heaven had been harder than it was? |
A27062 | But when hear we such Questions? |
A27062 | But whither must they depart? |
A27062 | But who be they that are ready? |
A27062 | But why is it called a Fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels? |
A27062 | Can foolish Sinners think to lie hid or escape at that Day, that will now sin wilfully before their Judg? |
A27062 | Can we absolve you when the righteous God will condemn you? |
A27062 | Can we have any Mercy on you, when he that made you will not save you, and he that formed you will shew you no Mercy? |
A27062 | Can you do it better when Sin hath more hardned it, and God may have given thee over to thy felf? |
A27062 | Can you escape without a Christ? |
A27062 | Can you find fault if you miss of the Salvation which you slighted? |
A27062 | Consider, 4. Who is it that sends this weighty Message to you? |
A27062 | Could not God requite your Labour or Sufferings? |
A27062 | Could you have taken no time from your rest, or eating, or at other Intermissions? |
A27062 | Dare you doubt of this which the God of Heaven hath so positively affirmed? |
A27062 | Depart: From whom? |
A27062 | Depart: from what? |
A27062 | Despisest thou the Riches of his Goodness, and Forbearance, and Long- suffering, not knowing that the Goodness of God leadeth thee to Repentance? |
A27062 | Did God hide these things from you? |
A27062 | Did God ● ake the World so easily? |
A27062 | Did God''s Word make Heaven and Earth? |
A27062 | Did he not stand by you when you were in your Cups and lustful Pleasures? |
A27062 | Did he not tell you of the Danger, and offer you far better things, if you would obey him and despise those Baits? |
A27062 | Did not Christ tell thee, One thing is necessary? |
A27062 | Did not Christ tell you that if you were ashamed of him before Men, he would be ashamed of you before his Father and the Angels of Heaven? |
A27062 | Did not God also threaten you with everlasting Death, if you were not ruled by him? |
A27062 | Did not God purpose also to manifest the Glory of his remunerative Justice? |
A27062 | Did not God tell you all this and much more; and plainly tell it you? |
A27062 | Did the Knees of King Belshazzar knock together with trembling, when he saw the Hand- writing on the Wall? |
A27062 | Did you doubt of his Will, or of his Power? |
A27062 | Did you joi ● with the Godly so far as they are all agreed? |
A27062 | Did you not feel Pain and Misery begin in this Life? |
A27062 | Did you spend no time in Recreation, nor Idleness, nor vain talking? |
A27062 | Did you think God was no wiser than you, and understood not himself, because you understood him not? |
A27062 | Didst thou attend diligently on the Word in publick, and think of what thou heardst when thou camest home? |
A27062 | Didst thou go to the Minister, or to others that could teach thee, and intreat them to tell thee the Way to Salvation? |
A27062 | Didst thou pray daily for it to God? |
A27062 | Didst thou use all the means thou couldst to get it? |
A27062 | Do not some of your Consciences by this time smite you, and say, I am the Man that have made light of my Salvation? |
A27062 | Do not the negligent Studies of some speak it out? |
A27062 | Do not these make light of Christ and Salvation? |
A27062 | Do not they make light of the Doctrine they preach, that do it as if they were half asleep, and feel not what they speak themselves? |
A27062 | Do not those then make light of Christ and Salvation, that shun the mention of his Name, unless it be in a vain or sinful Use? |
A27062 | Do not those then make light of Christ and Salvation, that think of them so seldom and coldly in comparison of other things? |
A27062 | Do not you use to ask this of your own Hearts? |
A27062 | Do we desire this sad Fruit of our Labours? |
A27062 | Do you mean to set as light by Christ and Salvation as hitherto you have done? |
A27062 | Do you not see by this time what a Case that Soul is in that maketh light of Christ and Salvation? |
A27062 | Do you soundly believe this Doctrine which I have ● ached to you? |
A27062 | Do you think that Christ shed his Blood to save them that continue to make light of it? |
A27062 | Do you think this will not one Day cost you dear? |
A27062 | Doth any repent when they come to Heaven, that it cost them so ● ● ear to come thither? |
A27062 | Doth it not behove you beforehand to think of these things? |
A27062 | Doth not that Soul make light of all these, that thinks his Ease more worth than they? |
A27062 | Doth not the Carelesness of some Mens private Endeavours discover it? |
A27062 | Doth not the continued Neglect of those things wherein the Interest of Christ consisteth discover it? |
A27062 | Doth not the covetous and worldly Lives of too many discover it, losing Advantages for Mens Souls for a little Gain to themselves? |
A27062 | Doth not their dead and drowsy Preaching declare it? |
A27062 | For as to their own Glory, it is but a Smoak: what matter is it whether you live poor or rich, unless it were a greater Matter to die rich than it is? |
A27062 | For he knoweth vain Man; be seech Wickedness also, and will be not consider it? |
A27062 | For how should it be? |
A27062 | For the fourth Particular, Who will be the Accuser? |
A27062 | For the poor Creture to stand before his Maker and Redeemer, to be judged to everlasting Joy or Torment? |
A27062 | For the seventh Head, What will be the Cause of the Day to be enqu ● ed after? |
A27062 | For the sixth Particular, What Law is it that Men shall be judged by? |
A27062 | For the third Point, Who are they that must be judged? |
A27062 | Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having on a Wedding- Gar ● ent? |
A27062 | God thought not all these too good for you, and did you think your Hearts and Services too good for him? |
A27062 | God will judg impartially; why should not we do so? |
A27062 | Hath God given you ● o means towards the Cure of this Disability, which you have neglected? |
A27062 | Hath not God been merciful to thee in bearing with thee so long, and offering thee Grace in the Blood of Christ, till thou didst wilfully reject it? |
A27062 | Have you found a better Friend, a greater and surer Happiness than this? |
A27062 | Have you gone to them, and told them the Doubtfulness of your Case, and asked their Help in the judging of your Condition? |
A27062 | Have you no Body to enquire of, that might help you in such a Work? |
A27062 | He served yours with the weary Labours of your fellow- Creatures; and should you have grudged to bear his easy Yoak? |
A27062 | He suffered more than Scorns for you: and could not you suffer a Scorn for him and yourselves? |
A27062 | He that will come after me, let him deny himself? |
A27062 | He told you it was an Enemy that tempted you: and would you hearken to an Enemy? |
A27062 | How can I do this great Wickedness, and 〈 ◊ 〉 against God? |
A27062 | How canst thou live merrily, or sleep quietly in such a Condition, as if thou shouldst die in it, thou shouldst perish for ever? |
A27062 | How carefully should we consider what we do with our Riches, and with all that God giveth us? |
A27062 | How could I be saved if Christ did not die for me? |
A27062 | How often hath Christ warned us in the Gospel, that we be always ready, because we know not the day or Hour of his coming? |
A27062 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation? |
A27062 | How shall we sooner know a Man to be a Fool, than if he knows no difference between Dung and Gold? |
A27062 | How then can a little Misery on Earth prevent it? |
A27062 | How then should thy Heart be afffected that seeth the Hand- writing of God as a Summons to his Bar? |
A27062 | How will these Despisers of Christ and Salvation be able one Day to look him in the Face, and to give an account of these Neglects? |
A27062 | How will ye escape the Damnation of Hell? |
A27062 | I say, doth this Man believe that he is going to this Judgment? |
A27062 | If I shall tell you what you must do for Preparation, shall I not lose my Labour? |
A27062 | If any foolish Infidels shall say, Where shall so great a Number stand? |
A27062 | If not, when you know''t is the Will of Christ, and he hath told you such shall not enter into his Kingdom, do not you make light of him? |
A27062 | If thou canst make thine own Heart willing, why is it not done now? |
A27062 | If you have the Face to say, Lord, when did we see thee hungry? |
A27062 | If you knew not better, who was it long of but your self? |
A27062 | If you say, Why can not God find out a Remedy for this Sin, as well as he did for the first? |
A27062 | If you will not be perswaded to this much, how can you say that you make not light of Christ and Salvation? |
A27062 | If you will not, are not you Slighters o ● Christ and Salvation, that will not be perswaded soberly to think on them? |
A27062 | In the Name of God, Brethren, I beseech you to consider how you will then bear his Anger which you now make light of? |
A27062 | Is Death more terrible than Hell? |
A27062 | Is Dives then any better than Lazarus? |
A27062 | Is Man more dreadful than God? |
A27062 | Is Self- love lost? |
A27062 | Is it all one to wrong you, and to wrong the God of Heaven? |
A27062 | Is it not God himself? |
A27062 | Is it not your own? |
A27062 | Is not everlasting Salvation worth more than all this? |
A27062 | Is not he better and more lovely than all these? |
A27062 | Is not he worthy to go without it that thinks so basely of it? |
A27062 | Is not that Man even worse than mad, that is going to God''s Judgment, and never thinks of it? |
A27062 | Is that a Friend or a Servant worthy to be regarded, that will disobey you, or betray you as oft as he is tempted to it? |
A27062 | Is that a Man or a Corps that is not affected with Matters of this Moment? |
A27062 | Is that a Man, or a Clod of Clay, that can rise and lie down without being deeply affected with his everlasting Estate? |
A27062 | Is this a Matter to be forgotten? |
A27062 | Is this the Thanks that God hath for his Mercies? |
A27062 | It is no less than Miracles of Love and Mercy that he hath shewed to us: and yet shall we slight them after all? |
A27062 | It was God that let loose the Devil to tempt me; and he was too subtile for me to deal with; and therefore what wonder if I sinned and were overcome? |
A27062 | May not God and Conscience witness, that it was because you cared not for Knowledg, and would not be at pains to get it, that you knew no more? |
A27062 | Methinks a Man that knoweth he shall be judged, should ask himself the question every day of his Life; am I ready to give up my Account to God? |
A27062 | Must God either be ignorant of what you will do, or else be the Cause of it? |
A27062 | Must the raw unexperienced Learner despise his Book or Teacher, as oft as in his Ignorance he thinks he meets with Contradictions? |
A27062 | My next Question is, Whether are you ready for his dreadful Judgment when it comes, or not? |
A27062 | My next Question is, Whether you do ever soberly consider of this great Day? |
A27062 | My next Question to you is, How are you ● ffected with the Consideration of this Day? |
A27062 | Nor Christ that came purposely from Heaven to reveal them? |
A27062 | Nor could reconcile his own Words, because you could not reconcile them? |
A27062 | O Lord, that Men did but know what everlasting Glory, and everlasting Torments are; would they then hear us as they do? |
A27062 | O Sirs, if Men made not light of these things, what working would there be in the Hearts of all our Hearers? |
A27062 | O Sirs, what shift do you make to keep your Souls from continual Terrors, as long as you remain unready for Judgment? |
A27062 | Or Paul that heard and saw them? |
A27062 | Or at least, did you not live near some that could read? |
A27062 | Or didst thou not rather sin against that Knowledg which thou hadst? |
A27062 | Or if you could, yet it was God''s Law, and not Mens Faults that was made the Rule for you to live by ▪ Will it excuse you that others are bad? |
A27062 | Or might you not have minded these things ever when you were about your Labour, if you had but a Heart to them? |
A27062 | Or rather have Death, ● ich is nothing, as the iust Reward of it? |
A27062 | Or rather think him the more unfit for Mercy? |
A27062 | Or will you now set your selves with all your Might, to prepare for so great a Day? |
A27062 | Or will you shew that you are Slighters of Christ by neglecting them? |
A27062 | See here thy own unholy Soul; canst thou now say thou didst love me above all? |
A27062 | Shall every Man be false to God that hath any Bait to entice him from him? |
A27062 | Shall every Murderer or Thief escape hanging, because the Devil was too cunning for him in his Temptations? |
A27062 | Shall the God of Heaven speak, and Men make light of it? |
A27062 | Should we lie and say we did not? |
A27062 | Should you not have served him that so liberally maintained you? |
A27062 | Sin is no Being: and ● ll Men be damned for that which is nothing? |
A27062 | Speak truth, Man, in the Presence of thy Judg; was thy Heart and Mind set upon it? |
A27062 | Tell me, is it so or not? |
A27062 | The chief thing that God called you to, was to love him, and make him your Delight: and are Love and Delight such grievous things? |
A27062 | The next Point in our Method is, to shew you, What will be the Evidence of the Cause? |
A27062 | The ninth part of our Work is to shew you, ● hat are those frivolous Excuses by which the Vnrighteous may then indeavour their Defence? |
A27062 | Then who will prove the Loser by thy Contempt? |
A27062 | They that tried them found them the very Joy and Delight of their ● ouls; and why could not you do so? |
A27062 | V. For the fifth Particular, How will the Sinners be called to the Bar? |
A27062 | Wa ● not God''s Word sufficient Evidence? |
A27062 | Was not Heaven worth your Labour? |
A27062 | Was there no more in God''s Intention when he elected some, than the Manifestation of the Riches of his glorious Grace? |
A27062 | Wat it not also prepared for wicked Men? |
A27062 | Were you afraid of being a loser by it? |
A27062 | What Gospel- Passages had Balaam? |
A27062 | What Matter can be mentioned with the Tongue of Man of greater moment? |
A27062 | What are these things you set so much by ▪ as to prefer them before Christ, and the saving of your Souls? |
A27062 | What barbarous, yea devilish, yea worse than devilish Ingratitude is this? |
A27062 | What did Men entice you with? |
A27062 | What do they for Souls? |
A27062 | What do you think when you repeat the Creed, and mention Christ''s Judgment, and everlasting Life? |
A27062 | What if they threatned you with present Death? |
A27062 | What is all the World to him, but as the Drop of a Bucket, as ● e Dust of the Ballance? |
A27062 | What is this Devil that hath Angels? |
A27062 | What need then is there that you should take heed lest this should prove your own Case? |
A27062 | What say you Sirs? |
A27062 | What say you, beloved Hearers, are you ready for Judgment, or are you not? |
A27062 | What say you? |
A27062 | What say you? |
A27062 | What say you? |
A27062 | What should be first sought after, Heaven or Earth? |
A27062 | What should we say if he ask us, Did not you tell them the Misery of their natural State, and what would become of them if they were not made new? |
A27062 | What think you now, Friends, of this Business? |
A27062 | What this Sin of making light of the Gospel is? |
A27062 | What was there but your own wicked Hearts that should make such a Life seem grievous to you? |
A27062 | What will ● ● is Babler say? |
A27062 | What wonder if for all that we can say or do, our Hearers still set light by Christ and their own Salvation, when the Apostles Hearers did the same? |
A27062 | What would you have us say, if God ask us, Did you tell this Sinner of the need of Christ, of the Glory of the World to come, and the Vanity of this? |
A27062 | What, will you abuse him by whom it is that you are Men? |
A27062 | When the Gospel pierceth the Heart indeed, they cry out, Men and Brethren, what shall we do to be saved? |
A27062 | When they are once pricked in their Hear ● for Sin and Misery, then they cry out, Men and Breth ● what shall we do? |
A27062 | When was it prepared for them? |
A27062 | Who are those? |
A27062 | Whose Salvation is it that you make light of? |
A27062 | Why Sirs, do you not care whether you be saved or damned? |
A27062 | Why Sirs, if you had every one a Kingdom in your Hopes, what were it in comparison of the everlasting Kingdom? |
A27062 | Why did you not ● o far then agree with them? |
A27062 | Why then did not these take as much with you as the other? |
A27062 | Why will you not judg now, as you know you shall judg then? |
A27062 | Wi ● ● you therefore attend to the publick preaching of th ● ● Word? |
A27062 | Will he then be worth ten thousand Worlds, and is he not now worth your highest Estimation, and dearest Affection? |
A27062 | Will you do all this with Delight, not as your Toil, but as your Pleasure? |
A27062 | Will you do no more than you have done hitherto? |
A27062 | Will you do these things? |
A27062 | Will you for the time to come esteem more of the Officers of Christ, whom he hath purposely appointed to guide you to Salvation? |
A27062 | Will you for the time to come make Conscience of daily and earnest Prayer to God, that you may have a Part in Christ and Salvation? |
A27062 | Will you for the time to come resolvedly cast away your known Sins at the Command of Christ? |
A27062 | Will you not believe till you see or feel? |
A27062 | Will you resolve and promise in the Strength of Grace, that you will faithfully and speedily endeavour to practise it, whoever shall gainsay it? |
A27062 | Will you resolve to stick to Christ, and make sure this Work of Salvation, though it cost you all that you have in the World? |
A27062 | Will you take this for a good Excuse from your ● hildren or Servants, if they abuse you? |
A27062 | Will you use hereafter to go 〈 ◊ 〉 your Ministers privately, and solicite them for Ad ● ice? |
A27062 | Would you have the Jury or the Judg to take this for a good Excuse? |
A27062 | Would you have us lie to God, and say we did not? |
A27062 | Yea further, answer as in the Presence of God; Didst tou obey so far as thou didst know? |
A27062 | Yea, did not the very plain Word that you heard read, tell you of these things? |
A27062 | You forget what Helps he afforded you to discover the Wiles of Satan, and to vanquish the Temptation? |
A27062 | You have Ministers at hand; why do you not go to them, and earnestly ask them, Sirs, What must I do to be saved? |
A27062 | You hear, Brethren, what will not serve the turn; will you now hear what Persons you must be if you would not be condemned as Slighters of Christ? |
A27062 | You know well enough that Death levels all: what Matter is it at Judgment, whether you be to answer for the Life of a rich Man, or a poor Man? |
A27062 | You would be afraid now to meet him in the Dark: what will you be to live with him in everlasting Darkness? |
A27062 | and can he not govern it by ● ● e and righteous Means? |
A27062 | and could you not have procured them to read to you, or to help you? |
A27062 | and did you not hear these things read to you in the Congregation by the Minister, or might have done if you would? |
A27062 | and did you pray daily that God would lead you into the Truth ▪ and did you obey as much as you knew? |
A27062 | and how importunate should we all be with Sinners for their Conversion, when we consider that we our selves also must shortly be judged? |
A27062 | and how they will shortly leave you ● and what mind you will be then of, and how you wil ● esteem them? |
A27062 | and if you have not such of your own as are fit, 〈 ◊ 〉 Advice from others; and ask them What you shall do 〈 ◊ 〉 be saved? |
A27062 | and might you not have had a Bible your selves, and found them there? |
A27062 | and neglect him without whom you can not subsist? |
A27062 | and the Revelation of his Will to guide that Reason? |
A27062 | and to be the same Men after all this? |
A27062 | and to save them that value a Cup of Drink, or a Lust, before his Salvation? |
A27062 | and what is it that you neglect? |
A27062 | and where was any ● rer Ground for your Confidence? |
A27062 | and whether time be no more worth to one that is so near Eternity, and must make so strict an Account of his Hours? |
A27062 | and why might not you have done so, if you had been as industrious as they? |
A27062 | and will you make ● se of them for that end? |
A27062 | and would you not believe Stephe ● that saw them? |
A27062 | and yet wouldst thou now perswade the Judg that thou didst love God above all? |
A27062 | and yet you have his written Word that speaks plainer than all these; and will you despise them all? |
A27062 | and ● at he was fain to rule the World by a Lie? |
A27062 | and ● ill you obey the Word of God in their Mouths? |
A27062 | and 〈 ◊ 〉 not his Word sufficient Security for you to have ● usted your Souls upon? |
A27062 | but how heartlesly do they make mention of Christ and Salvation? |
A27062 | but will you not then be troubled at his Presence and tormenting Power? |
A27062 | can he not awe ● em by Truth? |
A27062 | can not Men be saved without so much ado? |
A27062 | canst thou deny but thou didst love this World before me, and serve thy Flesh and Lusts, though I told thee if thou ● idst so thou shouldst die? |
A27062 | did you know where was ● y better Security to be had? |
A27062 | doth it support them, and secure them? |
A27062 | how carelesly didst thou serve him, and think much of all that thou didst therein? |
A27062 | how coldly didst thou worship him, or make any mention of him? |
A27062 | how little do they when they are out of the Pulpit for the saving of Mens Souls? |
A27062 | how many a Soul that is now in Heaven or Hell, within 100 Years dwelt in the Places that you now dwell in, and sat in the Seats you now sit in? |
A27062 | how shall I know whether I be ready or not? |
A27062 | how slightly do they reprove Sin? |
A27062 | how speedily is it come? |
A27062 | how to prepare for Death and Judgment? |
A27062 | if we should be so foolish and unjust, what good would it do you? |
A27062 | or from a ● hief or a Murderer? |
A27062 | or will a despised Christ save you then? |
A27062 | shall God and his Ministers speak in vain? |
A27062 | shall he escape by telling the ● dg that his Sin was nothing? |
A27062 | shall it appear in any good Uses that God calls you to be liberal in, according to your Abilities? |
A27062 | shall the Poor find that you see more by Christ than this World? |
A27062 | that ask of his Service, as Judas of the Ointment, What need this waste? |
A27062 | that provide outward Necessaries so carefully for their Families, but do so little to the saving of their Souls? |
A27062 | the Devils never had a Saviour offered them, but thou hast, and dost thou yet make light of him? |
A27062 | we must be either against God or you; and can you think that we should be for any one against our Maker and Redeemer? |
A27062 | we must either condemn the Sentence of Jesus Christ or condemn you: and is not there more reason to condemn you than him? |
A27062 | what is a little time when it is gone? |
A27062 | what is it that you run after? |
A27062 | what need God to say that ● hich he will not do, to awe Sinners? |
A27062 | what the Accusation, and what the Defence? |
A27062 | when God is against you, whose side would you have us be of? |
A27062 | why Flesh and Blood can not see them: You see not God: will you not therefore believe that there is a God? |
A27062 | why might not that at least have been spent about heavenly things? |
A27062 | will God punish one Sin twice? |
A27062 | will you excuse your Child or Friend, if he would be false to you, upon as great Enticements as these? |
A27062 | will you live to his Dishonour who giveth you your Lives? |
A27062 | will you not hear so loud and constant Calls? |
A27062 | will you not see so great a Light? |
A27062 | will you read it daily? |
A27062 | will you resolve t ● obey it whatever it may cost you? |
A27062 | will you speak to his Dishonour that giveth you your Speech? |
A27062 | will you therefore wrong God because you see others wrong him? |
A27062 | will you wrong him by his own Creatures? |
A27062 | with a little deluding fleshly Pleasure for a few Days? |
A27062 | with what an Heart must a Minister preach when he remembreth that all the Words that he is speaking must condemn many, if not most of his Hearers? |
A27062 | would they read and think of these things as they do? |
A27062 | would you have believed one from the dead that had told you he ha ● seen such things? |
A27062 | would you spit in the Face of your own Father if you saw others do so? |
A27062 | would you think it a good Excuse if the rest should do the like because of their Example? |
A27062 | yea, and to do you no good, when we know that Lies will not prevail with God? |
A27062 | you have the Bible and other good Books by you; why do you not read them? |
A27032 | 1. Who would have thought that you are so much looser in your communion than we are? |
A27032 | 15. and make to your self and followers a new Law, that whomsoever you shall suspect or accuse of sin, you must also separate from? |
A27032 | 2. Who made the Law, that no man must write on a subject after Dr. Owen? |
A27032 | A King without a Kingdom? |
A27032 | A yea, or a nay? |
A27032 | After so many Untruths? |
A27032 | Alas Sir, what would you have said if I had told you how common this was in the Army? |
A27032 | Alas man, what dayes of Humiliation do you use to keep, for the sins and miseries of the Land? |
A27032 | Alas, That your Pen could write the last word without the more prevalent rebuke of your Conscience? |
A27032 | Am I not free? |
A27032 | An Integral member may rather be cut off, than the whole should perish: But what member will separate it self from the b ● dy? |
A27032 | And God is no respecter of persons? |
A27032 | And Luther, Althamar and others, to set no more by James''s Epistle than they did? |
A27032 | And are not Ministers bound to teach the people by Example, as well as by Doctrine? |
A27032 | And are the sins of such as we, no Causes of our publick calamities? |
A27032 | And are they Hypocrites else for joyning with you? |
A27032 | And are they not two wayes of predicating or publishing the same Gospel? |
A27032 | And are you not by this time an excellent Scholar and a very wise man, if you did so by all your other Books? |
A27032 | And are you yet insensible of your own partiality; that then you blamed that in the Bishop which now you can freely do your self? |
A27032 | And as to the Predicate, Is there a difference between the Questions, whether such a Church may be joyned with? |
A27032 | And both of the Anabaptists? |
A27032 | And can any ignorant Mountebanks more mortally and perniciously practise Physick, than you thus practise the Reformation of the Churches? |
A27032 | And can you wink so hard, as not to see how here you openly declare your falsehood? |
A27032 | And could I expect, that he that will disdain to read these Books, will read another that repeateth the same things? |
A27032 | And could you see no difference between seeking it, and in faith expecting it? |
A27032 | And did those Prophets lie? |
A27032 | And did you believe your self that the Bishop of Worcesters words so many years ago, are a proof that I repent not now? |
A27032 | And do not most good Ministers and people publickly confess to God, that our own sins have been the Causes of our Calamities? |
A27032 | And do you doubt of it? |
A27032 | And do you not at that very time prove me proud for writing so many Books, when by this and other passages you call for an answer, that is, for more? |
A27032 | And do you not grosly wrong those Rulers, from whom you think any danger or hurt will come to us for such doctrine as this? |
A27032 | And do you not know how your erronious reasonings and practices do occasion men even to scorn at your talk of Reformation? |
A27032 | And do you not then dethrone him, and deny him indeed to be the Christ? |
A27032 | And do you not yet perceive your partiality and respect of persons? |
A27032 | And do you not yet see how much you have of the same silencing Spirit which you profess to separate from? |
A27032 | And do you think that the Church that hath Power to do well, and will not, is therefore to be communicated with because it can? |
A27032 | And do you think that they thereby expose good people to the Magistrates hatred or revenge? |
A27032 | And doth he not differ from most whom he nameth himself, by his Separation? |
A27032 | And doth it not exasparate them to see men justifie unquestionable sin? |
A27032 | And doth not his Epistle before it shew that he was one of the Publishers? |
A27032 | And have you first admonished them of that sin, and tryed all these Ministers whether they be penitent? |
A27032 | And here the word[ only] was before his eyes, a confutation of his calumny? |
A27032 | And how come the Churches in the Ages next the Apostles to leave out so many Books of the Canon as many of them did, while others received them? |
A27032 | And how few can say, the place where I live is not the less innocent for me, nor suffereth ever the more for me? |
A27032 | And if I offend all and please none, what need he be at all this labour to save men from being pleased by me? |
A27032 | And if an Aaron will make the people naked to their shame, will not God record it to his shame? |
A27032 | And if so, would he serve God or the Devil, that would scorn us all as Proud for preaching so much, as the best men do? |
A27032 | And if you Preach the Gospel to a Congregation that can not read, do you recite all the various readings in the Hebrew and Greek to them? |
A27032 | And if you have read them, why would you dissemble it, and give no Reply to it? |
A27032 | And is he fit to glory in the cleansing fruit of sufferings, that shall falsly say, that such a necessary warning is an inveighing against sufferings? |
A27032 | And is it any wonder if our dishonesty make us unworthy of their Communion, when our honesty is questionable for the Licensing of our Books? |
A27032 | And is not this also a rash and careless man, that no better heedeth what he readeth and what he writeth? |
A27032 | And is not this fallacy a dicto secundum quod ad dictum simpliciter, a notorious cheat, and falshood? |
A27032 | And is that example, which is unknown? |
A27032 | And is the same thing bad in the Bishop, and good in you? |
A27032 | And is there any thing in all this, that saith, I was no way Active in it? |
A27032 | And is there not sin among us, even among us also? |
A27032 | And is this Printed Epistle and Testimony no Publication? |
A27032 | And is this comparative question any kin to that which you now falsly father on me? |
A27032 | And it is false doctrine that Imprisonments and Death are due to all such: What kind of Politicks would you write? |
A27032 | And may not a True Church be faulty and Defective? |
A27032 | And may not your honesty be as reasonably questioned because you are suffered to Preach? |
A27032 | And must I needs as my duty, be so mad, as not to know that any observe me, or regard what I do, for fear of being proud? |
A27032 | And must they needs talk to the people of their superiours actions, and speak against them behind their backs? |
A27032 | And must your Ignorance of such matters as Melancholly have so great influence into your Divinity? |
A27032 | And shall I write more to remove his Fears, who will rather blindly vent them by calumny, than read for his satisfaction what I have said? |
A27032 | And so many Godly men long, and yet, to receive much of the Apocrypha? |
A27032 | And that every rash and carelesly uttered untruth, which is privatively voluntary( that is, where the will omitteth its Office) is a lie? |
A27032 | And the Independents think so of the Presbyterians? |
A27032 | And what Christian desireth not the greatest Holiness and Righteousness in the World? |
A27032 | And what Liberty doth that give away? |
A27032 | And what is it that keepeth you from seeing how strongly you confute your self? |
A27032 | And what made them threaten to disown him if he would not cease such wayes? |
A27032 | And what reason hath any man to doubt, but if it were in your power, you would silence me as much as any Bishop would? |
A27032 | And when I had answered all this so fully, why will you deign to confute a Book, while you disdain to take notice what it saith? |
A27032 | And when did I ever endeavour to expose such men? |
A27032 | And who gave you authority so to examine other Pastors, being but a single person? |
A27032 | And who will not think that read your Book, that you would be one of the first accused of Railing? |
A27032 | And why must this be non- sense now? |
A27032 | And why not as well from all other sins of equal greatness? |
A27032 | And why not? |
A27032 | And why should you think that I must be ashamed of that which you are uncertain of? |
A27032 | And will you believe this man and follow him upon his bare word, who hath published eighty such falshoods? |
A27032 | And would any thing cure this scandal also, that had not been notified? |
A27032 | And would you thus leave us all desperate in Impenitency? |
A27032 | And yet he professeth not repentance for any one of them? |
A27032 | And yet the Church that used the same Voluntarily( and therefore more sinfully) is not to be separated from? |
A27032 | And yet you would not have it said that he lied? |
A27032 | Are not you and others that suffer in danger of such temptations, and sin in sufferings? |
A27032 | Are those Infidels, Quakers, with the& c.[ All]? |
A27032 | As any? |
A27032 | As his manner was, he went in to them, and three Sabbath dayes reasoned — Or do you believe, that Christ was a sinner? |
A27032 | As if he did believe that those whom I mentioned( even with an& c.) were[ all] and there were no others in the world? |
A27032 | Bound, Dr. Young, Dr. Twisse, Mr. Eaton, Mr. Bifield, Mr. Shephard, and many more? |
A27032 | But I would fain know, whether it be the Imposition, that nullifieth the Church, or makes Communion unlawful, or only the obeying that Imposition? |
A27032 | But at the worst; not reproving can be but a particular sin? |
A27032 | But do you not know that there is a Ministerial as well as a Magistratical forcing Imposition? |
A27032 | But how could she be Converted without resolving of a holy life? |
A27032 | But if you do not believe your self, how much less should others believe you? |
A27032 | But if you think it a sin for any to hear you, or have communion with you, why do you not plainly tell your hearers so? |
A27032 | But is all the stress of separation laid upon the word[ Imposing?] |
A27032 | But is there a Power retained in such Churches to cast out offendors? |
A27032 | But next let us see your evidence or proof: Your first is,[ What need I have told the world,& c.] would you have an answer to your question or not? |
A27032 | But we that are not so wise as you, must be beholden to various Copies, Records, Printers, Lawyers, to know which are the Statutes in force? |
A27032 | But what are the few words that would satisfie you? |
A27032 | But what if he attain this end, and be believed? |
A27032 | But what if they have sharply reproved this one sin? |
A27032 | But what part you will call considerable who knows? |
A27032 | But will suffer, and be silenced, and ruined, and die, and yet not acknowledge that so unnatural and pernicious a thing is a sin? |
A27032 | By choosing what Chapter to read, you impose on the people to hear that Chapter then or none? |
A27032 | Can all Women and Unlearned persons or Ministers, judge by the Original Transcripts who understand not the Original tongues? |
A27032 | Can all your hearers inwardly approve of all that you say, if you preach and pray but as you write? |
A27032 | Can you believe this? |
A27032 | Can you heap up untruths in Book after Book, and commit all these Crimes, even when you have strictly meditated what you write? |
A27032 | Could I think that Book forgotten which remaineth visible? |
A27032 | Could I think that part of my life forgotten, which all in the City of Coventry, who thirty years ago were at years of discretion, may remember? |
A27032 | Could you think that[ a few words] would open a mans mind so plainly, as many Books can do? |
A27032 | Did David deserve to be hated of all, because his numbring the people brought the plague? |
A27032 | Did Venner and his company think you hold no more? |
A27032 | Did any other impose it, or shut her mouth? |
A27032 | Did ever sober men go about with such general accusations, and expect that men answer to they know not what? |
A27032 | Did not the Primitive Teachers, Apostles and others leave us their Examples for Writing, as well as for Vocal Teaching? |
A27032 | Did our Separations and Church- divisions these six and twenty years last past promote our Reformation? |
A27032 | Did you believe when you wrote this, that this reference was a proof of my Pride? |
A27032 | Did you know before you wrote this, that all such as we perswade men to hear, have by Oath renounced their Christian Liberty? |
A27032 | Do Angels rejoice at a sinners Repentance; and shall we take him for their enemy, that calls them to it? |
A27032 | Do I fell thirty three Truths, when I read thirty three untruths in your Writings? |
A27032 | Do I sell Truth, if I should hear you preach or pray erroneously, and impose your confused prayers on the people? |
A27032 | Do all the Men and Women that are Godly actually know the true and uncorrupt copies and readings, by the Book it self without mans testimony? |
A27032 | Do all the Parish Ministers do so? |
A27032 | Do not corrupt Copies come to other mens hands? |
A27032 | Do not the Translations differ? |
A27032 | Do you believe that none of the Levellers, or those whom Oliver Cromwell suppressed under the name of Fifth Monarchy men, held no more? |
A27032 | Do you believe that they that turned Quakers in Prison are gainers by their sufferings? |
A27032 | Do you consider what you write? |
A27032 | Do you know his name, that ever knew this by Reading the Bible only, without being ever told it by any? |
A27032 | Do you neither in Life nor in your sufferings, intend to be publickly exemplary? |
A27032 | Do you not forbear the publick Assemblies, the rather that your example may move others? |
A27032 | Do you not perceive here how your work contradicts your self? |
A27032 | Do you not preach or talk to your own auditors, and expect observation? |
A27032 | Do you only confess your adversaries sins? |
A27032 | Do you prove me as earnest and open an ● ss ● rter as any, by citing words in which I profess to be ignorant, neutral and uncertain? |
A27032 | Do you sin so studyedly and deliberately, and yet will you not Repent? |
A27032 | Do you think by such a rate of Reasoning as this is, to be accounted a wise& faithful Teacher? |
A27032 | Do you think he took any heed of the word[ only] when he wrote it? |
A27032 | Do you think indeed that you are not noted your self? |
A27032 | Do you think then that Christ ever sent out Lyars, Railers, furious Church- dividers, false accusers,& c? |
A27032 | Do you warn all others not to hear your self? |
A27032 | Doth he hereby expose them to be odious? |
A27032 | Doth he not fix upon you by such Libells as these, an odious reproach? |
A27032 | Doth no man ever receive Grace? |
A27032 | Doth not he that giveth a Thief his Purse, consent himself to it, and make it his own act to save his life? |
A27032 | Doth not this shew you, that you are not so good, but that the Churches of godly Pastors are as worthy of your Communion, as you are of theirs? |
A27032 | Doth this disputing satisfie any sober enquirer after truth? |
A27032 | False again: I have no such words that ought of my Sermon had any impression on her? |
A27032 | For Chastisements are threatned to them, and to the societies that they defile? |
A27032 | For how is it possible for me to know what is said of him to all others, in every distant place and corner? |
A27032 | Hath God promised it to all or most that shall be saved? |
A27032 | Hath a free- agent less Power to receive Grace, than a marble to receive the engraving of the work- man? |
A27032 | Hath a man no more Receptive Power than a block or stone? |
A27032 | Have I written for the Millenary Opinion, as earnestly and openly as Mr. Mead hath done? |
A27032 | Have we not power to eat and to drink? |
A27032 | Have we not power to lead about a Sister, a Wife, as well as other Apostles? |
A27032 | He hath not spoken to any considerable number of them: And of those few that he speaketh to, try if you can find any one of which he cleareth himself? |
A27032 | His third Reason: Because Parish Ministers consent to silencing and persecution, by open consent or pernicious silence? |
A27032 | How can he judge of the various Readings of all the rest of the Copies, which he never saw? |
A27032 | How directly do you set your self against the way of the Spirit of God? |
A27032 | How far he proceedeth in his separation, and how far he would draw poor unstable souls? |
A27032 | How like his own Spirit is to that which he accounteth the Spirit of imposition and persecution? |
A27032 | How many Texts be there that intimate that the Churches long( without a prohibition) held communion with the erronious judaizing Christians? |
A27032 | How many notorious false doctrines he hath delivered? |
A27032 | How many other notorious Crimes in two Libells he hath committed? |
A27032 | How many score notorious untruths he shamelesly publisheth in these two Libells? |
A27032 | How many volumes of the old Non- conformists give you this Answer? |
A27032 | How much he fighteth against Repentance, and so with gross Impenitency aggravateth all his crimes? |
A27032 | How much of the very same Spirit is in Church- dividers, with that which they most condemn in others: Why then do you not separate from your selves? |
A27032 | How oft have I urged you to prove, that our publick Parish Ministers whom I advise men to hear, do Impose any more than you your self do? |
A27032 | How shall men know which Translation is truest;( when none is perfect?) |
A27032 | How that thus you make all or most, or very many of Gods Servants, such as deserve to be hated of all? |
A27032 | How then can you say they unduely enter into the Ministry? |
A27032 | I askt you, whether the Parliament, nor the chief Speakers in it, nor the Earl of Essex, nor Cromwell did no more? |
A27032 | I challenge you if you can to prove any corruption in the Churches in question, which is not consistent with the essence? |
A27032 | I still approve of all the words of mine which you recite? |
A27032 | I think I could prove their sin as effectually as you can: But must we separate from all sinners? |
A27032 | If I had called you a wise, a calm, a sober and charitable man, when I had no evidence of the contrary, how can you prove that this had been a lie? |
A27032 | If a Translation will serve him to judge of the various readings in the Original, are they not in the Translation fore- judged of to his hand? |
A27032 | If all the Church apostatized, how shall we know that Apostates did not corrupt all the Copies of Scripture that are come down to us? |
A27032 | If he must see all, who is he or she in the world that can be certain? |
A27032 | If it be false doctrine( as undoubtedly it is) I further ask, whether it was the spirit of God, or Satan that was the Author of it? |
A27032 | If it be true, that thus he did( which is mentioned as no rarity) should you not rather take part with God than him? |
A27032 | If it did( as sure it did) what could it be less than Melancholy? |
A27032 | If not, can they judge of that they never heard? |
A27032 | If not, why do you ask it? |
A27032 | If one should admonish one of your Church- members of one single deliberate avowed lye, would you not call him to Repentance? |
A27032 | If others be partakers of this power over you, are not we rather? |
A27032 | If she did know, why doth she falsly call it an untruth, that she imposed it on her self? |
A27032 | If she knew not what she did, why is she angry for being thought Melancholy,( which is many a Godly persons case?) |
A27032 | If so, must all wicked men do so? |
A27032 | If so, then what certainty can we have of the truth of any of their Prophecies, if they may speak falsly to us in the name of God? |
A27032 | If the Truth of God hath more abounded through my Lye unto his Glory, why yet am I also judged as a sinner?] |
A27032 | If they must see but one Copy, how shall he know that it is the Truest Copy that falleth into his hands, and that all that differ from that are false? |
A27032 | If they must see many, who knows how many and which? |
A27032 | If to all; where is the promise? |
A27032 | If to none, may they not all erre? |
A27032 | If to some, how shall we know them? |
A27032 | If you do, are they ever the wiser as to know of themselves which of them is the right? |
A27032 | If you do, how unfit are you to be believed of any that know no better what is credible in a matter of fact? |
A27032 | If you do, why should you be so malignant as to question the assertion of it, and so loth to grant it? |
A27032 | If you have read them, why would you say you Fear, which signifieth uncertainty? |
A27032 | If you never read them, is it modesty to despise them? |
A27032 | If you never read what is written by Mr. Mead, Dr. Twisse, Mr. Archer,& c. Did you never read any Pamphlets within these thirty years that say more? |
A27032 | If you never read what lrenaeus, Lactantius and others of old held? |
A27032 | If you read them not, why would you not use a visible means to discuss your fears, before you divulged them? |
A27032 | If you would, why did you not take an answer when I gave it you; nor so much as mention it, as if you read it not, when you call for another? |
A27032 | In your Writings you do highly approve of that which was the worst part of the change, the setting up of Cromwell to he Protector? |
A27032 | Is Neutrality and Vncertainty the most earnest and open asserting of a doctrine? |
A27032 | Is any man Infallible in Translating? |
A27032 | Is every man Proud, that is not Mad? |
A27032 | Is it all one to say, that[ by Flesh is meant not only Indwelling sin, and to say It is not meant at all?] |
A27032 | Is it by Inspiration from Heaven, such as the Prophets had, that the true Reading must be known? |
A27032 | Is it not Gods direction to us, to take him for a false Prophet who prophesieth that which cometh not to pass? |
A27032 | Is it now come to that? |
A27032 | Is it pride only to differ from you, and to write against your judgement? |
A27032 | Is it that the Pope pretendeth to be a Political Head? |
A27032 | Is it the King and Parliament, or the Bishops whose Impositions have this sad effect? |
A27032 | Is it the number corrupted that must decide the case? |
A27032 | Is not Honesty among these men become a word of a new signification? |
A27032 | Is not Impenitency a greater Reproach to us, in the eyes of those by whom we suffer, than our Repentance would be? |
A27032 | Is not every Minister of Christ a publick person? |
A27032 | Is not his Writing published by himself? |
A27032 | Is not sin odious whereever it is found? |
A27032 | Is not that our own doing which we give a reason of, and say that we did it through fear? |
A27032 | Is not the honour of the Spirit of God more tenderly to be preserved than his, or yours, or mine, or any mans? |
A27032 | Is not this a concession that some part is so judged of? |
A27032 | Is not this a fine man to dispute with? |
A27032 | Is not this like the Hypocrites to blow a Trumpet before, and to do your actions that they may be seen of men? |
A27032 | Is the whole Church any thing besides the particular members? |
A27032 | Is there a promise of Infallibility to them? |
A27032 | Is there a word in Acts 15. to forbid all Church communion with those that taught even this subverting false doctrine? |
A27032 | Is there any falshood in all this? |
A27032 | Is there any other matter? |
A27032 | Is there no Gathered Churches( as they are called) that have one Railing woman in, or one Covetous person? |
A27032 | Is this Conscience scrupulous of Communion with us Publicans and sinners? |
A27032 | Is this only to declare your humility? |
A27032 | Is this to approve the setting up of Cromwell to be Protector? |
A27032 | It may be it may be a rich or powerful man, that will persecute or divide the Church if he be cast out? |
A27032 | It may be so: But will that do your work, and hold at last? |
A27032 | It s a wonder that corrupted nature should be so eager to have companions in sin, when it doth but tend to its own confusion? |
A27032 | Let me ask you one question more; Is it necessary to Salvation that men be able to read? |
A27032 | Let us next see Whether there be no way but separation in our Case, to preserve our liberty? |
A27032 | Let your followers mark what Spirit you are of, if you are resolved not to know your self? |
A27032 | May not a good man, yea, a true Prophet, be sometime mistaken? |
A27032 | May not many Prophets truly foretell things to come, and yet those things be a long time suspended and delayed because of the sins of the people? |
A27032 | May not this man as modestly charge Bishop Downame to be a Papist, that hath written so much to prove the Pope to be Antichrist? |
A27032 | May not we Repent? |
A27032 | Mead, Dr. Twisse, Mr. Baily, Mr. Porter,& c. that did more than favour it? |
A27032 | Must all these be separated from( that is almost all the Pastors in the World;) And is there no remedie? |
A27032 | Must he see all Translations that shall judge? |
A27032 | Must he that shall be certain see all the various Copies, or will it serve turn to see some one only? |
A27032 | Must it be once obeying or continual? |
A27032 | Must that Church needs be separated from? |
A27032 | Must they all leave their flocks to come up to London to do it? |
A27032 | Must we not loath our selves for it? |
A27032 | Name the Law that is against the Opinion of the desirableness of a holy Government of all the world? |
A27032 | Name the person that ever suffered for that Opinion? |
A27032 | Nay did I ever write or speak one word for it? |
A27032 | O but, you will reply, Is not this like Hypocrites, to do your actions to be seen of men? |
A27032 | O what a blinding thing is selfish partiality? |
A27032 | Of all the silenced Ministers in London or England, how small a number is there that have[ sharply reproved] the silencers? |
A27032 | Of the Possibility of salvation for some called Papist? |
A27032 | Or at least, why may not the Pope be said to lay such a claim? |
A27032 | Or can you believe that Christ was not usually or often present there? |
A27032 | Or dare you charge them with hypocrisie, as if they spake not as they thought? |
A27032 | Or did you dream that the Arminians hold all that the Jesuits hold? |
A27032 | Or did you dream that the Arminians hold all that the Jesuits hold? |
A27032 | Or do they receive what they can not receive? |
A27032 | Or do you yet take your self to be no sinner? |
A27032 | Or is all this on presumption, that his Reader will not know what I have said? |
A27032 | Or is it that he claimeth to be a Spiritual Head or Governour? |
A27032 | Or must they every one publish his reproof in Print? |
A27032 | Or nothing but what God commanded? |
A27032 | Or what opportunity hath he to know all their members crimes, and to admonish them? |
A27032 | Or who but a murderer will on pretence of curing, be a divider and dissolver? |
A27032 | Pool''s Vox clamantis, and Mr. Stukeley''s Book, and judge accordingly of others? |
A27032 | Shall he see the Autographs or only the Transcripts? |
A27032 | Shall he that by the Book alone can resolve all these doubts, see it in the Original, or only in Translations? |
A27032 | Should not such temptation and sin be carefully watcht against? |
A27032 | Should they not be the Lights of the world, that can not and should not be hid? |
A27032 | Sir, I am ashamed to spend time- upon such triflings? |
A27032 | Sir, Was it true or false? |
A27032 | Sure it is one thing to say, God saith this, or binds you to this, or forbids you this? |
A27032 | Sure the Licensers are not so bad men, as to prove all dishonest whose Books they License? |
A27032 | That I do with my industry and cunning labour to overthrow our foundation: Hath this man written more for the foundation than those three Books? |
A27032 | That I glory that I am accounted the Ishmael of the age( which is intimated in the question) or boast of mens contradiction? |
A27032 | That men can yet take that for the reforming way, which hath destroyed Reformation, and brought us into all the confusions we are in? |
A27032 | The charge of Hypocrisie for joyning in what we approve not? |
A27032 | The former Non- formists said, The filth of nature can not be sufficiently spoken of? |
A27032 | The question is not, whether I be so regardable, as to be worthy notice? |
A27032 | The question that I spake to was only[ Whether I was as guilty in stirring up and fomenting that War as any one whatsoever?] |
A27032 | Therefore I hope you are gratified ▪ and who will now contradict you? |
A27032 | This is another visible falshood in matter of fact: Alas Brother, that you should no more heed what you read or write? |
A27032 | This is yet more than the former: Alas, have you cast off all heed what you say, and all common modesty in your reports? |
A27032 | To set up and pull down, do and undo, own and disown, as by the Spirit of God? |
A27032 | To whom is it that you would have all the Countrey Ministers speak against our silencing? |
A27032 | Was Mr. Archer but Neutral? |
A27032 | Was Mr. Mead, and Dr. Twisse but Neutral? |
A27032 | Was it a blot on Dr. Owens honesty that his Books are Licensed? |
A27032 | Was not Arminius himself against Prelacy and Ceremonies? |
A27032 | Was not Nathan deceived, when he encouraged David to build the Temple? |
A27032 | Was not Samuel so, when he took Eliab to be the Lords anointed? |
A27032 | We have been used to call that Government Spiritual, which is done by the Word and Church Keyes, and consequently the Governours Spiritual? |
A27032 | Well, but what is the crime that maketh our Communion unlawful? |
A27032 | Were all the Non- conformists of one mind about Arminianisme? |
A27032 | What Authority are these statutes of? |
A27032 | What bitter enmity is here exprest against the Principles of Love, and Vnity, and Concord, and Peace, and Sobriety it self? |
A27032 | What eyes then have you that can not see that which I copiously and expresly speak? |
A27032 | What if Aurelian or Dioclesian forbid Church- assemblies: will once obeying them nullifie all the Churches, or make their Communion unlawful? |
A27032 | What if God Record even good mens sins, and tell a David what evil they should bring upon his house? |
A27032 | What if another E. B. were among them and should say, How proud are you to expect that we should all regard your words, as if you were our Pole- star? |
A27032 | What if erroneously it be imposed on the Church to meet at an inconvenient time or place? |
A27032 | What if it be Imposed on the Church, to use a Translation of the Bible that hath some errour in( And is there any without?) |
A27032 | What if some flaw or errour in Chronologie on smaller- matters, were in their imposed Confession, which the Pastour erroneously subscribeth to? |
A27032 | What if the Presbyterians think the Independents way of entrance to be undue? |
A27032 | What mean you then to tell me of a change? |
A27032 | What means is there left in the world to exempt a man from the malignant calumnies of this Judge of the Churches? |
A27032 | What more apparent than that the consequent should be but this? |
A27032 | What need is there of learning reason, sobriety or modesty to enable any man to dispute and seem Orthodox at this rate? |
A27032 | What not sanctified Free- will? |
A27032 | What, a Head without a Body? |
A27032 | When I had set down at least thirty three Vntruths which he deliberately dared to write and publish, did you ever read such a pittiful vindication? |
A27032 | When a Church is to be separated from for approving sin? |
A27032 | When it is much of the sense of the three first and greatest Petitions in the Lords prayer? |
A27032 | When many Copies so much differ as they do, is it not certain that some of them erred? |
A27032 | When the world rings of it? |
A27032 | When we are freed from the Condition of the Law of Works, is Repentance become so intollerable and hard a Condition? |
A27032 | When you might have come to a certain knowledge? |
A27032 | When you said you had done, will you not have done writing untruths? |
A27032 | Where did I ever deny any Activeness? |
A27032 | Where did I say, that men of the judgement of Peter or Paul, of Augustine or Prosper, wrote against me? |
A27032 | Whether I approved of setting up Cromwell to be Protector? |
A27032 | Whether I disclaimed any Activeness in the first War? |
A27032 | Whether Mr. E. B. be a Seeker, and separate from all Churches, as well as from all Parochial? |
A27032 | Whether all Christian liberty must be maintained? |
A27032 | Whether all they whose sin brings Judgements, must be hated of all and killed? |
A27032 | Whether calling Dividers to Repent,& c. be to make them odious? |
A27032 | Whether every untruth be a lye? |
A27032 | Whether he be an Hypocrite, who joyneth with any manner of Worship which he approveth not? |
A27032 | Whether if we separate not we sell the truth about Christs Soveraignty? |
A27032 | Whether it is an indispensible duty to maintain all our Christ ● an liberty, or what? |
A27032 | Whether my Actions be noted, is a matter of fact? |
A27032 | Whether no Church may be communicated with that is not such as Christ called and designed it to be? |
A27032 | Whether not separating be prejudicial to a fundamental, viz Christs Soveraignty? |
A27032 | Whether the true Reading and uncorruptness of particular Texts be sufficiently known by the light of the Scripture alone? |
A27032 | Whether there be little difference between persecuting, and not sharply reproving it? |
A27032 | Whether there be no way but separation, to preserve our Christian liberty? |
A27032 | Whether to be present where things are used in Gods Worship which he commanded not, be a sin? |
A27032 | Which are the Laws? |
A27032 | Which are wounded and torn by such Reformers? |
A27032 | Which of them is it that the man would have me grieve for grieving? |
A27032 | Who can tell where to find this Proteus? |
A27032 | Who is it now that prejudiceth fundamentalls? |
A27032 | Who is there that will deny that A holy and Righteous Government in the hands of holy and righteous men, would be a blessing to the world? |
A27032 | Who talkt of the whole? |
A27032 | Who were the great Antiadiaphorists in Germany, but Iliricus, Amsdorsius, Gallus and other Lutherans? |
A27032 | Who will plead for Oppression? |
A27032 | Why do you refuse the imputation of your own Untruths, if you have not the least free- will to forbear them? |
A27032 | Why doth not the doing it without constraint( as is said) make it as unlawful as obedience? |
A27032 | Why may not I in my travail communicate with a Church whose members and Discipline I know not? |
A27032 | Why then do you write two invectives to cure their esteem of me? |
A27032 | Why then might they not do so to his? |
A27032 | Why then will he publish that which himself supposeth to be my glorying? |
A27032 | Why will not obeying a Minister or de ● ● ver make it as unlawful as obeying a King? |
A27032 | Why would you no more regard your reputation, than to recite such a passage as this? |
A27032 | Will all this experience teach us nothing? |
A27032 | Will any Christian charge this doctrine to be erroneous? |
A27032 | Will you communicate with none that holdeth any thing( yea any errour) which the Jesuits hold? |
A27032 | Will you end as you begun? |
A27032 | Will you teach men to say against Gods command, I must not be so Proud as to think that my example will be observed or regarded? |
A27032 | Will your Reader doubt whether you should repent of such things as words of Impudency unbeseeming a man of understanding? |
A27032 | Will your followers still believe such an open self- contradicting false accuser? |
A27032 | Yea or ever heard them speak for themselves? |
A27032 | Yea or that knew these particular Books were the same that the Apostles wrote, without alteration, till some one told it them? |
A27032 | Yea, how few even of the strictest separating Churches are they, that neglect not Discipline upon some one person? |
A27032 | Yea, or Aaron that made the Golden Calf? |
A27032 | You deny not that your Brother Powel was mistaken? |
A27032 | You grant that we are not to have Communion with a Diocesane Church as such, and that we are not to own Diocesane Bishops? |
A27032 | You tell us anon that Prophets, Nathan, Samuel, and good men have been mistaken? |
A27032 | You — will not be beholding to an Act of Indempnity, but stand upon your Innocency? |
A27032 | [ There being but little difference in the sight of God,& c.] And what should I do with you, when you cast me into such a streight? |
A27032 | and did he believe himself, or could he possibly believe himself, that I approved of the setting up of Cromwell to be Protector? |
A27032 | and how? |
A27032 | and is to be vehemently desired, and sought by just and lawful means? |
A27032 | and many of his followers? |
A27032 | and must we not Repent, if we will be forgiven? |
A27032 | and one which he mentioneth and wrote against himself? |
A27032 | and so Christ had no Church, and was no Christ? |
A27032 | and so advance my reputation? |
A27032 | and so of the rest? |
A27032 | and such like? |
A27032 | and that he contradicted his own Soveraignty? |
A27032 | and that you are the fittest man to be the accuser of them? |
A27032 | and the Anabaptists of them both,& c. Must they all therefore warm all men not to hear each other? |
A27032 | and what a plague his numbring the people brought on his Kingdom; and so of others? |
A27032 | and whether it must be separated from? |
A27032 | and which so many have publickly preached against, both formerly and of late? |
A27032 | and yet be a perfect Saviour? |
A27032 | but whether de facto any do note what I do? |
A27032 | not a Receiving obediential power? |
A27032 | or Impressions? |
A27032 | or any form besides the Relation of the particular members? |
A27032 | or from all that sin in their entrance into the Ministry? |
A27032 | or impose this or that Metre or Tune on them in singing of Psalms? |
A27032 | or no great sinner? |
A27032 | or say any thing else that he hath list to say? |
A27032 | or that you speak evil of the Books which you never read? |
A27032 | or they that lose more of their Love, than of their Liberties? |
A27032 | or to ordinary( at least sanctified) Reason by evidence in the Text it self? |
A27032 | or whether he give us cause to believe that God hath revealed more to him than to them, while he himself can no better reveal it unto others? |
A27032 | or will one serve( as aforesaid) And how shall he judge of those he seeth not? |
A27032 | so they hold the same with all Christians, that there is a God, and a Christ and the Scripture true? |
A27032 | that after twenty years such doleful experience, we will not confess the sinfulness of our divisions? |
A27032 | that is, because it sinneth not through disability, but negligence or wilfulness? |
A27032 | the Cross, and in the other[ he despised the shame]( for so two of them do differ:) how shall he prove which Printer erred? |
A27032 | what Copies most perfect? |
A27032 | what Oath is it that you mean? |
A27032 | what none? |
A27032 | what words are false Printed, and what right? |
A27032 | when he sent out Judas himself, who was first a Thief and after a Traytor? |
A27032 | where then is the insignificancy of these words? |
A27032 | which are the Statutes in force? |
A27032 | which of these is the non- sense? |
A27032 | which so many Books accuse me of? |
A27032 | who dissenteth from you in this? |
A27032 | yea, and when in the same paragraph you are renewing the same sin? |
A26872 | Am I C ● nverted, or am I not? |
A26872 | And alas, must we lose our friends, and must they lose their God, their happiness, their souls for want of this? |
A26872 | And are all these ready to receive thee, and yet art thou not ready to come in? |
A26872 | And can you think he cares not whether his ends be accomplished, and whether we do the work that we are made for? |
A26872 | And do I conquer all gross sins, and am I weary, and willing to be rid of mine infirmities? |
A26872 | And do I still find thee doing the work of sin, and sleeping out thy life in negligence? |
A26872 | And do you not easily perceive it to be true? |
A26872 | And do you think that he hath any Pleasure in this? |
A26872 | And do you think that this is a pleasant thing to us? |
A26872 | And hath God made so glorious a habitation, and set man to dwell in it, and made all his servants, and now doth he look for nothing at his hands? |
A26872 | And how can the Holy Ghost be our Sanctifier, if God be so indifferent whether we be clean or unclean? |
A26872 | And how else will you know when the world is good or bad but by this? |
A26872 | And how quickly will that day and hour come? |
A26872 | And if the sin of the Devils deserved an endless torment, why not also the sin of man? |
A26872 | And if your Brethren see you everlastingly in misery, how shall they pitty you that were your own destroyers, and would not be disswaded? |
A26872 | And is God ready, the Sacrifice of Christ Ready, the Promise Ready, and Pardon Ready? |
A26872 | And is God the dearest and the Highest in my soul? |
A26872 | And is there a heart in man, in a reasonable creature, that can once refuse such a Message, such a Command, such an Exhortation as this? |
A26872 | And make thee send to beg their prayers whom thou didst despise in thy presumption? |
A26872 | And should all this be forgotten? |
A26872 | And then how soon will thy mind be changed? |
A26872 | And then whose shall all those things be that you have gathered? |
A26872 | And we tell you nothing but the truth which you must know: for who will seek out for Physick that knows not that he is sick? |
A26872 | And were you not commanded to seek first Gods Kingdom and Righteousness, and promised, that other things should be added to you? |
A26872 | And when I sin, is it against the very habitual bent and design of my heart? |
A26872 | And when they polluted his Altar, and made the Table of the Lord contemp ● ible, they durst say Wherein have we polluted thee? |
A26872 | And who is it long of now but your selves? |
A26872 | And why did he so long support thy life, but to see when thou wouldst bethink thee of the folly of thy waies, and return and live? |
A26872 | And why should not the certain Word of God be believed by you, and prevail with you, which openeth to you these glorious and eternal things? |
A26872 | And why should not you do so, that have Heaven opened to your faith, if you had but faith to see it? |
A26872 | And why then should you not think so of the Threatning of an endless and unspeakable misery? |
A26872 | And why will you not now be of the mind that you will be of then? |
A26872 | And why will you not? |
A26872 | And will that be any ease or comfort to you? |
A26872 | And will you be worse then Devils to your selves? |
A26872 | And will you do that against your selves which no one else can do? |
A26872 | And will you set your selves to your own destruction? |
A26872 | And with what Love and Ioy might we live among you? |
A26872 | And yet art thou not Ready? |
A26872 | And yet art thou not resolved to Turn? |
A26872 | And yet art thou unready? |
A26872 | And yet will you blame the absolute Lord, the most wise and gracious Soveraign of the world if he condemn the Unconverterted to perpetual misery? |
A26872 | And yet will you not be entreated to part with your sensual pleasures for your own salvation? |
A26872 | Are all things ready, and are you unready? |
A26872 | Are the matters which we were made for, and which we live for, too high for us to meddle with? |
A26872 | Are you in love with Hell? |
A26872 | Are you not able to go by an Ale- house door, or to shut your mouths and keep out the drink; or to forbear the company that hardneth you in sin? |
A26872 | Are you not able to read good Books from day to day, at least on the Lords day, and to convers ● with those that fear the Lord? |
A26872 | Are you wiser, and better, and righteouser then he? |
A26872 | Art thou able to confute him? |
A26872 | Art thou furnished with a sufficient answer? |
A26872 | Art thou not ready to be saved from Hell, when thou art even ready to be cast remedilesly into it? |
A26872 | Art thou not ready to lay hold on Christ that would deliver thee, when thou art even ready to drown and sink into damnation? |
A26872 | Art thou not sometime convinced that all is not well with thee? |
A26872 | Art thou ready to enter the lists? |
A26872 | As you are convinced that you have no Reason to destroy your selves, so tell me what Reason have you to refuse to Turn, and live to God? |
A26872 | At your death- bed, how boldly might we comfort and encourage your departing souls? |
A26872 | BVT how cometh it to pass that men should be so unreasonable in the matters of their salvation? |
A26872 | Be not these strange matters to many of you? |
A26872 | Because there are many, will you be of that way that you may be sure is wrong? |
A26872 | Behold sinners, we are set here as the Messengers of the Lord, to set before you Life and Death ▪ What say you? |
A26872 | But I am no whoremonger, nor drunkard, nor oppressor, and therefore why should you call upon me to be Converted? |
A26872 | But I mean nobody any harm, nor do no harm: and why then should God condemn me? |
A26872 | But alas, what poor stuff, what nonsense instead of reason, do we daily hear from ungodly men? |
A26872 | But are not all men sinners, even the best of you all? |
A26872 | But do you not know that the means do lead unto the end? |
A26872 | But if thou think God cares for thy body, canst thou think he cares not more for thy soul? |
A26872 | But if you do believe this, how comes it to pass that you live so quietly in an unconverted state? |
A26872 | But if you will cast it out by forgetfulness or unbelief, how can it work to your Conversion and Salvation? |
A26872 | But is not your flesh preparing for its own displeasure also? |
A26872 | But let us hear what reason you have, why you will not believe this word of God, which tells us that the wicked must be Converted or condemned? |
A26872 | But perhaps you''l say, What if we should find our selves yet unconverted; what shall we do then? |
A26872 | But what is it that you are afraid of losing if you Turn? |
A26872 | But what will you do for pleasure when these are gone? |
A26872 | But why is it that God will reason the Cause with man? |
A26872 | Can I truly say that I am dead to the world and carnal self, and that I live for God and the Glory which he hath promised? |
A26872 | Can it choose but torment you to think of this your present folly? |
A26872 | Can the candle burn without the oyl? |
A26872 | Can you be madder then you are already? |
A26872 | Can you expect that they should have any mercy on others, ● hat have none upon themselves? |
A26872 | Can you find any fault with God or his work, or wages? |
A26872 | Can you give any Reason for it that is worthy to be called a Reason? |
A26872 | Can you make so light of Heaven and Hell? |
A26872 | Can you think that an unholy soul is fit for heaven? |
A26872 | Can you truly say that you do as much as you are able to do? |
A26872 | Can your houses stand without the earth to bear them? |
A26872 | Christ standeth as it were by thee, with Heaven in one hand, and Hell in the other, and offereth thee thy choice; which wilt thou choose? |
A26872 | Could you heartily laugh or be merry in such a state? |
A26872 | Dare you stand to ever an one of these Reasons at the Barr of God? |
A26872 | Dare you think that the Holy Ghost doth take upon him a needless work? |
A26872 | Darest thou say that the Almighty Holy God is fain to rule the world by a Lie, and to deceive men into obedience? |
A26872 | Darest thou say to him, I will not depend upon thee? |
A26872 | Darest thou venture upon a dispute with God? |
A26872 | Did God put in any exceptions against you in his word, when he invited sinners to return, and when he promised mercy to those that do return?] |
A26872 | Did he forbid you to pray to him any more then others? |
A26872 | Did he say,[ I will pardon all that repent except thee?] |
A26872 | Did he shut you out from the liberty of his holy worship? |
A26872 | Did the many opinions of the world hinder you? |
A26872 | Did the sins of professors hinder you? |
A26872 | Didst thou ever consider, upon what terms thou standest all this while with him that calleth on thee for to Turn? |
A26872 | Didst thou never cry to him for help in thy distress? |
A26872 | Do I flie from them as my deadly enemies? |
A26872 | Do I give up my self to a life of Holiness and Obedience to God? |
A26872 | Do I hate my former sinful life, and the remnant of every sin that is in me? |
A26872 | Do I love it, and delight in it? |
A26872 | Do I need to say any more to you? |
A26872 | Do not you care what men say of you, or do to you? |
A26872 | Do we use to shut up the door of Mercy against you? |
A26872 | Do we use to tell you, that God will have no mercy on you, though you Turn and be Sanctified? |
A26872 | Do you believe all this Sirs, or do you not? |
A26872 | Do you know how to answer such a man, or do you not? |
A26872 | Do you know that you are Converted? |
A26872 | Do you make no matter of difference between a bad servant and a good? |
A26872 | Do you not observe that dayes and weeks are quickly gone; and nights and mornings come apace and speed ● ly succeed each other? |
A26872 | Do you not see that in the course of ● ature every thing is fitted to its use? |
A26872 | Do you not think of that? |
A26872 | Do you think in your Consciences that it would do you any harm to be Converted and live an holy life? |
A26872 | Dost thou believe that God is the Governour of the world or not? |
A26872 | Dost thou know what it is, that thou wouldst yet have more of it? |
A26872 | Dost thou know what will be the end? |
A26872 | Dost thou know whom thou disobeyest and contendest with, and what thou art doing? |
A26872 | Dost thou not understand and feel this voice,[ Turn ye, Turn ye, Why will ye die?] |
A26872 | Dost thou think God careth whether thou be a man or not? |
A26872 | Dost thou think that God careth what becomes of thy body? |
A26872 | Dost thou think that God is everywhere present, and infinite, and Al- sufficient? |
A26872 | Dost thou think thou shalt still esca ● e the Iudgement of God? |
A26872 | Doth God command all this ado, for a thing that he regards not? |
A26872 | Doth it love to be tormented with the Devils for ever? |
A26872 | Doth it love to stand trembling before his Bar, and to be judged to everlasting fire? |
A26872 | Doth not it grudge within you, and tell you sometimes that all is not well, and that your case is not so safe as you make it to be? |
A26872 | Doth not this turn thy heart within thee? |
A26872 | For to what purpose should he warn you if you will not believe him? |
A26872 | For what Communion hath light with darkness, or Christ with Belial? |
A26872 | For what are all other lower Creatures for, but for man? |
A26872 | For what must you Turn? |
A26872 | Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having on a wedding garment? |
A26872 | God asketh thee, Why wilt thou die? |
A26872 | God or you? |
A26872 | Ha ● h Heaven more of my Estimation, and Resolution, then Earth? |
A26872 | Had not you the same teaching, and time, and liberty to be godly as your godly neighbours had? |
A26872 | Had you not a better world to look after first? |
A26872 | Had you the world to look after? |
A26872 | Hadst thou rather I did burn there for ever then thou shouldst live soberly as other men do? |
A26872 | Hast thou any Reason that satisfieth thine own conscience for it? |
A26872 | Hast thou any thing which thou hast not received? |
A26872 | Hast thou had so many calls, and so many mercies, and so many blows, and so many examples? |
A26872 | Hast thou not as much reason to be ready to come, as God hath to invite thee, and bid thee welcome? |
A26872 | Hath he not made thee and established thee? |
A26872 | Hath not God as much authority over you? |
A26872 | Have I a new design, and a new end, and a new train of holy affect ● ons? |
A26872 | Have I deserved this unkind dealing at thy hand? |
A26872 | Have I set my hopes and heart in heaven? |
A26872 | Have I thankfully entertained my Saviour and Lord, that offered himself with pardon and life to my soul? |
A26872 | Have you any good Reason to give, why you should not Turn, and presently Turn with all your hearts? |
A26872 | Have you been thus born again and made anew? |
A26872 | He hath done his part, and spared thee yet longer, and tryed thee another and another year: and yet dost thou not Turn? |
A26872 | He hath much entrusted you with your own salvation: and will you betray your trust? |
A26872 | He hath set you with all diligence to keep your hearts: and is this the keeping of them? |
A26872 | How canst thou open it, and read a leaf, or hear a Chapter, and not perceive God bids thee Turn? |
A26872 | How come they else to be such importunate Tempters of men: which we feel, alas, by too much experience? |
A26872 | How diligent in hearing, and learning, and enquiring? |
A26872 | How eager are the Devils to be doing with thee that have tempted thee ▪ and do but wait for th ● word from God, to take and use thee as their own? |
A26872 | How earnest would you be with God in Prayer? |
A26872 | How easily can he at any time say to thy guilty soul,[ Come away and live in that flesh no more till the resurrection] and it can not resist? |
A26872 | How easily can he lay that flesh under gripes and groans, and make it too weak to hold thy soul, and make it more loathsom then the dung of the earth? |
A26872 | How fearful of sinning in thought, word, or deed? |
A26872 | How glad is he when he heare ● h thee revile the Minister that would draw thee from thy sin, and help to save thee? |
A26872 | How long wilt thou hate thy friends, and love thine enemies? |
A26872 | How low and base is your earthly, fleshly, sinful life, in comparison of the noble spiritual life of true Believers? |
A26872 | How many years hath God looked for the fruits of Love and Holiness from thee, and hath found none? |
A26872 | How many, how loud, how earnest, how dreadful, and yet what encourageing joyful Calls? |
A26872 | How might we come to be truly converted? |
A26872 | How resolutely would you scorn to yield to such temptations as now deceive you and carry you away? |
A26872 | How serious in meditating on the Laws of God? |
A26872 | How then can they live in that perfect love of him, and full delights, and Communion with him, which is the blessedness of heaven? |
A26872 | How zealously would you bestir your selves for that most blessed life? |
A26872 | I know this is not the first time that you have heard it; but how have you regarded it, or how do you regard it now? |
A26872 | I will not be beholden to thee for the life and mercies of another day? |
A26872 | I would ask you, Whether you would have the Rulers of the world to take no care what men say or do, or would you not? |
A26872 | If God did not much regard our hearts and lives, why doth he make all the world to be our Servants? |
A26872 | If God do not care so much what is in our hearts, or what we do, Why then would he make a Law for our hearts, and words, and ways? |
A26872 | If I came hungry or naked to one of your doors, would you not part with more then a cup of drink to relieve me? |
A26872 | If not, Who made thee, and preserveth thee? |
A26872 | If not, then how comest thou by thy life, and health, and mercies? |
A26872 | If not, why then should you think to be acquit for a course of sin against the Lord? |
A26872 | If not; will you go on against Reason it self? |
A26872 | If so, may I not say, thou art an unmerciful monster, and not a man? |
A26872 | If the dreadfull God of Heaven be slighted, who then shall be regarded? |
A26872 | If the inestimable Love and blood of a Redeemer be made light of, what then shall be valued? |
A26872 | If the town were wilfully set on fire, you would ask, What wicked wretch did this? |
A26872 | If they come from any other fountain- tell us from whence; Is it not to God that thou prayest for life and health? |
A26872 | If this had been his delight, how easily could he have had thee long ago in Hell? |
A26872 | If thou hadst any spiritual life and sense in thee, at least thou wouldst say, this Call is the dreadful voice of God, and who dare disobey? |
A26872 | If thou hast, let us hear them; bring them forth, and make them good? |
A26872 | If we saw a man killed and cut in pieces by the way, we would presently ask, Oh who did this cruel deed? |
A26872 | If you can not tell the day or the week of your change, or the very Sermon that Converted you, yet do you find that the work is done? |
A26872 | If you have a servant that robbeth you, will you take such an answer from him? |
A26872 | If you saw a Lamb lie killed in the way, would you sooner suspect the sheep, or the dog, or woolf, to be the author of it, if they both stood by? |
A26872 | If you think you have some reason to sin, should you not remember that death is the wages of sin? |
A26872 | If you were to die this day, had you not rather die in the case of a Conveted man, then of the Unconverted? |
A26872 | If you will commit again your old sins, what blessing can you expect on the means for your Conversion? |
A26872 | If you will, why do you not? |
A26872 | If your natural lives were in your own hands, that you should not die till you would kill your selves; how long would most of you live? |
A26872 | Is a little drink, or meat, or ease, is the good words of sinners, is the riches of this world to be valued above the Joyes of heaven? |
A26872 | Is an immortal soul of no more worth? |
A26872 | Is eternal death a thing to be de desired? |
A26872 | Is he a bad Master? |
A26872 | Is it I, or is it Satan that is thy enemy? |
A26872 | Is it I, or is it thy carnal self that would undo thee? |
A26872 | Is it a Pleasure to him to see you go on in sin, and can not stop you? |
A26872 | Is it an holy life, or a life of sin that thou hast cause to fly from? |
A26872 | Is it evil to be like God? |
A26872 | Is it harm to you to have the Spirit of Christ within you? |
A26872 | Is it not a strange Thing which God doth seem here to suppose, that any man should be willing to die, and be damned? |
A26872 | Is it not said that God made man in his image? |
A26872 | Is it possible that a man can have any Reason to break his Masters Laws? |
A26872 | Is it possible that a man can have any good reason to damn his own Immortal soul? |
A26872 | Is it so good to thee? |
A26872 | Is it thus indeed with me, or is it not? |
A26872 | Is it to be saved, if you turn and be sanctified? |
A26872 | Is it your friends? |
A26872 | Is it your pleasures that you are afraid of losing? |
A26872 | Is my heart broken or humbled within me for my former life? |
A26872 | Is my heart now turned another way? |
A26872 | Is my request unreasonable? |
A26872 | Is not God worthy to be the Ruler of your flesh? |
A26872 | Is not he thy Father that bought thee? |
A26872 | Is not this the Truth of your case Sirs? |
A26872 | Is that doing as well as you can, when you will not Turn to God, but your heart is against his holy and diligent service? |
A26872 | Is the Devil whom you serve, a better? |
A26872 | Is there any harm in an holy life? |
A26872 | Is there ever a man or woman in this Assembly that is yet a stranger to the renewing sanctifying work of the Holy Ghost? |
A26872 | Is there ever an Unconverted sinner that heareth these vehement words of God? |
A26872 | It s God that must sanctifie your hearts; but who corrupted them? |
A26872 | It seems then you take the word of God to be false, and then what will you believe? |
A26872 | Let the Potsheards strive with the Potsheards of the earth; Shall the clay say to him that fashioneth it; What makest thou?] |
A26872 | Let the world which you served now pay your wages, and save you if it can? |
A26872 | Like a man that was born blind, and hears an high commendation of the light: but what will bearing do, unless he see it? |
A26872 | Many mercies have I shewed thee; for which of them dost thou thus despise me? |
A26872 | Mark the Lords question[ Turn ye, Turn ye, Why will you die?] |
A26872 | Might you not live a comfortable life, if once you were made the Heirs of Heaven, and sure to be saved when you leave the world? |
A26872 | Must I be Converted or Condemned? |
A26872 | Must infinite wisdom learn of folly? |
A26872 | Must the Almighty stand at the Bar of a worm? |
A26872 | Must the God of heaven come to School to you to learn wisdom? |
A26872 | My desire is, that you should Hope and Trust in God: But for what is it that you will Hope? |
A26872 | Nor would he punish the world with Hell hereafter, or so many dreadful judgements here, as thousands feel, if he cared not what they think or do? |
A26872 | Not ready to be saved, when thou art even ready to be condemned? |
A26872 | Now what are they possessing that Turned at Gods Call? |
A26872 | Now what canst thou say in excuse of thy sin? |
A26872 | O how easily will the light of that day confound and shame such reasonings as these? |
A26872 | O my people what have I done unto thee? |
A26872 | O what thoughts will shortly fill your hearts, with unspeakable Delight or Horrour? |
A26872 | Oh blessed God, what a mercy is it that thou didst not cut off my life all this while, before I had any certain hope of eternal life? |
A26872 | Oh why did I not look after this till now? |
A26872 | Or any that thou darest own and plead at the barr of God? |
A26872 | Or are they worth the suffering of Eternal fire? |
A26872 | Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness, and forbearance, and long- suffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to Repentance? |
A26872 | Or do you think you may not have company enough in Heaven? |
A26872 | Or what course should be taken, that is liker to prevail? |
A26872 | Or will you go to Hell in despight of Reason it self? |
A26872 | Or will you not believe that God will execute his threatnings because they be so many that are guilty? |
A26872 | Or would you have him bring you and your sins to heaven together? |
A26872 | Or, Why they will rather die then Turn? |
A26872 | SO earnest is God for the Conversion of sinners, that he doubleth his commands and exhortations with vehemency; Turn ye, Turn ye, Why will ye Dye? |
A26872 | Shall every mole, or cold, or dung- hill, accuse the Sun of darkness, and undertake to illuminate the world? |
A26872 | Shall the living God send so earnest a Message to his creatures, and should they not obey? |
A26872 | Shall the voice of the Eternal Majesty be neglected? |
A26872 | Should not your own souls be as dear to you as theirs to them? |
A26872 | Should your flesh be pleased before your Maker? |
A26872 | Sirs, are you resolved what to do? |
A26872 | So when we read that the most will be firebrands of hell for ever, we must needs think with our selves, How comes this to pass? |
A26872 | Some will think with themselves, It s true, the wicked must Turn or Die: but wh ● ●''s that to me? |
A26872 | Tell me truly, as before the Lord, Though you are loath to live an Holy life, had you not rather die in the case of those that do so then of others? |
A26872 | The Controversie or Question propounded to dispute of, is, Why wicked men will damn themselves? |
A26872 | The Lord condescendeth to reason the case with Unconverted sinners, and to ask them, Why they will die? |
A26872 | The Lord condescendeth to reason the case with Vnconverted sinners, and to ask them why they will die? |
A26872 | The Lord condescendeth to reason the case with them, and asketh the wicked, Why they will die? |
A26872 | The Lyon hath roared, who will not fear? |
A26872 | The Priests that despised his name, durst ask, Wherein have we despised thy name? |
A26872 | The voice of the Lord maketh the Rocks to tremble, Psalm 20. and is it nothing to hear him threaten thee, if thou wilt not Turn? |
A26872 | Then how comfortably should we preach Absolution and Peace to you? |
A26872 | Then is it better to be a Believing Saint, or a sensual Worldling? |
A26872 | Then will you jear at them that warned you? |
A26872 | These have come near thee, and made thee feel; they have made thee groan, and can they not make thee Turn? |
A26872 | Thou art his own, and owest him thy self and all thou hast; and may he not Command his own? |
A26872 | Turn ye, Turn ye, why will you die? |
A26872 | Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die O''house of Israel? |
A26872 | Was I awake, or in my wits? |
A26872 | Was ever such a change or work done upon my soul? |
A26872 | Well Sirs, are you yet resolved, or are you not? |
A26872 | Well Sirs, look inwards now and tell me, How are your hearts affected with these offers of the Lord? |
A26872 | Were the Church- doors shut against you? |
A26872 | What Reason hast thou to deny, or to delay? |
A26872 | What answer did he make? |
A26872 | What desires of your wel- fare did the Lord express in his holy word? |
A26872 | What doth the earth but bear us, and nourish us? |
A26872 | What harm can it do you? |
A26872 | What hindered you, but the wickedness of your hearts? |
A26872 | What iniquity have you found in me, that you have followed after vanity and forsaken me? |
A26872 | What is there in the work that Christ calls you to, that should drive a man out of his wits? |
A26872 | What is your resolution? |
A26872 | What not Ready to live, when thou hast been dead so long? |
A26872 | What now will you do Sirs? |
A26872 | What reason have you willfully to perish? |
A26872 | What sadder thing can you bring to their hearts? |
A26872 | What saist thou, Unconverted sensual wretch? |
A26872 | What say you yet Unconverted sinners? |
A26872 | What say you, Sirs? |
A26872 | What say you? |
A26872 | What should be said more to you? |
A26872 | What should one say to such men as these? |
A26872 | What state is my soul in? |
A26872 | What will you do if he take you once in hand? |
A26872 | What will you do now? |
A26872 | What will you do? |
A26872 | What will you say if he begin in wrath to plead with you? |
A26872 | What work will you be employed in? |
A26872 | What would you have God say more to you? |
A26872 | What would you have him do with his Mercy? |
A26872 | When did you ever hear a Preacher say such a word? |
A26872 | When shall it once be?] |
A26872 | When the Lord had said, Cut it down; why cumbreth it the ground? |
A26872 | When they weary the Lord with their words, they say, wherein have we wearied him? |
A26872 | When you find it in the Word of God that so it is, and so it will be, do you think your selves fit to contradict this Word? |
A26872 | Where were you when the Almighty made these Laws, that he did not call you to his counsel? |
A26872 | Whether they have any sufficient reason for so doing? |
A26872 | Whether thou be sick or well? |
A26872 | Who can dwell with the everlasting fire? |
A26872 | Who forced you to sin? |
A26872 | Who is in the right now? |
A26872 | Who is it that is so cruel as to be the cause of such a thing as this? |
A26872 | Who is it that will have the worst of this? |
A26872 | Who is it then that takes Pleasure in your sin and death? |
A26872 | Who is it then that takes Pleasure in your sin? |
A26872 | Who is it then that takes pleasure in mens sin and death? |
A26872 | Who is it then that you Pleasure by your sin and death? |
A26872 | Why are men so unreasonable and loth to Turn, and will destroy themselves? |
A26872 | Why could you not if you would? |
A26872 | Why did I venturously poste off, or flubber over so great a business? |
A26872 | Why do all creatures serve thee with their labours and their lives, but that thou mightest serve the Lord of them and thee? |
A26872 | Why doth he give thee time, and health, and strength, but for to serve him? |
A26872 | Why doth the air afford thee breath, but to serve him? |
A26872 | Why doth the earth bear thee but to seek and serve the Lord? |
A26872 | Why hast thou Reason, but to Rule thy flesh, and serve thy Lord? |
A26872 | Why hast thou an heart within thee that can love, and fear, and desire, but that thou shouldst fear him, and love him, and desire after him? |
A26872 | Why hast thou an understanding soul, but to learn and know his will, and do it? |
A26872 | Why hast thou meat, and drink, and cloathes, but for his service? |
A26872 | Why have you not done it all this while? |
A26872 | Why should God give thee a mind that can know him; and a heart that can love him, if he cared not whether thou know him, and love him or not? |
A26872 | Why then could not you have been godly as well as they? |
A26872 | Why then will you not become a sanctified people as well as they? |
A26872 | Will any man purposely put arms into his enemies hands to resist him? |
A26872 | Will not hell be as hot to you as to others? |
A26872 | Will not such Answers as these confound and silence you? |
A26872 | Will you Turn or Die? |
A26872 | Will you Turn, or will you not? |
A26872 | Will you be undone for company? |
A26872 | Will you call your Maker to the Barr? |
A26872 | Will you displease the Lord, and displease your Teachers, and your godly friends, and all to please your brutish appetites, or sensual desires? |
A26872 | Will you do that which you have no Reason for? |
A26872 | Will you fall upon this self examination when you come home? |
A26872 | Will you resolve and promise to be at this much labour for your own souls? |
A26872 | Will you wilfully take Poison because you can not cure your selves? |
A26872 | Will you, or will you not? |
A26872 | Wilt thou undertake to prove that God is mistaken, and that thou art in the right? |
A26872 | Wilt thou yet go on and despise his word, and resist his Spirit, and stop thine ear against his Call? |
A26872 | With this Nature or Corrupt inclination we are all now born into the world: For who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
A26872 | Would God have done this, and appointed his Ordinances for your good, if he had taken Pleasure in your death? |
A26872 | Would be so strictly forb ● d us sin, if he were indifferent, whether we sin or no? |
A26872 | Would he command us that which he doth not care for? |
A26872 | Would he have astonished Angels and men by his condescension? |
A26872 | Would he promise eternal life to the holy and obedient, if he care not whether we be holy and obedient or no? |
A26872 | Would you have him bring you to Heaven whether you will or no? |
A26872 | Would you know the will of God? |
A26872 | Wouldst thou forbear an hundred cups of drink man, to save my life if it were in thy power, and wilt thou not do it to save thy own soul? |
A26872 | Yea let me tell you, that even here on earth, you little know the difference between the Life which you refuse, and the Life which you choose? |
A26872 | Yet hast thou not had enough of sin? |
A26872 | You can say, that the Holy- Ghost is your Sanctifier, but do you know what Sanctification is? |
A26872 | You migh have said,[ To what end should I repent and turn, when it will do no good?] |
A26872 | You would be ready to flie in the face of him that should give you the lie: and yet dare you give the lie to God? |
A26872 | Your flesh is pleased with your sin: but is your conscience pleased? |
A26872 | [ Do you thus requite the Lord O foolish people and unwise? |
A26872 | [ Iudge I pray you betwixt me and my Vineyard: What could have been done more to my Vineyard, that I have not done in it? |
A26872 | [ Wherefore do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and your labour for that which satisfieth not? |
A26872 | a Son that would lay down his life for you, and a Son that longs for your death that he may have your Lands? |
A26872 | after so many convictions, and gripes of Conscience: after so many purposes and promises, art thou not yet ready to turn and live? |
A26872 | an obedient, and a disobedient child? |
A26872 | and can you find this wonderful change upon your souls? |
A26872 | and deliver the Sacraments which are the Seals of Peace to you? |
A26872 | and didst thou not then understand that it was thy part to Turn and serve him if he would deliver thee? |
A26872 | and doth not conscience tell thee that thou must be a new man, and take a new course, and often call upon thee to Return? |
A26872 | and examine his Word upon the accusation of falshood? |
A26872 | and how can you devise to grieve them more? |
A26872 | and how careful to please God, and grow in Holiness? |
A26872 | and infinite Goodness be corrected by a swinish sinner, that can not keep himself an hour clean? |
A26872 | and reason to abuse the Lord that bought him? |
A26872 | and reason to dishonour the Lord of Glory? |
A26872 | and shall they therefore be acquit? |
A26872 | and should not your soul and conscience be pleased before that corruptible flesh? |
A26872 | and such a change indeed there is? |
A26872 | and such as you never felt upon your selves? |
A26872 | and that God hath by his righteous Law concluded that you must repent or perish? |
A26872 | and that you have such hearts as are before described? |
A26872 | and to have a cleansed purified heart? |
A26872 | and to think what an everlasting life of Glory you wilfully despise and cast away? |
A26872 | and what a bewitching and befooling thing is sin? |
A26872 | and what can you say is the chief cause of your damnation, but your own Wills? |
A26872 | and when he heareth thee curse, or swear, or rail? |
A26872 | and wherein have I wearied thee? |
A26872 | and who is it long of? |
A26872 | and why do you not fall upon it yet? |
A26872 | and would you not lay it to heart? |
A26872 | and yet wilt thou now neglect it, and suffer us to return without our errand? |
A26872 | are these such things as should make men mad? |
A26872 | between a faithful friend and a deadly enemy? |
A26872 | durst you live another day in it? |
A26872 | hast thou not served the flesh and the Devil long enough? |
A26872 | hast thou seen so many laid in the grave, and yet art thou not ready to let go thy sins and come to Christ? |
A26872 | how can I find in my heart to disobey? |
A26872 | is a life of worldliness and ungodliness better? |
A26872 | it loves the bait, but doth it love the hook? |
A26872 | nor care how he thinks, or speaks, or lives? |
A26872 | of an holy and heavenly man, then of a carnal earthly man? |
A26872 | or at least can there be a more dangerous madness, then to neglect your everlasting welfare, and wilfully undo your selves? |
A26872 | or did you not keep away your selves? |
A26872 | or fit and sleep, or hear as if you did not hear? |
A26872 | or is the flesh a better? |
A26872 | or so profitable for thee? |
A26872 | or who did hold you back from Duty? |
A26872 | or would you not rather be the more careful to enquire the way? |
A26872 | that is, What dost thou in my Church among professed Christians, without an holy heart and life? |
A26872 | to Praise the Lord with Saints and Angels, or to cry out in fire unquenchable with Devils? |
A26872 | to see you merry, when you are not sure to be an hour out of Hell? |
A26872 | to see you so miserable, and can not so much as make you sensible of it? |
A26872 | to think what you must for ever suffer, because you will not Turn? |
A26872 | when they were pricked in their hearts,& said, Men and Brethren, what shall we do? |
A26872 | when thou hast been besides thy self so long? |
A26872 | when wilt thou let go all and Turn, and deliver up thy self to God, and give thy Redeemer the possession of thy soul? |
A26872 | whether thou live or die? |
A26872 | which of them will you choose? |
A26872 | why doth it afford thee its fruits but to serve him? |
A26872 | will you Turn, or not? |
A26872 | will you make or buy a Clock or Watch, and daily look to it, and not care whether it go true or false? |
A26872 | will you sit upon him and judge him by the Law of your Conceits? |
A26872 | would he threaten Hell to all that are ungodly, if he care not whether we were godly or not? |
A26872 | ● nd that they should much stick at ● he destruction of others, that ● ● ck not to destroy themselves? |
A27046 | & c. Why not an Oath of Allegiance to make one a Coblar? |
A27046 | & c. and those that sell Perriwigs, Pide- silks and Ribbons? |
A27046 | ( And had he proved it, is that a justification of the Liturgy?) |
A27046 | 10. you seem to defend: and 1. you say[ What is this more, than some that writ for the Kings Cause in the late Wars professed?] |
A27046 | ? |
A27046 | A known falshood, if a Question may be false: What matter of Fact shall ever come to Posterity by such hands without falsification? |
A27046 | A man that never saw me: why did he not cite Bishop Brambal''s proof? |
A27046 | Alas, Brother, did you shew this to any man before you Printed it? |
A27046 | Alas, how fell the good man under this temptation? |
A27046 | Alas, will the good man turn Papist or Infidel, unless the Universal Church and a Diocesane have the same specifying difference, or formal Head? |
A27046 | Am I therefore a Conformist? |
A27046 | And I pray you, what number of Sinners must go to prove a Religion, Creed, or Articles false? |
A27046 | And are all these Fathers and Christians damn''d? |
A27046 | And are these his saving truths? |
A27046 | And are you sure that your Conformists also are damned? |
A27046 | And by what means shall any Church or Party under Heaven defend their Religion against such a Censurer and Disputant as you are? |
A27046 | And can one and the same thing have two different Essences, beings, and definitions? |
A27046 | And can you insist on such passages thus against your sight, when your Error is detected? |
A27046 | And did not all my tedious writings convince you before now? |
A27046 | And do not all Christians? |
A27046 | And doth he say Yea, or Nay? |
A27046 | And had the Text those contrary senses? |
A27046 | And hath not he forsaken you also? |
A27046 | And hath not the same Collect the same sense on the next days? |
A27046 | And have you now vindicated the Doctrine of the chief Prelatists any better than by disowning them? |
A27046 | And how came we to be less free than our Ancestors that made such Offices? |
A27046 | And how long it was before the Christians had many considerable Schools, much less Universities? |
A27046 | And how silly a shift is all this covered with? |
A27046 | And if we are taken for intollerable Malefactors, is not undeceiving our Accusers and Haters a necessary means of Peace? |
A27046 | And indeed, do you loath as much the altering of your Church Government as the Kings, and yet be loyal? |
A27046 | And is Communicating in the Lords Supper all the Conformity that is scrupled? |
A27046 | And is it hypocrisie then to say, I feared to displease you? |
A27046 | And is it not credible that every man loveth himself, and is unwilling to be ruined? |
A27046 | And is not that true? |
A27046 | And is that no difference? |
A27046 | And is that unequal? |
A27046 | And is the Captain a Troop, or the Pastor a Church, if he be the gatherer of it? |
A27046 | And is there no diversity in parte essentiae,( as in subalternis) where there is not a diversity in totâ essentia,( as there is in summis generibus?) |
A27046 | And must Christ bear such a charge as well as I? |
A27046 | And must you not Assent and Consent to all things in it? |
A27046 | And next, why did you not prove that we hold those rebellious Genevian Principles? |
A27046 | And our Question is not, what Party of Lads, or Apprentices, or Women did clamour against Bishops,? |
A27046 | And quid inde? |
A27046 | And so, whether the word Church here signifies but one Species? |
A27046 | And this Talk needs a Confutation? |
A27046 | And though I urge him, he will not answer what I said of the Question, Who shall judge whether the Minister be faithful? |
A27046 | And was it possible that you should think that this made for you? |
A27046 | And was that before the raising of the Army? |
A27046 | And were you willing here to be understood? |
A27046 | And what Doctrine is it to say, Christs Body is one; not as one is opposed to multitude, but to division and destruction? |
A27046 | And what a jumble of swearing and unswearing would you have us make? |
A27046 | And what else is it that we say, but the Using without Approving, satisfieth not the imposition? |
A27046 | And what got the People by that scruple? |
A27046 | And what if he can not be their Governour without their consent, doth this give them any part in governing? |
A27046 | And what if they do? |
A27046 | And what men the common Presbyters were; yea, and the Bishops for the most part? |
A27046 | And what more necessary to unite us against the common Adversaries? |
A27046 | And what need we more, were not the Parliament Lay- men? |
A27046 | And what of that? |
A27046 | And what saith he? |
A27046 | And what temerity is it to feign men to wrong Christ by that which was his Institution, and so judged and used in all the Churches? |
A27046 | And what then? |
A27046 | And what then? |
A27046 | And what''s all this to our Controversie? |
A27046 | And when I never had a hand in putting any such men out, and have kept many of your Party in: What room after this for such a Question? |
A27046 | And where should I begin but with the first? |
A27046 | And who knoweth not that proximity is but dispositio materiae, and not the differencing form? |
A27046 | And whose practice must it be that is the Exposition? |
A27046 | And why must my Ministry lie on a thing beyond my knowledge? |
A27046 | And why? |
A27046 | And will true Conscience be convinced by such Arguments? |
A27046 | And will you defend or own all that then was confessed by them? |
A27046 | And will you so grosly dispute down Non- conformity? |
A27046 | And would they also repent and change their minds, if they were alive? |
A27046 | Anne putares? |
A27046 | Answer, Is this proving? |
A27046 | Answer, Still worse and worse: what Confusion is here? |
A27046 | Are Conformists come to that? |
A27046 | Are Presbyterians all for Excommunicating Kings? |
A27046 | Are Rubricks of no use? |
A27046 | Are not Bishops and Laicks partes heterogeneae? |
A27046 | Are not Christ and Christians, the King and the Subjects of the Universal Church, partes heterogeneae, in esse politico relativo? |
A27046 | Are not diversa distinguishable as well as opposita? |
A27046 | Are not the words universal? |
A27046 | Are not these words plain? |
A27046 | Are not whole stones part of Mountains? |
A27046 | Are such Doctrines of certain Faith no parts of the Book? |
A27046 | Are they not Relative opposita? |
A27046 | Are they not worthy to be silenced and branded as you have done, that can resist such Light? |
A27046 | Are we guilty of that Mistake, who Take it, and Write for it? |
A27046 | Are we not to do it in every partaking of the Lords Supper? |
A27046 | Are we, I say, we now living, and silenced, answerable for all that any Presbyterian holdeth, any more than you are for what Hooker holdeth? |
A27046 | Are your Logicks above my skill to answer? |
A27046 | Are your ways here equal too? |
A27046 | Are your words like Cyphers, that change their power by such additions? |
A27046 | As if the King be contrary to himself, if his Kingdom and a Corporation or School be not of the same species? |
A27046 | As to your doubt, whether England infected not Scotland? |
A27046 | Barclay and Grotius make? |
A27046 | But I pray you dream not, that I take all the old Ministry for such as these? |
A27046 | But I think the King may not Administer Sacraments or Spiritual Discipline himself: Which of our Kings did it? |
A27046 | But all your ways are just and equal: But I pray you, why was no Article about Excommunicating Kings offered us as a Test? |
A27046 | But did they not increase and multiply? |
A27046 | But do you believe therefore that there are no subordinate Species of Churches and Honour on Earth? |
A27046 | But doth that prove that there are no subordinate Societies in these? |
A27046 | But fie, Sirs, why will you talk of[ straining Oaths, and turning plain Oaths into Snares, ana ● allowing no Interpreters?] |
A27046 | But how heedlesly do you read? |
A27046 | But how long since after Edge- Hill Fight? |
A27046 | But if Episcopal men are so unstable and simple to be drawn into such a War by a few Non- conformists, why do you not acknowledge it? |
A27046 | But if all the Christian world be of the same mind, do they all set up Atheism, and are you only free? |
A27046 | But if it must needs be so, I pray dispute no more against the Non- conformists, or dispute against them better by your Lives, than you have done? |
A27046 | But is this the Question? |
A27046 | But is this true? |
A27046 | But it is not these Ends that will serve to prove a War lawful? |
A27046 | But nobis non licet, Must we be Silenced and ruined for want of such Charity? |
A27046 | But the Question is, Whether these be such? |
A27046 | But what Party it was that raised the War? |
A27046 | But what am I doing? |
A27046 | But what good will it do the Reader, to have this mans Falshoods detected and numbred? |
A27046 | But what if all this had been true? |
A27046 | But what if the Bishop spake as falsely, as if he had said that I pleaded for Mahomet? |
A27046 | But what if the first Non- Conformists erred? |
A27046 | But what meant he to say[ should it be practised?] |
A27046 | But what were the parts they had to act? |
A27046 | But what''s all this to our Case in hand?] |
A27046 | But what''s next? |
A27046 | But what''s this to the Case? |
A27046 | But where did the Lord Digby say it? |
A27046 | But where is it that I said, that these honest Conformists sin avowedly, delaberately, and against knowledge? |
A27046 | But where''s his proof? |
A27046 | But who accused them? |
A27046 | But why talk you of none being Interpreters? |
A27046 | But will you falsly accuse the part that is good for the part that is evil? |
A27046 | But you come to the quick, and say,[ Is there no Communion but personal? |
A27046 | But( saith he) may not a man be a Shepherd by calling and occupation, unless he have a Flock, as well as a Physician? |
A27046 | But, saith he, Why not à Church- Covenant for all other Duties? |
A27046 | But, saith he,[ This makes against you — Can any man forbid these people from being Members of the Particular Church that are of the Universal?] |
A27046 | Can you believe this? |
A27046 | Can you not forbear this ill custome a few Lines together? |
A27046 | Can you prove that I am for Silencing faithful Ministers, and making partition separating hedges in the Vineyard of Christ? |
A27046 | Christ and a Bishop are heterogeneous: Yea, a Diocesane and a Parish- Priest: have you proved that they are not? |
A27046 | Could it have been proved, would not the Duke of Buckingham have alledged it against his Adversaries? |
A27046 | Could that be the Cause or Controversie which they were both agreed in? |
A27046 | Did I? |
A27046 | Did ever Christian before you, deny particular Churches to be distinct policies, and parts of the Universal? |
A27046 | Did he not tell you that the Copy was interlined with Hookers own hand, as approving it? |
A27046 | Did not even the Westminster- Assembly of old Conformists forsake it assoon as they could? |
A27046 | Did not we live in the Country with them? |
A27046 | Did such men as Dr. Twisse, Mr. Herle, Mr. Gataker, Mr. Vines,& c. want the Instruction of our present Lords, to make them wise enough to Conform? |
A27046 | Did these Lads give the Earl of Essex his Commission? |
A27046 | Did these satisfie him to Conform herein? |
A27046 | Did they never read or hear what might be said for the New- Conformity? |
A27046 | Did this prove me to be neither fish nor flesh? |
A27046 | Did you ever know any put to death or burnt at a Stake for your Opinion? |
A27046 | Did you not know till now, that the Nonconformists are not in all things of one mind? |
A27046 | Did you think we must take your bare word in so great a case? |
A27046 | Do I mai many Sentence? |
A27046 | Do I pervert any? |
A27046 | Do all or half the Non- conformists profess themselves Presbyterians? |
A27046 | Do any Independents say that none are Christians but their special charge; yea, or stated Members of particular Churches? |
A27046 | Do not Heathens abhor such Injustice as this? |
A27046 | Do not men pay dearer for a place in a Play- house, than in the Church? |
A27046 | Do not the Popish, Protestant, Episcopal, and Presbyterian, differ in the Form of Government? |
A27046 | Do not those of the same Form differ as Individuals by their several Rulers? |
A27046 | Do not you in Print proclaim men to be flesh or fish, hot or cold, that are not so? |
A27046 | Do they think it enough to warrant their slanders of us, because one of their Archbishops hath slandered us before them? |
A27046 | Do we forbid them that are not willing, or do they forbid themselves? |
A27046 | Do we shut them out that will not come in? |
A27046 | Do you intimate an Accusation against Many of them; and when I name almost all of that County neer you, will you absolve them all? |
A27046 | Do you know that the Parliaments Adherents drew up a Catechism out of that Answer, as pretending to justifie all their Cause by it? |
A27046 | Do you know what Discipline they were of at Prague? |
A27046 | Do you mean in you or in me, or all others? |
A27046 | Do you not Assent to that neither? |
A27046 | Do you not tremble your self, when you question whether they be not gone to a worse place and revile us for the hopes of their Salvation? |
A27046 | Do you resolve to cast away all Religion, if Christ and a Bishop be not the same informing regent parts of the Church Universal and particular? |
A27046 | Do you say one word to prove your affirmation? |
A27046 | Do you think that the Christian world, which hath ever been of the opinion which you detest, had never any Religion? |
A27046 | Doth every one that after consenteth do more? |
A27046 | Doth he not know that it is practised by them all? |
A27046 | Doth he take such Arguments for unanswerable? |
A27046 | Doth he that dishonoureth the University, deserve honour for being at the University? |
A27046 | Doth it not imply, that you will take an Oath your self, if you judge but one part of it lawful? |
A27046 | Doth it oblige only the first time? |
A27046 | Doth not the extreme bold confidence of the falsest of his own conceptions, shew a very unhumbled overvaluing of his own understanding? |
A27046 | Doth not this savour of Factious malignity? |
A27046 | Doth the Act go to the Essence of the Object? |
A27046 | Doth the Physician forbid them to be his Patients that consent not? |
A27046 | Doth this suppose them ungodly before? |
A27046 | Durst you swear that none of the Lords, or Commons, or Citizens meddled with the War, but those that entred into the Army? |
A27046 | Either they were at Manhood, or in breeches at least, or not: If not, he should have chosen other Counsellers: If yea, were they Laymen or Clergymen? |
A27046 | Enquire who drave away the People of Kederminster? |
A27046 | Farwel the credit of all History, if there be no truer Historians:( But how shall Posterity know who they are?) |
A27046 | For who can hold that which will away? |
A27046 | Had he forgot how much of his Book is to prove even Bishops and Presbyters as widely different? |
A27046 | Had he no pretence for it? |
A27046 | Had it not been better for your to have let your Logick alone, than to bewray that which you might have concealed? |
A27046 | Had the Martyrs been burnt, if men had been of this minde? |
A27046 | Had they not Learning or Wit enough to understand it? |
A27046 | Hath Christ a multitude of Bodies univocally so called? |
A27046 | Hath Christ many Universal Churches containing all Christians headed by Christ? |
A27046 | Have I so oft exprest it, and yet will you say so? |
A27046 | Have there not since more( of the Laity) turned from you, than have turned to you? |
A27046 | Have we so many Books written of Ecclesiastical Policie, and is there no such thing? |
A27046 | Have you read him all, and understand him no better? |
A27046 | Have you read the Kings Answer to the 19 Propositions? |
A27046 | He addes,[ What shall godly Strangers, Travellers,& c. do? |
A27046 | He saith,[ Why then do you blame turning Parish- Churches into Chappels, and making them but parts of a Diocesane, as a Troop of an Army?] |
A27046 | He that refuseth Consent to be a stated Member, is none such: But is he therefore no Christian? |
A27046 | He would 1. make it doubtful, Whether it was a Vow to God? |
A27046 | Hearken whether they talk not more for Bishops, than for any other Sect? |
A27046 | How came he to think that Election is nothing to the case, as if Consent were something more? |
A27046 | How could you wink so hard, as not to see that your false witness confuteth it self? |
A27046 | How did this bold man know my thoughts? |
A27046 | How false is it then, that[ this is distraction and rage?] |
A27046 | How far doth your hearing reach? |
A27046 | How far will that hold? |
A27046 | How few words of Truth, and soberness, and soundness, can you number among all these? |
A27046 | How little truth is in all this, and abundance such? |
A27046 | How long will you be of the Parish- Priests or the Diocesans Flock, or of a Physicians Hospital? |
A27046 | How many of that Party have you known in such places of Trust? |
A27046 | How shall the unlearned know when they are safe? |
A27046 | I hope he doth not think all is excluded that is not to be named? |
A27046 | I hope then a Bishop and a Presbyter are all one, that in your sorry sense agree in uno tertio? |
A27046 | I know it is not But Cassander dealt more Candidly than you do Is there any thing that could be imposed, that would make you a Non- conformist? |
A27046 | I know there are many excellent men: But I think the present Non- conformists as fit for the Sacred Office as these;( Is that presumption?) |
A27046 | I left them out, because the Book could not be Licensed else: And should I not rather leave out a few Names, than cast away the whole Book? |
A27046 | I mean, not as if All were such; but it hath been my hard hap to meet with few persons, even of Gentile Education, who ask me, Why do you not Conform? |
A27046 | I never till now read or heard Papist, Protestant, or any Christian of his mind: And, alas, are divers of it now? |
A27046 | I own that which you transcribe? |
A27046 | I say, can I expect that such should be able or willing to understand us? |
A27046 | I suppose you know, when the Test in the Corporation- Act was imposed, that Party were then turned out of all Corporation- power? |
A27046 | I will not examine your Reasons: The King never made me his Confessor, nor put the question to me; Why then should I make my self a Judge of it? |
A27046 | If Christ and a Bishop in esse relationis politicae differ essentially, must good and bad, Heaven and Hell be all one? |
A27046 | If I give him no more than he is willing of, what do I put him out from? |
A27046 | If I have disputed the Case by Reasons, Why did he not cite them, and tell where? |
A27046 | If a Captain have commission to raise a Troop, is consent of the Listed needless? |
A27046 | If by[ All] or[ None] I understand All or None, and you understand not All but Some, who is the Strainer of the Oath? |
A27046 | If de re, do you mean any more than that he is authorized to gather and rule a Flock? |
A27046 | If it be, dare you oppose it? |
A27046 | If more, what is it? |
A27046 | If not, how shall we know which words are useless? |
A27046 | If not, is not one of them contrary to the Text? |
A27046 | If not, tell us how we shall know what are parts of it, and to what we must consent? |
A27046 | If our Preaching did no good to Souls, why should you think that yours does any? |
A27046 | If so many in Queen Maries days were burnt for denying the Real Presence,& c. Shall I not fear Perjury? |
A27046 | If so, is not[ conteined] an idle word when all men know that all that is prescribed is conteined? |
A27046 | If so, you are men of no true Religion: If not, why expect you it from us? |
A27046 | If the Materia Jurata be Lawfull, do you think that the unlawfulness of the other two, do leave no need of an Absolution? |
A27046 | If there be any such, what''s that to me? |
A27046 | If you can think so, why must all be silenced that think otherwise, and dare not be so bold? |
A27046 | If you mean that indeed they do not, why would you not say so, and deal plainly? |
A27046 | If you preach the same Gospel, why should you think so well of your own works above other mens? |
A27046 | If you require me to write out all his Book, when ever I transcribe a part? |
A27046 | In some places not two of the old staid in: And is it any wonder then, if none of that Party be in such Power? |
A27046 | Is Christ''s Discipline against our highest Priviledges? |
A27046 | Is Mr. Allen''s Book for Covenanting, and Mr. Rawlet''s of Sacramental Covenanting, such unchristening Heresies? |
A27046 | Is a Positive and a Comparative Assertion all one?] |
A27046 | Is a man and womans Consent needless, unless the Ministers marrying them be needless? |
A27046 | Is he a compleat Pastor of a Flock that hath none? |
A27046 | Is he not a Calumniator, unless he prove it? |
A27046 | Is it Schism to say, That it is unlawful like Atheists to cease all Publick Worship of God, till Conscience can finde it lawful to Conform? |
A27046 | Is it all the Christian world? |
A27046 | Is it damnable or sinful to covenant to be a godly Servant, or a godly Husband or Wife, or a godly Minister or Magistrate? |
A27046 | Is it so frightful a thing for me to say, I will be no Pastor to any that consent not, as to put you into talk of dying and burning at a Stake? |
A27046 | Is no modesty or tender fear of sinning against the Ninth Commandment left? |
A27046 | Is not Animal rationale a just definition of a man, without naming his Liver and Spleen, or Heart? |
A27046 | Is not Conformity now another thing? |
A27046 | Is not Consent then necessary to the imposed Pastor, if not consenting Unchristen men? |
A27046 | Is not a whole hand or foot part of a whole man? |
A27046 | Is not one Joshua Placaeus pro deitate Christi, worth all that ever was then wrote? |
A27046 | Is not the Genus& differentia enough for a definition? |
A27046 | Is not the mateial Universe made up of compounded parts? |
A27046 | Is not your Superiour''s judgment imposed on you to Assent to? |
A27046 | Is such Conformity tolerable, and our Preaching intolerable without it? |
A27046 | Is that an unequal expectation? |
A27046 | Is that the art of defining? |
A27046 | Is the rest contradictory to this? |
A27046 | Is there any part of the Universe if this be true? |
A27046 | Is there no such thing as Personal Communion in presence, because there is such a thing as distant Communion of another sort? |
A27046 | Is this fairly done, to pretend that to be the Controversie which I never undertook to meddle with? |
A27046 | Is this it in which the Authority of Archbishops consisteth, that they must be followed in slanders? |
A27046 | Is this lawful? |
A27046 | Is this made by a Minister a heinous sin? |
A27046 | Is this the equality of your way? |
A27046 | Is this the usual sence of[ All things,& c.] If not, where have the Law givers given us another? |
A27046 | It is a fallacy, A dicte secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter: I only askt you, What Farthing doth it take from their Estates? |
A27046 | It is a wonder to me that an Englishman should be in doubt who they be that drive men from the Parish Churches? |
A27046 | It is not one or two such men as are the Guides of Souls in England: But what? |
A27046 | Judge by old experience: Were old Hildersham, Ames, Dod, and hundreds like them, brought to Conformity heretofore? |
A27046 | Judge by present Experience: Why is it not done, if it be morally possible? |
A27046 | Let those sober men pass by; Do such Houses want custome? |
A27046 | May not a Town, Hospital, or Person, chuse a Physician as theirs if he were licensed be- before? |
A27046 | May you not distinguish Army, and Regiment, and Troop, Kingdom and City, Christ and a Bishop? |
A27046 | Most Christians live not according to the Christian Profession: Is the Christian Profession therefore bad, and the cause of all their Villanies? |
A27046 | Must it be all, or the major part, or will any one serve? |
A27046 | Must not Popery be renounced till you are all herein agreed? |
A27046 | Must we all turn Papists upon your immodest naked saying, it is so? |
A27046 | Must we judge all lawful, because our Guides do so? |
A27046 | Must we write Books against such things as these? |
A27046 | Must we write Histories out of mens secret thoughts and hearts, and call men only what they are conscientiously and in sincerity? |
A27046 | Nay what if he can not baptize a Non- consenter, or give him the Lords Supper, is the Refuser a Church- governour? |
A27046 | Next he aggravates this Injury: And who contradicteth him? |
A27046 | Next he asks, How can any man know the right Church then? |
A27046 | Next, he questioneth,[ Who shall degrade them that prove Heretical or Scandalous? |
A27046 | Next, he quibbles onely with a Question[ How long shall it last?] |
A27046 | Nor are we agreed of all forbidden in Gods Laws; Must we therefore forbear no sin? |
A27046 | Nor hath now any? |
A27046 | Nor no different species of the civil honour, what not to Kings, Parents, Masters? |
A27046 | Nor the Bishops to silence Ministers that refuse such Conformity? |
A27046 | Of the Wars I spake before: What other doth he name? |
A27046 | Oportuit fuisse memorem? |
A27046 | Or can I know who are capable till I know who consenteth? |
A27046 | Or did we spring out of their Loins, and must be silenced for such Original sin, derived from them that were no kin to us? |
A27046 | Or had they no Conscience living or dying? |
A27046 | Or what if I vowed without the Command of any power? |
A27046 | Or, whether the King of France be absolute? |
A27046 | Our Question is, Whether Silencing, Fining, Imprisoning the Non- Conformists, be the way of Peace, and of the desired Concord of Protestants? |
A27046 | Say you so; our Question is, Whether different Degrees in the subject may vary the species of Relations? |
A27046 | Seaman,& c. did not consider what they did, neither in their Health, nor before their Death? |
A27046 | Semper idem? |
A27046 | Should I abuse the Reader by a particular Answer to them? |
A27046 | Should we not have known them? |
A27046 | So I perceive you would have me Conform that I may Preach: And what should I Preach against but Sin? |
A27046 | So the Rubrick and the 39 Articless were the judgment of your Superiours: But are not they, and that Preface, parts of the Book? |
A27046 | Still all alike; What? |
A27046 | Suppose, so the Covenant hath some good? |
A27046 | That you seem to me to come near to Blasphemy, to intimate that Christ ordained so vain a Discipline: What? |
A27046 | The Canon forbiddeth the Minister to refuse any as aforesaid; What''s this then to the rest? |
A27046 | The Liturgie bids men come tell the Ministers before- hand that they desire the Communion: Shall I ask them to consent to their duty when it is past? |
A27046 | The Question is but whether it be our Church- men or theirs that are to be believed? |
A27046 | The Question is not, What were the final Motives of the War? |
A27046 | Then what remedy? |
A27046 | These things being premised, I ask you, Are you in good sadness? |
A27046 | They never pretended to it: How many men are so, whose Faith is their own? |
A27046 | Till then, is it the Pastors that refuse such till they voluntary seek it, or the Contemners of these Priviledges, that are to be reproved? |
A27046 | Was it not long after, at the Treaty of Uxbridge that you mean? |
A27046 | Was it well done to write such a Book, while he understood so very little of the very plainest passages which he wrote against? |
A27046 | Was not the Proposals at Nottingham sent by the Earl of Essex, a little before the raising of the Army? |
A27046 | Were not these the Levellers and Democratists Principles, higher than the old Parliament owned? |
A27046 | Were we and our present Controversie,( for the most of us) in being, and at age when the Lord Digby spake that? |
A27046 | What Bishoprick was it that he sought and missed of, and when? |
A27046 | What Book- sellers break faster than those that confine their Trade to rare Pieces of Antiquity, Learning, Reason, and serious Piety? |
A27046 | What Cheater then will not foist in some bad thing into his Vows, that he may be disobliged from all the rest? |
A27046 | What Church must he covenant with that was first baptized? |
A27046 | What Credit then is to be given to such mens History or Reports? |
A27046 | What Hereticks should we be? |
A27046 | What Shops have more trading, or seldomer break, than Toy- shops, that sell Babies, and Puppets, and Hobby- horses, and Pipes? |
A27046 | What a saying and unsaying is this? |
A27046 | What a thing is factions Interest? |
A27046 | What a trick has he found to exempt us all from Government? |
A27046 | What are the Parts of the Book to which we are to declare our Assent and Consent? |
A27046 | What can not you verily believe, which you are but willing should be true? |
A27046 | What credit can be given to Histories of things bapned in the Indies 2000 years ago? |
A27046 | What encouragement have we to embody with that Tribe, who all Consent to this, and not one of multitudes of them do it? |
A27046 | What false Doctrine is charged on us? |
A27046 | What hands are we fallen into? |
A27046 | What if God should send an Angel or Prophet with a particular Message so to do? |
A27046 | What if I shew how far Lying is unlawful? |
A27046 | What if a Thief force me to swear Allegiance to the King, or to swear to do some Duty, doth it not add a Second bond? |
A27046 | What if the King command a Bishop to Excommunicate a Magistrate or Parent for Treason? |
A27046 | What if the Oath of Allegiance be thrice taken? |
A27046 | What in the great Hooker? |
A27046 | What is my Chair? |
A27046 | What is of Use if these be not? |
A27046 | What is the Crime that we have committed? |
A27046 | What is the Schism? |
A27046 | What is the plain sense, but an universal sense of an universal enunciation? |
A27046 | What may not such a Wit prove true and lawful, if the man be willing? |
A27046 | What need you disown or cover it, if it were not so? |
A27046 | What pretty Logick is here, to prove a King and a Constable all one, because they are both Men, both Christians, and both Rulers? |
A27046 | What still untruths? |
A27046 | What then is imposed to be believed? |
A27046 | What will you call this dealing? |
A27046 | What would you have more? |
A27046 | What would you say to such returns? |
A27046 | What''s that to us any more than to you? |
A27046 | What, may not Corpus politicum be a member of a larger body Politick? |
A27046 | What? |
A27046 | When it''s visible in the Book that I avoid Argumentation, doth not that prove that I said true? |
A27046 | When shall we meet with a true Sentence? |
A27046 | When the Question is, As whether the Parliament of England be English- men, or French- men? |
A27046 | When your practices much much differ? |
A27046 | Where and when did I engage any to dwell in the Parish? |
A27046 | Where did you seek to find it? |
A27046 | Where is the proof of all these Accusations? |
A27046 | Where is your proof then? |
A27046 | Whether he justifie not the silencing and ruining of all whom he so accuseth? |
A27046 | Whether the great number of asserted untruths here, shew not some want of necessary tenderness, or care of writing? |
A27046 | Whether the two thousand Ministers were justly Silenced? |
A27046 | Which Party hath killed more for Religion? |
A27046 | Which way do Churches that are parts of the Universal, cast out all Religion? |
A27046 | Who authorized you to say that[ Assenting and Consenting to all things contained and prescribed] meaneth not as it saith? |
A27046 | Who knoweth another mans sincerity but God? |
A27046 | Who would have thought that there had been such men among Christians, and Pastors of a Reformed Church? |
A27046 | Why did he pretend to defend the rest, which are imposed in the same Act? |
A27046 | Why did not the man tell where and when? |
A27046 | Why may not Archbishops then make Patriarks, and they a Pope, ad summum ascendendo? |
A27046 | Why may not Consent, and Ordination, and Institution, and Induction too, be all needful? |
A27046 | Why must I believe them more than Heylin, or more than Doctor Moulin afore- cited believed the English Tradition against Geneva? |
A27046 | Why not a Marriage- covenant to make one a Priest? |
A27046 | Why should playing in the dark, or dealing under- board, be preferred in the greatest things? |
A27046 | Will ever men of such different Capacities, Educations,& c. agree in such and so many things? |
A27046 | Will his Reasonings make me ignorant of such a matter of my own fact? |
A27046 | Will it hold in Italy, or in France, or in Denmark; or formerly in Scotland if you had lived there? |
A27046 | Will it not more tire than profit the Reader, if I should number abundance more of his Untruths? |
A27046 | Will men awake believe that Petitioning is no Endeavouring? |
A27046 | Will not Experience convince you? |
A27046 | Will there not be Children and indulgent Parents while the world lasteth? |
A27046 | Will you defend this because Hooker wrote it? |
A27046 | Will you judge fidem ex homine? |
A27046 | Will you preach this Doctrine to your Flock? |
A27046 | Will you thus reproach all Bishop Gauden''s triumphant Vindication and Dedication to the King? |
A27046 | Would you make an English- man of this age believe, that none of your own Church have an appetite to Bishops Lands? |
A27046 | Would you your selves change your minds in Religion, if you were but Fined and Imprisoned? |
A27046 | Yea more, yet I much doubt, whether all the Bishops of England now would Conform themselves as Ministers do, if they were put to it? |
A27046 | Yea those that determine of Doctrines, which are not only de Fide, but matters of Salvation, certain undoubted Salvation of all baptized Infants? |
A27046 | You think that such Books will make the Book- sellers- shops, like the Toy- shops: And what if they do? |
A27046 | [ Did ever any Bishop aspire to such Tyranny as this, the Pope only excepted? |
A27046 | [ Why tell you of mens Professions, when you see their contrary Practice?] |
A27046 | a better Logician than all the Assembly too? |
A27046 | after such a confident Perswasive to Conformity? |
A27046 | and Fulgentius, how would the Lads reconcile their Doctrinal Disagreements, and then draw one Method out of both Parties? |
A27046 | and that of Europe? |
A27046 | and that of the world? |
A27046 | and whole Fields of the whole Countrey? |
A27046 | and whole Herbs of the whole Garden? |
A27046 | and whole Parishes of the whole Diocess and County, and those of the Kingdom? |
A27046 | and whole Trees of the Forrest? |
A27046 | and yet in the Oath swear that it is not lawful to resist any Commissioned by him? |
A27046 | at a venture, true or false, and to have ended at the Nicene Council, yea or any where short of Augustine: What a Method think you would they draw up? |
A27046 | besides abundance of accidental differences? |
A27046 | but only an useable measure of Truth and Goodness? |
A27046 | even such a Body as we treat of? |
A27046 | is every renewal of the Covenant of Godliness or Christianity a Rebaptizing, or supposeth us Pagans? |
A27046 | is there not both diversity and opposition, inter totum& partem, and between the species of an universal and particular Society? |
A27046 | no way but by making Christ and a Bishop formally the Head? |
A27046 | nor contained in it? |
A27046 | or is it not the same spirit? |
A27046 | or must we lay by our senses in believing such Writers against damning errour? |
A27046 | or no Churches that are Politick Societies? |
A27046 | or that they are? |
A27046 | or were any but Consenters Members of that Church? |
A27046 | or why was there never any such difference between us and the Prelatists pretended? |
A27046 | or will he have none in the definition? |
A27046 | or, Convenientia partialis& totalis, Accidentalis& Essentialis, were all one? |
A27046 | should not such impious Atheists be silenced? |
A27046 | that is, unless his Church- relation be the same with the Bishops? |
A27046 | they that say[ We will rule none but Consenters or Volunteers,] or they that call this wickedness and abomination, and so are for the contrary course? |
A27046 | what a Synod was? |
A27046 | what a strange Chain of Calumnies can you make? |
A27046 | what an Army was? |
A27046 | what uncertain Guides have you? |
A27046 | what''s this to Baptism? |
A27046 | when I was acquainted familiarly with so many of them all? |
A27046 | who would have thought but this was neerer your opinion than theirs? |
A27046 | will he have another? |
A27046 | with wat weapons are we assaulted? |
A27046 | yea, what snares are thus laid to rob men of their time, as well as their Faith and Charity? |
A27046 | — How can any man know which is the right Church? |
A27046 | —( Do you not think now that we are agreed? |
A26886 | & unde il ● e colitur, nisi Charitate? |
A26886 | ( That is, both profess it at present, and engage to continue in it; answering the interrogation Credis? |
A26886 | ) But was the word[ entitled] in your Argument? |
A26886 | 17, 9, 10. is concerning others,[ who can know it?] |
A26886 | 2 Quest ▪ What must we take for a violent presumption, of the unsoundness of his claim? |
A26886 | 2. and 3. were such or not? |
A26886 | 2. he saith,[ Vt agamus de forma Ecclesiae, ubi potius essentialis ejus forma posita est, quàm in fide Christi interna? |
A26886 | 2d Question is, what is the Common effect of Baptism on all that Receive it? |
A26886 | 4, 5 Whether Profession be required for it self, or as a sign of the thing professed? |
A26886 | 4. doth purposely dispute it, Vtrùm peccatores sint Baptizandi? |
A26886 | 5. that such was their judgement, when they express no such thing? |
A26886 | 6.17, 18 For what communion hath Light with darkness, and Christ with Belial, or a Believer with an Infidel? |
A26886 | 6.33& c.[ How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein? |
A26886 | A Professor of what? |
A26886 | Abrenuncio: Spondes? |
A26886 | Again tell me, what a man should do to be of every learned good mans minde, or to escape their censures? |
A26886 | All the doubt is, Whether they also ascribe Regenerating, Renewing Grace to all the rightly baptized? |
A26886 | Also it is one thing to ask, Whether men have right to performance of their own part in Baptism, in part? |
A26886 | An Equivocal faith is a Real faith; why then may it not cast out a Real Devil( that is, be a Causa sine qua non? |
A26886 | An ● raeter electos vocatos etiam Reprobi, Infideles, sive occulti sive manifesti peccatores, verae Christi Ecclesiae membra sint? |
A26886 | And I crave their patient sober enquiry, Whether that be not to make another species of Baptism and of visible Christianity? |
A26886 | And Pag 268. he gives the like answer to the Question, Quid est credere in Jesum Cristum, qui ascendit in coelum?] |
A26886 | And another question, whether they have Right to Both these? |
A26886 | And another, Whether they have right to Gods part? |
A26886 | And are not all the Philosophers that ever defined punishment,( so far as I know) agreed in it? |
A26886 | And are not these more then unus Baxterus? |
A26886 | And before they actually baptized them, they asked them whether they believed in God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost? |
A26886 | And did you not set these words before your Readers eyes? |
A26886 | And do you not fear to make these the Grounds of[ a charge?] |
A26886 | And doth not that man shew his heart unfound, that can believe the next moment, and will not do it at the present? |
A26886 | And he comes to the objection, How all that are baptized can be said to put on Christ, when Baptism is not effectual with all? |
A26886 | And how have Gods servant in all ages of the Church to this day received comfort in such mixt Communion? |
A26886 | And how many thousand souls may perish everlastingly? |
A26886 | And if I be mistaken, why should he be so angry at it? |
A26886 | And if they know not the essentials, may we not help them to a tolerable knowledge of them at the present, before we part with them? |
A26886 | And if we may not Initiate such a one, how shall we bring him to the Lords Table? |
A26886 | And if we may not initiate such a one, how shall we bring him to the Lords Table?] |
A26886 | And if you prove it, I may the next time I see you demand all your Estate and Learning; and what will you do then? |
A26886 | And is it certain, that Dr Molin knows the mind of Dallaeus better then he doth his own, or is sooner then himself to be believed in the report of it? |
A26886 | And is it not a kind of impossibility for any unregenerate man, rationally and soberly to promise to be regenerate the next minute or instant? |
A26886 | And is there any which is not de futuro? |
A26886 | And might I not well say desideratur conclusio? |
A26886 | And must all omit this that have no assurance or subjective Certainty? |
A26886 | And must we not dispute against that also which is indirectly asserted? |
A26886 | And should I be so unmerciful now as to confute this man, if I could do it? |
A26886 | And should that which makes them the greater sinners, give them right of admittance into the Church? |
A26886 | And so I confidently say still: And what''s this to your Cause at all? |
A26886 | And so whether it be a mutual Covenant; and both parties be actually obliged? |
A26886 | And then what certainty have we that any of our Ances ● ors had a true Dogmatical faith? |
A26886 | And therefore we do not, nor must not ask them in Sacramental Administrations, whether they have saving faith by meer name, without description? |
A26886 | And this would put us hard to the enquiry, Which is the Church that hath this Infallibility? |
A26886 | And what Saints were they? |
A26886 | And what a Church? |
A26886 | And what have I said against this? |
A26886 | And what is it that is denyed unanimously by other Congregations? |
A26886 | And what is that but sincerely to obey? |
A26886 | And what is that equally Coram Deo& Exclesiâ? |
A26886 | And what is there now on the other side to move us to think it probable that Iudas did Receive the Sacrament? |
A26886 | And what is this more then the wooden leg, or silver teeth, which our Divines compare them to? |
A26886 | And what saith Peter less, when he saith,[ Baptism saveth us] and thus expoundeth himself when he hath done? |
A26886 | And what say the Fathers more? |
A26886 | And what should one say to such a man as this? |
A26886 | And what would Mr. Blake do with him if he say neither Yea, nor Nay? |
A26886 | And what''s the reason? |
A26886 | And what''s this to Mr. Blake''s new visible members that profess only some other kind of faith? |
A26886 | And what''s this to the advantage of Mr. Blake''s Cause? |
A26886 | And when shall we see the Donation that conveyed this Title to him? |
A26886 | And why so? |
A26886 | And would you have separated from all the Churches in the world? |
A26886 | And yet he questioned with men in humane Language; he asketh some whether they believed, and Peter, whether he loved him? |
A26886 | And yet what thoughts will you entertain of the Scripture? |
A26886 | And yet will you in the next words perswade him that I talk of a faith short of justifying? |
A26886 | Another, whether it be so necessary, that they ought not to come nor we to admit them without it? |
A26886 | Are you resolved never to baptize more on the grounds that the Church of Christ hath alwayes baptized on? |
A26886 | At least, few of them know that they do it sincerely( as themselves will here confess;) what then must these do in such a case? |
A26886 | Because he named me not? |
A26886 | But do you indeed think that all Equivocal terms are Culpable? |
A26886 | But do you not contradict this, when you add[ yet if such Resolutions do not appear& c.] What if they appear not? |
A26886 | But how prove you that the external Ordinance is a Nullity where there was no Title? |
A26886 | But how should he be moved to consent by receiving it, and so signa ● ly Professing to consent when he doth not? |
A26886 | But if they faithfully do their own part, how should the sins of others ● e their burden, unless by way of common compassion? |
A26886 | But is it a likely thing that the Fathers and Catholick Church should be so blind as to take all for truly justified and regenerate that are baptized? |
A26886 | But is this to say, They are vindictive, satisfactory to Justice, or more than chastisements? |
A26886 | But it is much more disputable according to his principles, whether all that he should so Baptize, must not be rebaptized? |
A26886 | But our Question is, Whether they they did not profess a saving faith? |
A26886 | But our Question is, what the Circumciser must look for? |
A26886 | But stay Brethren; do you build the Churches Peace on such terms as these? |
A26886 | But tell me where any man was ever said in scripture to be united to Christ without saving faith, or the Profession of it? |
A26886 | But that can not import a sincere Covenanting in saving Faith; For then how great a part of the people must be cut off? |
A26886 | But the Question is, What they professed? |
A26886 | But these will not serve his turn, but he must moreover have a third sort, even such as only Profess another faith short of Justifying? |
A26886 | But to what, if not to have Christ as he is offered, who can tell? |
A26886 | But what Saints? |
A26886 | But what if he resolve not to continue it? |
A26886 | But what if the Word had not truly converted them? |
A26886 | But what if they deride and persecute Godliness it self, or a man because he is Godly? |
A26886 | But what if they had or did say so? |
A26886 | But what if they live many years in Sweating, or the like sin, is not that a certain sign of Ungodliness? |
A26886 | But what is all this to a Saint- ship consisting in the Profession of a faith short of that which is Justifying? |
A26886 | But what is that we may take for a sufficient reason of a mans claim? |
A26886 | But what need we make any further enquiry, or dispute against a man that professedly yields the cause? |
A26886 | But what shall I give you to make Mr. Blake of your opinion? |
A26886 | But what shall we do for a Judge or Rule for the determining of our Controversie? |
A26886 | But what then? |
A26886 | But what''s that to the conveying of Right? |
A26886 | But when I interpret this promise to be[ that he will so believe de futuro] he asketh me[ how comes de futuro in?] |
A26886 | But where the contradictions? |
A26886 | But where? |
A26886 | But who are they? |
A26886 | But with what comfort can the Godly have communion with the societies that are so mixt with multitudes of the ungodly? |
A26886 | But you will perhaps say, what faith is that? |
A26886 | But( I know some dissenting Brethren will say) what a Labyrinth do you bring the Church into on your grounds? |
A26886 | Can Mr. Blake shew a Covenant of God ex parte sui distinct from this Promise? |
A26886 | Can any man forbid water that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we? |
A26886 | Can any man have a fundamentall Righ ●, that denyeth any Fundamental Truth? |
A26886 | Can you so lament the estate of the less miserable, and not of the more miserable? |
A26886 | Dare you hold communion with no Church that hath some members that in your own Judgement are unfit to be there? |
A26886 | Did I there once mention such a faith? |
A26886 | Did ever I say that[ such] a faith gives evidence? |
A26886 | Did he expect an answer from men, for the bare words sake? |
A26886 | Did he oblige them to a true answer, or to a false? |
A26886 | Did you think men would take no heed what they read? |
A26886 | Do any Divines deny to question it? |
A26886 | Do not those persons profess a Justifying faith? |
A26886 | Do our Brethrens Grounds afford us any better footing? |
A26886 | Do you call for proof? |
A26886 | Do you put the wrong end forward, and indeed mean[ a profession of faith[ or] a faith conjunct with a profession]? |
A26886 | Doth Gods Covenant give it them, and yet is there no Promise of it to such as they? |
A26886 | Doth all Passive or Objective power, Natural, Violent or Neutral, come into act? |
A26886 | Doth he make a justifying and a Dogmatical faith all one? |
A26886 | Doth he promise that he doth at the present so believe? |
A26886 | Doth not God call them his servants himself? |
A26886 | Doth not Paul in all his Epistles speak of the Saints, as converted savingly by the word of the Gospel? |
A26886 | Doth not Scripture expresly affirm it? |
A26886 | Doth not this man think himself very wise in his zeal? |
A26886 | For if Gods Law had been fulfilled, the parents had been put to death,( we speak of both parents) and then how could they have had a child? |
A26886 | For what is that but to choose Christ for salvation? |
A26886 | For what is that but to follow the rules of Christ and Scripture? |
A26886 | For what man is so prone to scruple or question his own Right or his childrens, as another may be? |
A26886 | For what profit can it be to any man to be convinced at so dear a rate, how much Mr. Blake hath miscaried in his arguing? |
A26886 | For where can we expect to find it, if not here? |
A26886 | For where would you find a Church( among us) where there be not many that have not a Dogmatical faith, which you say must give them Title to Baptism? |
A26886 | For will he profess it to be true, when he takes it not to be true? |
A26886 | Fourthly, Do you give us any reason to believe that a notorious ungodly person in your Church is in any better a state than an Infidel? |
A26886 | God saith, Friend, how camest thou in hither not having on a Wedding garment? |
A26886 | Hath such an assertion bin usually heard among the worshippers of the Creator& the admirers of his works? |
A26886 | Have you to do with any man that denyeth it? |
A26886 | He will think this is great confidence; but what Remedy? |
A26886 | How are those born within the Church, whose Parents are no Members of the Church? |
A26886 | How comes I pray you that future in? |
A26886 | How contrary is this new Doctrine to the Word, and all the ancient Churches, and all approved Protestants Judgements? |
A26886 | How few will take well a Reproof, but rather defend their sin? |
A26886 | How knows he it, but on the word of his Master that tells him so? |
A26886 | How oft hath this opinion been confuted in the Separatists? |
A26886 | How prove you that therefore they should be admitted to receive? |
A26886 | How will you difference between Truth and a lye? |
A26886 | I ask''t whether Preachers be not bound to endeavour the saving conversion of whole Nations? |
A26886 | I conclude my sentence in his following words;[ Quid ergò agendum est? |
A26886 | I hope you will not: And how should it speak otherwise to mans understanding? |
A26886 | I know my censures of his labors are like to be provoking: But who can help that? |
A26886 | I know this is like to displease: But what remedy? |
A26886 | I shall enqure further, Whether this be so or not? |
A26886 | If I be asked, what I mean by a serious Profession? |
A26886 | If any say so to me, I will hold my hand from baptizing one minute, and ask him whether now he be willing? |
A26886 | If any, what is it? |
A26886 | If every man that did ought presumptuously might be cut off from the Church, why not from the Living? |
A26886 | If he ask, Why then did I there mention his name? |
A26886 | If he be not worthy that he keepeth not this sign, what is written? |
A26886 | If he yield that charity is to hope the best, Why not then to be put to it? |
A26886 | If only words, than what if a man worship actively the Sun or Moon, while verbally he makes the Christian profession? |
A26886 | If the Pastor be thus Judge, how can you say as before, That the Notoriously Ungodly are ipso Jure Excommunicated? |
A26886 | If they lose by it no more then I, what cause have I to care? |
A26886 | If you ask them,[ Are you heartily willing to have Christ to save you both from the guilt and reign of sin, and to glorifie you?] |
A26886 | If you do, then what profession is it, and of what faith? |
A26886 | If you were to baptize an Aged man, that comes new into Christianity would not you be the judges whether his profession seemed serious or not? |
A26886 | In the highest matters about the Attributes and Works of God, how common are Equivocal terms? |
A26886 | Is here one word of answer to any real part of the Argument? |
A26886 | Is his word to be taken? |
A26886 | Is it credible that all Israel must be forced to profess themselves true believers, when many were not? |
A26886 | Is it not a wonder how the Major could be denied? |
A26886 | Is it not bad enough if he will not resolve to leave it? |
A26886 | Is it not our duty to refuse the children of more than the Notoriously Vngodly? |
A26886 | Is it not put to it, when it must hope the best? |
A26886 | Is it unlawfull to say[ Lord I believe] as long as we have any Vnbelief to be removed? |
A26886 | Is not Mr. Blake able to distinguish, between an Hypocrite and a Professor of another sort of faith? |
A26886 | Is not Repentance ever concomitant with Faith? |
A26886 | Is not such dealing a sufficient prohibition to dispute? |
A26886 | Is the Church the outward fulness of Christ, considered as Head? |
A26886 | Is there a Divine on earth that will deny that there are Equivocal terms in Scripture? |
A26886 | Is there no Reality in a picture or a corps? |
A26886 | Is there the vilest Murtherer, or Adulterer, that is not purposed to leave it before he dies? |
A26886 | Is this the same with yours, or as large? |
A26886 | It is a great doubt whether there be any power, properly Decisive- judicial in the Church- Guides or not? |
A26886 | It is one thing to ask, whether the profession of justifying Faith be a duty to all that come to be Baptized? |
A26886 | It therefore excludeth expresly all other wayes of interest in the Covenant by Birth- Priviledge: Else how could that Negative be true? |
A26886 | Its one thing to ask, Who may demand it and come there? |
A26886 | Judge then whether the profession of this, be not the profession of saving faith? |
A26886 | Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death? |
A26886 | Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey? |
A26886 | Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death? |
A26886 | Let them answer this for themselves, and they shall answer for us? |
A26886 | May we not be certain that he is graceless or ungodly, that is a frequent Swearer? |
A26886 | May we not take a man for Notoriously Ungodly, that hath been oft drunk, or oft committed fornication? |
A26886 | Moreover, how much doth all History depend upon the word of of man? |
A26886 | Mr. Corbet( cited by you) might well say, that primarily the Sacrament is Gods Seal; but did he say that it is only his, and not secondarily ours? |
A26886 | Must Logick do the deed at last? |
A26886 | Must men endeavour to convert a whole Nation, or not? |
A26886 | Must we write confutations of such men as these? |
A26886 | Nam de illis quoque ignoramus sictè neone accedant, an verè credant; an sint filii Praedestinationis, an Perditionis? |
A26886 | Nay how many that did not provoke and harden them? |
A26886 | Nay, is it not manifested that Dr Twiss himself hath frequently written for it? |
A26886 | Nay, that they are not in a state much worse? |
A26886 | Neque audiendi sunt qui hac de re movent scrupulum, ac dicunt, Quid si Minister fallatur? |
A26886 | Non concludit quod est in Questione, quia Questio est, An sunt ex Ecclesia, seu membra Ecclesiae; non An in Ecclesia Visibili? |
A26886 | Nor is God actually obliged to give them the blessings of the Covenant? |
A26886 | Nor yet is it any of our Question, whether the Action of Receiving be commanded to any that are unregenerate, and so be his Duty? |
A26886 | Note that the stress of the Controversie is not[ Whether it belong to them at all?] |
A26886 | Now I would know of Mr. Blake, Whether all the Children of these Parents must be Baptized again, or not? |
A26886 | Now what will you do with all these? |
A26886 | Now which of these is it that Master Blake here meaneth? |
A26886 | Or do you think that the covetous dissemblers had coram donatore a just claim, supposing him to be able to discern their deceit? |
A26886 | Or is here such a Grievous inconvenience as you imagined? |
A26886 | Or is it Infallible symptoms of the contrary which you mean, or which are sufficient to nullifie or invalidate that Profession? |
A26886 | Or is not this a contradiction? |
A26886 | Or to teach me how I may please you both, with the rest of the offended? |
A26886 | Or what was it, I wonder, that occasioned the jealousie of it? |
A26886 | Or will it follow that Receiving converteth, because the fears of unworthy Receiving do convert or conduce thereto? |
A26886 | Or[ Whether it be their duty?] |
A26886 | Or[ Whether such Children be the Objects of our Just, and Justifiable Action of Baptizing?] |
A26886 | Our question is, what is a Disciple? |
A26886 | Perhaps you will Object, If this be not Notorious ungodliness, what is? |
A26886 | Q Ejusmodi verò parentibus natum infantem admitteres? |
A26886 | Q. Quibus ergo Conditionibus? |
A26886 | Quae est validitas Baptismi nisi haec, quòd baptismus tum praedicatus tum collatus confirmat omni Credenti Remissionem peccatorum? |
A26886 | Quare? |
A26886 | Quest Doth the inward Grace alway accompany the outward sign? |
A26886 | Quid enim non habentibus Fadem& justitiam obsignarent? |
A26886 | Quid enim non hathentibus fidem& justitiam obsignarem?] |
A26886 | Quid est Credo in Jesum silium Dei unigenitum? |
A26886 | Quid est credere in Christum crucifixum? |
A26886 | Quid igitur illi baptismus in nomine Christi susceptus testatur minù, quàm omni Discipulo Christi? |
A26886 | Quid sirevera Puer neque est filius Promissionis, divinae Electionis atque Misericordiae? |
A26886 | Quid tu illos baptizat? |
A26886 | Quinamsunt baptizandi? |
A26886 | Quorsum ergò Baptismus eis traditur, si ante rem Baptismi habuerint? |
A26886 | Shew where is a word of Promise that the Sacraments shall convert any one? |
A26886 | Should not secret sin deterr aswell as open? |
A26886 | Tell us how you will distinguish; will you not reject all that is apparently lying? |
A26886 | The Apostle Peter writes to the scattered Jews that professed Christianity: And what kind of Christians or Believers did he take them for? |
A26886 | The Church of the Colossians are called Saints: But what Saints? |
A26886 | The Corinthians are called Saints; True: But what is meant by Saints? |
A26886 | The Lord of that Feast saith not,[ Friend, why wast thou invited h ● ther?] |
A26886 | The Question is[ Whether it be Gods command, that Ministers should baptize Children of notoriously ungodly men?] |
A26886 | The Title indeed was Null ab initio, but prove that the Ordinance was so too? |
A26886 | The second Question is, Whether the Minister may or must deliver the Sacrament to the unconverted, with this Intention that he may be converted by it? |
A26886 | The third Question is, Whether the unconverted may Demand and receive that Sacrament as a means of Conversion? |
A26886 | Then a Promise to be a Christian, so long hence may give right to Baptism: And who can tell how long it must be? |
A26886 | Then we must re- baptize those whose ▪ Parents had not saving faith, because their Baptism is a Nullity: And what work will that make among us? |
A26886 | Then you may well ask[ With what comfort can such Professors live in the sinful neglect of their own duty?] |
A26886 | They may tell me so: but how will you prove that they tell me true? |
A26886 | To proceed, the Church of Philippi are called Saints; True, but what Saints? |
A26886 | To what purpose is the multitude of your Sacrifices? |
A26886 | To which I answer; Are you able to search and know the heart? |
A26886 | True: But what was meant by that word, and what Saints did they appear to Paul by their Profession to be? |
A26886 | Two of these by a false oath, might put a man to death; and yet how seldom are such things done? |
A26886 | Upon which Mr. Blake assumeth[ What have I spoke more than here is said? |
A26886 | Was it not possible for a Jew upon mistake to Circumcise a man that had no Right to it, and yet upon some kind of misunderstood profession? |
A26886 | Was not Paul sent by preaching to open mens eies and turn them from the power of Satan to God? |
A26886 | We are next to consider, what are the Competitors which we now exclude? |
A26886 | We suppose the child born after the Parents are excommunicate: And had that child a Right be ● ore he had a Be ● ng? |
A26886 | What Church in all the world was ever of your Judgement? |
A26886 | What Divines are there that deny the Sacraments to be mutual signs and seals, signifying and sealing our part as well as Gods? |
A26886 | What did the Apostles require? |
A26886 | What else is there to hinder any Heathen from the like Right? |
A26886 | What heaps of clear Testimonies might we bring out of his Epistles? |
A26886 | What if I distinguish the visible Kingdom from the Elect? |
A26886 | What if by the Law of the Land a Traitors Estate be forfeit? |
A26886 | What if twenty men will swear that I have written there is no God? |
A26886 | What if you can not know the Parents justifying faith? |
A26886 | What is necessary to make a man a true Member of the Catholick Church? |
A26886 | What is required of persons to be baptized? |
A26886 | What is the more sure Rule for our proceeding, which is here mentioned? |
A26886 | What is this to our business? |
A26886 | What is to be done in this strait? |
A26886 | What matter is it then which is oftner mentioned, wh ● le both are mentioned, and both true? |
A26886 | What more should a man expect to warrant him to do so? |
A26886 | What proof of all this? |
A26886 | What should the sence of this mysterie be? |
A26886 | What take you for a sufficient disproof of a verbal profession? |
A26886 | What them? |
A26886 | What those Modes or concomitant Acts must be? |
A26886 | What you do mean by[ a faith of Profession]? |
A26886 | What''s that to the Major, or Argument? |
A26886 | When I wrote 〈 ◊ 〉 the Index the contents of one section, thus[ whether it be virtually written in Scripture that Mr. Blake is justified? |
A26886 | Where do you find in Scripture that such a faith is the Title to Sacraments? |
A26886 | Whether Baxter and Woodbridge are not the same man? |
A26886 | Whether God, who appointed this Sacrament, did intend that it should eventually be used to the Conversion of any souls? |
A26886 | Whether Hypocrites and other Unregerate persons be called Christians, Believers, Saints, Church- members,& c. Univocally, Analogically or Equivocally? |
A26886 | Whether any besides Regenerate Believers have a Right to the Sacraments given them by God, and may thereupon require them and receive them? |
A26886 | Whether it be a Ministers duty to baptize them? |
A26886 | Whether it be worth the while to write or preach to perswade men to offer such a service to God as doth but condemn themselves? |
A26886 | Whether saving Sanctity or a common Sanctity and Faith short of it? |
A26886 | Whether such subjects have Right by any Gift or Grant of God to themselves? |
A26886 | Whether the Infants of Notoriously Ungodly Baptized Parents have Right to be Baptized? |
A26886 | Whether the Infants of Notoriously ungodly Baptized Parents have Right to be Baptized? |
A26886 | Whether the Infants of Notoriusly- ungodly baptized Parents have Right to be Baptized? |
A26886 | Whether they have right for their Parents sake? |
A26886 | Whether this Learned man know the judgement of all England? |
A26886 | Who art thou that Judgest another mans servant? |
A26886 | Who dare say that any of these were a Profession of Christianity? |
A26886 | Who will doubt whether it can be so, when he sees it is so? |
A26886 | Why did not Mr. Blake shew but one Text( for this one in hand) where any are said to be Justified upon a faith short of Justifying? |
A26886 | Why do you expect that your Readers should believe your so frequent and evident mis- reports? |
A26886 | Why then is it not done? |
A26886 | Why then may not the same be said of an Infidel, that he may have a right for his child, though none for himself? |
A26886 | Will Mr. Blake himself Baptize them, that will not thus profess? |
A26886 | Will it follow that you may not know a Profession of it? |
A26886 | Will my unpeaceableness excuse yours? |
A26886 | Will you deny that the Scripture most commonly speaks of God himself himself in equivocal terms? |
A26886 | Will you have Union and Communion with none but your own Party, that are in all things of your own Opinions? |
A26886 | Will you take any verbal profession as a title, or not? |
A26886 | Would Mr. Blake have the Children of all these rebaptized, or not? |
A26886 | Yet remember that we say not that men ought to forbear coming that are unconverted; but that they ought to come; but how? |
A26886 | You next add[ How will this make Christianity look with any better face? |
A26886 | [ And who that dependeth on the mouth of Christ would baptize this man? |
A26886 | [ Ergò servantur omnes ex pio parente oriundi? |
A26886 | [ Q. Quid significat In Nomen? |
A26886 | [ Quid est b. pazari in nomine, Patris& Filii& Spiritus sancti? |
A26886 | [ Quid recipiunt Impii in Sacramentis? |
A26886 | [ Sed quum is qui Papista est, non sit verè Christianus, non ejusmodi hominem adulium, nec dum baptizatum, ad Baptismum admitteres? |
A26886 | [ is not here direction enough to help us to judge of the mind of God, whether infants are his Disciples and Servants or no? |
A26886 | an Christi gratiam habeant, an illà sint destituti,& mendaciter dicant se credere? |
A26886 | and a third, whether Baptism without it be a Nullity? |
A26886 | and also whether they have not the same uncertainty of the sincerity of that lower Faith in the Professors, as of true saving Faith? |
A26886 | and another to ask, To whom may we give it? |
A26886 | and are you not put in all this upon the same uncertainties, and to the use of probabilities as we? |
A26886 | and consequently, Whether Mr. Blakes doctrine have delivered them from difficulties, or ensnared them? |
A26886 | and did I ever speak with more and higher Confidence? |
A26886 | and doth he not averr that he never denied it? |
A26886 | and how far? |
A26886 | and how ill do you to wrong the Church of God by seeking to make men believe that these things are new and strange? |
A26886 | and how is he to be dealt with? |
A26886 | and in what words? |
A26886 | and is no more acceptable to God than the Pharises washing cups, or than the cutting of their flesh, or the rent in the garment? |
A26886 | and proceed on meer probabilities, as well as we? |
A26886 | and so prove that to you to be the title to Baptism and the Lord''s Supper? |
A26886 | and take a violent presumption as ground for some determinations? |
A26886 | and that if they do it not sincerely, that is not yet justifying faith which they profess? |
A26886 | and the only thing in doubt is, Whether the person be penitent or impenitent? |
A26886 | and they will say yea withal their hearts? |
A26886 | and what Saints? |
A26886 | and what is that but( supposing assent) the true description of saving faith? |
A26886 | and what other way is there of knowing the signification of any Language whatsoever? |
A26886 | and what was necessary to warrant them to circumcise them? |
A26886 | and what''s your answer to that, unless you distinguish of two sorts, and mean that another sort there are that inherite Ordinances? |
A26886 | and when? |
A26886 | and where? |
A26886 | and whether Mr. Blake know where to fix himself, and how to describe his Dogmatical faith? |
A26886 | and whether he do not yield the cause that I am maintaining? |
A26886 | and whether they are willing to have God for their only God, and Christ for their only Saviour, and the Holy Ghost their Sanctifier? |
A26886 | as if every promise were not de futuro; Is it de praesenti? |
A26886 | but whether they believe in God the Father, Son and the Holy Ghost; and renounce the World, Flesh, and Devil? |
A26886 | but whether( as he affirmeth) to all alike? |
A26886 | but you say so? |
A26886 | can you discern sincerity by an infall ● ble judgment? |
A26886 | for it was done by his own appointment: but[ Friend how camest thou in hither?] |
A26886 | hath God bid or permitted this man to speak all this for nought? |
A26886 | how much will Worcester- shire Congregations where this is received exceed other Congregations where unanimously it is denyed?] |
A26886 | if I saw them Baptized with mine eyes? |
A26886 | is not here a plain concession, that a profession of justifying faith is requisite to Baptism? |
A26886 | like Dr. John White''s Catechumene, that being asked what Jesus Christ was? |
A26886 | must I write against them all? |
A26886 | or a ground for such a violent presumption that a man doth lye and dissemble, and is no Christian? |
A26886 | or all this Nation, if they had been Heathens this hundred years, because their Ancestors were justly presumed to be Christians? |
A26886 | or as a sign of their mind? |
A26886 | or how will this warrant his new kind of Baptism, which must be administred upon the Profession of another sort of Faith? |
A26886 | or in whole? |
A26886 | or is the Administration of the Lords Supper to such a Nullity, or only unprofitable? |
A26886 | or not intelligible? |
A26886 | or that ever man was admitted to them upon such a profession? |
A26886 | or that receiving is a means ordained and enjoyned for conversion, because seeing and hearing is? |
A26886 | or themselves, if it were their case? |
A26886 | or what one feather is plucked from his plume? |
A26886 | or whether the necessary order of his duty be not first to believe and repent, and then to claim these ordinances? |
A26886 | or whether they were admitted on the profession of another kind of faith? |
A26886 | per gratiam supernaturalem,& viam illius gratiae;& quo tandem? |
A26886 | tas, nisi Dei cultus? |
A26886 | that is, I Invited thee not to come without the wedding garment to disgrace my house, but to bring it with thee? |
A26886 | that is, by lying? |
A26886 | that is,[ who can know anothers heart?] |
A26886 | true or false? |
A26886 | what bone is broken? |
A26886 | what cross evidence will you take for currant? |
A26886 | what is meant by that Baptism, the Right whereto we are now enquiring after? |
A26886 | while we must judge of mens sincerity, we are left at uncertainty; and who knows among al these difficulties whom to judge godly, and whom ungodly? |
A26886 | why saith he[ Who would not believe that I had directly asserted it, or made some unsavooy vaunts about it?] |
A26886 | will it follow that eventually faith never followeth baptism, nor baptism never goeth before faith? |
A26886 | will it not disable and discredit his profession with you? |
A26886 | would ever the Church of Christ Baptize any but such? |
A26886 | yea or unnecessary? |
A26886 | you have Christ himself, and do you grudg them the name of Christians, or the bare symbole or signs of his body and blood? |
A26886 | — Justam Ecclesiae formam adscripsimus — Vecatur à Deo quisquis ad Ecclesiam pertinet è natura& modulo naturali suo: quá autem? |
A26886 | —[ Instituitur quidem disputatio acuta de eo, quinam sint populus Dei& participes Remissionis peccatorum per Christum? |
A26906 | ( not denying any essential part of Christianity) are Christs Universal Visible Church? |
A26906 | ( unless it be in formality to seem humble persons) yea, how impatient are they with any other that find fault with them? |
A26906 | 14. Who made me a judge or a divider over you? |
A26906 | 4. Who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A26906 | A grievous charge upon Divines and Christians: Are they the only Bedlams or drunken men in the world? |
A26906 | Age maketh not the difference: We are fain to teach many aged persons forms of Catechism as well as children; Why not therefore forms of prayer? |
A26906 | Am I therefore become your enemy because I tell you the truth? |
A26906 | And I pray you judge whether there be any more Christian Love in this kind of dealing, than there is in that which you call persecution? |
A26906 | And afterward also whom to catechise and instruct and admit to the communion of the Church? |
A26906 | And all the errours that are found in so many Councils and Confessions of Churches; and in so many Volumes of Controversie as are extant? |
A26906 | And are not your Tongues employed too often in revenge? |
A26906 | And are these such great matters that we should envy them to poor sinners that must have no more? |
A26906 | And are you able and willing to leave all your callings, to do all this? |
A26906 | And can you think that Christ disowneth them all, save you? |
A26906 | And do not you do so by those whom you causlesly separate from? |
A26906 | And do they mean All such sinful worship or some only? |
A26906 | And do we not yet know where Repentance must begin? |
A26906 | And do you not fear such a reckoning? |
A26906 | And doth it not then concern them as much as us, to know which they be? |
A26906 | And have I not Gods own Ministers and means to help me to the knowledge of his word? |
A26906 | And how know you that you are one of them? |
A26906 | And how perversly do they aggravate the faults of all that are against their way? |
A26906 | And how prove you that the faults of the Liturgy are not as far from the Matter of the worship, as your own are? |
A26906 | And how shall we know them? |
A26906 | And how small and common a good seemeth excellent in them? |
A26906 | And if multiplicity and diversity have so much cause in nature, how much more must needs be added by the common corruption and pravity of nature? |
A26906 | And if these busie people had their wish, would they not be in a worse case than the most dumb and lazy Minister? |
A26906 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do you more than others? |
A26906 | And if you extend the case to all other parts of the Ministery, where the reason is the same, they will say[ what reverence is due to such? |
A26906 | And indeed where are there any sects or factions, but there are Ministers that head them, and that caused them at first, and keep them up? |
A26906 | And is it not a greater fault in Parents that pretend to greater wisdome, to be impatient with them for it? |
A26906 | And is it not a shame that you will sin so easily? |
A26906 | And is it not as bad if( but accidentally) it tend to the ruine of the Church, and the hurt of souls? |
A26906 | And is it not so in the duties of Love and Peace? |
A26906 | And is it not time to bring water when we see the flames? |
A26906 | And is it so bad in them, and good in us? |
A26906 | And is it to One Christian, or to every praying Christian that he hath promised it? |
A26906 | And is it unlawful to joyn with such? |
A26906 | And is not our labour as needful here as any where? |
A26906 | And is not the learning of the words first, profitable to their learning of the sense? |
A26906 | And it is an aggravated Crime in them, that so much cry down Church- tyranny in others, to be thus notoriously guilty of it themselves? |
A26906 | And most lament that, which we are most guilty of? |
A26906 | And most talk against that which most concerneth us? |
A26906 | And must we not separate from them then as Idolaters? |
A26906 | And shall any be saved against his will? |
A26906 | And suppose you could secure all your conquests, are the Churches healed ever the more? |
A26906 | And that to separate from the Universal Visible Church, is visibly to separate from Christ? |
A26906 | And then Godly people first scruple them, and then flye from them as discerned superstition? |
A26906 | And then should not all force be meerly such as is subservient to the ends of Love? |
A26906 | And then the worst men b ● glad of that advantage to persecute those that would not submit to them? |
A26906 | And therefore should be countenanced& encouraged? |
A26906 | And to hate an enemy than a friend? |
A26906 | And was it not a pitiful life that they lived that while? |
A26906 | And what abundance of Sect- masters did arise from among the Ministers of the Gospel in the Apostles own times? |
A26906 | And what errour is it that hath not a party? |
A26906 | And what greater cruelty can you shew to souls, than thus to harden them in their sin and misery? |
A26906 | And what greater injury can men do to Christ and to Religion than this? |
A26906 | And what harm is it then if the people hear them? |
A26906 | And what if the next age after that should make Laws to enforce them? |
A26906 | And what is the cause? |
A26906 | And what measure of Gifts is necessary to the being of the Ministry? |
A26906 | And what pitiful arguments have they to prove this charge of Idolatry? |
A26906 | And what wise man had not rather partake of the friendly converse, than joyn with drunken men that are fighting in the streets? |
A26906 | And when all the world feeleth the consequents of this difference, can we doubt of it, or so far dote, as to think it possible to cure it? |
A26906 | And when we are our selves no better, should we not rather complain of the sore that is so near us? |
A26906 | And where is the promise which maketh this difference? |
A26906 | And wherefore slew he him? |
A26906 | And whether the Church be not the same thing now as then, and and its universal constitution and necessary administration the same? |
A26906 | And whether the Holy Ghost i ● not the Author of the Church- establishment in the Scriptures? |
A26906 | And whether the primitive Church or ours be the purer and more exemplary? |
A26906 | And whether we can expect more infallible deciders of such cases, than Christ, and his Spirit and Apostles? |
A26906 | And who hindereth the preaching of the pure doctrine of the Gospel in all the Romanists dominions? |
A26906 | And who shall cure them, if their Physicians themselves be they that do infect them? |
A26906 | And why are they commanded to teach all Nations, and to teach the Church all that Christ commanded them? |
A26906 | And why did he kill his brother? |
A26906 | And why do no Sea- men trust any other, to govern the ship, as well as an experienced Pilot? |
A26906 | And why is it that children must so much honour their fathers and mothers, and must be governed by them? |
A26906 | And why may not Separatists, Anabaptists and others easily take such kind of comfort? |
A26906 | And why may you not as well stay seven years more, for a seasonable time, to Preach down all other sins as well as this? |
A26906 | And why not then other words which are agreeable to their State? |
A26906 | And why should I turn lyar against my self, and say that my presence is a profession of that consent which I never made the least profession of? |
A26906 | And why should one have more maintainance than another? |
A26906 | And why would not this serve for all the world? |
A26906 | And will work succeed well that is not done? |
A26906 | And will you now come in, and justifie these men from their hypocrisie, by saying that they are no Professors? |
A26906 | And yet how contrary is the practise of no small number of the Religious? |
A26906 | Are not men most afraid of overthrowing the children and the weak, rather than those that are stronger than themselves? |
A26906 | Are not the most conscientious, necessary helpers of the Ministery, by their example, to cure the unconscionableness of the rest? |
A26906 | Are not the old Apostolical rules and terms sufficient to the safety and peace of Christians? |
A26906 | Are not the sons of Levi yet refined? |
A26906 | Are not these the plain commands of God? |
A26906 | Are not you guilty of Ministerial weaknesses in preaching and praying, and of many omissions in your private oversight? |
A26906 | Are there not parties against parties, and cause against cause, and heart- risings, and passions, and censurings of Dissenters, to say no worse? |
A26906 | Are they not the fruits of Gods mercies and your own endeavours: Will you grudge at your own successes? |
A26906 | Are you still so ignorant as not to know, how uncertain still you are to keep it, and that one spurn can take it from you? |
A26906 | As if every infirmity were a crime, and had no excuse? |
A26906 | Be not righteous overmuch, neither make thy self over- wise: why shouldst thou destroy thy self? |
A26906 | But Christ cared not for offending such perverse ones as Herod or the Pharisees? |
A26906 | But If I joyn with them that worship God amiss, do I not approve of their sin or signifie my consent to it? |
A26906 | But hath not God bid us believe that we shall receive what ever we ask, and promised to believers that they shall receive it? |
A26906 | But how doth all this make it mine? |
A26906 | But how seldome do you hear them tell any how bad they are themselves? |
A26906 | But if you ask why we separated from the Papal Church? |
A26906 | But is there no secret wish in your heart, that some evil may befal another? |
A26906 | But saving the due respect to the honesty of such persons, ask them, How shall I know that you are in the right? |
A26906 | But shall I therefore forbear, and betray their souls, and betray the Land through cowardly silence? |
A26906 | But suppose it prove true, should we not do good to Souls, and save men from sin, and heal divisions, at the dearest rate? |
A26906 | But then why did Luther and the first Pretestants, separate from the Church of Rome; and how will you justifie them from Schisme? |
A26906 | But then you leave us at utter uncertainty, whether we have the answer of our prayers or not? |
A26906 | But to what purpose is all this? |
A26906 | But what Text of Scripture is it that ever told these men that all false worship is Idolatry? |
A26906 | But what if c ● rn ● l neglig ● nt Ministers will let in 〈 ◊ 〉 into the Church by Baptism and give them the Lords Supper? |
A26906 | But what if the forms imposed be worse than the exercise of our own gifts? |
A26906 | But what if they are notoriously wicked? |
A26906 | But what is it that you would have 〈 ◊ 〉 do for Love and Peace, and against the contraries? |
A26906 | But what is my inference from all this? |
A26906 | But what mean these men by false worship? |
A26906 | But what shall a man do in so hard a streight? |
A26906 | But what will you say if this be the common case, of the far greatest part of the Christian world? |
A26906 | But when you have got the Ball, have you done the work? |
A26906 | But whether they will make this profession or not? |
A26906 | But why dost thou judge thy brother? |
A26906 | But why make you no conscience of scandalizing others, on the contrary side? |
A26906 | But will it not be my sin if I communicate with such as I know to be notoriously wicked? |
A26906 | But ye have despised the poor: Do not the rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgement seats? |
A26906 | By which we must try who are to be the members of himself and his Church, and to have Communion with himself and one another? |
A26906 | Can their words add any authority to the Word of God? |
A26906 | Can you name and number them? |
A26906 | Can you not bear the censure of such a shadow? |
A26906 | Can you prove that Christ doth separate from all the Christians of the world which you separate from? |
A26906 | Can you well Preach so great Love of Christ to men without Love? |
A26906 | Certainly in Christs time both Liturgies by forms, and also prayers by habit were used? |
A26906 | Dare you say before God, Let me have no part in any of the prayers of all these Churches on earth who use a Liturgy as culpable as ours? |
A26906 | Dare you say, Do not you use such a form of prayer or such a ceremony for if you do, I will sin against God? |
A26906 | Did all the Ministers and common people persecute you? |
A26906 | Did he live in fulness, and ride in po ● p, and associate only with the rich and great? |
A26906 | Do I pretend to add any clearness to the methods or points received, or to correct any error which hath got the major Vote of the injudicious? |
A26906 | Do they mean worship contrary to Gods word? |
A26906 | Do we not yet know where Iudgment hath begun, after such plagues and flames, and Church convulsions? |
A26906 | Do you ever pray your selves in secret or in your families without sin? |
A26906 | Do you not believe that it is unlawful in any case whatsoever to separate from it? |
A26906 | Do you not believe that this Church is only One; and that every particular Church, and every Christian is a part of it? |
A26906 | Do you not feel your minds disturbed by it: Do you not see the Church discomposed by it? |
A26906 | Do you not think that you have a far stronger temptation, to dishonour a persecuting Magistrate than a good one? |
A26906 | Do you say that your neighbours are not to be accounted members of the Church, nor to be communicated with? |
A26906 | Do you set so light by your part in their prayers? |
A26906 | Do you think that there is no imposition but by force? |
A26906 | Doth any man love evil that knoweth it to be evil? |
A26906 | Durst these persons profess this openly with their tongues? |
A26906 | Either of these answers may stop your mouths, First, What is that to the whole Parishes whose communion you avoid, who never persecuted you? |
A26906 | Else why should we be thought any fitter to be their Teachers and Guides, than they to be ours? |
A26906 | Every one saith, I am of Paul, and I of Apollo — Is Christ divided? |
A26906 | Fifthly, What need men study or bestow so many years at the University, if Ordination and Office be enough? |
A26906 | Fifthly, will stripes change the judgement in matters of Religion? |
A26906 | First, Is not the priviledge of the Church, ● ette ● than the priviledges of the Commonwealth? |
A26906 | First, What is the true spirit of a Christian, and nature of Christianity? |
A26906 | For how can we expect that the people should hear, if the Pastors be obdurate and remediless? |
A26906 | For if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he take care of the Church of God? |
A26906 | For what is it to govern, but to have all others obliged to fulfil your wills? |
A26906 | For y ● are yet carnal: For whereas there is among you envying and strife and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men? |
A26906 | For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying and strife and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men? |
A26906 | Fourthly, And how cold and unskilful are many in the application of that doctrine which they have tolerably opened? |
A26906 | Fourthly, But suppose them yet so foolish and faulty, as to run from you to their own perdition; The question is, What is the way to c ● re them? |
A26906 | Fourthly, Mercy is to be preferred before sacrifice: What if the present uttering some truth would cost many thousand mens lives? |
A26906 | Fourthly, What is the Office, but an Authority and Obligation to do the Ministerial work? |
A26906 | Fourthly, is not the work to be done, the saving of mens souls? |
A26906 | God is Love, and he that dwelleth in Love, dwelleth in God, and God in him:( who can speak a higher word of any thing in all the world?) |
A26906 | God telleth the Sabbath- breakers of Israel, that when they were rooted out, the land should keep her Sabbaths: Was that a mercy or a judgement? |
A26906 | Hast thou faith? |
A26906 | Hath God said you shall use Notes in preaching? |
A26906 | Hath he so few? |
A26906 | Hath not God made his Ministers Judges whom they are to baptize? |
A26906 | Have I not heard many, do I not know many, who preach more convincingly, more plainly and more powerfully than I? |
A26906 | Have not I liberty to do my best? |
A26906 | Have we not seen a proud Victorious Army dissolved without a drop of blood? |
A26906 | Have we so preached, so privately overseen and taught them, and so lived, as that all this confusion will not be justly laid at our doors?] |
A26906 | Have we the Kernel, and do we envy them the Shell? |
A26906 | Have we the Spirit, and do we envy them the flesh, or outward signes alone? |
A26906 | Having begun in the spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh? |
A26906 | He came not to be ministred unto but to minister: How sharply did he rebuke his disciples when they strove who should be greatest? |
A26906 | He will say, No, they will not sin, but they will take it to be your sin, and they will be troubled at it? |
A26906 | How can you think that the unbelievers and ungodly should think well of them, that all speak so ill of one another? |
A26906 | How easily do we see this in one another, as our mutual censures and severities shew? |
A26906 | How hard is it to keep up a zealous love of God and Man? |
A26906 | How long must a sinner be admonished and exhorted to repentance? |
A26906 | How many a Kingdomes conversion from Infidelity hath been hindered? |
A26906 | How many be there that seem to love and honour you, and yet do not love and honour God? |
A26906 | How many hundred or thousand persons are there in a Parish to be tried? |
A26906 | How many vehement commands are there in Solomons Proverbs to the younger sort, to hearken to the counsel of their Parents? |
A26906 | How partially do they judge of the judgements and practises of others? |
A26906 | How small a thing will serve the turn, to excuse the faults of any of their party? |
A26906 | How then can you say that these are no Professors? |
A26906 | How then would you suffer martyrdome for Christ? |
A26906 | How vile and unsufferable some account them, that will pray in any words which are not written down for them? |
A26906 | How weakly do we preach and pray and write? |
A26906 | I entreat these men to mark whether it was Christ or the Pharisees that came nearest to their way, and whom they now imitate? |
A26906 | I have seldom seen the best tempered people inclined to this way of jesting at other mens manner of worship? |
A26906 | I hope you do not mean that no body must displease you? |
A26906 | I know they will say that Religion was ever scorned by the wicked, and ever will be? |
A26906 | I speak to your shame, Is there not a wise man among you? |
A26906 | I would ask such a one why call you those good people that are easily drawn to sin against God? |
A26906 | I would ask you therefore, whether you take not the people of the Parish Churches to be more than you? |
A26906 | If I am not able to enumerate just how many faults or weaknesses may be tollerable in my servants? |
A26906 | If he must have so many years learning and preparation, can you do it without? |
A26906 | If not, how can you think so in a case so neer it? |
A26906 | If not, you must know that this only is true scandal, to occasion you to sin? |
A26906 | If the Minister that doth it, must lay by the business of the world, how think you that you can do the same without laying by your worldly business? |
A26906 | If then they are admitted by an entrusted Officer, will you venture to usurp the place, yea and to do them the wrong to say that they are no members? |
A26906 | If they say that the spirit hath told them the meaning of the Scripture, say as before, that is not told for you, which is not proved to you? |
A26906 | If to every one, why are we not all of a mind? |
A26906 | If we are put to defend our Religion, or any necessary part thereof, how weakly and injudiciously is it usually done? |
A26906 | If ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, why as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances? |
A26906 | If you ask me, How can it stand with grace to be so much hid? |
A26906 | If you believe this, how dare you blame me for writing to save you from confusion and every evil work? |
A26906 | If you grant it, was it not his Office so to do? |
A26906 | If you had but a hundred sheep when your neighbour had a thousand, would you thank him that would rob you of all save one? |
A26906 | If you say, How know you that they were mistaken? |
A26906 | If you will promise to your selves, you must perform for your selves? |
A26906 | If you would not, why should you think that others will? |
A26906 | In all companies how forward are they to talk of the sins of Princes and Parliaments? |
A26906 | Is Love caused by hard words or stripes? |
A26906 | Is it a fault for children to be so impatient as to cry and quarrel? |
A26906 | Is it a mark of hypocrisie to go no further in duties of Godliness, than the safety of our reputation will give us leave? |
A26906 | Is it any of your trust or work? |
A26906 | Is it because they abound most in Love to the souls of those who offend, or them who are endangered by them? |
A26906 | Is it not a blaspheming of Gods spirit, to make it the Patron of mens sloth and idleness, under pretense of magnifying grace? |
A26906 | Is it not an erroneous Clergy? |
A26906 | Is it not long of us? |
A26906 | Is it not the Bishops that have caused the long division, between the Greek and Latin Churches? |
A26906 | Is it not the end of all your studies and labours to to promote them? |
A26906 | Is it not the former that you more desire than the later? |
A26906 | Is it not their Councils and their contentious writings and practises, which have been the grand causes of this woful schism? |
A26906 | Is it not there sufficiently revealed? |
A26906 | Is it not worthy of our labour? |
A26906 | Is not every confused prayer sinful, which hath unmeet expressions and disordered, and hath wandering thoughts and dull affections? |
A26906 | Is not standing a fit gesture to profess our Faith in? |
A26906 | Is not the Land in a continual heart war? |
A26906 | Is not the experience of all the Christian world a sufficient proof? |
A26906 | Is that in vain which Heaven is promised to? |
A26906 | Is there any of these Love- killers that dare say they pray without sin? |
A26906 | Is this the least malignant, or least dangerous sin? |
A26906 | It is not doing as we would be done by, what if any should say of you, that you are Heretical and deny Fundamental Truths? |
A26906 | It s two to one but there are present many persons of contrary opinions ▪ what shall I do to please them all? |
A26906 | It would be much more acceptable to God and wise men, to hear you talk of your own infirmities, than of the Rulers or Ministers, or Neighbours? |
A26906 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? |
A26906 | Little do such persons think, how many be in Hell, through these scandals and snares which they have set before them? |
A26906 | Lord wilt thou that we command fire to come down from heaven, and consume them, even as Elias did? |
A26906 | May they not teach their Children the Lords Prayer or a Psalm, though it be a Form? |
A26906 | Me thinks you are renewing the old controversie, whether in this Mount or at Ierusalem men ought to worship? |
A26906 | Must I be blind? |
A26906 | Must I not fear them that can kill the body? |
A26906 | Must I therefore have none, till I have those that are faultless? |
A26906 | Must all separate from you for this? |
A26906 | Must he forbear to do better, because he can not do so well, by the use of his own gifts alone? |
A26906 | Must therefore all be used indifferently or none? |
A26906 | NOne usually are so spleenishly impatient at the weakness of Dissenters or Separatists as the Pastors are? |
A26906 | Nay is it not the Duty of such to do it? |
A26906 | Nay that will sin because I do my duty? |
A26906 | Ninthly, Why also is there so much difference between the Pastors reputations and their labours when they are dead? |
A26906 | Nor no secret gladness that some evil hath befaln him? |
A26906 | Nor to mention the sin which is most to be repented of? |
A26906 | Now how shall a stander by know which of you is in the right? |
A26906 | Now if this should be the cause that others are preferred before you, O how heynous were your sin? |
A26906 | O see him washing his disciples feet? |
A26906 | O strange exposition of the Fifth Commandment? |
A26906 | O that men would discern what is the true worth of prayer? |
A26906 | O what rends and ruines had it prevented in the Christian world? |
A26906 | Or at least, whe ● her it proceed not from the same uncharitableness? |
A26906 | Or if you will imprison them, every subject must be in prison, and then who shall be the Jaylor, and who shall find them food? |
A26906 | Or is it praise- worthy to be odd and singular in the Church? |
A26906 | Or may not you bear anothers failings as patiently as your own? |
A26906 | Or some of them at least? |
A26906 | Or that you your selves should not rather joyn with that than with none? |
A26906 | Or what need have others of your Revelations: If it be but to some, who be those some? |
A26906 | Or where God requireth ability in them for Church- government? |
A26906 | Or whether you should joyn with such a Church, in the use of such preaching and prayers or not? |
A26906 | Or why should more scrupled things be called necessary to order and decency than indeed are so? |
A26906 | Or will it be done by bare Authority and Obligation to do it? |
A26906 | Or would you not rather joyn with them, than with no Church at all? |
A26906 | Or, who must be the judge? |
A26906 | Secondly, And what if ther ● be a difficulty what points are necessary and what errours are into ● erable? |
A26906 | Secondly, Is it not a deeper accusation to charge one to be ungodly and prophane, than to charge him only to be schismatical? |
A26906 | Secondly, will force cure them better than evidence of truth, and Love will do? |
A26906 | Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
A26906 | Seventhly, Is it the honour and felicity of so ● ls to be such? |
A26906 | Shall it be thus in their power to corrupt the Church: And must we joyn with them and take no care of it? |
A26906 | Shall we therefore think that the people are in the wrong? |
A26906 | Shew us what text doth give them that power? |
A26906 | Should we not most fear that which we are most in danger of? |
A26906 | So Christ be preached, and the people instructed, sanctisied and saved, what if it be done by another rather than by me? |
A26906 | So after he had washed their feet and had taken his garments, and was set down again he said unto them, Know ye what I have done to you? |
A26906 | Some are puffed up — Shall I come to you with a rod or in love? |
A26906 | Suppose it were so? |
A26906 | THe question is not, Whether the impenitent should be put away from Church- Communion? |
A26906 | THere have been two great questions which long have troubled the Church, whether we may take him for a true Minister of Christ, that is ungodly? |
A26906 | Tell us when the people were authorized to baptize? |
A26906 | Tenthly, Why should the Kingdome be at so much cost upon the Ministery? |
A26906 | That is, which is sinful? |
A26906 | The Devil is the Love- killer: And what way can you imagine so powerful to kill love to any others, as to make men think them to be very bad? |
A26906 | The good of the Office and of the person is of God; and the evil is of Satan: And should you so look at Satans part, as to pass by all Gods part? |
A26906 | The greater number are not always in the right; therefore why should my singularity discourage me? |
A26906 | The purified peculiar people of the Redeemer ane zealous, but of what? |
A26906 | They were grievous persecutors: Which of the Prophets did not your fathers kill and persecute? |
A26906 | This way hath been long tried by the Mountebanks in Italy, Spain and many other Countries, but alas with what success? |
A26906 | Till we see this, what promise have we of the pardon of our dreadful temporal penalties? |
A26906 | To apply all this, It may be you are in doubt whether this or the other be the meaning of such a text of scripture? |
A26906 | To make it the scorn and contempt of the world? |
A26906 | To what purpose do you set together all these words of Scripture, without any exposition, or telling us what you conclude from them? |
A26906 | To what will you liken me, that ● should be like unto it, saith the Holy one? |
A26906 | Touch not, tast not, handle not( which all are to perish with the using) after the Commandements and Doctrines of men? |
A26906 | Universal Concord& c. in octavo? |
A26906 | WHo can say I have made my heart clean? |
A26906 | Was Rehoboam unwise in forsaking the counsel of the aged, and harkning to the young and rash? |
A26906 | Was it for going too far from sinners that the Pharisees did censure Christ? |
A26906 | Was it not a Minister of Christ? |
A26906 | Was it not because their Pride and superstition made them think too highly of their own religiousness? |
A26906 | Was it the high or the low that were his familiars? |
A26906 | Were not that an untimely and unmerciful word? |
A26906 | Were they never baptized? |
A26906 | What a toilsome task doth Popery contain? |
A26906 | What are all your secret reflections, and endeavours to dishonour those that have wronged you, but revengeful speeches? |
A26906 | What company can you come into of forward Christians, but they are talking against those of other parties? |
A26906 | What do we teach them for, if we would not have them learn and profit? |
A26906 | What elfe do you mean, when you blame men for scandalizing you? |
A26906 | What errours are tollerable, and what are intollerable? |
A26906 | What greater honour can a Teacher have, than to make his Schollars as wise and able as himself? |
A26906 | What if it be a hard thing to enumerate just how many bits a man may eat, and not be a glutton? |
A26906 | What if the next age should turn them into a dead formality? |
A26906 | What if you can not justly enumerate what herbs or roots or drugs are wholsome and what are unwholsome? |
A26906 | What need we Commentaries then? |
A26906 | What profaning of Gods word is this? |
A26906 | When had we ever greater Temptations to Love- killing principles and practices than now, except in the times of the miserable Wars? |
A26906 | When he had done it he was in great doubt and perplexity about it, whether he had done well or not? |
A26906 | When so many Texts command us diligence, and slothfulness is so great a sin? |
A26906 | When so many were turned out of the Universities for not engaging? |
A26906 | When the Papists had murdered so many hundred thousands of the Albigenses and Waldenses, who would have thought, but they had done their work? |
A26906 | Where dwelleth that man who by meer inspiration, can turn one Chapter out of Hebrew or Greek into the vulgar tongue? |
A26906 | Where hath God given any men power to prescribe and impose forms for others? |
A26906 | Where hath he promised upon all your prayers, that ever he will teach you in this life the sense of every text of Scripture? |
A26906 | Whether they are sure that these superstitions of theirs may not run the round as other superstitions have done before them? |
A26906 | Who brought in Transubstantiation with the rest of the Roman absurdities? |
A26906 | Who can teach others that which they never learned themselves? |
A26906 | Who hath bewitched you, that you should not obey the truth? |
A26906 | Who have been the Masters of the bloody Inquisitions? |
A26906 | Who have caused and kept open the wounds of the Churches of the East and West so long? |
A26906 | Who introduced all the errours( about praying for& to the dead,& c.) that are in most of the Liturgies of the Churches in East and West? |
A26906 | Who loveth to thrust himself into a fray? |
A26906 | Who perhaps are more in number, and whose salvation should be as much desired by you? |
A26906 | Who prated malitiously against Iohn, and cast out the brethren, but a Diotrephes? |
A26906 | Who set up Usurpers and raised wars against Emperors and Kings upon these grounds? |
A26906 | Who set up the Papal power above Princes; and determined in the Laterane Council for their power to depose them and alienate their dominions? |
A26906 | Who set up the Roman Usurpation and Tyranny? |
A26906 | Who then shall cast out an Heretick or pernicious Pastor, if he himself must be rejected? |
A26906 | Who took them into the Church by Baptism? |
A26906 | Who troubled Paul and the first Churches, but erroneous Teachers? |
A26906 | Why are almost all the Greek Churches, the Armenians, the Russians, the Abassians, so lamentably ignorant? |
A26906 | Why be not all as wise as you? |
A26906 | Why do you not offer to prove it to be so, but barely affirm it without any proof? |
A26906 | Why was it that Christ mentioneth the Parable of the Pha ● ● see, and the Publican? |
A26906 | Why were the Apostles sent out into all the world? |
A26906 | Will you find some words which you can call false in the matter? |
A26906 | Will you say therefore that God approveth or consenteth to all these sins? |
A26906 | Will you say to them, Love me, or you shall be fined or imprisoned? |
A26906 | Wisdome and Love may prevent all this: Envy not the gifts or graces of your people? |
A26906 | With such a one no not to eat — Do not ye judge them that are within? |
A26906 | Wo to the shepherds of Is ● ael that feed themselves; should not the shepherds feed the flocks? |
A26906 | Would you not think that you had the more injustice? |
A26906 | Would you so cure Sabbath- breaking and disorder? |
A26906 | Yea and every man from himself; that is, He must give over praying because its all Idolatry? |
A26906 | You know not how fast you are hastening to infidelity, and to the renouncing of Christ himself? |
A26906 | You''l say, Those are Papists and so are not we? |
A26906 | among the prophane we take this to be a deadly sign of impenitency? |
A26906 | and a fervour in all our heavenly and spiritual desires? |
A26906 | and a fit gesture to praise God in? |
A26906 | and a pitiful kind of worship which they thus offered to God? |
A26906 | and a pitiful zeal which did set them on? |
A26906 | and how gross and palpable a contradicting of its plain expressions? |
A26906 | and how many a faithful Minister silenced or reproached? |
A26906 | and how many blamless customs, forms, and practises accused? |
A26906 | and how many excellent Christians slandered and vilified? |
A26906 | and how sharp they are against all that are contrary? |
A26906 | and not to do as the rest of the Church doth? |
A26906 | and so many out of the Magistracy& Corporation priviledges? |
A26906 | and so many out of the Ministry? |
A26906 | and take a solitude for Peace? |
A26906 | and the further they go, the more they will increase and multiply? |
A26906 | and to be worse than you? |
A26906 | and to condemn those whom he condemneth not? |
A26906 | and to make sins and duties which God never made, and then to condemn the innocent for want of this humane religiousness? |
A26906 | and where the Scripture calleth them to exercise it by Votes? |
A26906 | and whilst they despise and vilifie one another, they teach the wicked to despise and vilifie them all? |
A26906 | and who are to be rejected and avoided? |
A26906 | and why doth he promise to be with them to the end of the world? |
A26906 | and will you take from him almost all those few? |
A26906 | as the soul is better than the body? |
A26906 | be understanding, serious, and resolved in covenanting with Christ? |
A26906 | because I will have no Communion with them? |
A26906 | before whose eyes — Are ye so foolish? |
A26906 | but despise religion and their own Salvation? |
A26906 | but not that therefore no use of forms of prayer are lawful; May we not now use the Lords Prayer, or pray in some other Scripture form? |
A26906 | but that this is the way of the Spirits teaching, to teach those first who are our outward teachers, and then to help us to understand them? |
A26906 | ceremonies, and austerities, and useless labours? |
A26906 | do not even the publicans the same? |
A26906 | do not even the publicans the same? |
A26906 | nor yet commandeth you to forsake or to condemn? |
A26906 | of Courtiers and Nobility, and Gentry? |
A26906 | of positives and negatives? |
A26906 | or commanded others to obey them? |
A26906 | or else must I allow them to do any thing that they list? |
A26906 | or how many drops a man may drink and be no drunkard? |
A26906 | or just what meats and drinks must be used, to avoid exce ● s in quality? |
A26906 | or just what sort of stuffes or silks or cloth or fashions may be used without excess in apparel? |
A26906 | or of Church or Kingdome to be composed of such? |
A26906 | or rather than such terms should be tolerated among us? |
A26906 | or that hath neither Greatness nor Godliness for a refuge? |
A26906 | or that he may wear any thing, or must go naked? |
A26906 | or that he taketh them for no Churches, and disowneth the administration of all the Ministers in the world whom you disown? |
A26906 | or that they have no visible Comm ● nion with him? |
A26906 | or to multitudes of their Brethren, because they are not of their way? |
A26906 | or where he calleth them to leave their Callings and attend this work? |
A26906 | or why d ● st thou set at nought thy brother? |
A26906 | or why should we maintain and honour men, for doing no more than our children can do?] |
A26906 | or yet that it is safe, to separate where Christ doth not separate, and to be gone from his Ho ● se while he there abideth? |
A26906 | was Paul crucified for you? |
A26906 | what a loss are we at in our ordinary studies? |
A26906 | what difficulties puzzle us? |
A26906 | what text do they name, but such as if they did it on purpose, to shew their boldness in adding to Gods Word? |
A26906 | when I must shew that I love the looser sort by my sharp reproofs? |
A26906 | whence is persecution, but from thinking ill of others,& abhorring them, or not loving them? |
A26906 | which purge too much and which too little? |
A26906 | who will sin against God every time that his brother doth not humor him? |
A26906 | will you thence infer that men may eat and drink any thing in quantity and quality, or else nothing? |
A26906 | yea, that make their Communion, the very badge and means of their uncharitableness and divisions? |
A26906 | you little suspect that your extraordinary strictness, for the purity of the Church doth tend to your turning heathens, and denying the whole Church? |
A26906 | — But why judgest thou thy brother, or why dost thou set at nought thy brother? |
A26906 | — Sed quomodo vos aliquid solvetis, ut sit solutum& in coelis, a coelo ob scelera adempti,& immanium peccatorum sun ● bus compediti? |
A27051 | 11. from men that Judged before they knew? |
A27051 | A man of credit, or an impudent Liar? |
A27051 | Alas what a gulf should I plunge my Soul in? |
A27051 | Alas what a number are there that are otherwise? |
A27051 | All the Arguments that in disputation are used against him, how frivolous and foolish are they? |
A27051 | Anatomy as being by ocular inspection hath had the best improvement; And yet what a multitude of uncertainties remain? |
A27051 | And Christ himself did not in vain sum up all the Commandments in the love of God and Man, Nor in vain ask Peter thrice: Lovest thou me? |
A27051 | And Miracles to be made a standing Church Ordinance? |
A27051 | And O how common is this imposing Pride, even in them that cry out against it and condemn it? |
A27051 | And all this ordinary course of Miracles to be wrought at the will of every Priest, be he never so ignorant or wicked a Man? |
A27051 | And also how but on the word of a Priest you can know all that the Church hath determined? |
A27051 | And also that it was not a total failing, rather than a failing in some degree that Peter was by that promise freed from? |
A27051 | And are you sure that meer Christians will take all these for certain truths? |
A27051 | And as for Philosophers and Judicious Speculators in Divinity, do I need to say, that the number is too small? |
A27051 | And as for the Papists, what wonder is it, when their Religion is to believe as the Church believeth? |
A27051 | And be built or preserved by the destruction of Christs Church? |
A27051 | And can he be said indeed to know any Creature that knoweth it not in any of these respects that knoweth neither its Original, Order or Use? |
A27051 | And can the Vote of a few such Fellows oblige all the World to renounce all their senses, who were never obliged to it before? |
A27051 | And can the unlearned, or the unstudied part of Ministers then, with any modesty pretend a certainty, where so many and such men differ? |
A27051 | And consequently what kind of Persons are to be well thought of as the Children of God? |
A27051 | And do you think that there were no Christians or Churches all that while? |
A27051 | And doth not Paul call it[ Bread] after consecration three times in the three next verses? |
A27051 | And doth not the sad example of this Age, as well as all former Ages warn you to be fearful of what you entertain? |
A27051 | And doth not this prove that we know but little? |
A27051 | And doth the Intellect know that it knoweth by the very same act by which it knoweth other things? |
A27051 | And every one in the Church, even all the wicked, and every Mouse that eateth the Host, to be partaker of a Miracle? |
A27051 | And had I obeyed them, how many years ago had I been dead? |
A27051 | And hath made to Godliness, the promise of this life and that to come, and will with- hold no good thing from them that walk uprightly? |
A27051 | And he hath long made good that promise: Only ask thy self again and again as Christ did Peter, whether indeed thou love him? |
A27051 | And how can it be avoided, while all men must pretend to know and judge, what indeed they are unable to understand? |
A27051 | And how doth the Soul perceive its own Volitions? |
A27051 | And how doth their Church know that it is Gods Word? |
A27051 | And how know they that they say true? |
A27051 | And how long shall our foolish Souls be loth to come into the Celestial light? |
A27051 | And how then can any man be Certain what those points are which are necessary for him to believe? |
A27051 | And how wise, expedient and vigilant must he be that will commit no such killing oversight? |
A27051 | And if you can bear it from all the Sects save one, why not from that one also? |
A27051 | And in cases of great Temptation, how insufficient is Learning to repel the Tempter, when it''s easily done by the holy Love of God and Goodness? |
A27051 | And in what rather than about Faith and Publick Government and Order? |
A27051 | And into what misery do foolish Prodigals run, who had rather have their portion in their own hand, than in their Fathers? |
A27051 | And is not he as good an expositor of Christs Words as the Council of Trent? |
A27051 | And is not our love, the fruit of his love? |
A27051 | And is this to you a Certifying Evidence that indeed God revealed it, because their Church saith so? |
A27051 | And shall I not expect good from so good a God, the cause of all the good that is in the World? |
A27051 | And shall I rashly venture on such a danger, any more than I would do on Fornication, Drunkenness, or other sin? |
A27051 | And shall it be harder to me to think well of Infinite Love and Goodness, than for my neighbours to trust me and think well of such a wretch as I? |
A27051 | And shall this be called a saving love of God? |
A27051 | And that his Word must be known to be his Word, by the same Evidence by one man and another? |
A27051 | And to be able to overdo such gamesters, any more than to beat one at a game at Chess, or for a Physician to know the Pox or Leprosie? |
A27051 | And what a multitude of young ones will some one Creature Procreate, especially Fishes to admiration? |
A27051 | And what are the Pretences for all this? |
A27051 | And what calling is there in which hasty judging and conceits of more knowledge than men have, doth not make great confusion and disappointment? |
A27051 | And what is it that must perswade us to all this? |
A27051 | And what is it that such men know or seem to know, which may be compared with their Ignorance? |
A27051 | And what is that? |
A27051 | And what is the Evidence by which they know, and are brought to consent? |
A27051 | And what is the Omnipotent Power that doth this? |
A27051 | And what is the pretence for all this? |
A27051 | And what is this Spirit, but the Habit of Divine and Heavenly Love, and its concomitants? |
A27051 | And what mischiefs doth it cause in Churches? |
A27051 | And what more uniteth Souls than Love? |
A27051 | And what mortal man can truly take the measure of them? |
A27051 | And what pretence must justify all this? |
A27051 | And what will cause love if all this will not? |
A27051 | And when all''s done, how little do we obtain? |
A27051 | And when did God work Miracles which were meer objects of belief against sense? |
A27051 | And where men least love one another? |
A27051 | And where mutual Hatred, Cruelty and Persecution, proclaim them much void of that love which is the Christian Badge? |
A27051 | And where rather than in Councils? |
A27051 | And who had not then rather hear the talk and prayers of a holy person, than the most accurate Logick or Mathematicks? |
A27051 | And who is in the right among so many who all with confidence pretend to be in the right? |
A27051 | And who more peremptory and bold in their judgments than those that least know what they say? |
A27051 | And why did he make the Sun so Glorious? |
A27051 | And why should it be hard to thee, O my Soul, to be perswaded of the love of God? |
A27051 | And will a man full of Himself and his Own, be moved from his presumptions, by any thing that such a hated or scorned people can say? |
A27051 | And yet alas, what enmity is used in the World against the Love of God and Man? |
A27051 | And yet are we wise men? |
A27051 | And yet have we not experience enough to teach us? |
A27051 | And yet shall man be proud of Wit? |
A27051 | And yet shall we not fear, but rage and be confident? |
A27051 | Are all these precious things which die with Love, no better than to be sacrificed to the Clergies Pride and Worldly lusts? |
A27051 | Are all your large Writings evident certainties? |
A27051 | Are not Election, Creation, Redemption and Conversion acts of love? |
A27051 | Are these wise men? |
A27051 | Are we blind also? |
A27051 | Are you sure that notwithstanding all this, God would have you avoid Communion with the Churches that in such Forms and Orders differ from you? |
A27051 | As God is here seen as in a Glass, so is he loved: He that Loveth not his Brother whom he seeth daily, how shall he Love God, whom he never saw? |
A27051 | At least you make Ignorant Persons happy that can but Love God, though they know not their Catechism? |
A27051 | But I pray you ask these damning Sectaries, Is it believing your Word, and being of your Opinion that will save me? |
A27051 | But Sir, I pray you, who shall do it? |
A27051 | But above all, though nothing is perfectly known which is not methodically known; yet how few have a true methodical knowledge? |
A27051 | But again I ask you, How you know that God biddeth or forbiddeth you any thing, if sense be not first to be believed? |
A27051 | But alas, how low are our hopes? |
A27051 | But are you content your selves to be kill''d by Love? |
A27051 | But every side almost tells me that I am damned if I do not believe as they do? |
A27051 | But hark you Sir, shall that one Man have a Wife or not? |
A27051 | But how few of them unite on the terms of simple Christianity and Certainties? |
A27051 | But how know you that ever you did hear or read or see a Book or Man? |
A27051 | But how long will it seem so? |
A27051 | But how loth should I be to take such sawce for my food, and such recreations for my business? |
A27051 | But how must this be done? |
A27051 | But how shall he know that this Scripture is Gods Word? |
A27051 | But how shall strangers and posterity know when they read a History, whether the Writer was an honest Man or a Knave? |
A27051 | But how then doth God love his Enemies? |
A27051 | But if Wisdom were justified of none but her Children, how confidently durst I call my self a Son of Wisdom? |
A27051 | But if there be so many things either uncertain or less- certain ▪ what is it that we are or may be fully certain of? |
A27051 | But if they were not Evident Truths before, what made those Prelates conclude them for Truths? |
A27051 | But is it not possible for sense to be deceived? |
A27051 | But must their Church live on Blood? |
A27051 | But shall I doubt whether he that made the Sun, be Father of lights, and whether he know his dwelling, and his continued works? |
A27051 | But suppose it were so that to love the Creature were to love God, is not then the hating of the Creature the hating of God? |
A27051 | But suppose them mistaken; hast thou tryed that they are unwilling to be instructed? |
A27051 | But sure this is not the first knowing that we know? |
A27051 | But that prevaileth not, and yet it is undone? |
A27051 | But the POPE must be PRINCIPIUM UNITATIS: And will all Christians certainly Unite in the Pope? |
A27051 | But the Question is, What soundness of Reason or proof that this is God''s Word, is necessary to make it a Sanctifying Faith? |
A27051 | But were they not stronger after all these cruelties than before? |
A27051 | But what Knowledge must it be? |
A27051 | But what is this believing him? |
A27051 | But what is this to the Love of God which the Text speaketh of? |
A27051 | But what''s all this to foolish conceit that you know what you do not? |
A27051 | But what''s become then of the contrary evidence which appeared before to these dissenters? |
A27051 | But which is the Church, my Lord? |
A27051 | But who will desire the Wisdom that maketh a man never the better? |
A27051 | But would they not yet speed worse if they used you as much? |
A27051 | But you''l say,[ We can be no wiser than we are: If we do the best we can, what can we do more? |
A27051 | By Hearing or Reading? |
A27051 | Can Persecutors for shame Hang and Burn men for meer Ignorance, who are willing to learn, and will thankfully from any man receive information? |
A27051 | Can not God do it? |
A27051 | Can our common poor Labourers,( especially Husbandmen) have leisure to inform their minds with Philosophy or curious Speculations? |
A27051 | Consider how communicative this Infinite Goodness is: Why else is he called LOVE it self? |
A27051 | Could I ever have truly loved Him, his Word, his Ways and Servants, but by the reflection of his love? |
A27051 | Did I say, It is a doubt? |
A27051 | Did not Christ prefer mercy before Sabbath rest, and before the avoiding familiarity with sinners? |
A27051 | Did they know them to be such without Evidence? |
A27051 | Do not some of those men whom thou so Magisterially condemnest, study as hard and as impartially as thy self? |
A27051 | Do they not live as well, and shew as much tenderness of Conscience, and fear of erring and sinning as thy self? |
A27051 | Do they not pray as hard for Gods assistance? |
A27051 | Do we live in such weakness, and shall we not know it? |
A27051 | Do we not justly account it as unfit a work for the Lords day to be for pleasure perusing Maps, as to be for pleasure viewing the Woods and Fields? |
A27051 | Do you long to be liker to God in your capacity, and more near him and united to him? |
A27051 | Do you long to have Families, Cities, Kingdoms and all the World, made truly Holy, Wise and united in Love to one another? |
A27051 | Do you love Wisdom and Goodness in your selves, and not in others only? |
A27051 | Do you love the holy Laws of God, as they express that holy Wisdom and Love, which is his perfection? |
A27051 | Do you love them as they would rule the World in Holiness, and bring mankind to true wisdom and mutual love? |
A27051 | Do you love to have Wisdom and Goodness, and Love as Universal as is possible? |
A27051 | Do you perceive any Substances Intellectually or not? |
A27051 | Do you truely love the Image of God on the Soul of Man? |
A27051 | Doth God know all things, or not? |
A27051 | Doth a Dog or a Goose know a Book of Philosophy, because he looketh on it, and seeth the bulk? |
A27051 | Doth he know a Clock or Watch, who knoweth no more of it, but that it hath such Parts and Shapes, made of Iron and Brass? |
A27051 | Doth he rule us by a Law, or not,& c? |
A27051 | Doth not God say, he that seeketh shall find; and wisdom must be laboriously searched for, as a hidden treasure? |
A27051 | Doth not God''s Loving us make us Happy? |
A27051 | Ease and Pain will have their end: It is the end that must teach us how to estimate them: And who but God can foretell thee the end? |
A27051 | Even those Controversies in which you have so many Adversaries? |
A27051 | For how should we be sure of that one above all the rest? |
A27051 | For who hath known the mind of the Lord? |
A27051 | For, how little knoweth that man who knoweth not his own Ignorance? |
A27051 | Gassendus often; and who not? |
A27051 | Goodness not- sensible, Certainly apprehended by the Intellectual Soul, not only sub ratione Veri, sed& Boni? |
A27051 | Had Christ his humane Soul from the Virgin, or only his flesh? |
A27051 | Had he his Manhood from Man, if not his Soul, which is the chief essential part? |
A27051 | Had our Salvation been laid upon our Learning a Body of true Philosophy, how desperate would our case have been? |
A27051 | Hath Christ commanded you any thing before it, except the Love of God? |
A27051 | Hath not God made f ● oli ● h the wisdom of this world? |
A27051 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this World? |
A27051 | Hath not pride made thy silly wit to be as an Idol, to which all must bow down on pain of the heat of thy displeasure? |
A27051 | Have I heard him speak for himself? |
A27051 | Have they not the same Books, and as good Teachers? |
A27051 | Having given me so precious a gift as his Son, will he think any thing too good to give me? |
A27051 | He that knoweth the King''s Impress, and the Value, and what it is good for, and how to get and use it? |
A27051 | He that saith he loveth God, and hateth his Brother, is a Liar? |
A27051 | Heaven is a state of Joyful Complacence; and what is that but Perfect Love? |
A27051 | His common Influx all creatures receive? |
A27051 | How Divine, how High and Noble is this life; To live in a humble friendship with God and all his holy ones? |
A27051 | How are Infants saved that have neither Knowledge nor Love? |
A27051 | How can you possibly know how much more may be unknown to you? |
A27051 | How doth he know that these men do not lie? |
A27051 | How easily is a man''s Judgment tempted to think well of that which he loveth, and ill of that which his heart is against? |
A27051 | How else should Souls have Communion with God? |
A27051 | How false must a great number of the Historians on one side be? |
A27051 | How few are much the wiser for them? |
A27051 | How highly did these people think of their own wisdom and holiness, while they cryed down Laces, Points and Cuffs? |
A27051 | How is God our End? |
A27051 | How know you that here is no Bread and Wine? |
A27051 | How know you that? |
A27051 | How knoweth the Lay- man that ever the Church made such a decree? |
A27051 | How known? |
A27051 | How little of the Divine Artifice is known in the composition of mixt Bodies? |
A27051 | How long Lord shall this Dungeon be our dwelling? |
A27051 | How long hath he kept thee safe in the midst of dangers? |
A27051 | How many Methods of Logick have we? |
A27051 | How many Sects and Opinions in Religion? |
A27051 | How many such a wound hath poor Durandus suffered? |
A27051 | How ordinary is this? |
A27051 | How shall one that would learn Philosophy know in this Age, what Sect to follow, or what Guide to chuse? |
A27051 | How shall we know certainly which are the true uncorrupted writings of these Fathers among so many forgeries and spurious Scripts? |
A27051 | How shall we know which side to be on? |
A27051 | I ask it of each particular Bishop in that Council, Is he saved for believing himself or the rest? |
A27051 | I ask not only whether your opinion will make you say that this Society and State is best? |
A27051 | I know not what the meaning of a Reflect act is: Is it the same act which is called Direct and Reflect? |
A27051 | I must expect that opening the Crime will exasperate the Guilty: But what remedy? |
A27051 | I therefore ask the Infidel Objector, whether he shall be saved that loveth God in one respect, and hateth him in another? |
A27051 | I think that God nor Man have no true need of a lie in this case; and that lies seldom further mens Salvation? |
A27051 | IF so much knowledge will save a man as helpeth him to love God as God, may not Heathens or Infidels at least be saved? |
A27051 | If by Evidence, let it be produced? |
A27051 | If he be asked[ Sir, did you ever try?] |
A27051 | If it be true and good, why do they hate and revile them that would live in the serious practice of it, if they will not practise it themselves? |
A27051 | If it come especially to the characterizing of others, how ordinarily do men speak as they are affected? |
A27051 | If no man be saved for believing himself, why should another be saved for believing him? |
A27051 | If not, how shall we know in what to believe their consent, according to this Rule? |
A27051 | If not, the Kingdom will die with him? |
A27051 | If not, why do they use it, and never blame it? |
A27051 | If not, why pretend you that there are any? |
A27051 | If only by this Revelation, how know you that Revelation? |
A27051 | If religion be bad, and our faith be not true, why do these men profess it? |
A27051 | If sense be fallible here, why not there? |
A27051 | If so much Knowledge will save Men as causeth them To Love God, may not Heathens be saved who know God to be good, and therefore may Love him? |
A27051 | If so, why is it called Reflect, and what is that reflection? |
A27051 | If the Greek Church can be corrupted into so gross a foolery, why may not the Latine, and the English, if they had the same temptations? |
A27051 | If the Inquisitors Torment Protestants, or Burn them, is it not necessary that they call them by such odious names as may justify their fact? |
A27051 | If the former, then is it as necessary to Salvation to know how old Henoch was, as to know that Jesus Christ is our Saviour? |
A27051 | If they are too ignorant, how come you to be wiser? |
A27051 | If they that never used a Trade, should presently take themselves to be as wise as the longest practicers, who would be Apprentices? |
A27051 | If you are not, why will you not learn of him? |
A27051 | If you are not, why will you not learn? |
A27051 | If you are wise enough already, what need you a Teacher? |
A27051 | If you ask me, when this desire of common Learning is inordinate? |
A27051 | If you were wiser than He, why did you choose or take him for your Teacher? |
A27051 | Is any Infallible besides the Pope and his Council? |
A27051 | Is any thing more evident than that all men must be saved for Believing God? |
A27051 | Is he our Owner, or not? |
A27051 | Is it a greater evil than the destruction of Love that you would avoid? |
A27051 | Is it any great honour to know the vanity of Philosophical Pedantry? |
A27051 | Is it because Scripture or Councils say so? |
A27051 | Is it by any certifying Evidence, or by Prophetical Inspiration? |
A27051 | Is it not blaspheming God? |
A27051 | Is it not revealed to others as well as to them? |
A27051 | Is it not then an unspeakable comfort in all these cases that we are known of God? |
A27051 | Is not here Self- conceitedness in all( at least) save one? |
A27051 | Is not the love of God like to be least, where Contentions and Controversies divert the peoples minds from God and necessary saving Truths? |
A27051 | Is there no Remedy, no Hope from Thee, though there be none from Man? |
A27051 | Is this an Intellect to be proud of? |
A27051 | Is your worldly interest on that side that your opinion is for? |
A27051 | It can be none of the former; therefore it must be the latter: And how can the understanding find that in sense which was never there? |
A27051 | It is a natural Impossibility: For Evidence is nothing but the perceptibility of the Truth: And can we perceive that which is not perceptible? |
A27051 | It is not their own words: Doth a Pope believe himself only? |
A27051 | It is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise,& c. Where is the wise? |
A27051 | LOVE is the great command and summary of all the Law: And what can be a just pretence for breaking the greatest command, yea, and the whole Law? |
A27051 | Let them not go beyond their knowledge: How little of our kind of Physick did the old Physicians( Hypocrates, Galius, Celsus,& c.) give? |
A27051 | Let unbelievers say, How doth God know? |
A27051 | Many a man spendeth all the studies of his Life, more for a Fame of Learning than for Learning it self; what is Pride if this be not? |
A27051 | May a Papist or an Heretick by his knowledge be a lover of God as God? |
A27051 | May not a Papist or Heretick Love God and be saved? |
A27051 | Miracles to become ordinary things, through all the Churches in the World, and every day in the week or every hour to be done? |
A27051 | Must Sense be renounced and ordinary Miracles believed for such words as these? |
A27051 | Must not that Evidence convince us also? |
A27051 | Must not we have a Faith of the same kind as the Church hath? |
A27051 | Must their doctrine be kept up by silencing faithful Ministers? |
A27051 | Must we believe therefore that neither David nor Christ was a Man, but a Worm? |
A27051 | Nature teacheth us to loath death as death, and to desire, if it might be, that this Cup might pass by us? |
A27051 | Nay, it is well if when they have increased knowledge they increase not sorrow? |
A27051 | Nay, will he not be hardened in his self- conceit, because it is such as these that contradict him? |
A27051 | No Gospel daily preached and practised? |
A27051 | No Knowledge of the Lords Prayer and Commandements? |
A27051 | Now after ye have known God, or rather are known of of God? |
A27051 | O how much goeth to make an able Physician? |
A27051 | O that Ministers would be wiser at last, than to put their superfluities, their controversies, and private opinions into their Catechisms? |
A27051 | Of how little use is it to me in it self to know what is written in many a hundred Books, which yet by accident, it much concerneth me to know? |
A27051 | Or absolutely, as supposing that one mark infallible, because it is never separated from the rest? |
A27051 | Or hath God said, You shall be saved if you will believe your selves, and believe that I have said all that you say I have said? |
A27051 | Or if he be told it but once, or twice, or thrice, or how oft? |
A27051 | Or is it Charity or common Justice to condemn a man unheard? |
A27051 | Or is it certain that all Christians will Unite in Patriarchs? |
A27051 | Or is it not an over- valuing of thy own understanding, which makes thee so easily condemn all as unsufferable that differ from it? |
A27051 | Or must I also know by scientifical Evidence that you say true, and that God himself hath said what you say? |
A27051 | Or no Profession of the Christian Faith in distinct Articles? |
A27051 | Or on the other, Away with these from our Communion as not holy enough to join with us? |
A27051 | Or than the life of mens Souls in all matters of Soul concernment? |
A27051 | Or than the life of the Church in all Church affairs? |
A27051 | Or that the Spirit was promised to these Prelates which was promised to the Apostles? |
A27051 | Or that there was no Baptism? |
A27051 | Quod enim opes est ut hec& hujusmodi affirmentur, vel negentur, vel definiantur cum dis ● rimine, quando sine crimine nesciuntur? |
A27051 | Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
A27051 | Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
A27051 | Shall I not easily believe and trust his love who hath promised me eternal glory with his Son,& with all his holy ones in Heaven? |
A27051 | Shall I not easily hope for good from him, who hath made such a covenant of Grace with me in Christ? |
A27051 | Shall I say, SUSPEND TILL YOU HAVE TRUE EVIDENCE, and you are safe? |
A27051 | So often heard my prayers in distress, and hath made all my life, notwithstanding my sins, a continual wonder of his mercies? |
A27051 | Specially in the work of self- judging, how hard a work have the most Learned that are ungodly truely to know themselves? |
A27051 | Such obloquy had Hierome, such had Augustine himself, and who knoweth not that Envy is Virtues Shadow? |
A27051 | That even one mans Life is more precious than one mans maintenance, or fuller supply: Is it not honester to beg your bread? |
A27051 | That ever the Bishops of that Council were lawfully called? |
A27051 | That is, a Heavenly Life, and Light, and Love? |
A27051 | That is, take that for more certain which all men believe, than that which I think I see a Divine word for my self? |
A27051 | That the Physician is but One man; And will his maintenance or livelyhood excuse him for killing many? |
A27051 | That they truely represented all Christs Church on Earth? |
A27051 | That this or that Doctrine is the decree of a Council, or the sence of the Church indeed? |
A27051 | The Heavenly work is perfect Obedience and Praise: And what are these but the actions and the breath of Love? |
A27051 | The Lord is my Shepherd, what then can I need? |
A27051 | The prouder the Obtruder of his own conceits is, the more he condemneth all Dissenters as proud, for presuming to differ from such as he? |
A27051 | Then so must we: It is not the present Church then that I must believe by a saving Faith: But why then was the last Age saved, and so the former? |
A27051 | To say no more of Rome, O that the Reformed Churches themselves had been more innocent? |
A27051 | Was it not labour enough to study so many years to know what others say? |
A27051 | Well, and Patriarchs must be the Pillars of Unity: But was it so to the Unity of the first Churches? |
A27051 | Were it but Poverty alone, how much of our time will it alienate from contemplation? |
A27051 | Were it left to our wills how long we should live on Earth, alas how long should many of us be kept out of heaven, by our own desires? |
A27051 | Were they Forreign Enemies that did it, and still keep open our wounds, or is it our selves? |
A27051 | What Soul in Hell doth think that Wisdom brought him thither? |
A27051 | What a case then had Mankind been in, if none could have been wise and happy indeed, but these few of extraordinary capacity? |
A27051 | What a dark deceitful mind have I? |
A27051 | What abundance of darkness do these two words contain in all their writings? |
A27051 | What abundance will talk against an Arminian, a Calvinist, a Prelatist, a Presbyterian, an Independent, that really know not what any of them are? |
A27051 | What an odious thing is a partial, blind, rash, hasty and impatient judge, that can not hear, think and know before he judgeth? |
A27051 | What are Church Societies or Combinations for but the loving Communion of Saints? |
A27051 | What are the Certainties that must be known and held fast, and why? |
A27051 | What are the unknown things or Uncertainties, which we must not pretend a certain Knowledge of, even Scripture Truths? |
A27051 | What did the Church- assemblies think you, do all those years? |
A27051 | What difference between the Histories of the orthodox, and that of Philostorgius, and Sondius? |
A27051 | What different Characters do Eusebius and Eunapius give of Constantine? |
A27051 | What different characters were given of Chrysostom? |
A27051 | What great numbers have I heard begging relief from others, under the confession of this sin? |
A27051 | What gross self- deceit hath sensuality taught these men? |
A27051 | What help of Teachers, do we need? |
A27051 | What if a novice can not Anatomize Cicero or Demosthenes, doth it follow that they are immethodical? |
A27051 | What if you could come to this glory, without dying as Henoch and Elias did, would you not be willing to go thither? |
A27051 | What injury should I do the Truth? |
A27051 | What is a man''s wit worth, but for its proper end? |
A27051 | What is it that he is Ignorant of? |
A27051 | What is it that we read books for, and hear Sermons for, but to kindle and exercise holy Love? |
A27051 | What is the Bible else written for, but to teach us to Love and to exercise the fruits of Love? |
A27051 | What is the Church that saith so? |
A27051 | What is the Contention in Families,( and in all the World) but who shall have his way and will? |
A27051 | What is the whole Christian Faith for, but the doctrine of holy love believed, for the kindling and exercise of our love? |
A27051 | What joyn we for in the Sacred worship of the assemblies, but that in an united flame of holy love, we might all mount up in praise to Jehovah? |
A27051 | What large Consciences have they that can join with a Parish Church? |
A27051 | What need one be sent from Heaven to teach men the order and rules of speaking? |
A27051 | What plant is not natured to the propagation of its kind, yea to a plenteous multiplication? |
A27051 | What though they are godly men that report it? |
A27051 | What villany may he not do? |
A27051 | What wisdom, and what esteem of our wisdom is not here condemned? |
A27051 | What work doth Aristotle make with Actus and Potentia, and the School- men after him? |
A27051 | What wrong to Souls? |
A27051 | What''s this to the hasty believing of falshoods, or uncertainties, and troubling the Church and World with self- conceit and dreams? |
A27051 | When I see the Skulls of the dead who perhaps once knew me, how little doth it now concern me what thoughts of me were once within that Skull? |
A27051 | When Learning doth but help their Pride to blind them? |
A27051 | When a man cometh to die, who savoureth not more Wisdom in the Sacred Scripture, and in holy Treatises, than in all Aristotle''s Learned works? |
A27051 | When you have written all this against pretended knowledge, who is more guilty than your self? |
A27051 | Where is there such a promise? |
A27051 | Whether it be sufficient, if he be told it in his Childhood only, and at what Age? |
A27051 | Who almost suffer but by themselves? |
A27051 | Who art thou that judgest anothers Servant? |
A27051 | Who can these Gordian Knots undo? |
A27051 | Who giveth me what his Son hath purchased, who accepteth me in his most beloved, as a member of his Son? |
A27051 | Who hath already brought many millions of blessed Souls to that glory, who were once as bad and low as I am? |
A27051 | Who hath bid me, ask and I shall have? |
A27051 | Who hath given me a life full of precious mercies, and so many experiences of his love as I have had? |
A27051 | Who hath given me there a great Intercessor to prepare Heaven for me, and me for it and there appeareth for me before God? |
A27051 | Who hath so often signified his love to my Conscience? |
A27051 | Who is averse to that which he Loveth( unless for something in it which he hateth?) |
A27051 | Who is liker the Devil than he that knoweth most, and loveth God least? |
A27051 | Who should proceed more cautelously than Bishops? |
A27051 | Who so oppresseth his Reader with distinctions? |
A27051 | Who think you best knoweth what Money is? |
A27051 | Whose hands kindled all the flames that have wasted the Glory, Wealth and Peace of England in State and Church except our own? |
A27051 | Why doth a Lay- man believe Transubstantiation, or any other Article of their Faith? |
A27051 | Why else did he animate and beautify the Universe, with the Life and Ornaments of Created Goodness? |
A27051 | Why else made he all the World? |
A27051 | Why is not Catechizing more used, both by Pastors and Parents? |
A27051 | Why lay Fines and Penalties upon them? |
A27051 | Why should I not easily believe his love, which he hath sealed by that certain gift of love, the Spirit of Christ which he hath given? |
A27051 | Why, command them all to be of your mind? |
A27051 | Will it comfort them in Hell to be praised on Earth? |
A27051 | Will not such a Gospel, such a Covenant, such promises of love secure me that he loveth me, while I consent unto his covenant terms? |
A27051 | Would my good Lord Bishops have burnt them for[ I know not?] |
A27051 | Would not a Malefactor at the Gallows take it for his reproach to hear an Oration of his happiness? |
A27051 | Would their Lordships have burnt such modest persons? |
A27051 | Would you not fain be one of them and be united to them, and joyn in their perfect Love and Praise? |
A27051 | Yea and maintain? |
A27051 | Yea, I would ask the Infidel, whether God will save men for rebelling against him? |
A27051 | and Eunapius and Hilary,& c. give of Julian? |
A27051 | and all their uncertainties become certainties to us? |
A27051 | and doth not God use to give his blessing on supposition of mens Faithful endeavours? |
A27051 | and given thee peace in the midst of furious Rage and Wars? |
A27051 | and holy Blood? |
A27051 | and how much unknown in comparison of what we know? |
A27051 | and how you shall be sure of that? |
A27051 | and many things alledged as pretences to justify it? |
A27051 | and so on to the first? |
A27051 | and that will not save his Soul from Hell? |
A27051 | and their worship by destroying or undoing the true worshippers of Christ? |
A27051 | and what use the God of nature maketh even of sensual LOVE to all Generation? |
A27051 | and whether the Will by its Natural Gust have not a Complacential Perception of it as well as the Intellect? |
A27051 | and who shall that one man be that shall be left to be all the Kingdom? |
A27051 | as Complacency, or as Complacency? |
A27051 | as plain; yea and that in a Prophecy of Christ? |
A27051 | as plain? |
A27051 | at least, as most prevalent and trusted in? |
A27051 | but they must now undo much of it, and begin a new and harder labour? |
A27051 | but whether you do not so really esteem it as that it hath the pleasing desires of your Souls? |
A27051 | concerneth them that will save heir Skin; Be not Righteous over- much, neither make thy self over wise: Why wilt thou destroy thy self? |
A27051 | did I part with all the pleasures of the world, for one flame, one spark more of the Love of God? |
A27051 | how can they tell which are the wisest Teachers, and whom to chuse? |
A27051 | how shall the person that we would instruct( be it for Health or Soul) be able to know which of all these to trust as wisest? |
A27051 | nor in vain so often charge it on them, as his new( that is his last) Commandment, that they love one another? |
A27051 | or a Council believe themselves only? |
A27051 | or by a Priest that never read the Councils? |
A27051 | or from the overvaluing of the thing known? |
A27051 | or only as we do other men that may deceive and be deceived? |
A27051 | or whether it be better as Virtue, or as Virtue? |
A27051 | or who hath been his Counsellor? |
A27051 | or, are there many? |
A27051 | say such, what Idolaters are they that use a Form of Prayer, which God did not command? |
A27051 | shall I question whether he love those whom he hath caused to love him? |
A27051 | that can communicate Kneeling, and among bad men, or those whose Conversion is not tryed? |
A27051 | too like them still? |
A27051 | what Goodness? |
A27051 | what Holiness? |
A27051 | what Knowledge? |
A27051 | what Will? |
A27051 | what a dreaming dotard should I be? |
A27051 | what are these but trifles to a dying man? |
A27051 | what doth the word[ God] signifie? |
A27051 | what is Power in God? |
A27051 | what is a Person in the Trinity? |
A27051 | what is faith itself but the bellows of love? |
A27051 | what is the Union of the Divine and Humane Nature? |
A27051 | what is the difference between the three Persons? |
A27051 | where is the Scribe? |
A27051 | where is the disputer of this World? |
A27051 | wherein different from the Union of God and Saints, or every Creature? |
A27051 | whether by a Parent or Layman that can not tell him what is in the Councils? |
A27051 | whilst great necessities call for great care and continual labour? |
A27051 | who will do it? |
A27051 | why then art thou so hasty in condemning them that are as fair for the reputation of wisdom as thou art? |
A27051 | would you not believe him?] |
A27051 | yea upon their Husbands and their Children? |
A26955 | ( And 〈 ◊ 〉 Christ be put to Justifie us against our selv ● ● as well as against Satan?) |
A26955 | 12. abroad? |
A26955 | 26.74, 75. Who knows what''s ● ● rtually in a seed, that never saw the tree, 〈 ◊ 〉 tasted of the fruit? |
A26955 | 38. that yet Hezekiahs heart should so deceive him, as to prove unthankful? |
A26955 | 53.4, 5, 6,& c. Art thou in doubt whether there be any forgiveness for thy sins? |
A26955 | ? |
A26955 | A ● I in the Spirit or in the flesh? |
A26955 | Alas Sirs, what would you have a poor Minister do, when Gods command doth cross your pleasure? |
A26955 | And can he choose but express his Joy and Thankfulness, that hath assurance of the crown of life? |
A26955 | And do I need to tell you what a powerful incentive it is to Love, to know that you are beloved? |
A26955 | And doth not your own experience convince you? |
A26955 | And doth so much of our work and of your recovery lie upon this point and yet shall we not be able to ac ● complish it? |
A26955 | And hence come suspitions, and murmurrings against them, and Corah''s censures,[ Ye take too much upon you: Are not all the people holy?] |
A26955 | And how frowardly do they reject the wisest counsel, and cast the medicine with unthankfull indignation into the face of the Physicion? |
A26955 | And how should they think better of your knowledge of your selves, if any of you that are yet in the flesh, will say you are spiritual? |
A26955 | And if you can not be saved in an unrenewed unjustified state, is it not needful that you know it? |
A26955 | And is a man like to be saved by the word, while he hateth it, and bends his thoughts and passions all against it? |
A26955 | And is he a man, or some monster that wants a name, that will go on to Hell, when he seeth it as it were before him? |
A26955 | And is it not pitty that the celestiall undeceving Light should be abused to so dangerous selfdeceit? |
A26955 | And is not such a frail and sinfull wight, more likely to be the cause of sin then God? |
A26955 | And is there no Remedy for a stupified inconsiderate soul? |
A26955 | And is this a matter for a man of Reason to be quietly and contentedly ignorant of? |
A26955 | And is toyl and danger your delight? |
A26955 | And saith Hierom[ Quomodo potest praeses Ecclesiae auferre malum de medio ejus, qui in delictum simile corruerit? |
A26955 | And shall Justice it self be judged to be unjust? |
A26955 | And that self- deceit should be increased, by the glass of verity that should undeceive you? |
A26955 | And then, will Pride preserve them from the knowledge of it? |
A26955 | And to hear a carnal unregenerate person give thanks for his Regeneration and Sanctification by the Holy Ghost? |
A26955 | And what an ease and pleasure is this to a mans mind through all his life, to be able with well- grounded comfort, to think of death? |
A26955 | And what if the nature of the disease be obstinate, and will not be cured easily and at once, but with time and diligence and patience? |
A26955 | And what if they distaste our doctrine? |
A26955 | And what is the matter that there is no more such lamentation? |
A26955 | And what should break the Peace and Patience of him that is assured of Everlasting Rest? |
A26955 | And what should deprive that man of comfort, that knoweth he hath the Comforter within him, and shall be for ever comforted with his masters joy? |
A26955 | And what should they make known to you, if not your selves? |
A26955 | And what will more effect ● ● ● kindle in you the fervent Love of Chr ● ● ● then to know that he loveth you, and 〈 ◊ 〉 in you? |
A26955 | And when for a season he hath hid his face, how soon and seasonably he returned? |
A26955 | And when they hear that[ The Righteous are scarcely saved] They would think[ Where then shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?] |
A26955 | And when we are stopt at the first door, and can not conquer Satans out works, what hopes have we of going further? |
A26955 | And where it is that thou must shortly fix thy unchangeable abode; And what is now to be done in preparation for such a day? |
A26955 | And whose anger think you should a wise man choose? |
A26955 | And will a man then be regardless of his soul, that knows he hath an immortal soul? |
A26955 | And will he refuse thee? |
A26955 | And will you refuse this Mercy, and by no entreaty yield to have it, and yet think to be saved by it? |
A26955 | And will you reproach God or his word or works, or Ministers, with that which is the matter of his Praise? |
A26955 | And will you say, We preach not Mercy, because we tell you, that Mercy will not save you, if you continue to reject it? |
A26955 | And would not a man think that such words as these should waken the guilty soul that doth believe them? |
A26955 | And would you not more highly value him, more importunately solicite him for your soules, if you knew your selves? |
A26955 | And yet would you think, that with all this Humility, there should be any pride? |
A26955 | And, except his Incarnate and his written word, what Glass revealeth him so clearly as the soul of man? |
A26955 | Are you all desirous to be sure before hand, what sentence shall pass upon you then, or are you not? |
A26955 | Are you fain to go to Cards or Dice to waste this treasure, which is more precious then your money? |
A26955 | Art thou cast out as helpless, wounded by thy sin, and neglected by all others that pass by? |
A26955 | Art thou weary and heavy laden? |
A26955 | Art thou wiser then all the best and wisest, in the matters of their own profession? |
A26955 | BUt is all self- ignorance a shame, or dangerous? |
A26955 | Be not offended to give Conscience a sober faithfull answer, if it ask you, What you have done with all your Time? |
A26955 | Behold, I am vile, what Shall I answer ● ● ee? |
A26955 | But a Pharisee will say[ Are we blind also?] |
A26955 | But how came they to continue thus ignorant of themselves till it was too late? |
A26955 | But if it be true, tell me, Why would you not know it? |
A26955 | But if you are unregenerate and unjustified, what will you do at death and judgement? |
A26955 | But if you confess it to be true, do you think in reason, it should be silenced? |
A26955 | But if you confess that once you were children of wrath, my next Question is, Whether you know how and whe ● you were delivered from so sad a state? |
A26955 | But indeed is there in these words of ours so great a crime? |
A26955 | But is there not cause of as deep humiliation for this sin, as almost any other? |
A26955 | But to the self- condemning soul that knoweth it self, how wellcome would a Saviour be? |
A26955 | But what need I use any other Instances then that which was the matter of our dispute? |
A26955 | But when you are afraid lest death will turn you into Hell, What wonder if you timerously draw back? |
A26955 | But who can Live, when God will pour out wrath upon him? |
A26955 | But whom can the prosperous blame so much as themselves, if they are undone by the deceit of flatterers? |
A26955 | But you may well discern Whether it be there, or not? |
A26955 | Can a man forbear thus to fly from Hell, if he saw that he is as near it as a condemned Traytor to the Gallows? |
A26955 | Can not the company of imperfect mortals serve your ● urn? |
A26955 | Can not you endure to know your sin and misery, and yet can you endure to bear it? |
A26955 | Can we help it, if God will save none but sanctified believers? |
A26955 | Can you fear to dwell where Christ ● wells with you? |
A26955 | Can you look for any cheerful thanksgiving from him that looks to lie in hell? |
A26955 | Can you seek to Christ to take you up, till you find that you have fallen and hurt you? |
A26955 | Can you stand before God, or be saved upon any other terms? |
A26955 | Can your thoughts be pleasant of him? |
A26955 | Could not I heave plaid the beast without a Reasonable free- working soul? |
A26955 | Could they thinke the greatest care and labour of so short a life to be too much for the securing of their salvation? |
A26955 | Could you tell how to sleep quietly many nights more, before you had earnestly sought out for help, and made this change? |
A26955 | Did Infinite Wisdom it self want Wisdom, to make a Law to rule the world? |
A26955 | Did men considerately know what they are, how quickly would it bring them low? |
A26955 | Did we indite the Holy Scriptures, or did the Holy Ghost? |
A26955 | Did you see your inside with a fuller view, how deeply would you aggravate your sin? |
A26955 | Do but lay by your prejudice and partiality, and see whether there be not in serious Christians another spirit then in the world? |
A26955 | Do men know themselves, that will sooner suspect and blame the most Righteous, Holy God, then their own unrighteous carnal hearts? |
A26955 | Do the ● think in their dejections, that it is in the ● hearts so much to exalt themselves? |
A26955 | Do they Morally know themselves, that make a ● est of sin; and make it their delight? |
A26955 | Do they know themselves, that are prying into unrevealed things, and will be wise, in matters of Theology above what is written? |
A26955 | Do they pronounce you miserable as being strangers to the spirit of Christ? |
A26955 | Do you keep silent ordinarily the matters which you highliest esteem? |
A26955 | Do you now take a civilized person for a Saint? |
A26955 | Do you take it now for true Religion to be hot for lust, and pride, and gain, and cold for God and you Salvation? |
A26955 | Do you think our saying so, would make it so? |
A26955 | Do you think that Baptism by water only will save, unless you be also baptized by the spirit? |
A26955 | Do you think that you were ● ver unsanctified, and in a state of wrath and condemnation or not? |
A26955 | Dost thou delight in the mysteryes of nature? |
A26955 | Dost thou hate a holy heavenly life, and art void of the love of God, and of his servants? |
A26955 | Dost thou know that thou hast sinned against Heaven and before God, and art not worthy to be called a Son? |
A26955 | Doth a ceremonious Pharisee thank God for the sincerity and Holynes which he never had? |
A26955 | Doth a little formal heartless, Hypocriticall devotion, now cover a sensuall, worldly mind? |
A26955 | Doth it not reprove you for your self neglect, and your wanderings of mind, and your aliene, unnecessary fruitless Cogitations? |
A26955 | Doth the Baptisme of water only goe with you now for the Regeneration of the Spirit? |
A26955 | Doth the name of a christian, and the heartless use of outward ordinances, and that good esteeme of others, now goe for Godlyness and saving grace? |
A26955 | Doth ● ot this mutability shew how few men now have a true knowledge of themselves? |
A26955 | Had we no Vnderstandings? |
A26955 | Hast thou a carnal, dead, unconverted heart? |
A26955 | Hast thou these beams in thy own eye? |
A26955 | Hath Conscience no Vse to make of this Doctrine, and of all that hath been said upon it? |
A26955 | Hath he not made thee, and established thee?] |
A26955 | Hath our Physicion poured out his blood to make a medicine for distracted sinners? |
A26955 | Hath thy neighbour some mistakes about the disputable points of doctrine, or doubtfull modes of Discipline or Worship? |
A26955 | Have they not told you the truth and you would not believe it? |
A26955 | Have you more need to be acquainted with your sin and danger? |
A26955 | Have you not lived an unholy carnal life since you came to the use of reason? |
A26955 | Have you not since then delcared, that you did not live the life of faith, nor walk after the spirit but the flesh? |
A26955 | Have you the Necessary parts of the New Creature now? |
A26955 | Hence it is that we have all need to lament in general our unknown sins, and say with David[ Who can understand his errors? |
A26955 | Him that is weak in the faith, receive ye — who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A26955 | Ho ● confident upon good grounds is 〈 ◊ 〉 an honest heart of its sincerity? |
A26955 | Hoc scire quid proderit, ut solicitus sim, quum Saturnus& Mars è contrario stabunt? |
A26955 | How ambitiously do you avoid ambition? |
A26955 | How calmly do we converse together? |
A26955 | How can they speak that language with desire to God, which they never learn''t by faith from God or by knowledge of themselves? |
A26955 | How can you Love him that you apprehend to be your enemie, and to intend your ruine? |
A26955 | How cheerfully will he endure the foulest way, that is assured to come safe to such a home? |
A26955 | How easie and sweet would all 〈 ◊ 〉 service be to you, if you were assured 〈 ◊ 〉 Christ abideth in you? |
A26955 | How easily may you bear imprisonment, banishment, or other persecution, as ● ong as you are assured of the Love of Christ? |
A26955 | How far would self- acquaintance go to the Cure of all our discords and divisions? |
A26955 | How few are there( to a wonder) that grow better by worldly greatness and prosperity? |
A26955 | How few such true and faithful friends have they? |
A26955 | How gladly will he be exercised in the praises of his Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier, that knows it must be his work for ever? |
A26955 | How great are you in the lowliness of your mind? |
A26955 | How har ● is it to convince them of the tender love of God towards them, and of the sincerity o ● their Love to him? |
A26955 | How have I deserved this? |
A26955 | How he hath resolved your doubts, and expelled your fears; and heard your prayers? |
A26955 | How heavily would you charge your selves? |
A26955 | How high in your Humility? |
A26955 | How inconsiderable is it as to your own felicity, what mortal worms shall say or think of you? |
A26955 | How many a sin do you forget in your Confessions that should have a particular Repentance? |
A26955 | How many hearts would be filled with wholsome griefe and care, that now are careless and almost past feeling? |
A26955 | How many would ask directions for the cure of their unbelief, and pride and sensuality, that now take little notice of any such sins within them? |
A26955 | How many would lament their sin and misery, that now are Pharisaically confident of their integrity? |
A26955 | How many would weep, that now laugh, and live in mirth and pleasure? |
A26955 | How near have we been oft to Death? |
A26955 | How neer him sometimes you have got in fervent prayer, and serious meditation? |
A26955 | How oft he hath found you weeping, and hath wiped away your tears? |
A26955 | How ready is such a soul for Christ? |
A26955 | How suitable wi ● ● Christ and grace appear, and how unsuitabl ● will worldly pomp appear, to one that trul ● knows himself? |
A26955 | How suitable will serio ● ● fervent worship appear, and how unsuitab ● ● the ludicrous shews of Hypocrites? |
A26955 | I answer, And whence is it that you have not been used to it? |
A26955 | I appeal to your own consciences Christians; would you not think it a foretaste of Heaven upon earth, if you could but Love God as much as you desire? |
A26955 | If Heart and Tongue be not used for God, what do you either with a Heart or Tongue? |
A26955 | If he will go with you ● hrough fire and water, what need you fear? |
A26955 | If it be terrible to hear of the wrath of God, how terrible will it be to feel it? |
A26955 | If they befoole ● hemselves with the ordinary Questions[ where is Hell: and what kind of fire is it? |
A26955 | If they have ● ● ken the true estimate of themselves in ● ● eir prosperity, how come they to be so ● ● ch changed in adversity? |
A26955 | If you had know the Greatness and Goodness of the Lord, as sensibly as they, would not you have used to Pray to him and speak of him as well as they? |
A26955 | If you say, To what purpose should you know before hand, how subject you are to this falling sickness? |
A26955 | If you were running ignorantly into a Cole- pit, would you revile him that told you of it, and bid you stop if you love your life? |
A26955 | In all this Congregation, how few hearts are affected with so miserable a case? |
A26955 | In reason is there any likelier way to draw you to hate God, then to draw you to believe that he hateth you? |
A26955 | Is he afraid to talke to thee of death or of damnation? |
A26955 | Is he for the opinion, or form, or Policy, or Ceremony, which thou dislikest? |
A26955 | Is idle talk and prating better? |
A26955 | Is it because there are few or none so miserable? |
A26955 | Is it because your Reason is lower then those mens that do speak it, whom you despise? |
A26955 | Is it easier to bear Gods wrath for ever, than to find at present that you have offended him? |
A26955 | Is it long of us, if there be any words there that cross your flesh, and that you call bitter? |
A26955 | Is it so small a matter with thee what becometh of thee? |
A26955 | Is it we that hinder the forgiveness of your sins, by letting you know that they are not forgiven? |
A26955 | Is not he thy father that hath bought thee? |
A26955 | Is that your perfume, that stinketh in the nostrils of men of sounder senses? |
A26955 | Is the Knowledge of your selves so intolerable a thing to you? |
A26955 | Is there no prevention of so terrible a self- knowledge, as the Light of Judgement, and the fire of Hell will else procure? |
A26955 | Is there no sense in this discourse? |
A26955 | Is this opinion inconsistent with all Government? |
A26955 | It is thy sin and shame if it be not 〈 ◊ 〉 Why wilt thou have twenty thoughts of sin and misery, for one that thou hast of Christ and mercy? |
A26955 | It will be thus with you but a little while, and where will you be next? |
A26955 | Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death? |
A26955 | Know ye not your own selves —?] |
A26955 | Know ye not your own selves? |
A26955 | Know ● e not that the friendship of the world, is ● nmity with God? |
A26955 | Let him come near to me: Behold the Lord God will help me; who is he that shall condemn me? |
A26955 | Let them take them for me, saith ● he believing soul; may I but still have the comforts of the presence of my Lord, how ● ittle shall I miss them? |
A26955 | Let thy thoughts of the Remedie be deeper and larger and longer then all thy thoughts of thy Misery? |
A26955 | Lord, what hath thus lockt up the minds and hearts of sinners against thy truth and thee? |
A26955 | May I die assured of the Love of God, how little regardable is it whether I be poor or rich till then? |
A26955 | Men and Brethren, what shall we do? |
A26955 | Must you not know it with everlasting woe and vengeance when you come thither, if by knowing your danger you prevent not your coming thither? |
A26955 | Nay, can you be satisfied with none below the Lord himself? |
A26955 | Now sweet would meditation be to you, ● f you could still think on Christ and all the riches of his kingdom as your own? |
A26955 | Now thou art ready to be healed by him, when thou findest that thou art sick, and dead: Hast thou received the sentence of death in thy self? |
A26955 | Now thou hast smitten upon the thigh, and said, What have I done? |
A26955 | O Christians, do you live such exemplary and convincing lives? |
A26955 | O how do ● ● ey think now, of the fearless slumber ● nd stupidity of those that they have ● eft behind? |
A26955 | O how easie is it with the most, to see and aggravate the faults of others? |
A26955 | O what a Court have you chosen for your abode? |
A26955 | O what a change it would make in the world, if men were brought to the knowledge of themselves? |
A26955 | O what pillars have been shaken by prosperity? |
A26955 | Or directed you to Remedies which you would not use? |
A26955 | Or he ● hat doubteth of a particular Providence, ● f which he hath daily and hourly expe ● ience? |
A26955 | Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the moat out of thine eye, and behold, a beam is in thy own eye? |
A26955 | Or is the difference no more then that one ● ● th the name of a Christian, and not the ● her? |
A26955 | Or is the judgement of able faithful Ministers in the way of their own office, of no more regard with thee? |
A26955 | Or that it is hot unless it be always Summer? |
A26955 | Or the knowledge of Cities and places? |
A26955 | Or what is the Rich man the better for his sumptuonus attire and fare? |
A26955 | Or would he not deal with us as perfidious messengers that had betrayed our trust, and belyed him, and deceived yout souls? |
A26955 | Patience and meekness is commanded to the Ministers of Christ, even in the instructing of opposers; But to what end? |
A26955 | Prove your selves: Know ye not your own selves: how that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be Reprobates?] |
A26955 | Put home the question, Am I sanctified or not? |
A26955 | Quid cognitio urbium aut locorum? |
A26955 | Quid est sapientia( inquit Seneca?) |
A26955 | Quid ex his metum demit, cupiditatem fraenat?] |
A26955 | Quid juvat immensos scire atque evolvere casus, Si facienda fugis; si fugienda facis? |
A26955 | Quid miraris tibi peregrinationes non prodesse, cum te circumferas? |
A26955 | Quid terrarum juvare novitas potest? |
A26955 | Say not too late, I thought I had been born again of the Spirit, and had been in a state of grace? |
A26955 | Scis quae recta sit linea: quid tibi prodest si quid in vita rectum sit ignoras?] |
A26955 | Shall not the Physicion have leave to tell you of your diseases? |
A26955 | Shall they escape the Sentence by reproaching the Law- maker? |
A26955 | Should I not have been judged unmeet to live in any Governed society? |
A26955 | Sirs, the question is whether you are under the condemnation of the law, or not? |
A26955 | Take no thought for your life, what you shall eat, or drink, or for your body what you shall put on — Why take ye thought for rayment? |
A26955 | The Question is, Whether you are now in a state of sanctification? |
A26955 | The anger of the dreadfull God of Heaven, or yours? |
A26955 | The guilty hearer would say,[ How then shall I be able to stand before him?] |
A26955 | The word of God is full of terror to the ungodly: But return with all your hearts to God, and then what word of God speaks terror to you? |
A26955 | Then where is th ● pleasure of lust, and merry company, an ● meat drink and sports? |
A26955 | Then who shall be the Lord, and who the Knight or Gentleman? |
A26955 | They think they may bear the words of the miserable, while ● hey have the the pleasure of prospe- And shall not we give losers leave to ● alke? |
A26955 | They would have said as Hazael, Am I a dog that I should do this? |
A26955 | This therefore he next urgeth, and that first in General; and this by way of Interrogation,[ Know ye not your own selves?] |
A26955 | Thou knowest a strait line: and what the better art thou if thou know not what is right or strait in thy own life?] |
A26955 | To be then newly to ask, What am I? |
A26955 | To carry about a dark, unknown, neglected soul, while they are travelling to know remotest things that less concern them? |
A26955 | What Article of the faith do not most among us confidently profess? |
A26955 | What Petition of the Lords prayer will they not put up? |
A26955 | What can the novelty of countreys avail? |
A26955 | What cares can vex him that hath secured hi ● everlasting state? |
A26955 | What could I find to do in the world, that is worthy of a man? |
A26955 | What else should he thirst for, that hath in him the well of living waters springing up to everlasting life? |
A26955 | What fears should disquiet him that is sure to escape the wrath of God? |
A26955 | What furtherance to vertue is the enarration of syllables, the diligence of words, the remembring of fables, and the law and modification of Verses? |
A26955 | What good would it do you for a Preacher to tell you a lye and say that you may be pardoned and saved in an impenitent, unsanctified state? |
A26955 | What have I done to him? |
A26955 | What is Lazarus the worse now for h ● s sores or rags? |
A26955 | What is it but Self- ignorance that perverteth the unsetled among us, and sends them over to the Romane tents? |
A26955 | What is there no difference between the heirs of Heaven and Hell? |
A26955 | What losses should afflict him that is sure he shall not lose his soul, and is sure to gain eternal life? |
A26955 | What matter is it what men call us, if God call us his children, and friends, and Christ be not ashamed to call us Brethren? |
A26955 | What more beloved company or employment hath he got?] |
A26955 | What need you ● ● re proof then the sad instances of ● oah, Lot, David, Solomon and Peter? |
A26955 | What of these taketh away fear, and bridleth concupiscence? |
A26955 | What profit is there in my blood, when I go down to the pit? |
A26955 | What saved by that Mercy which you will not have? |
A26955 | What shall it profit a man, if he win the world and lose his soul? |
A26955 | What should I do with life and time? |
A26955 | What sin may not Satan tempt a man into, that is not acquainted with the corruptions and frailties of his own heart? |
A26955 | What terror is it to the Regenerate( that knoweth himself to be such) to hear that none but the Regenerate shall be saved? |
A26955 | What then can be the cause of this dumb disease, but that you are unacquainted with your selves? |
A26955 | What time, what industrie is necessary to understand them? |
A26955 | What use should I make of Gods provisions? |
A26955 | What wants should trouble him that knoweth he is an heir of Heaven? |
A26955 | What will a man stick at that knows he is following Christ to Heaven; and knoweth that he shall reign with him, when he hath suffered with him? |
A26955 | What would you do with Teachers but to Teach you? |
A26955 | What you that are but skinfuls of corruption? |
A26955 | What''s here but a brittle glass full of dangers? |
A26955 | When Satan durst assault the Lord himself; What hope will he have of such as we? |
A26955 | When the question is, How come so many souls to perish? |
A26955 | When the stream of the times and authority shall change, and put the name of Truth on falshood, how many may be, carried down the stream? |
A26955 | When they hear that[ Judgement must begin at the house of God] They would infer[ What then shall be the end of them that obey not the Gospel of God?] |
A26955 | When we are admired, appladed, or excessively esteemed and loved, how apt are we to be too much pleased with it? |
A26955 | When we are reproved of any disgracefull sin, how hardly goes it down, and how many excuses have we? |
A26955 | When we consider the millions that are blinded, and hardened and damned by temptations, are we in our wits if we will cast our selves into them? |
A26955 | When you marry or contract any intimate friendship with a person of unsound and dangerous principles, how easily are they received? |
A26955 | Whether he hath forgotten to be gracious, and hath shut up 〈 ◊ 〉 tender mercies in displeasure? |
A26955 | Whether you are regenerate and justified, or yet in your sin? |
A26955 | Whether you make it your chief business to please God, and to save your souls? |
A26955 | Which of the Commandements will they not profess their obedience to? |
A26955 | Which should he venture to offend? |
A26955 | Who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A26955 | Who can for shame repine at the loss of temporal commodities, that is secured of the eternal Joyes? |
A26955 | Who is it now that ever he ● ● such lamentations and self- accusations fr ● ● them, as then its likely will be heard? |
A26955 | Who say in effect[ our lips are our own: Who is Lord over us? |
A26955 | Who tells them plainly of the odiousness, and bitter fruits of sin? |
A26955 | Who wil ● refuse blood letting, that is assured before- hand that it shall procure his health? |
A26955 | Who would not with Peter cast ● imself into the Sea, or walk with confidence upon the waters, if Christ be there and call us to him? |
A26955 | Why are you dumb when you should speak this language, and frequently and delightfully speak it? |
A26955 | Why did I not give 〈 ◊ 〉 the ghost when I came out of the belly? |
A26955 | Why do they pray, and call for prayers, when they come to die, but that they begin a little better to know themselves? |
A26955 | Why dost thou judge thy brother, and why dost thou set at nought thy brother? |
A26955 | Why dy ● I not from the womb? |
A26955 | Why marvellest thou that travels avail thee not, when thou carriest about thy self? |
A26955 | Wi ● ● you think it enough that you have the statutes of the Land, and the Law- books to judge of all your own cases by? |
A26955 | Will God falsifie his word to make good ours? |
A26955 | Will God speak submissively to thee for fear of offending thee? |
A26955 | Will he recall his threatnings, and repent him of the severity of his laws, because such worms are angry with them, or will not believe them? |
A26955 | Will no lower a place than Heaven content you to converse in? |
A26955 | Will not God judge the world? |
A26955 | Will that soul be in tune for the high Praises of the Lord, that thinks he meaneth to use him as an enemy? |
A26955 | Will you be instead of God to us when we have lost his favour? |
A26955 | Will you be our Gods if we forsake our God? |
A26955 | Will you cry for help before you find your selves in danger? |
A26955 | Will you not believe that a man can speak, unless he be always speaking? |
A26955 | Will you not believe that there is a sun in the firmament unless it always shine upon you? |
A26955 | Will you save us from him, when he sendeth for our souls by death, or sentenceth us to Hell by judgement? |
A26955 | Will you seek to him to fetch you from the gates of hell, that find not that you are there? |
A26955 | Will you tell Christ, the Saviour of the world, that he is not mercifull, because he talks to you of Damnation? |
A26955 | Will you therefore think the means are vain? |
A26955 | Would not he ask,[ What is the matter that my friend so seldom looketh at me? |
A26955 | Would you not your selves say he were worse then mad, that would rather abuse the Eternal God, then cross the misguided desires of such worms as you? |
A26955 | Would you tell him that he speaks bitterly or terribly to you? |
A26955 | Would you think that a Holy man, thus rapt up in Gods praise, should yet miscarry, and be charged with ingratitude? |
A26955 | Yea how few that held their own, and grow not worse? |
A26955 | You have enough against all this within you: What if you go for hypocrites, or factious, or what malignity can call you, until the day of Judgement? |
A26955 | You may hear some impious persons now disputing against frequent and fervent prayer, and saying, What need all this ado? |
A26955 | You may reach the flesh; but he that is a Spirit, can afflict and wound the Spirit: And a wounded spirit( and wounded by him) who can bear? |
A26955 | You should rather think with your selves, If we can so hardly bear the forethoughts of Hell, how shall we be able everlastingly to bear the torments? |
A26955 | You will aske then, What is to be done in such a difficult case? |
A26955 | Your own diseases, losses, injuries, and miseries, seem the worst and most grievous to you: And why should not your own sins also be most grievous? |
A26955 | [ Do ye thus requite the Lord, ye foolish people and unwise? |
A26955 | [ In death there is no remembrance of thee: in the grave who shall give thee thanks? |
A26955 | [ Lord, to whom 〈 ◊ 〉 we goe? |
A26955 | [ Man, who made me a Judge, or a divider over you?] |
A26955 | [ Quare enim superbit cinis& tre ● a? |
A26955 | [ Quid ad virtutem viam sternit syllabarum enarratio, verborum diligentia,& fabularum memoria,& versuum lex& modificatio? |
A26955 | [ Why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thy own eye? |
A26955 | and What have I done? |
A26955 | and What will become of me for ever? |
A26955 | and Whither am I going? |
A26955 | and by how many dangers must you come to greater dangers? |
A26955 | and calmed and quieted your troubled soul? |
A26955 | and can such a God be despised and not be terrible to thee? |
A26955 | and commanded you oft to Take and Eate the Bread of Life? |
A26955 | and fle ● to Christ as your only refuge from the wrath of God? |
A26955 | and have changed your company, your business, and your delights? |
A26955 | and have turned away with resolution from your former ungodly careless life? |
A26955 | and how little cause have blessed souls, to envie them that are left on earth, in a quiet and prosperous passage to damnation? |
A26955 | and how many eyes would stream forth teares that now are dry, if men were but truly acquainted with themselves? |
A26955 | and how many wants do you overlook in prayers, that should have particular petitions for a mercifull supply? |
A26955 | and how sensibly would they perceive that a hundred years time is not too long, to spend in serious preparation for eternity? |
A26955 | and how you have entertained Christ into your hearts? |
A26955 | and how you have lived in the world? |
A26955 | and how you have obeyed the calls of grace? |
A26955 | and judge them by a Law? |
A26955 | and make us all to look about us? |
A26955 | and no more mindeth me or my affaires? |
A26955 | and not, Whether you can tell just when you did receive it? |
A26955 | and now is he unwilling to work the cure? |
A26955 | and of life eternal, that knows his danger of eternal death? |
A26955 | and of the wrath of God and endless misery? |
A26955 | and resolve to take up with the hopes of Heaven as your only portion,, and not to hazzard it, for any wordly interest, or fleshly pleasure whatsoever? |
A26955 | and such like passages which offend you; Are they ours, or are they Gods? |
A26955 | and that Truth itself should be made the furtherance of so great an error? |
A26955 | and that the same person should lift up themselves and resist the ● helps to further Humiliation? |
A26955 | and that think they can keep in their candle in the greate ● ● storms, and in any company maintain their innocency? |
A26955 | and that when Reason is low, and sensuality prevaileth, we should then have the right use of Reason for self- discerning? |
A26955 | and that will continue in a state of sin, when he knows he must be damned in Hell for ever, if he so continue to the end? |
A26955 | and that you are naturally near kin to ideots? |
A26955 | and those that hate the Holiness, and Justice, and Government of God, will say they love him? |
A26955 | and to be culpable in all the ill that doth befall us? |
A26955 | and to be pulling these motes out of thy Brothers eye? |
A26955 | and to obey God so far as will stand with your outward prosperity, and as the flesh, or your other Masters will give leave? |
A26955 | and visited you with his consolations? |
A26955 | and what a mercy would it prove to their inferiours and themselves? |
A26955 | and what assurance you have of your Justification and Salvation? |
A26955 | and what forwardness the work of your salvation is in, for which you came into the world? |
A26955 | and what readiness to die? |
A26955 | and what should you know better then what''s within you, and what you carry still about you, and that which me thinks, you should alwayes feel? |
A26955 | and when he is sure to offend either God or you? |
A26955 | and whether there be any place for Repentance? |
A26955 | and whether they live not upon the things above, which your belief and love did never reach? |
A26955 | and whether you have been led by the spirit or the flesh? |
A26955 | and whether you have loathed your selves for your iniquities? |
A26955 | and whether you have obeyed him or his enemy? |
A26955 | and which you are deeplyest affected with, and prefere before all other matters of the world? |
A26955 | and who shall domineer, and say, Our will shall be done, an ● thus we will have it? |
A26955 | and who shall wear the gay attire? |
A26955 | and will he not be just and beyond the reach of their reproach? |
A26955 | art thou a presumptuous, careless, worldly wretch? |
A26955 | cujus rei gratia militatis? |
A26955 | do you want company and business to pass away your time? |
A26955 | et per qu ● t pericula pervenitur ad majus periculum? |
A26955 | even of the most honest and impartial, that would not flatter you nor deceive you? |
A26955 | how delightfully dost thou load? |
A26955 | how easily can I ● pare them?] |
A26955 | how few shall you see that with penitent tears lament their misery? |
A26955 | how gloriously dost thou inthrall? |
A26955 | how many sicknesses might have put an end to life and hope? |
A26955 | how mildly do we speak? |
A26955 | how oft he hath entertained you in secret with his Love? |
A26955 | how plesantly dost thou press? |
A26955 | how prudently dost thou instruct?] |
A26955 | how seldom are we brought to downright penitent confessions? |
A26955 | how strongly dost thou bind? |
A26955 | how 〈 ◊ 〉 he hath condescended to your weakness, and pardoned you when you could not easily forgive your self? |
A26955 | i. e. What strive you for, O worldings? |
A26955 | i. e.[ Why doth no ● an confess his vices? |
A26955 | let us stand together: Who is mine adversary? |
A26955 | must we forbear? |
A26955 | no Hearts? |
A26955 | no life or sense? |
A26955 | of so dark a mind, ● f so blameable a heart and life? |
A26955 | or What must I be for time to come? |
A26955 | or a small matter? |
A26955 | or afraid to use them, when thou thinkest them laudable? |
A26955 | or at least Whether it be done, or not? |
A26955 | or can you attend him, or draw near him with delight, while you think he hateth you, and hath decreed your damnation? |
A26955 | or choose your plaister till you know your sore?] |
A26955 | or in what manner Death shall do its execution? |
A26955 | or is he against them when thou approvest them? |
A26955 | or strive to get out of sin and misery, before you believe that you are in it? |
A26955 | or that right ● ● ous Lot had carried from Sodom the seed 〈 ◊ 〉 drunkenness and incest in him? |
A26955 | or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?] |
A26955 | or whose should he most resolutely avoid? |
A26955 | or your speeches of him sweet? |
A26955 | shall it declare thy truth?] |
A26955 | shall the damned praise thee, or shall they give thee thanks that must be scorched with the flames of thine indignation? |
A26955 | shall the dust praise thee? |
A26955 | that am ● ● ke to be mistaken in matters as great, ● here I least suspect it? |
A26955 | that is[ The yoak of holy Love, O how sweetly dost thou surprize? |
A26955 | that they did but hear the humble, holy heavenly language, that we have heard? |
A26955 | that we have lingered so long, and lived so carelesly in such a state? |
A26955 | that would displease God to please you, and sell his Love to purchase yours? |
A26955 | then they that dote on it as their felicity: And is a man to be valued, applauded, and magnified for his dung, or for his personal endowments? |
A26955 | though perhaps you know not just when or how it was formed in you? |
A26955 | what hath made Reasonable man so unreasonable, and a self- loving nature so mortally to hate it self? |
A26955 | what medicine will cure this disease, of wilfull, obstinate, self- deceiving? |
A26955 | what promises broken? |
A26955 | what sad eruptions of Pride and worldliness? |
A26955 | what shame, what punishment can be too great for such a wretch? |
A26955 | what should inordinately grieve that man that is certain of eternal Joy? |
A26955 | whether in your eyes a vile person be contemned, but you love and honour them that fear the Lord? |
A26955 | which you oftenest think of? |
A26955 | which you take your life and happiness to consist in? |
A26955 | who keepe ● thy breath yet in thy nostrills, and continueth thee in life? |
A26955 | will he cry thee mercy for handling thee so roughly as to tell thee thou art yet the child of wrath? |
A26955 | will he stoop to thee, and bend or stretch his word to humor thee? |
A26955 | will you go and faithfully open your state( supposing you have the need before expressed) to some able faithful Minister of Christ? |
A26955 | will you go to Hell for fear of knowing that you are in the way? |
A26955 | — Ibi quid nisi fragile plenum periculis? |
A26955 | ● isi quaedam visio phantasmatis, quae hic ● stendit in imagine, quod non habet in veri ● ate? |
A26955 | ● s all my sweet familiarity with the godly, ● nd all my comfortable hours under the pre ● ious means of grace, new come to this?] |
A26955 | 〈 ◊ 〉 did the knees prevent me, or why the 〈 ◊ 〉 that I should suck? |
A43841 | & altas veluti Cupressus, singulos prae vobis, tanquam viburna,& vilia arbusta fastidientes? |
A43841 | & incassùm cesserunt singula? |
A43841 | 13. or other Scriptures, did tell the World whether Caesar or the Senate was the higher Power? |
A43841 | 13. were to be understood of the two Houses of Parliament? |
A43841 | 8. hath said higher than those Parliament Soldiers that I was most acquainted with? |
A43841 | Alas Sir, is not repentance better than hiding slander by palpable untruth? |
A43841 | And are there any Divisions so bitter? |
A43841 | And by some Scolia upon the Liturgy, and their own Arts, give the meaning of every Paragraph, and word in both? |
A43841 | And did you never hear of Mr. John Goodwin? |
A43841 | And do you know what all the Justices in England are ready to do? |
A43841 | And do you not know,( that write about the Cause) that the War was not founded in Theological Differences, but in Law Differences? |
A43841 | And do you oppose that Hypothesis which the King had expresly put into the words of his Commission, so far as to appoint Men to alter it? |
A43841 | And does your Conscience cheek you at this Instant only? |
A43841 | And doth not Dr. Heylin largely shew you, that there were but five Bishops joyned at first with Bishop Laud? |
A43841 | And doth not he endeavour an alteration, who Petitioneth the King or Parliament for it? |
A43841 | And for me; let it lye there: yet''t is worth their second thoughts, Whether such dealings are not Iniquity? |
A43841 | And have not these People been visited for this? |
A43841 | And have these Leopards( do you think) chang''d their Spots? |
A43841 | And have we not a Cause? |
A43841 | And if the Publick Minister can not spare so much time from his Studies; why should others be hindred from so good a work? |
A43841 | And is it lawful to swear to the unlawful part think you? |
A43841 | And is it not as easie with you to contemn another in stead of answering it, as that? |
A43841 | And is not Davila a false Historian? |
A43841 | And is that all one as to say, I never medled with the War? |
A43841 | And is that all the Oath; or is there not a Clause for our Church- Government? |
A43841 | And is there any sense or strength in such an Answer? |
A43841 | And is your printed Clamour come to this? |
A43841 | And may not we now promise Obedience to them in things lawful? |
A43841 | And must Davila a Papist be credited against Bishop Jewel, Bishop Bilson, King James, and many other on the other side? |
A43841 | And must I be put to defend the King against such Men and Principles, at the same time when we are charged with that which we oppose? |
A43841 | And must not the main Body of the Clergy then be your Church? |
A43841 | And mutual kindness towards all Men? |
A43841 | And now what is the connexion of your Premises and Conclusion? |
A43841 | And shall not we have so much Prudence, as to reunite our selves, now our Enemies are not only hovering, but ready to fall directly upon our heads? |
A43841 | And shall our Sins so bow down our Backs, that we must fear those whom we have Conquered? |
A43841 | And shall we scatter our selves into Parties, and crumble and divide our selves into small Gobbets? |
A43841 | And since it became Christian; how have the Streets thereof been fill''d with Blood, from one end to the other, in the several Persecutions? |
A43841 | And since one or two of these Innovators, are so pregnant with quarrels, in our narrow Precincts; what Earthquakes? |
A43841 | And tell me if this be the Doctrine which you count it your chief preferment to preach? |
A43841 | And that Arch- Bishop Vsher reduced Episcopacy to Novelty, when he pretended to reduce it to the ancient Form? |
A43841 | And this is not strange in them, when some Lawyers have mooted the Case; Whether there be any Penalties remaining, for Drunkards, and Whoremasters? |
A43841 | And was it not time to call in Aid? |
A43841 | And what if it come down yet ten degrees more? |
A43841 | And what of that? |
A43841 | And what say you of the Practice now? |
A43841 | And what say you to this? |
A43841 | And what you speak to is so managed, as if our Question had not been, whether you had spoken well and truly? |
A43841 | And what? |
A43841 | And when you have taught the Papists to say that Andrews,& c. spake falsly, how will you prove it? |
A43841 | And when you talk of Vulgar Capacities, do you not reproach the Reverend Bishops as Vulgar Capacities, in print? |
A43841 | And whether it be lawful to print such a Book? |
A43841 | And who dare say that we are bound in every thing they did, to follow their Example? |
A43841 | And who knows but( as Montanus said of the Holy Ghost) Quakers and Fifth- monarchy- men might have had their turns? |
A43841 | And who knows, but Authority( if desir''d) may dispense with the Letter of the Law in such a Case? |
A43841 | And will wiping my Mouth thus make me innocent? |
A43841 | And yet you say, Are they not ready,& c. What wonder if Oaths go smoothly down, where there are such Resolvers? |
A43841 | And you ask me, Why then did they flit their Habitations? |
A43841 | Are Men turn''d into Hogs, and Hogs into Men? |
A43841 | Are Oaths necessary to be sworn to the Clergy? |
A43841 | Are new Oaths necessary to be sworn by us to the Clergy, which never were necessary till of late? |
A43841 | Are not many things in Parliament ascrib''d to the Lords Spiritual, which were transacted by their Proxies? |
A43841 | Are not negative and affirmative Interrogations in Scripture equivalent to plain Negations and Affirmations? |
A43841 | Are not these Controversies in Law and Politicks, though handled by Divines? |
A43841 | Are not these the best Commentary on their practise? |
A43841 | Are not you of their mind? |
A43841 | Are there any Laws so Draconical? |
A43841 | Are these written to vindicate the Truth? |
A43841 | Are they like to be our Assistants, in promoting the work of Peace? |
A43841 | Are they so purely Spiritual, as to labour for the wind? |
A43841 | Are we not now under Anathema''s enough in the Canons if we obey not? |
A43841 | Are we the King and Parliament? |
A43841 | Are you Secretary to him, who at one glance sees them, who have Eyes and see not, or else see but perceive not? |
A43841 | Are you like to prove a good Samaritan to our bleeding Church? |
A43841 | Are you such a walking Library? |
A43841 | Are you sure they will all agree in the sense? |
A43841 | As King Charles the first told them Anno 1628. and may not the Justices in the Country declare what was the sense of the Judges? |
A43841 | Athei,& Ethnici( Cur non asini caput adorâssè? |
A43841 | Away with these Heats; let''s tear one the other in pieces no longer: Can you blame me for saying such dissentions make Musick at Rome? |
A43841 | Baldwin Senior, or Mr. Spilsbury, or which of all the rest do you mean? |
A43841 | But I pray, Sir, forget not to tell me in your next what one Non- conformist was silenced on the account of insufficiency? |
A43841 | But Sir, consider your Dogmatical Aphorism; Can not a Question be false? |
A43841 | But Sir, was you led aside by Hooker, to what you did and wrote? |
A43841 | But Sir, what mean you by your Church, which they kept not close to? |
A43841 | But Sir, you might have understood my Inference: Why then do you pretend a false Reason of our refusal, when we tell you the true Reason? |
A43841 | But did I say, that I am parted from your Society? |
A43841 | But how many of those were never in any Sequestration; and must not they preach the Gospel for the sake of others? |
A43841 | But if I thought so, is Petitioning no Endeavouring? |
A43841 | But in our case; how are words, and sentences wrested, and tenter''d beyond the Grammar, and intention of them? |
A43841 | But instead of that, you exclaim,[ This is strange] and you ask me,[ Did I never hear of Dr. Ferne, Mr. Dudley Digs?] |
A43841 | But is this an Historical Vntruth? |
A43841 | But must we be silenced because we be not such as these Conformists, or must these also be silenced with us? |
A43841 | But quorsum haec? |
A43841 | But since you say, That Lay- Chancellors exercise the Power of the Keys in Excommunications; do they do this of themselves, as Lay- men? |
A43841 | But sure you were too credulous, and easie to be deceiv''d by your Informer; were they Episcopal Men that cry''d, To your Tents O Israel? |
A43841 | But tell me true; should you re- assume your Chair, would you continue in this courteous Moode? |
A43841 | But were there so few Non- conformists in England before the War? |
A43841 | But what did those three men lose by their Imprisonment? |
A43841 | But what is there in that Model that is so intolerable now? |
A43841 | But what mean you by saying, That they excommunicate by vertue of those Surrogates,& c. Do you mean that Surrogates give the Chancellor his Power? |
A43841 | But what need is there of elaborate Reasons against toyes? |
A43841 | But what of all this? |
A43841 | But what thought you of when you call me to obey old Establishments, and not invent now ones, and set the People on gadding after Innovations? |
A43841 | But what''s that to a difference between the Parties in their Religious Principles? |
A43841 | But what''s that to the lawfulness of taking up Arms? |
A43841 | But what''s that to the many hundred that did not? |
A43841 | But who are the Honest Conformists? |
A43841 | But why are you so incens''d against Lay- Chancellors? |
A43841 | But why should we swear Allegiance to Bishops? |
A43841 | But you add,[ Do they do this of themselves as Lay- men, or do they not? |
A43841 | But, Quid tanto dignum feret hic promissor hiatu? |
A43841 | Can not I say that the Episcopal began it without clearing those that did second them; or the Sectaries that carried it on to the end? |
A43841 | Can that be for the advantage of the Church, which is not according to the Truth? |
A43841 | Can they reverse and retrench Laws? |
A43841 | Caroli? |
A43841 | Censure? |
A43841 | Christ himself was troubled at the loss of one Apostle: He also put an Accent of Sorrow upon these words to his Disciples — Will ye also go away? |
A43841 | Did I not expresly tell you why? |
A43841 | Did I say that they were free? |
A43841 | Did he and all the Clergy, and Parliaments, that went his way, forsake the Church of England? |
A43841 | Did it any way hinder Parliament Mens speaking, or others peaceably petitioning for such reformation as is necessary? |
A43841 | Did it any way hinder Parliament Mens speaking? |
A43841 | Did not Hazael seem to abhor the ripping up of Women with Child? |
A43841 | Did not St. Paul complain of those who would exclude him out of the Affections of the People? |
A43841 | Did not they Covenant too, to preserve the late King in his Person, and Honour? |
A43841 | Did they all fight against one another? |
A43841 | Did they not all equally abhor the War? |
A43841 | Did we cast any out,( how bad soever;) some did perhaps, or had a hand in it? |
A43841 | Did we silence any Man? |
A43841 | Did you never hear of Dr. Ferne? |
A43841 | Did you never read, that the Nobles of Jehosaphat went about all the Cities of Juda, and taught the People? |
A43841 | Did you really think that our Establishment was elder than the days of the Apostles of Ignatius? |
A43841 | Do not you know that the Bishop of Alexandria had all Aegypt, Lybia, and Pentapolis, under him? |
A43841 | Do such words satisfie your Conscience, for the falsifying of such notorious matters of Fact? |
A43841 | Do these Men grow more than others, in the dimensions of Religion, by their gadding up and down? |
A43841 | Do they not think themselves the best of Subjects, to whom so great a favour is vouchsafed? |
A43841 | Do you call five Sheets a few Lines? |
A43841 | Do you confute any of it? |
A43841 | Do you deny? |
A43841 | Do you name a Man as an instance of my mistake, or can you do it? |
A43841 | Do you not know how much, yea very much more we yielded to, than ever Hildersham, whom you praise, or the other old Non- conformist would have done? |
A43841 | Do you thus requite the King? |
A43841 | Do''s it not harden them? |
A43841 | Does God stand in need of our Lies? |
A43841 | Does this savour of humility in preferring our selves before others? |
A43841 | Does this( say you, savour of any sense at all to Souls? |
A43841 | Doth not the Canon Anathematize them that deny the Convocation to be the Representative Church? |
A43841 | Doth the Bishop commit it to the Surrogate, and the Surrogate to the Chancellors, and the Chancellors to the Official? |
A43841 | Doth this savour of any sense at all of a love to Souls? |
A43841 | Episcopal? |
A43841 | For what benefit can be expected by it? |
A43841 | For who would unmuzzle a fierce Panther, that would worry him that sets his Chops at liberty? |
A43841 | Goodwin, Mr. Bridges, Mr. Calamy,& c. And what of all that? |
A43841 | Had Bishop Abbot liv''d, do you think he would have espoused the Parliaments Cause? |
A43841 | Haeccine in publicum benevolentia? |
A43841 | Has not Religion been prostituted to the Lusts of Men? |
A43841 | Has not the Altar it self been formerly polluted? |
A43841 | Has not the Diana of Disobedience been cry''d up, by Preaching and Prayer? |
A43841 | Have not we seen their Actions quite contrary? |
A43841 | Have not you seen Anabaptism with one foot in the Stirrup? |
A43841 | Have private Men a Legislative Power? |
A43841 | Have they forgotten to Judge? |
A43841 | Have they forgotten to Sequester? |
A43841 | Have we leave to preach when we are ejected out of the Places of Maintenance? |
A43841 | Have we not in 1660. yielded to more than ever Ball, or any of the old Non- conformists yielded to? |
A43841 | Have we retracted our Doctrine or Consent to the Church Articles, or to the Oaths of Allegiance or Supremacy? |
A43841 | Have we the fifth part? |
A43841 | How Natural is it for Men, to procure fame to themselves, and leave others under Reproach? |
A43841 | How Tragically does be cry out, against the Translation of some Texts, in the Epistles, Gospels, and Psalmes? |
A43841 | How are you sure that I am not able to endure the light of the Truth? |
A43841 | How can we depend upon their Kindness? |
A43841 | How can you hope to heal our Divisions, and to wooe our English World into mutual love? |
A43841 | How cold and perfunctory are many of us in our Ministerial Imploys? |
A43841 | How could a non- ens be free or guilty? |
A43841 | How could we then foretel that, when we gave them in? |
A43841 | How did Calvin and Beza labour with their Favourers here to promote their Discipline? |
A43841 | How does he strain some things in the Act for uniformity, and also in the Liturgy; until the very Blood follow? |
A43841 | How does it follow? |
A43841 | How oft did Christ and his Apostles quote Texts out of the Old Testament? |
A43841 | How shall I do such wickedness, and sin against God? |
A43841 | How shall I please you? |
A43841 | How such a Work will please the Diocesan Party? |
A43841 | How transparent and thin is that Answer? |
A43841 | How you shall be kept out of Goal? |
A43841 | I account it my chiefest preferment to preach the Gospel; ergo, you ask me, whether this Gospel which I preach be the unlimited Power of Princes? |
A43841 | I did, as you say, desire you to name the Theological Differences, if you know any, for I never did: And what say you to this? |
A43841 | I fear, this melancholick Discourse, has made you sad: And indeed, who can be otherwise? |
A43841 | I had said Mr. Cartwright wrangled himself into Conformity: you say it is well done of you to write an historical untruth so boldly? |
A43841 | I had said that of those 1800 silent Ministers, how many of them have much more learning than your English Books have taught them? |
A43841 | I had said, — Would Episcopal Men root out Episcopacy? |
A43841 | I knew not so much before, nor believe it now; or doth the Chancellor represent the Surrogate, and do it in his name? |
A43841 | I know Innocency is best: But can any Man think it would please such Men? |
A43841 | I know the Devoto''s of our Age will startle at this: What? |
A43841 | I may allude to the words of God himself,( I hope without offence) Is your way equal? |
A43841 | I only said,[ Was Arch- bishop Abbot a Presbyterian?] |
A43841 | If it be otherwise, what need any Man say, Their — be on us, and on our Children? |
A43841 | If none deal plainly with offending Preachers, how much worse is their condition than the Peoples? |
A43841 | If not, what way of Discipline is it that startles at it, unless you mean Military Discipline? |
A43841 | If so, why is the first Clause the Sum of the whole? |
A43841 | If they were not the worst among you, who do conform, no doubt you think them so? |
A43841 | If this way be lawful, what if a Papist could find a Justice that would expound the Oath of Supremacy for the Pope? |
A43841 | If we should go to all Houses, and deal with the People there, in private; how soon might we wound our Names? |
A43841 | If you can do it, why have not you done it? |
A43841 | If you knew it not, did it beseem you to meddle in Print, where you know no better what you do oppose? |
A43841 | In quantam errorum voraginem immerguntur, quibus doctrinae fundamina desiderantur? |
A43841 | In what a dismal Condition is the poor Pilgrim? |
A43841 | Indeed I thought those words needless and superfluous: For what Parish Ministers had any hand in your silence? |
A43841 | Independency, Presbytery? |
A43841 | Into how many Shapes can you transform your self? |
A43841 | Is 1650 years ago the time of Novelties to us, and our establishment the true Antiquity? |
A43841 | Is a Troop, a Regiment, and one Army of the same Species? |
A43841 | Is any Man so mad( especially an Episcopal Parliament) as to think all War lawful against the King, which is for Religion? |
A43841 | Is any of their Power or Negative Voice taken away? |
A43841 | Is it Episcopal Discipline that you mean? |
A43841 | Is it disingenious to learn of you where the sin lies, that we may avoid it? |
A43841 | Is it not a dismaying Spectacle, to see Mount Gerazim, and Mount Ebal to strut, and swell; as if they would either confront, or confound Mount Zion? |
A43841 | Is it not all the Justices in England that are authorized( two at once) to administer it? |
A43841 | Is it strange dealing, and disingenious, to call for the Reasons of Non- conformity? |
A43841 | Is it the Preachers or the People that suffer more? |
A43841 | Is it this you would have? |
A43841 | Is it unlawful to promise or swear to be obedient to Bishops, in rebus licitis& honestis? |
A43841 | Is not the Law- maker the universal Expositor of his own Law; except for the Judicial decision of a particular Case which he committeth to his Judges? |
A43841 | Is not the Roman Eagle ready to prey and quarry upon us all? |
A43841 | Is not the same Fervent Swelling still among us? |
A43841 | Is not this Canononical Obedience? |
A43841 | Is not this an inauspicious and ominous Presage, what is like to follow? |
A43841 | Is not this enough to make your Students to throw away their Books? |
A43841 | Is not this to have hot and feaverish Heads? |
A43841 | Is not this to play the Wantons, with those things which are most Sacred? |
A43841 | Is not this, to slight, contemn, reproach, and discourage their own painful Ministers, who watch for their Souls? |
A43841 | Is one farthing taken by it from their Estates? |
A43841 | Is one tittle taken from the Bishops or Arch- bishops Honour? |
A43841 | Is the Discipline changed which you speak of, or the whole Chorus which you speak to? |
A43841 | Is there any room for a doubt in the Business, except to Strangers, or those that were unborn, or Children? |
A43841 | Is there no Communion but personal, and''twixt those that see each other? |
A43841 | Is there not need of many hands? |
A43841 | Is there one Man named here as an Instance to Confute me? |
A43841 | Is there one Syllable in that Preface for justifying Lay- Chancellors use of the Keys? |
A43841 | Is this Evidence fit for such a Contradictor of notoriety it self? |
A43841 | Is this a sufficient Answer to all those Books? |
A43841 | Is this so easie a Work? |
A43841 | Is this the Assistance they will give us? |
A43841 | Is this the way to keep up, and maintain all their Softnesses? |
A43841 | Is this your Balm of Gilead for our Wounds? |
A43841 | Just as David''s Enemies insulted over him, in his distress, saying, — Where is now thy God? |
A43841 | Loyalty to the King? |
A43841 | May he therefore take it? |
A43841 | May not I say that Abraham was the Father of the Faithful, and David a Man after Gods own Heart? |
A43841 | May not I say that Venus was beautiful, though she had her Mole? |
A43841 | May not a Man be said to do that vertually, which he does not act immediately? |
A43841 | May not this be done, with so much moderation and sobriety, that you need not incur the guilt, or penalty of Treason? |
A43841 | May not we say the same? |
A43841 | Men that are so taught? |
A43841 | Mountains, did I say? |
A43841 | Mr. Bridges? |
A43841 | Mr. Calamy''s Speech in the City of London? |
A43841 | Mr. Dadley Diggs, and many others, who wrote in behalf of the King, against the lawfulness of taking up of Arms? |
A43841 | Must many Thousands go to Hell, that we may be requited? |
A43841 | Must the People do nothing but hear? |
A43841 | Must there be nothing else but sowing of Seeds? |
A43841 | Nay, whether there be any thing imaginable which they may not command? |
A43841 | Nay? |
A43841 | No time for the settling the Seed of the Word in the furrows of their hearts? |
A43841 | Non mancipia sumus, sed fratres? |
A43841 | None so fierce that dare stir them up; who is able to stand before them? |
A43841 | Not a true word: What should move you to do thus? |
A43841 | Not obey the King''s Declaration? |
A43841 | Now what do you say to all this? |
A43841 | Num vobis solummodò erexisse scalas,& tot quasi Acesios, in caelum ascendisse contigit? |
A43841 | Of whom shall we Complain? |
A43841 | Or has this Champion nothing else to do( had he leave) but to encounter Flies? |
A43841 | Or need my Conscience stick at nothing in an Oath, but what you will call the Sum? |
A43841 | Or whether you think it lawful to print it unlicensed, contrary to the Law of the Land? |
A43841 | Paulinum istud paulò attentiùs evolvite, Quis hominum scit quae sunt hominis nisi spiritus hominis qui in ipso est? |
A43841 | Piety to God? |
A43841 | Preach up Obedience to the Law? |
A43841 | Presbyterian? |
A43841 | Qui non vitat peccare,& c. And will any dare to run upon the thick Bosses of his Buckler? |
A43841 | Quid ni de gratiâ dicendum? |
A43841 | Quid tandem restat? |
A43841 | Quid vetat anseres ipsos, clamorem in coelum tollere, cùm templi arces, ipsumque Capitolium sitis prodituri? |
A43841 | Quis conversionem,& 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 sibi ausit vendicare? |
A43841 | Quis non videt capita vestra coelo ipsi minantia? |
A43841 | Quomodò canales esse poterint, qui conchae ne unquam fuerint? |
A43841 | Quorsum caperatis frontem,& superbienti supercilio sic supplices torquetis miseros? |
A43841 | Quorsum igitur, vos Dei gressus,& Circuitus, in ipso cordis sanctuario, ad amussim callere jactatis? |
A43841 | Quorsum in ipsius spiritus scrinium, claves vestras demittitis? |
A43841 | Quò se ferat lacerata haec,& procellis agitata cohors? |
A43841 | Reproach those for Traitors, who have lost Blood and Estates, and jeoparded their very Lives for him? |
A43841 | Say so, and shew that you care not what you say, to draw down an Oath: And must not I swear, That I[ will not any time endeavour any alteration?] |
A43841 | Severe? |
A43841 | Shall men that have a Religious, well- grounded fear of God, bandy together against their lawful Governors? |
A43841 | Shall not the Lord visit for these things? |
A43841 | Shall those that have pray''d, paid, fought against the King? |
A43841 | Shall we now so unravel our Cord by our Intestine Divisions, that they may be easily broken apart; which were inviolable whil''st twisted together? |
A43841 | Shall we swear universally, and say we meant it but particularly? |
A43841 | Shall you not( say you) endeavour the alteration of Government by Lay- Chancellors? |
A43841 | Siccine indignus ego? |
A43841 | Sir, I do now perceive, that Cataline was a Fool: If he had laid the Conspiracy against Rome, upon Tully, might not he have gone free? |
A43841 | Sir, what think you of these disciplinarian Principles? |
A43841 | St.? |
A43841 | Such an Heluo Librorum, especially of those that are Modern and English: And yet had you no acquaintance with these? |
A43841 | T. C. saw as far into this Controversie, as R. B. yet what said he? |
A43841 | Tell me true, were there not Bishops before there wery any Parishes? |
A43841 | That preach''d — Curse ye Meroz? |
A43841 | The Children of this world, are wise in their Generation, to maintain their Notorious Errors: How much more should we be wise in guarding the Truth? |
A43841 | The King himself is to be obeyed but in licitis& honestis: And must we be sworn as much to the Clergy as to the King? |
A43841 | The inconsequence which you bring in with[ I must say] should have been turned into[ I did say,] Did I not recite your own words? |
A43841 | The same Achan in our Camp? |
A43841 | The same Jonah in our Ship? |
A43841 | There are many Non- conformists that live within a few Miles of your dwelling; which of them do you mean? |
A43841 | There are those that will tell you, that it is no Paradox for a Bishop to be a Presbyter: What think you of the Bishop of Lincoln? |
A43841 | There were but few who were not then tantum non Independents; and are they all now of a sudden become Presbyterians? |
A43841 | They are the words of your own Author; and is it any wonder to see this Man in Arms against the King? |
A43841 | They open the Floodgates to let in Atheism? |
A43841 | They were Monsters sure; for would Episcopal Men conspire to root up Episcopacy? |
A43841 | This is all one, as to enquire, whether Huxters, or Mercenary Men, will refuse their Advantage? |
A43841 | This was our Case; and were we requited as we had done? |
A43841 | To defend the Out- works, and lose the main Fort? |
A43841 | To get Mammon, and to part with Religion? |
A43841 | To have a fat Carkass; but a Meagre, and lean Soul? |
A43841 | To what purpose is your Tragical out- cry of provoking you to gape against an Oven? |
A43841 | To whom were they given, but to them? |
A43841 | True: But did not Peter Vow and swear as heartily as they, That He would not deny his Master? |
A43841 | Was Arch- bishop Abbot a Presbyterian,( who saith he was suspended for refusing to License Dr. Sybthorpes Book; see his Narrative in Rushworth?) |
A43841 | Was it because contempt was fitter than a Confutation? |
A43841 | Was not Teachings proper to the Priests, Levites, Prophets, as Matters of Discipline were to the Apostles? |
A43841 | Was the Controversie only betwixt Lawyers and Statesmen? |
A43841 | Was there ever Madness like this Madness? |
A43841 | Was there no Martin- Marprelates then? |
A43841 | We may ask with St. Pauls amazement, Is Christ divided? |
A43841 | Were not these things Theological? |
A43841 | What Advantage will it be, to be rich in the World, and poor towards God? |
A43841 | What Conformists and honest too? |
A43841 | What Fanatick could have spoken more slightly of the Universities than you have done? |
A43841 | What Musick? |
A43841 | What Salvo''s were invented to Palliate the Vlcer? |
A43841 | What Stars did then prevail, when thou becamest the By- word of other Nations, who wast the Glory of all Lands? |
A43841 | What Triumphs are we preparing for new Rome? |
A43841 | What could hinder Nourishment to be Ministred to the Body of the Church, by Joynts and Bands? |
A43841 | What delight had I, think you, to rush into the midst of your Pikes? |
A43841 | What evil Spirit is come abroad, and crumbled thee into so many shivers? |
A43841 | What good will Austins Retractations do him, if he shall ten or eleven years after be freshly charged with all that he retracted, and much more? |
A43841 | What if Mr. Baxter had two Bibles? |
A43841 | What if it had been the Presbyterians, and not the Episcopal, that in England raised the War? |
A43841 | What intrenching is this upon the Kings Ecclesiastical power? |
A43841 | What lowring and longing must there be, after another mode of Worship, if ours be so imperfect, and that of other Churches so far beyond it? |
A43841 | What need I prove their Practise? |
A43841 | What need is there of Ingenuity to swallow an Oath upon such satisfaction as this? |
A43841 | What need so much Watching? |
A43841 | What need we speak of Mens Confessions and Declarations? |
A43841 | What poor Sacrifices are these to Atone a most wise and heart- searching God? |
A43841 | What prevarication is this? |
A43841 | What shall we say? |
A43841 | What then will be left, but flashy Meteors, and false Fires, to give an uncertain light? |
A43841 | What think you of Crete,( 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉) Ephesus, Rome? |
A43841 | What think you of this? |
A43841 | What use can such Writings as these be of, but to abuse the simple? |
A43841 | What was the Sum of that Oath? |
A43841 | What was the sum of that Oath, was it not plainly and directly against taking up Arms? |
A43841 | What will we say, if you should lay open the sin of Conformity in your Reasons? |
A43841 | What, honest Men, and charge the Sequestred Ministers of Scandal upon their Oaths? |
A43841 | What? |
A43841 | What? |
A43841 | What? |
A43841 | What? |
A43841 | What? |
A43841 | What? |
A43841 | When also He Prohibited any to take the Covenant, by his Royal Proclamation; Do you call to mind any one of these new Royalists, that did obey it? |
A43841 | When the Covenant was justly charged to be unlawful, from the very articulate sound of the words: with what tenderness, and softness was it sens''d? |
A43841 | When you disputed in the Schools, would you have taken it, for a good Answer? |
A43841 | When you have named me the Men that used those words, I will answer you whether they were Episcopal? |
A43841 | Where did I foretell you, that your writing should do me but little good? |
A43841 | Where did either part pretend to be the Church? |
A43841 | Where did the King and Parliament give them power to declare the sense? |
A43841 | Where is the Good, then, that is to be expected from these Assistants? |
A43841 | Where shall I find you? |
A43841 | Where then will your Stripplings? |
A43841 | Where was the Kites renown, that soop''d away the Frog and the Mouse, whil''st they were contending and aiming at each others Ruine? |
A43841 | Whether I desire your Death? |
A43841 | Whether any will print, or sell such a Book? |
A43841 | Whether it be lawful to write against the Laws of the Land? |
A43841 | Whether the Arch- bishops and Bishops in Ushers Model be Diocesanes or not? |
A43841 | Whether you know of any Printer and Bookseller, who would Print and Publish such a Book, and who they are? |
A43841 | Whether you know of any one that will License it, if I should write it? |
A43841 | Whether you think if I should write such a Book, that the Diocesane Party would not be much more offended and angry, than if I had said nothing? |
A43841 | Who gave you Commission to make an Inclosure of that which lay in Common? |
A43841 | Who gave you commission to read my thoughts backward? |
A43841 | Who knows not? |
A43841 | Who then were the Church? |
A43841 | Who will care, what Volumes were written against him? |
A43841 | Who would have thought that a word or two of advice and seasonable counsel should have merited such harsh and Passionate Censures? |
A43841 | Why all this do you think? |
A43841 | Why did so many of them then flit their Habitations, five Miles from any Corporation, or their own ancient Homes? |
A43841 | Why did they not Petition the King and Parliament, to erect a scruple Office? |
A43841 | Why did you not name the Theological Difference? |
A43841 | Why did''st thou forsake us at Leicester? |
A43841 | Why do you lay this Injunction upon me, and others in my Sphere? |
A43841 | Why do you not quarrel with these Nobles, for being Usurpers? |
A43841 | Why do you print against Lay- Chancellors then, if they be the Government? |
A43841 | Why should so many suffer for our faults? |
A43841 | Why then do you not call the Episcopal Party to repentance? |
A43841 | Will a good end justifie ill means? |
A43841 | Will he burn these Bibles? |
A43841 | Will not the Doctor take it amiss, that you take no more notice of his Labours? |
A43841 | Will not this make our fluent Chrysostomes, and our divine Nazianzens to hide themselves in holes? |
A43841 | Will they not expect hereafter to be humour''d, rather than govern''d? |
A43841 | Will they not grudge, if they be not satisfy''d? |
A43841 | Will those words of Mr. Dod hold weight in the Ballance of the Sanctuary? |
A43841 | Will you cease to preach false Doctrine, and slander your Brethren? |
A43841 | Will you give me leave to divine? |
A43841 | Will you put the King to prove all his Power from Scripture? |
A43841 | Would you make me believe, that I saw not what I saw, and heard not what I heard? |
A43841 | Would your Spoon be a Spoon if it were as big as a Church, or your Church be a Church if it were no bigger than a Spoon? |
A43841 | Yet how little have you heard the Non- Conformists say against those Canons these eleven years? |
A43841 | Yet who can conceive that any should be so fond of Slavery, as to return into this Babylon? |
A43841 | You ask me again, whether the worst of those that joyned with you, being re- ordained, are not received when they do conform? |
A43841 | You ask, Is it Prelatical Discipline? |
A43841 | You dare say, that Kings may not be excommunicated, unless perhaps in some rare Case; pray who shall be Judges of that Case? |
A43841 | You faintly demand, — How many of these were never in any Sequestrations, and must not they preach the Gospel? |
A43841 | You have not prov''d their Practise such, and is your printed Clamour come to this? |
A43841 | You say,[ Some of my own Books have not an Imprimatur] why would you say so, before you knew it? |
A43841 | You say,[ Would Episcopal Men conspire to root out Episcopacy?] |
A43841 | You were too credulous,& c. were they Episcopal Men that cryed, To your Tents O Israel? |
A43841 | [ Were not those who were commissioned to administer it, ready to declare the sense of it?] |
A43841 | a prodituri inquam; quid enim à proditione distat, tot satellites, tot veteranos inhibuisse, quos in castra sua miserat Dominus Exercituum? |
A43841 | and Banish? |
A43841 | and Keen? |
A43841 | and all manner of Help? |
A43841 | and bring a Scandal upon our Persons? |
A43841 | and it Books revile them that will not swear? |
A43841 | and making your Name a Stepping- stone to those Ends I aspire after? |
A43841 | and so destructive? |
A43841 | and that Abbot had the rest with him, in so much that they durst not commit their Cause to a Convocation? |
A43841 | and that it was Statesmen and Lawyers that made the difference by their Political and Law- Controversies? |
A43841 | and that theirs were Innovations to ours? |
A43841 | and the New Conformists? |
A43841 | and to be Consecrated to the Temple? |
A43841 | and to put my Hand into an Hornets Nest? |
A43841 | and to shed the blood of their Brethrens names? |
A43841 | and whether the very worst and meanest of those that formerly joyned with them, be not re- ordained and received when they do conform? |
A43841 | and which the Convocation by their actual alterations owned? |
A43841 | and yet did not observe the Identical Words: Will you say they were unfaithful, or not a true word? |
A43841 | animarum pulsus, non minori fiduciâ tractantes, quàm corporis temperiem, per symptomata,& Crises, Hariolantur medicorum filii? |
A43841 | are they not such that swear, declare, subscribe one thing, and speak and act another? |
A43841 | are we transformed now? |
A43841 | as to hinder any man from answering toyes? |
A43841 | but where is any Antiquity for it? |
A43841 | but whether you could speak again, or had any Pen, Ink, and Paper left? |
A43841 | but why impertinent? |
A43841 | cur ìnfantulos etiam devorâsse, non sortiter nos calumniamini?) |
A43841 | de ponte mittendus, sicut 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A43841 | evolverim, ut muneri huic Evangelico,& animarum aucupiis invigilarem? |
A43841 | first voted, and then fought against the King? |
A43841 | first you deride the motion, as a thing not to be required of you, and say their Actions are quite contrary to their Confessions? |
A43841 | for ruminating, and digesting what is heard? |
A43841 | how can we gratifie the Pseudo- Catholicks more, than by pulling down the Pale of our English Church? |
A43841 | is my way unequal? |
A43841 | is there any Sorcery or Necromancy in the word Diocesan? |
A43841 | must Cannons be planted against a Paper- wall? |
A43841 | nay do not they vehementius negare& affirmare? |
A43841 | nisi ipsissimum Quando& Quomodo vobis innotescat? |
A43841 | nisi ut cervicibus publicis depulsi jaceant,& caedantur victimae, non tam aliorum ambitioni, quam suae? |
A43841 | no, nor of our Perjury neither) should we speak wickedly for God, or talk deceitfully for him?] |
A43841 | nulla eruditionis rimula? |
A43841 | nulla pietatis scmtillula? |
A43841 | or Curse him to his Face? |
A43841 | or a standing Committee? |
A43841 | or can a Justice dispense with equivocation in Oaths, and not a Pope? |
A43841 | or can procure me so great a favour, and who it is? |
A43841 | or do they not? |
A43841 | or marvel that I think better of the Waldenses Bohemian Episcopacy, and that which obtained in Ignatius, yea in Cyprians days? |
A43841 | or must we take it in several senses, if several Men severally expound it? |
A43841 | or others peaceable petitioning, for such Reformation as is necessary? |
A43841 | or rather by the King by whose Law this is injoy''nd? |
A43841 | or should not escape branding with the black Theta of a Challenge, Ambuscade, and an intimation of Defamation and Blood? |
A43841 | or that a single person may be a Kingdom or a Family) because Magis& minus non variant speciem? |
A43841 | or that they joyned not in the Progress? |
A43841 | or to limit my meaning without Authority from my words? |
A43841 | or whether it be possible for that Man at all to sin, that is not limited by God? |
A43841 | or which is the higher Power in Venice, Germany, Poland, Hungary, France, England, or any Country in the World? |
A43841 | or why do you insinuate such suspitions into Mens Minds, that the Discipline is it that startles at renouncing War against the King? |
A43841 | or your Name sullied? |
A43841 | quae in Coelis sunt comprehendes, qui ea quae ante pedes videre nequeas? |
A43841 | quoties nigro carbone notabitis immeritos, cùm meliorem calculum apposuisse debeatis? |
A43841 | shall these brandish that Sword, to which they have no Right? |
A43841 | should we speak wickedly for God, or talk deceitfully for him? |
A43841 | sic Coelum terrâ miscere gestitis? |
A43841 | sic Haereticorum( tot veluti serpentum) spumam: tot errorum zizania in Areâ dominicâ dispersisse libuit? |
A43841 | sic contentiosi pulveris nubem pedibus vestris excitare? |
A43841 | since you say you can not conform without sin? |
A43841 | so Ambitious to hold the Pope''s Stirrup; and lay his Neck under his insulting feet; that he should be accessary to promote his own Bondage? |
A43841 | so much consulting the Oracles, and Monuments of the Dead? |
A43841 | such Proficients in Christ''s School? |
A43841 | that might assoil their growing doubts? |
A43841 | that preached Curse ye Meroz, first voted, and then fought against the King? |
A43841 | that snares may be spread upon Mispeh, to keep men from going to the House of the Lord; will the great God thank these Mormo- makers another day? |
A43841 | that the Gunpowder- Treason was hatch''d in a Conventicle? |
A43841 | this Behemoth, shall groan, and bring forth? |
A43841 | though the one was pusillanimous in Aegypt, and the other had his falls? |
A43841 | to advance the Salvation of Souls? |
A43841 | to bring his Person, — Conscience, — and Estate under the Harrows of this Usurping Tyrant? |
A43841 | to divert their Studies? |
A43841 | to espouse an Ephod? |
A43841 | to make the Land of his Nativity, Tributary to a foreign Power; by becoming( as Egypt once was) the Granary of Rome? |
A43841 | to win upon, and ingage the Judgments of such Men, as know that a reasonable Service is required at their hands? |
A43841 | tot labores exantlârim? |
A43841 | toties jejunaverim? |
A43841 | triobolaris ego,& nullius pretii Theologaster? |
A43841 | ubi reclinabunt capita, ignorantium consputa opprobriis; quibus adhuc cordi sunt, morientes,& steriles literae? |
A43841 | was it not plainly and directly against taking up Arms? |
A43841 | was stirring in those Parliaments, though not known by those Names? |
A43841 | were not those who were commissione''d to administer it, ready to declare the sense of it? |
A43841 | were there not many Parishes in these? |
A43841 | what Incouragement is there, to exhaust the Spirit in Studies? |
A43841 | what a Conflagration? |
A43841 | what advantage will it be to me to see you in the flames? |
A43841 | what an easie Prey will she be, to the Attempts of her Enemies? |
A43841 | what must we expect, when this Mountain? |
A43841 | where is the distinction found? |
A43841 | where is young Tarquine? |
A43841 | who said that the Congregation was Holy, and that Moses and Aaron took too much upon them? |
A43841 | who stand up so much for Godliness: or, Are they like to bring in Popery? |
A43841 | why did''st thou leave us in the West? |
A43841 | will these vapours, these sparks raise? |
A43841 | would not any Reader here expect that you should have named some one difference? |
A43841 | yet how shall they do it, who understand not their Language? |
A43841 | your young Divines appear? |
A43841 | — Have not you seen Presbytery supplanting Episcopacy? |
A43841 | — Quid domini facient, audent cum talia fures? |
A43841 | — You say, That it was called the Cause of God, Religion,& c. Did you think that you spake to the purpose, when you said this? |
A26959 | ( But thou that abhorrest Idols, dost thou more than commit Sacriledge? |
A26959 | 11. be not high- minded but fear? |
A26959 | 19,& c. Visible Church- membership what it is? |
A26959 | 2. the saying of Osiander, Fuller, Bullinger, that the Donatists and the Anabaptists held the same opinions? |
A26959 | 3. and Christ''s words to the Sons of Thunder, ye know not what manner of spirit ye are of? |
A26959 | Again he tells us of Thuanus, and tells not where, as if we must read over five volumes in folio to be able to disprove such a Tale- teller as this? |
A26959 | And I pray you tell me yet a little better, how an act can make a man a Church- member that was one long before that was done? |
A26959 | And are not the Independents more against Traditions now than the Britains were? |
A26959 | And are these Waldenses and this man to he believed of them too? |
A26959 | And are they therefore Anabaptists? |
A26959 | And are we therefore against Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | And can Mr. Danvers now tell us that they held that which for a thousand years hath lain unknown? |
A26959 | And can we think that Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea and many more, were not timerous faint- hearted Christians? |
A26959 | And consider whether you deny not Christ in Infancy to have been the Son of God according to his humane nature? |
A26959 | And could it not be the Instrument of conveying right to them as soon as they were born? |
A26959 | And did former Laws oblige to Circumcision till Christ? |
A26959 | And did the man think that this is any thing to his purpose? |
A26959 | And did they not Plead Tradition for their difference from Rome? |
A26959 | And did they not thereby profess to take God for their God? |
A26959 | And do we live upon these terms, that any Railer can call us off from our better services when ever He and Satan please? |
A26959 | And do you call a man[ lost] that loseth the thoughts or the breath of man? |
A26959 | And do you damn all Infants? |
A26959 | And do you gather by Gildas that they were such as you dream? |
A26959 | And do you think this the common sense of the word? |
A26959 | And doth Mr. D. the great enemy of Antichrist perswade poor Anabaptists to believe such fellows and tales as these? |
A26959 | And doth he think that Antichrist was before Tertullians time? |
A26959 | And doth it follow( in despite of their own professions and practises) that all these and the rest such, were against Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | And doth not he that saith there is no law, say there is no transgression? |
A26959 | And doth that prove that Mr. Wills knew it, who never saith, that he ever saw Cluniacensis book? |
A26959 | And have we here any honester dealing than before? |
A26959 | And how audacious to talk thus of what he knoweth not? |
A26959 | And how proveth he this? |
A26959 | And if Cyprian was Antichristian, where then was the Church of Christ? |
A26959 | And if they say as he reporteth, they belied the Donatists; and why then should I believe them? |
A26959 | And if they understand, they must have grief or pleasure: But who can know more than God revealeth? |
A26959 | And indeed is this all at the upshot? |
A26959 | And is it a contradiction to say that a doctrine that hath Plain Proof, may be assaulted by difficult ob ● ections? |
A26959 | And is it no benefit in it self besides the consequents to be visibly united and related to Christ and his body? |
A26959 | And is it not shame and pity that so publick matters of fact must be handled at this rate? |
A26959 | And is not the cause in order of nature, though not of time before the effect? |
A26959 | And is not this worthy of your zeal? |
A26959 | And is there a syllable in this story that Infant- baptism is concerned in? |
A26959 | And is there no intimation in this that Seth was an Infant member of the visible Church? |
A26959 | And is this a good proof for Prideaux to tell you what a forged writing saith, which Crab and Binius and Bellarmine eject or take for false? |
A26959 | And is this a witness against Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | And is this loathing, and opposition and fighting against truth the way to know it? |
A26959 | And it was Cresconius words to Austin[ Vna Religio, eadem Sacramenta, nihil in Christiana observatione diversum:& adhuc adversus invicem laboramus? |
A26959 | And might not right have been falsly pleadded or usurped by a counterfeit Jew? |
A26959 | And must he be believed against Wickliff? |
A26959 | And must we know of Mr. Tombes what Dr. Hammond held? |
A26959 | And now where is this mans clear proof that the Britains were Anabaptists? |
A26959 | And so of the Infants if they were sold in Infancy? |
A26959 | And so should every repenting believing Jews Infants be Church- members? |
A26959 | And suffer his Church to be wrong framed till now? |
A26959 | And tell me Sir, for what prize or gain do you think I am lost with all my friends? |
A26959 | And that all the ancient writers and Churches sinned that so spake?] |
A26959 | And that he maketh final impenitence the sin against the Holy Ghost; And that none can know what sin is mortal in us, and what not? |
A26959 | And the English Nonconformists too? |
A26959 | And then indeed Where was our Church and the Kingdom of Christ before Luther, or rather before those whom he opposed? |
A26959 | And then what brought in your denial of spiritual membership to the non- elect? |
A26959 | And then what was the physical act which is called Gods taking? |
A26959 | And then, how can you say that any Infants shall be damned, or not saved? |
A26959 | And though under the most extraordinary necessities of avoiding marriage, he find such confirmation of his Resolutions needful? |
A26959 | And to the next qu ● stion, Whether Infants unbaptized when Baptism could not be had, be all damned? |
A26959 | And unchurch almost all the Churches on Earth? |
A26959 | And was it not a Moral Donation then, if it gave Right? |
A26959 | And was not the Church before Christs incarnation a society of faithful men, when yet you confess that Infants were visible parts of is? |
A26959 | And were not the Scots then of their mind, and as much against Traditions as they? |
A26959 | And what a lamentable confusion are we now brought into by these? |
A26959 | And what a poor put off to the point in hand? |
A26959 | And what doth he but hence take advantage to tell the world how loose my doctrine was, and what sinful persons I thought had grace? |
A26959 | And what hole was it that I came out of, with their Indulgence? |
A26959 | And what if one give land to you and your heirs? |
A26959 | And what is here of Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | And what meaneth the man in labouring to prove it? |
A26959 | And what right or hope doth this give to Christians for their Children more than Pagans? |
A26959 | And what say they? |
A26959 | And what use was here for a plea from Tradition for Infant- baptism, which was not denied? |
A26959 | And what will the Papists desire more? |
A26959 | And what''s that to prove, that he was against Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | And what''s this to the question of Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | And what''s this 〈 ◊ 〉 our controversie? |
A26959 | And whether God call not them that are visible members to that state? |
A26959 | And whether I may not as groundedly make a fact sufficient for this purpose of the acts of an hundred or two hundred years only? |
A26959 | And whether he like his other reason, Quid festinat innocens aetas ad remissionem peccatorum? |
A26959 | And whether he that saith, There is no Law of God binding to do thus for his children, do not infer that they sin not by not doing it? |
A26959 | And whether it be lawful for me to take all sorts then living for lyars, rather than this one man that hath written us such a book? |
A26959 | And whether none but the Elect are visible members? |
A26959 | And whether they received not the Scriptures and Religion as certainly from the Asiatick Churches, and so from the Apostles, as the Britains did? |
A26959 | And whether they that dare use souls at this rate, are so much better than us, as to be above our communion? |
A26959 | And whether this will prove that at that time they were against Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | And whether you may not as well make all the acts from Abrahams call till Christ to be one fact, and assign it to this office? |
A26959 | And whom is this against, me or him? |
A26959 | And why have we no satisfactory answer to these things so oft replyed? |
A26959 | And why might not this Covenant[ I will save my Elect] be made with Cain, or Cham, or Judas, as well as with Abraham? |
A26959 | And why not also from all the rest that have written against me? |
A26959 | And why should my impartiality in acknowledging the Churches liberty as to the time of Baptism, at first, be so unkindly received? |
A26959 | And why talketh he of this one reason against him in so publick a matter of History? |
A26959 | And why then do they not insist only on the Argument and neglect the Author? |
A26959 | And why? |
A26959 | And will not the Reader be satisfied with these concessions? |
A26959 | And will not the ungodly put in for the like hopes? |
A26959 | And would not renouncing God have cut them off? |
A26959 | And would their seed then have had any right for being theirs? |
A26959 | And yet is Infant- Baptism a sin?) |
A26959 | And yet just now, Church- membership in Israel was a thing that none could usurp, or have without right? |
A26959 | And yet were all the Britains then of another mind? |
A26959 | And yet were the old Britains against Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | Annon gravis demolitio ista? |
A26959 | Annon opera vulpium haec?] |
A26959 | Are all Protestants against Infant- baptism, that are against the Popish Sacrament of Confirmation? |
A26959 | Are these likely means to propagate truth? |
A26959 | Are they all excluded? |
A26959 | Are they worse than their Parents? |
A26959 | Are you really for Rebaptizing; and are you justifying it? |
A26959 | As the Sichemites must do, so other nations must do: For what priviledge had the children of the Sichemites above the rest of the world? |
A26959 | Before any such accusations on the Albigenses? |
A26959 | But ask the man whether Asia it self long before the dayes of Gregory had not Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | But did they say that the Novatians were against Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | But do you write a book to prove the Tradition of Adult Baptism from Christs time to ours, and when you have done renounce and scorn it? |
A26959 | But how came Dr. Prideaux so to mistake? |
A26959 | But how far might this have extended? |
A26959 | But if I have lost so much as you intimate, you would perswade me that my service is more than I take it to be? |
A26959 | But if it had, I ask, was it no mercy to be a member both of the Jews Church and the universal? |
A26959 | But if they had, would that prove that the Novatians were, seven hundred or eight hundred years before? |
A26959 | But it is others that he tells it to ▪ Those others will read my own words or, they will not? |
A26959 | But must they therefore be so used by all? |
A26959 | But see the misery of a Sectarian spirit, that taketh it for a contradiction to be a friend to Calvin and Arminius both? |
A26959 | But what all this is to the case of Infant- baptism, what man besides himself can tell? |
A26959 | But what doth he mean by[ sheltering my self in a storm in their tents]? |
A26959 | But what if that Council had so accused Bruis and Arnold, are they to be( believed of them? |
A26959 | But what is all this to Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | But what is it then? |
A26959 | But what is that to Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | But what man else could have gathered, that then this must be the only or chief end, and more in Gods eye than the saving of a sinner? |
A26959 | But what need we ask Cassander what Guitmund said? |
A26959 | But what shall we be agreed in that are ignorant and differ here? |
A26959 | But who but the Owners of the child are capable of making such a promise? |
A26959 | But who can answer words not cited? |
A26959 | Can you prove any Roman Ordination of it before all these? |
A26959 | Church, that used Reliques so strangely for working miracles? |
A26959 | Could a Bishop of so great a City and Diocess have been against Infant- baptism and none to be able to prove it, even in envious accusations? |
A26959 | Could he be in such a station as he was, and have so many writings, and so many adversaries, and yet hold such an opinion and never be suspected? |
A26959 | Could you think now that you did not cheat your poor Reader, if partiality had not shut one of your eyes? |
A26959 | Dare you maintain that all the world is sinless in this respect? |
A26959 | Did Nicephorus write in Dutch? |
A26959 | Did he tell the Reader where by one( in any words) I contradict the other? |
A26959 | Did he think that it was flatly unlawful for maids and young widdows to be Baptized? |
A26959 | Did not I know what I had written till he told me? |
A26959 | Did nothing in Christ himself in Infancy agree with visible membership? |
A26959 | Did the Nonconformists shelter me? |
A26959 | Did the bringing out of Aegypt concur to make Moses a Church- member when he was in the basket on the waters? |
A26959 | Did they not precisely observe Easter, and place Religion in keeping it on their own dayes? |
A26959 | Did they not use the Asiatick Ceremonies? |
A26959 | Do the Anabaptists no better own their cause? |
A26959 | Do they know what[ a transeunt fact is, that without Law or Covenant makes Church- members?] |
A26959 | Do they say that those fifteen are all? |
A26959 | Do you and your Companions know that you are renouncing your Baptism, and Christianity, and the Cross of Christ, while you would rebaptize us all? |
A26959 | Do you believe that our union with the visible Church as such, and participation in its priviledges, is none of that Grace? |
A26959 | Do you know the History of the Council of Calcedon and Dioscorus, and the Nestorians? |
A26959 | Do you know what most Protestants think that hear them? |
A26959 | Do you think it is to get other friends that I more value? |
A26959 | Doth God say, that the seed of the righteous are not blessed till they come to age? |
A26959 | Doth Mr. D. himself know it, of a book never read? |
A26959 | Doth a dumb man signifie his consent to the Covenant by any signs or not? |
A26959 | Doth it not rather imply that there was no controversie between him and the Britains about Infant- Baptism, seeing he never mentioned any such thing? |
A26959 | Doth not the promise give them an established right in this blessing? |
A26959 | Doth that prove that others were not baptized in Infancy? |
A26959 | Doth the word[ taking] signifie a meer physical taking or fact; or a moral, such as among men we call, a civil action? |
A26959 | Elsewhere indeed Socrates and many more say so: But doth that prove they were against Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | Even teach men so to do, and say It is no Sacriledge? |
A26959 | For doubtless Marriage is a sin accidentally to some, though not in its own nature, and far from being a duty to all? |
A26959 | From what, and how? |
A26959 | HAve you well considered of the fruit of your ways apparent in England and Ireland at this day? |
A26959 | HOw prove you that it was a blemish to the old frame, that Infants were members? |
A26959 | Had it not been for the Separatists and you? |
A26959 | Had not the Conformists tents been likelier? |
A26959 | Had the Apostles so little charity as not to endeavour to rectifie any of their errors? |
A26959 | Had they not Bishops, and were they not Monks? |
A26959 | Had you or I more hand in these matters? |
A26959 | Hath not many a Minister among us been so accused? |
A26959 | Have our worst Parish Churches many greater scandals? |
A26959 | Have these things toucht your heart? |
A26959 | He addeth[ Sometimes a violent impugner of Popery, and yet at last who hath spoken more in favour of it?] |
A26959 | He did not publish this his opinion, but held it unpublished: And how then did Guitmund know it? |
A26959 | He feigneth this to be said of the Waldenses, which is expresly said in the history to be spoken of the Manichees? |
A26959 | He knoweth that Cluniacensis — hath given no such wicked and false testimony,& c. And how proveth he that? |
A26959 | He that would not consent to the Covenant was by Asa to be put to death: And was not Circumcision a covenanting act? |
A26959 | His Catalogue containeth three Columns: The first of the Baptism of the Adult: And what Christian ever denied this? |
A26959 | How great a number would your untruths appear, were they all gathered and enumerated to you? |
A26959 | How inconsiderable a part of the universal Church they hold communion with? |
A26959 | How know you another mans knowledge? |
A26959 | How know you that they so vehemently rejected humane Traditions in the worship of God? |
A26959 | How proveth he that that was meant by the Roman manner or fashion of Baptizing? |
A26959 | How shall I know that they will any more read the last than the first? |
A26959 | How weak a minded mother art thou, and of how little faith? |
A26959 | I say, do they know this? |
A26959 | I take a visible Church- member to be a visible member of Christ as Head of the Church and of his Church as visible? |
A26959 | I will not turn to see whether it be so ▪ but what''s this to the purpose? |
A26959 | I would desire him if he can, to tell me, whether both Cain and Abel were not visible Church- members in Adams family? |
A26959 | IF unbelief brake them off, will not repentance graff them in? |
A26959 | IN what regard is the new frame bettered by casting out Infants which were in the old? |
A26959 | IT is a thing that all are not duely informed of, How far Controversial Writings and Disputes are to be practised by pious and peaceable men? |
A26959 | If God had made no other Law, Promise or Covenant, with the adult, but[ I will save whom I will save] who would have taken this for a Law or Covenant? |
A26959 | If besides those that Gods Laws condemn or justifie, God will save many in a neutral state, why may he not, saith the ungodly, save me also? |
A26959 | If bitter Papists so accuse him, is it therefore true? |
A26959 | If by writing, is not the act transeunt? |
A26959 | If he be to be believed in this, why not in the first article, of the lawfulness of abusing all women commonly? |
A26959 | If he did, then how much more flagitious is his practice, thus to tell the world an untruth so notorious to himself? |
A26959 | If he did, was he against it then? |
A26959 | If he hold not the contrary doctrines, why doth he exclaim against mine, as heynous? |
A26959 | If he rejoyce in these Witnesses, is here a word of Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | If he understand not Latine, how unfit is he to give us the History of these antiquities? |
A26959 | If it be by voice, is not that transeunt? |
A26959 | If it be this same, then how comes a meer transeunt fact to work effectually so many hundred years after it is past? |
A26959 | If it were asked what benefit had the Circumcision? |
A26959 | If not, how is he one of these covenanting and separated people? |
A26959 | If not, the Jews lost nothing by being broken off? |
A26959 | If not, what a man is this that dare talk thus confidently and falsly of what he knew not? |
A26959 | If not, what did the man think that a recitation should do with me? |
A26959 | If not, what meaneth[ barely] but the nakedness of your ill cause? |
A26959 | If not, why cheat you your simple followers by this talk? |
A26959 | If not, why cite you instances of Rebaptizers? |
A26959 | If not, why will it prove the same of the Britains? |
A26959 | If the case were, whether the Lords Supper might be Administred with Beer, or Milk, where there is no Wine? |
A26959 | If therefore God have made general promises as to age and person, who is he that dare limit it, without just proof that indeed God hath limited it? |
A26959 | If this prove that the Waldenses were against Infant- Baptism, it will prove that Papists, Protestants and all are so? |
A26959 | If we be but such Antichristians say they, as holy Cyprian and the primitive Churches were, we will prefer it before the Anabaptists Christianity? |
A26959 | If yea, how did the Christians Children forfeit it? |
A26959 | If you do, we are agreed, and why contend you? |
A26959 | If you except Liberty, Health, Life, you are hypocrites: And can you except Children? |
A26959 | In all things or some? |
A26959 | In what? |
A26959 | Infants have none of these in act, and yet who doubteth but Infants are members of the Kingdom( of every Kingdom under Heaven that I have read of?) |
A26959 | Is Dallaeus that hath written so large a disputation of Confirmation, an Anabaptist? |
A26959 | Is all this then no promise, but a transeunt fact? |
A26959 | Is dipping any thing to the case of Infants? |
A26959 | Is here a word that he was against Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | Is it a physical action though a moral causation of some physical effect? |
A26959 | Is it at all by the Covenant as Evangelical? |
A26959 | Is it like that God will bless such unmanly scandals, to the Churches good? |
A26959 | Is it mens praise or good thoughts of me? |
A26959 | Is it not so as to the Jews policie and peculiarity? |
A26959 | Is it not so? |
A26959 | Is it the Papists? |
A26959 | Is not Church- membership contained in, Gods being their God, and taking them for his people thus in Covenant? |
A26959 | Is not the Action ut agentis naturally antecedent to it as in patiente? |
A26959 | Is not this an excellent Prover? |
A26959 | Is that a point that they differed from all the Apostolick Church in? |
A26959 | Is the poor Church to be thus abused, and holy things thus played with? |
A26959 | Is the subject of Baptism, the Manner? |
A26959 | Is this a good witness that the Waldenses were against Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | Is this a safe ground to build so great a weight on? |
A26959 | Is this establishing Covenant on Promise but a transeunt fact? |
A26959 | Jews Infants should be members and not Genties? |
A26959 | Just as Wickliff ▪ Judge now of this mans words? |
A26959 | Keturahs children were Church- members in infancy: I enquire of you by what act they were made such? |
A26959 | Let him shew you if he can, where or when I have changed my judgement about Conformity, or exprest a change since 1640? |
A26959 | Let him tell you where and when I ever defended that Episcopacy which I had opposed? |
A26959 | Long before what? |
A26959 | Lot came out of Ur with Abraham, yea, and from Haran, and lived with him: were not Lot and his Infants Church- members then? |
A26959 | Mark Reader, what an issue our Controversies with these men come to? |
A26959 | Me thinks these Professions should put off the chief matter of offence and exception against each other, as to the ill consequents of our opinions? |
A26959 | Mr. T. can not see how this promise can be repealed: what, not an universal promising Law, or Covenant or Instrument? |
A26959 | Much more that this calumny should be thus over and over audaciously justified? |
A26959 | Must such dealing as this go for an answer? |
A26959 | Must the Christendom of Kingdoms be impetuously questioned by men that know not such rudiments as these? |
A26959 | Must we read all his works again to see if there be such a word, as oft as such a man will talk to us at this rate? |
A26959 | Neither do we say that Infants are learners in actu exercito; and so what is this to the matter? |
A26959 | No such thing in the Asiaticks Churches? |
A26959 | No wonder if all Christians Infants must be shut out, if Innocent Adams must have been shut out? |
A26959 | No wonder therefore if Augustin so long after say that no Christian taketh it to be in vain? |
A26959 | No, but by the Priests and Worshippers? |
A26959 | None of them in Infancy? |
A26959 | None of this ever came into my thoughts which he untruly saith I drive at,& c. What sober man could imagine either of these assertions? |
A26959 | Now do you think that the reason of Physical Qualities and Moral Rights, Relations and duties is the same? |
A26959 | O cease from man whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be accounted of? |
A26959 | O wh ● t pleasure is this to Papists? |
A26959 | O what a Church might we have had, and were likely to have had? |
A26959 | O what work have you made your self? |
A26959 | Or have you not seen enough to make you suspect and fear whether indeed God own your way or not? |
A26959 | Or how could it be any part of the cause? |
A26959 | Or is he not concerned in the donation at all? |
A26959 | Or shall he have that gift absolutely which is conditional to all others? |
A26959 | Or that Christs Church then and now are of two frames in regard of the subjects age? |
A26959 | Or that it shall be one of a million at least that shall not? |
A26959 | Or the children of Apostates? |
A26959 | Or the children of such? |
A26959 | Or the profession of a saving faith? |
A26959 | Or was Hinomarus against adult Communion because envy said he let some die without it? |
A26959 | Or whether Baptism might be Administred by Milk or Wine, where there is no water? |
A26959 | Or why should God promise it as a new thing? |
A26959 | Prove what you say by any words of mine? |
A26959 | Quid fidelius? |
A26959 | Quis hoc dixerit? |
A26959 | Reader, How big a volume wouldst thou have me write in answering such stuff as this? |
A26959 | Reader, are not the Anabaptists ductile men where they like, as well as intractable where they dislike, that they will follow such a Leader as this? |
A26959 | Reader, dost thou not marvail to find him so plead for me against himself, or speak nothing to the case? |
A26959 | Reader, is here a syllable against Infant- baptism? |
A26959 | Reader, is not all here unsaid again by this concession? |
A26959 | Reader, will not this kind o ● arguing make thee an Anabaptist? |
A26959 | Saith Austin, Quare ergo rebaptizas Christianum? |
A26959 | See Reader, how he valueth his own work? |
A26959 | See here what a witness he hath brought? |
A26959 | See how he feareth not to make reports of the dead by this hearsay? |
A26959 | See how this accuser proveth Lyes? |
A26959 | Shall I answer them that never speak or write to me? |
A26959 | Shall I take this mans accusation for a confutation or conviction? |
A26959 | Shall he be certainly shut out unto damnation? |
A26959 | Shall we not have one true word? |
A26959 | Should one ask him whom he heard this from, do you think we should get a satisfying answer? |
A26959 | Si haberi foris potest, etiam dari cur non potest? |
A26959 | So that our enquiry must be, whether the Congregation and the Commonwealth be the same thing in your sense?] |
A26959 | So they use to say, that Death and the Grave are sanctified by Christ: How? |
A26959 | Speak once like a man: And was not that till the fourth Century? |
A26959 | Stay Reader a little, and tell me whether it call not for shame and tears that one such Book should be written by a Christian? |
A26959 | Still such untruths? |
A26959 | Such as I believe the Sun never saw, nor the wisest Lawyer in England ever read before? |
A26959 | THE next Question that I spould speak to is, whether these Laws, or Covenants, or Promises, are capable of a revocation, or repeal? |
A26959 | That Infants unbaptized are damned; which in charity he thinks is to be denyed: And what''s this against their Baptism? |
A26959 | That Tertullians words prove that Infant- Baptism was then in use: And it is the matter of fact that we are searching after? |
A26959 | That all Infants are made Church- members by it, did any of us ever affirm? |
A26959 | That believers must be baptized in pure water,( And what are these to the purpose?) |
A26959 | That died a Martyr for Christ; 4. Who is so great a part of the pure antiquity; that if you cast him away, what will the rest be for a great time? |
A26959 | That either Christ did not joyn with the Jews in worship which had Musick( in the Temple) or else he sinned in so doing? |
A26959 | That is, None would make schisms if they were not blinded by the hatred of their brethren: Is there not the hatred of brethren in Schism? |
A26959 | That it is no wrong to Ignorant Christians to put such whimsies and scruples into their heads? |
A26959 | That it was not whether Infants should be Baptized that was the question, but whether it should be done before the eighth day? |
A26959 | That most of them speak to the Question[ What is the kind of Covenant consent required in baptism? |
A26959 | The Pope bids Baptize Infants: Ergo not only the Manichees but the Waldenses denyed it? |
A26959 | The adult blemish the Church with more carnal sins than Infants do? |
A26959 | The adult come in by the same kind of consent for themselves, as they make for their Infants? |
A26959 | The adult have souls and bodies, and so have Infants? |
A26959 | The eighth question,[ Which are the Texts of Scripture that contain or express the said laws, precepts, or grants which I maintain?] |
A26959 | The fifth question,[ Whether there be such precepts and promises as you grant,( or as I shall prove) which yet make not Infants Church- members?] |
A26959 | The first question in order fit to be resolved is,[ whether Infants before Christs incarnation were Church- members, or not?] |
A26959 | The ninth question,[ Whether such laws, preceps or grants as I shall prove, are capable of a repal or revocation?] |
A26959 | The second question and the first resolved, is[ what Church it is that Infants were members of?] |
A26959 | The seventh question,[ Whether those which you have assigned be such facts?] |
A26959 | The tenth question,[ Whether they are actually revoked or repealed?] |
A26959 | The third question is, what it is that gives the Israelites that denomination of[ the Congregation of Israel] of which Infants were members? |
A26959 | This is not the Controversie: Is your judgement alike right of persons as of Doctrines? |
A26959 | To the Minor, If his bare affirmation would prove that Infants were not to be baptized, what need he write his books? |
A26959 | Utterly false: And how doth he prove it? |
A26959 | WAs not Christs Church before his incarnation spiritual, and gathered in a spiritual way? |
A26959 | WHether any Jew at age was a member of the old Church without professing faith( in the Articles necessary to salvation) repentance and obedience? |
A26959 | Was ever such a reporter as this man before taken for a credible person? |
A26959 | Was it better to be of no visible Church, than of the universal? |
A26959 | Was that an honest man that would secretly hold an opinion which he knew he had no Scripture for? |
A26959 | Was there ever a Law or Covenant made in the world any other way than by a transeunt fact? |
A26959 | Was there never but One Parliament and One Cause? |
A26959 | Was there no such thing? |
A26959 | Was this an Anabaptist? |
A26959 | Was this great Pope an Anabaptist? |
A26959 | Were not this a contemptible arguing? |
A26959 | Were not this as good an argument? |
A26959 | Were these Persecutors think you blind or merciful herein? |
A26959 | What a Knave do they make him that so say? |
A26959 | What a bare put off is that, of a man that must say something? |
A26959 | What a deal of the Gospel and the Churches mercys do these men deny? |
A26959 | What a prover is this man? |
A26959 | What a wide gap doth that[ at least] make you, yet to say, They were a Church or no Church, as you please? |
A26959 | What aptitude hath the leading to Padan Aram, or removal to Aegypt, to make Infants Church- members? |
A26959 | What aptitude hath the setling of an Army to be any part of the causation of Infants Church- membership? |
A26959 | What childish play is this? |
A26959 | What durst I not subscribe to, if I durst do all this? |
A26959 | What have I got by them but silencing and the loss of all Ministerial maintenance, these twelve years? |
A26959 | What have I lost Sir? |
A26959 | What is it that a sanctified man must not devote to God that is His? |
A26959 | What is that to Church — membership? |
A26959 | What is the matter that men that can do all this, can not Conform? |
A26959 | What man will say so? |
A26959 | What not so notorious a Law, and Covenant, and Benediction? |
A26959 | What pains is taken in the Epistle to the Hebrews to prove the change of the Covenant as faulty in comparison of that which had better promises? |
A26959 | What pittiful abuse of ignorant Readers is this? |
A26959 | What should I say to him and them? |
A26959 | What will not partiality say? |
A26959 | What wonder then if disputes be endless? |
A26959 | What''s the difference? |
A26959 | What, doth Infants Relation detract from its spirituality? |
A26959 | When a storm fell on the Nonconformists, were their tents a likely place for shelter? |
A26959 | When in all the lines which I have examined I have met with so few that are not guilty of them? |
A26959 | When shall I come to a sentence that is true? |
A26959 | When you should prove to us the revocation of Infants Church- membership, to tell us that they had it only by a transeunt fact? |
A26959 | Whether a man may not oblige himself to a duty meerly by his consent? |
A26959 | Whether a meer dogmatical faith professed? |
A26959 | Whether it is sinfully used in Scripture?) |
A26959 | Whether then were not the children of the Disciples and all believing Jews Church- members in Infancy? |
A26959 | Whether there were any Ordinances or Law of God that Infants should be Church- members? |
A26959 | Who be they? |
A26959 | Who c ● uld hence have found out that God hath various degrees of intention? |
A26959 | Who then is this Man a Factor for? |
A26959 | Who was the accuser here? |
A26959 | Who would not receive them, though we approve not of their way? |
A26959 | Why did you cite neither words, page nor Book? |
A26959 | Why must we be told what Dr. Prideaux saith of the acts of an old Council, as easily known by us as by him? |
A26959 | Why some of the wisest of them that I know did read them over, and approved them before they were printed? |
A26959 | Why then dost thou rebaptize a Christian( that differeth not from them?) |
A26959 | Will he make the Church of his mind by such palpable falshoods as these? |
A26959 | Will you not confess your self that Cyprian and that Carthage Council, Nazianzene, Basil, Augustine& c. were for Infant- Baptism? |
A26959 | With what scorn will they deride such men? |
A26959 | Would not every week detect it? |
A26959 | Would you be believed in other things that can deliberately, in two Editions, do thus? |
A26959 | Would you have made your Reader believe that it was any thing to the question? |
A26959 | Would you tempt me to look to the hypocrites reward? |
A26959 | Yea even Independents and Presbyterians and all that prize and cleave to them now in England? |
A26959 | Yea whether he hath not all along confirmed it? |
A26959 | Yea, to justifie all Jews against this charge, that should neglect or refuse to engage their children to God in Covenant as members of his Church? |
A26959 | You see what he hath brought the ancient and later Church- membership, Circumcision and Baptism to? |
A26959 | [ Baptizing after the manner of Rome] And what''s that to his question? |
A26959 | [ Cum autem dicatur, Qui vero non crediderit condemnabitur, quid hic dicimus de parvulis, qui per aetatem adhuc credere non valent? |
A26959 | [ That Christs Ministers rightly ordained and dedicated to God in that sacred office, are not so much as Relatively holy as separated to God therein? |
A26959 | [ That Church Musick( and consequently singing which is the prime Musick) is no help to any man in the service of God? |
A26959 | [ That anointing, using the white Garment, Milk and Honey, were Blasphemous rites, and Popish before Popery was existent? |
A26959 | [ That it is in no Case lawful to keep a Vow of Chastity, at least among the Papists? |
A26959 | [ That no Reverence is due to Ministers and Church utensils?] |
A26959 | [ That though he find it a help, it is sin for any man to use it? |
A26959 | [ To be uncovered in the Church; and use reverent carriage and gestures there, doth not at all tend to preserve due reverence to God and his worship? |
A26959 | [ 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 —[ Hast thou an Infant? |
A26959 | and every one of my Nonconforming brethren? |
A26959 | and is here no Covenant, where the mutual Covenant is described? |
A26959 | and many another Text, mean no such thing as they speak, as if to be the seed of the faithful were no condition, but only[ I will save my elect?] |
A26959 | and more against vice and formality in and after Colmans and Columbanus dayes? |
A26959 | and so that almost all Christians in the world are no Christians? |
A26959 | and what a sort of new political Doctrine shall we have from you, when these things are accomplished according to the frame you have begun? |
A26959 | and what constituteth it formally? |
A26959 | and what you imagine that precept or promise to be which I assert? |
A26959 | and whether only with the punishment of loss, or also of sense?] |
A26959 | and whether the moral action of that law were permanent or transeunt? |
A26959 | as if he knew not what abundance more may easily be produced, if it were of any need? |
A26959 | as if were but one Tomb or Volume, that long ago was eleven great Volumes, and now many more? |
A26959 | as to the matter believed and the sincerity of the belief and consent?] |
A26959 | except the Anabaptists, who reject the benefit; whose case( as I said before) I will not presume to determine? |
A26959 | hath no more? |
A26959 | is one question: Whether this be repealed? |
A26959 | no not when God himself is the separater and man the unjust alienater? |
A26959 | or a fit reason of your application of it to the thing in hand? |
A26959 | or doth not this confirm their right to the benefit promised, which was received before by the same means? |
A26959 | or else make thee pitty the seduced party? |
A26959 | or from the creation till this day? |
A26959 | or if not, what sense it hath? |
A26959 | or if otherwise, that All Christs Church was Popish then? |
A26959 | or only less safe, and eligible, except in danger of death? |
A26959 | or would God else have taken them for his people? |
A26959 | p. 142. in favour of Tradition a heynous provocation, to say no more of them?] |
A26959 | party? |
A26959 | sure this was not so long after, a Manner peculiar to Rome? |
A26959 | that is, as soon as they were subjects capable? |
A26959 | that is, in the point of Rebaptizing persons before baptized( do you own that indeed?) |
A26959 | the approbation of man? |
A26959 | to be relatively a member of the Houshold of God? |
A26959 | unless it made a Law or Covenant which doth the deed? |
A26959 | were all these Papists, or Romans? |
A26959 | what proving is this? |
A26959 | what unlikely things( yea against evidence) can some believe? |
A26959 | when about the Manner indeed there were then so many and different ceremonies? |
A26959 | whereto will not men run left to themselves?] |
A26959 | whether all equally or unequally? |
A26959 | which no man that ever breathed till now, nor ever man will know again? |
A26959 | who did not send men of their own company? |
A26959 | who yet were born of Abrahams seed, and in that Land? |
A27058 | & c. And also that they so hardly speak of the Jesuites, Yea and Papists commonly? |
A27058 | ( or Myriads?) |
A27058 | ( that is, of the whole City?) |
A27058 | 17,& c. And is not mincing and extenuating great sin, an implicit hardening men against Repentance? |
A27058 | 4. Who knows not that the Church is now divided into about Twelve Sects, all condemning one another? |
A27058 | 7. it came to Maturity? |
A27058 | 7. was Proud and ambitious when he threatened the Prince of Calaris with the loss of his dominions, unless he made his Bishop shave his beard? |
A27058 | Abbot or Grindall Antimonarchical or Antiepifcopal? |
A27058 | Allen, Lord Mayor, to draw him in? |
A27058 | Among the multitude of Protestant Church Historians and Chronologers, how few are there that do not do the same, though in various degrees? |
A27058 | And Paul when he said, I have no man like minded; for they all seek their own things, and not the things that are Jesus Christ''s? |
A27058 | And a greater fault to feel, and say we feel, than to strike or wound men? |
A27058 | And almost condemn your vindicating Book? |
A27058 | And as I before noted, Is not even in London where other differences might exasperate, yet this Controversie almost laid to sleep? |
A27058 | And as it is more tumid than the Patriarchs, is not the Patriarchs more tumid than the Metropolitanes, and that than the Diocesanes? |
A27058 | And by whom? |
A27058 | And can you in your Conscience own what the Bishops did towards it? |
A27058 | And did I ever say worse of the Bishops than this? |
A27058 | And did I ever so discredit the whole stream of Church- Historians, as on the word of one Jesuite, to bring them under the suspicion of such a Lie? |
A27058 | And did he prevail against the Primitive Purity and Simplicity without them? |
A27058 | And did not most of the same men meet in the next Parliament after, and look yet more suspiciously on the Clergy? |
A27058 | And did the Papacy Spring up in a year? |
A27058 | And do you think that the Bishops Erring did not more to seduce the Flocks, than the Emperour''s? |
A27058 | And do you think that the other Seven Thousand or Eight Thousand that conformed did confederate beforehand to conform? |
A27058 | And do you think there are none such in the world? |
A27058 | And doth it follow that they were not Episcopal but Presbyterian? |
A27058 | And doth this signifie that I charge the Bishops with bloody purposes? |
A27058 | And for how small a prize? |
A27058 | And for many hundred to Err, than for One Man? |
A27058 | And for what? |
A27058 | And from that time forward, will you not be as great a Railer as I, and scandalize Christianity more than Lucian or Julian? |
A27058 | And harden me in my Errour? |
A27058 | And hath this Historian any proof of this? |
A27058 | And how came they to know each others minds? |
A27058 | And how can you tell who all be that hear you in an uncertain crowd? |
A27058 | And how could I have known if he had not told me that this word is railing? |
A27058 | And how great is the Number of the Poor? |
A27058 | And how ordinarily do they expound[ Let him be Anathema] that is[ Cut off from Christ?] |
A27058 | And how shall they have it but by Objects and Communication? |
A27058 | And how should I make it generally known more than by oft Printing it? |
A27058 | And how should young men know who these are? |
A27058 | And how smartly Isidore Pelusiota reflects on him? |
A27058 | And if Seven Thousand could agree without confederating, why not Two Thousand? |
A27058 | And if de facto, God do sanctifie only a peculiar People, who can deny his differencing Will and Grace? |
A27058 | And if he had written History, would this report advance the credit of it? |
A27058 | And if the Eastern followed the Emperours, had not the Western been in danger if they had the like temptation? |
A27058 | And if these words be uncharitable Railing, what means have we lest to give them that demand it, the Reasons of our Nonconformity? |
A27058 | And if yea, than how shall it be known without proper names? |
A27058 | And is it enough to accuse? |
A27058 | And is it malice in me to transcribe their History? |
A27058 | And is it not as true if Bishops be the Dividers? |
A27058 | And is it not more culpable for Bishops to Err in the Mysteries of Divinity, than a Lay- man? |
A27058 | And is it the whole Catholick Church then, or a Schismatical Church? |
A27058 | And is that true? |
A27058 | And is the name[ self- conceited] in describing the cause of this a railing? |
A27058 | And is this against Moderation? |
A27058 | And is this railing? |
A27058 | And is this the way to make me lament my want of his Academical Education? |
A27058 | And may not an Orthodox man confess the Piety of others? |
A27058 | And must I not, when importuned by Bishops, Priests and Rulers, say what I fear, le ● t others should think it intimateth their guiltiness? |
A27058 | And must all be ruined that would not be so convinced? |
A27058 | And must it not be known? |
A27058 | And must we needs Rail indeed against such numbers of hurtful Prelatists? |
A27058 | And must we renounce Communion with all the Christian world? |
A27058 | And so seems to vindicate the Bishops and Councils but for the space of 150 years of the time that I mentioned their degeneration? |
A27058 | And so which way can a Succession of the worst men be avoided? |
A27058 | And the Bishops of the West strive to rise with, and by the Pope? |
A27058 | And the burning of our Smithfield Martyrs: And it''s like most of the Wars between the Old Popes and Emperours about Investitures? |
A27058 | And the next yet more? |
A27058 | And those that conquered for them drove them out, when they considered what they had done: But had it not been better known at a cheaper rate? |
A27058 | And to be but the consequent of former Subornations and Perjury; can you name greater wickedness? |
A27058 | And to write a Confutation of a multitude of Volumns of false Accusations brought to justifie the Executions? |
A27058 | And was it well done, or ill? |
A27058 | And was not this Eutychian Speech as improper as Nestoriu''s is? |
A27058 | And was this a Crime worthy the forbidding men to preach the Gospel? |
A27058 | And what a shake is given to the Credit of all these by Mr. M. and others of greater name? |
A27058 | And what do I say worse of them than he? |
A27058 | And what is it that some men do not confidently ascribe to the most holy God? |
A27058 | And what is the Discipline that you exercise on Hereticks? |
A27058 | And what moved the man to dream that when I so describe and praise their constancy in Suffering, I did it as at unawares? |
A27058 | And what say I more of the Bishops and the whole cause, than Sulpitius Severus the fullest and most knowing Describer saith? |
A27058 | And what was their Will? |
A27058 | And what''s this to us any more than to you? |
A27058 | And what, and where are those Laws which we must all be governed by, which neither God nor Councils made? |
A27058 | And when I have said[ by Man] how bad, how sad a creature have I named? |
A27058 | And when he confesseth what I say, is he not a Railer at the Bishops as much as I in that? |
A27058 | And who can deny now but the Diocesane Species is essential to the Church? |
A27058 | And who is it now that most raileth at Bishops? |
A27058 | And who made him acquainted with Thoughts that were never uttered? |
A27058 | And who persuaded the Lay- Men to it? |
A27058 | And why do you say so, if I call you Silencers, if that be as good? |
A27058 | And why doth not your Discipline meddle with constant Non- Communicants? |
A27058 | And why should not I regard the words of such an Emperour, as well as of one half the Bishops against the other? |
A27058 | And why, saith he, may not that skilful man shew his skill in Councils, as well as else where? |
A27058 | And why? |
A27058 | And will it not burn if combustible fewel be contiguous? |
A27058 | And will the faults of that Assembly justifie the far greater faults of others? |
A27058 | And would not any impartial Historian do the like? |
A27058 | And yet could they not help it? |
A27058 | And yet is a Jesuite a Papist? |
A27058 | And yet these 19. or 20. years how few of them have been convict of any false doctrine? |
A27058 | And[ Take off the penalty of subscribing, declaring, crossing,& c. what good doth subscribing a Sentence which he believeth not?] |
A27058 | Are any of them Excommunicated? |
A27058 | Are not Baronius and Binnius friends to the highest Prelacy? |
A27058 | Are not a Parliament and an Army things publick enough to be known in the same Age? |
A27058 | Are there no other Christians? |
A27058 | Are there none such? |
A27058 | Are you for it? |
A27058 | As to his Question, Whether the Presbyterians brought in the King? |
A27058 | Asking,[ Were not almost all the Westminster Assembly Episcopal Conformable men when they came thither?] |
A27058 | At last mentioning the common Dissentions of the Churches, he seems to resolve the Question, What then must be done? |
A27058 | But I have oft cited Jewel defending the French Protestants; Was not he a Bishop? |
A27058 | But d d I ever rail more at Bishops than he here doth? |
A27058 | But did never any person oppose it? |
A27058 | But did the man think that Unconstancy and compliance with powerful Heresie, is the same thing with Repentance for it? |
A27058 | But do you not know the Dedication from the Title, only because it is printed on the Title Page? |
A27058 | But for this you find fault with him[ He did resent the Injury( And was it an Injury?) |
A27058 | But he hath a far greater charge against me, that I did not apprehend the mind of the Council at Tours; why so? |
A27058 | But how do you think all these that were scattered all over England, and knew not one another by name or Dwelling, should so confederate? |
A27058 | But how great is the Number of Jews and Ethnicks? |
A27058 | But how many Bishops were against the passing of that Bill? |
A27058 | But if they had been Nonconformists, what names had been bad enough for them? |
A27058 | But is it falshood to omit what is said in such and so many Volumns? |
A27058 | But is it not therefore to be blamed? |
A27058 | But is it not this 4th Century that is made the Churches more flourishing state by others? |
A27058 | But is it nothing that they could have done in Parliament, had they been willing? |
A27058 | But is this therefore said of the substance of the Liturgy? |
A27058 | But saith he,[ I pray where were the Presbyterians when the Parliament took up Arms: Were they not then in being?] |
A27058 | But seeing no abatement of their Canons,& c. must be granted, what is it that must cause our Concord? |
A27058 | But the Question is, Whether the Bishops, whose faults I mention, were of equal Worth and Innocency with those whom I honour and praise? |
A27058 | But the question is, how he shall be heard and prevail? |
A27058 | But to whom is it that you intend this? |
A27058 | But what better Argument have the Papists, and many others that talk against Schism? |
A27058 | But what will not some Historians confidently say? |
A27058 | But what''s this to me, if it be not me that he means? |
A27058 | But when I have said so much to Mr. Hinkley already to prove this, did this Lord Bishop think to be believed without confuting it? |
A27058 | But when I largely recited Hillary''s words of them, he saith,[ The Account is very sad]( and what said I more?) |
A27058 | But who had the loss? |
A27058 | But why name I one man? |
A27058 | But why should they be forbidden to preach( which was good and they were devoted to?) |
A27058 | But why will you dishonour Reverend Prelates so much as to father them on such? |
A27058 | But will fire burn without fewel? |
A27058 | But would you persuade the Reader that I call it a Faction, to believe your sence of these Councils? |
A27058 | But, saith he,[ Were they Episcopals that Petitioned the King at York for Reformation in Discipline and Worship then? |
A27058 | By what Obligation? |
A27058 | By what authority will he so do? |
A27058 | By what name should I have called Silencing but its own and so of the rest? |
A27058 | Can I help that? |
A27058 | Can you believe that the generality turn from good to bad just in one Age? |
A27058 | Can you find nothing in your Impositions that in the nature of the thing is worthy to be altered? |
A27058 | Can you tell who the man aimeth at? |
A27058 | Certainly this can not be Indifferent? |
A27058 | Did Christ speak against Christianity, when he reproved them for striving who should be greatest? |
A27058 | Did I ever say or think that there were no Bishops that kept the Faith? |
A27058 | Did I lay it only on the Erastians? |
A27058 | Did I not preach by the Kings License, and the Clergy blame me for it? |
A27058 | Did I not purposely say,[ David himself] and cite the Text, lest any should feign the same that he doth? |
A27058 | Did Peter or Paul make it, or submit to it? |
A27058 | Did Thuanus, Davilah,& c. sin in recording the French Massacre? |
A27058 | Did he know it to be false? |
A27058 | Did he renounce Communion with General Monk and his whole Army, who were long in Arms for the Parliament? |
A27058 | Did he think that I excluded the Army if I blame the General, or the Prelatical Priests when I blame the Prelates? |
A27058 | Did my begging in vain a License from Bishop Morley, and craving and obtaining one of Bishop Sheldon, signifie this? |
A27058 | Did none of these profess before to be Orthodox? |
A27058 | Did not Marcellinus fall to Idolatry, and Liberius to subscribe against Athanasius with the Arians? |
A27058 | Did not his Councils, and Prelates, as his Armies, do his greatest works? |
A27058 | Did not the Bishops take it for a great service of God, and is it railing to name it? |
A27058 | Did not the King make his Declaration about Ecclesiastical Affairs? |
A27058 | Did not the West actually fall to Arianism when tempted for the most part? |
A27058 | Did that man ever understandingly consider the matter, who can doubt of the truth of what I say? |
A27058 | Did the Fathers speak thus? |
A27058 | Did the former Life and Doctrine of these Two Thousand men signifie a Spirit so much worse than the rest? |
A27058 | Did the man that died of Gluttony, swallow all at one morsel? |
A27058 | Did they not do it? |
A27058 | Did they not in their next Convocation lay aside the Kings Indulgent Declaration, and make the Additions to the Liturgy? |
A27058 | Did they refuse any thing that God commanded in Nature or Scripture? |
A27058 | Did this begin? |
A27058 | Do I contradict it? |
A27058 | Do I here speak of any but my self and the Nonconformists? |
A27058 | Do I need to answer this to any man of 50 years of age? |
A27058 | Do I not as oft as he profess my great dislike of every sect, as a sect? |
A27058 | Do I not disclaim this Novatian sect and their opinion, and own the Contrary? |
A27058 | Do I not protest against accusing others, and only say, what it would be to me, should I conform? |
A27058 | Do I say All fell, when I say Most fell? |
A27058 | Do I say that none but the Bishops persuaded him? |
A27058 | Do I say that peccavimus was their sin? |
A27058 | Do men call out for the execution of the Law, and plead for our Silencing as a good work, and take it for railing to have it named? |
A27058 | Do not Councils, and all Church- History tell us how many Councils of Hereticks there have been that were Bishops? |
A27058 | Do not Jewel, and all Protestant writers say worse than this of Papist Bishops? |
A27058 | Do not the Lusts that war in our Members live upon that food which we are forbidden to provide? |
A27058 | Do not these Papists here say worse of them than I do? |
A27058 | Do not you your self say, that the Bishops and Church grew more corrupt after the third Century? |
A27058 | Do not your selves maintain that all Churches in the world had Bishops; and that the Bishops were the Rulers, and of Chief Power? |
A27058 | Do we not continue so and impoverished almost 20 years? |
A27058 | Do you not see, Mr. Morrice, that there have been Prelates and Puritanes, even Episcopal Puritanes before our Times? |
A27058 | Do you punish many learned moderate men for the fault of a few others that they were not concerned with? |
A27058 | Do you think in your conscience that if we had not here a Protestant King, but a Papist, many of the Clergy would not be Papists? |
A27058 | Do you think that acontradiction? |
A27058 | Do you think that any two Men on Earth are of one mind in all things? |
A27058 | Do you think that so great a Patriarchate& Diocess would not find a conscionable Pastor work enough, without joyning with it the Magistrates Office? |
A27058 | Doth a general Accusation signifie more ill of the accuser, or of the accused, if it be not proved by particular Instances? |
A27058 | Doth either the work or the effect commend this General Council? |
A27058 | Doth he know my meaning better than my self? |
A27058 | Doth he know my thoughts? |
A27058 | Doth he not know how ill he is spoken of by a great number of Chrysostom''s Defenders? |
A27058 | Doth he not think that the Popes Bishoprick is faulty( yea, as a corrupt species?) |
A27058 | Doth he speak against Patriarchs that speaks against the Pope? |
A27058 | Doth it increase our crime to say, It is untrue? |
A27058 | Doth my large profession of Subjection in my Second Plea for Peace not yet blamed by them herein agree with this? |
A27058 | Doth not Basil that sent to them for help, complain of them as proud, and no better than their Brethren? |
A27058 | Doth not God himself keep men usually from strong temptations, when he will deliver them from sin? |
A27058 | Doth not every Christian Favour them that have lesser Errours more than them that have greater? |
A27058 | Doth not he himself say that Socrates is a credible Historian? |
A27058 | Doth not our own Case and Experience then confute those over- doing Councils? |
A27058 | Doth not your stomach rise against Sulpitius as too Puritanical and severe? |
A27058 | Doth the Bishop know them? |
A27058 | Doth their accusation of my flattering the Usurpers( whom I more openly disowned than most of his Fraternity) agree with this? |
A27058 | Easily said: And what''s the proof? |
A27058 | Fie Dr. will you thus abuse so many Orthodox Bishops? |
A27058 | Fie, Mr. Ludolphus, can you so well describe Ethiopia, and no better know your Neighbours? |
A27058 | HE begins with accusing me of imitating the Devil; Doth Job serve God for nought? |
A27058 | Hath Rome and the West stood faster to the Truth since then? |
A27058 | Hath he proved one word false that I have said of Theophilus? |
A27058 | Hath not Bishop Epiphanius made us more Hereticks than he needed? |
A27058 | Hath not Bishop Philastrius made many more than the Devil himself made? |
A27058 | Hath the Christian world had no such Bishops these 1000 years? |
A27058 | Have I not undeniably proved that the War here began between two Episcopal Parties? |
A27058 | Have none but Bishops been against corrupting the Churches, by silencing good Ministers and ordaining bad ones? |
A27058 | Have none perished in prisons or with want? |
A27058 | Have not whole Kingdoms been forbidden all Gods Publick worship by such, even France and England among the rest? |
A27058 | Have these no Parochial Personal Communion? |
A27058 | Have we given you any cause? |
A27058 | Have you proved that they did so? |
A27058 | He asketh, Is it the Bishop or the Papist that is here to blame? |
A27058 | He asketh, Is this the way to be at Peace with us? |
A27058 | He next comes to Sedition, and asketh[ What Reign have they disturbed here with their Sedition?] |
A27058 | He saith this plainly of me afterward, to shew the credibility of his History? |
A27058 | He that forsaketh not all that he hath can not be my Disciple? |
A27058 | He would not tell you; but it''s discernible what''s left: It must be no Concord but what Punishment can procure: And what punishment? |
A27058 | Here( wi ● hout railing) he bedawbs Novatus and Novatian to the purpose with horrid Crimes, a Pharisaical Saint, Perjured, and what not? |
A27058 | How came he waking to dream that this was a contradiction, when Historians tell us that the Women and Courtiers hated both Chrysostome and Nestorius? |
A27058 | How could Bonner and Gardiner help it? |
A27058 | How far from Truth? |
A27058 | How few Historians do not this? |
A27058 | How few can you name of all the Nonconformists now in England, that had any hand in the Severities you mention? |
A27058 | How knew we who would conform and who would not, when Nine Thousand were equally in Possession? |
A27058 | How know you that none of them all oppose it? |
A27058 | How know you your stated Communicants, when any stranger may come unquestioned? |
A27058 | How light a thing is the contradiction or reproach of man who is speaking and dying almost at once? |
A27058 | How little stir doth the Antinomian Controversie make? |
A27058 | How long after the War begun was this Petition at Oxford, this Covenant, and these Ordinances? |
A27058 | How long shall we fight against our Brethren and near Friends, cutting off our Right Hand with our Left? |
A27058 | How long shall we turn our Swords against our own Bowels, when yet by the Roman Belief we know nothing but what we knew before? |
A27058 | How long will it be ere the sober people of this Land believe this Character? |
A27058 | How many Christians will you that there be( That is will you grant, or do you think there be?) |
A27058 | How many Thousand Books be they which you or I never read? |
A27058 | How many more are there yet to be killed? |
A27058 | How many pounds of Gold have been gathered? |
A27058 | How many score of Historians doth Blondell cite, who he thinks have falsly told us of a Pope Joan? |
A27058 | How much worse have I said of Bishops? |
A27058 | How much worse r ● ● ers are they that will call a Drunkard a Drunkard, or a For ● ● cator a Fornicator? |
A27058 | How old then is your Religion? |
A27058 | How shall we then answer for our selves at any Bar? |
A27058 | I can find no such ordinance: He saith It was offered? |
A27058 | I confess Scripture useth the like Phrase, Can the Leopard change his Spots,& c. or they that are accustomed to do evil learn to do well? |
A27058 | I could never learn yet how to know who are Members of your Churches: Is it all that dwell in the Parishes? |
A27058 | I did but recite the Historians words, and was that forgetfulness? |
A27058 | I doubt not but the Man can write another Book to justifie this; for what is it that some can not talk for? |
A27058 | I know no Protestant that denyeth this? |
A27058 | I never heard the question put[ What will satisfie you?] |
A27058 | I spake to before: If such Historians believed not what they write or loved a malicious Lye; alas, whom shall we believe? |
A27058 | I''le appeal to Learned Bishop Barlow whether Mr. Tombs hath not made the Case of Anabaptistry more difficult? |
A27058 | If Conscience stood a man in no stead for greater Ends than worldly wealth and ease and honour, who would not be a Latitudinarian Conformist? |
A27058 | If I ask the Butcher[ Is your Meat sweet?] |
A27058 | If I may compare great things with small, who sinned more? |
A27058 | If Nature put for Person be pardonable, why is it not pardonable to prefer a denomination a proprietate vel forma, to another? |
A27058 | If a man will not do all that you would have him to do, shall he do nothing? |
A27058 | If all these be not written in Malice, how know you that mine were? |
A27058 | If another Bishop said the first words before him, do I wrong him in saying he said the second? |
A27058 | If any Presbyter broke from his Bishop to set up a Heresie, was it not one that sought to be a Bishop? |
A27058 | If ill, why do you plead for it in others? |
A27058 | If it be ill done, why condemn you your self by defending those that did the like? |
A27058 | If it be implicite faith that they are bringing us to, let them tell us which Councils we must so believe when they condemn each other? |
A27058 | If it was well done in Bishops Councils, why not in them? |
A27058 | If not, When was it that he thinks they ceased to be generally so commendable? |
A27058 | If not, am I bound to dedicate my Book to such? |
A27058 | If not, and I be ignorant in English too, what wrong is that to any Bishop? |
A27058 | If not, did not the fear of Popery make that very Parliament begin to look so sowrely on the Clergy, as produced that which I need not tell you of? |
A27058 | If so, can you imagine that after they had such Power, Churches could be usually made Hereticks without them? |
A27058 | If so, what was that to the rest? |
A27058 | If that which we judge sinful be not so, let them confute us: If it be so, and as great as we fear, is it not our duty to bewail it, and mourn for it? |
A27058 | If the poor retired Monks were as bad as you make them, what wonder if great Lordly Bishops were much worse? |
A27058 | If we had written to them all, would not One Thousand of our Letters have detected it? |
A27058 | If well ▪ why do you liken them to the Inquisition? |
A27058 | In Justinian''s time a Controversie arose, whether we may say[ One of the Trinity was crucified?] |
A27058 | In the case of Images: How oft did they change in Councils, for them and against them, as the Princes changed? |
A27058 | In what words? |
A27058 | Is Valesius a man of so much credit with you? |
A27058 | Is all that is written against the Pope and such Ascendents, written against Christianity? |
A27058 | Is any of this false, not excluding a higher title? |
A27058 | Is he better than they? |
A27058 | Is he here called David? |
A27058 | Is here ever a word of Oliver? |
A27058 | Is his Authority weighty enough to discredit them whom he contradicts? |
A27058 | Is it Nonconformists? |
A27058 | Is it a sin not to speak hardlier of so good a Prince, who after repented and punished his Wife and Eunuch for persuading him? |
A27058 | Is it all that hear you? |
A27058 | Is it any wonder if these men prove us Liars and proud, and if they sentence us for lesser Crimes? |
A27058 | Is it not that that you blame the Popes for? |
A27058 | Is it only all that Communicate with you? |
A27058 | Is it only the Bishops that have opposed warping towards Rome for Church- Unity? |
A27058 | Is it railing to tell for what little things they not only Silenced men, but burned and murdered many thousands? |
A27058 | Is it the French Protestants now that are criminal for describing and complaining of their Sufferings? |
A27058 | Is it to tempt others to the like? |
A27058 | Is it tollerable voluminously to tell the World down- right falshoods of us? |
A27058 | Is it true that I said those miracles countenanced the Eutychian Cause? |
A27058 | Is it unlawful for us to know if he know it not, or deny it, how much the Bishops and Clergy did with the Parliament- Men? |
A27058 | Is my Assertion false or doubtful? |
A27058 | Is not Chrysostom as credible as he? |
A27058 | Is not here a great accord of the Bishops?) |
A27058 | Is not my Language of most of the Bishops soft in comparison of his? |
A27058 | Is not such an effect of 1200 years continuance, a witness of the failing of that Council? |
A27058 | Is not the English word of the same sence with the Latine? |
A27058 | Is not then your Church of a singular Religion from all the World, and consequently a singular Church? |
A27058 | Is that all? |
A27058 | Is that any slander of Bishops or Councils? |
A27058 | Is that unusual? |
A27058 | Is the West at this day free from Popery and its fruits? |
A27058 | Is the ascendent sort of Prelates that were growing up to maturity till Gregory the Seventh''s daies, the whole Church of God? |
A27058 | Is the nature and Person to be confounded? |
A27058 | Is the praise of Confessors any honour to the Hereticks? |
A27058 | Is there any Comparison between the language of any of these books, or yours and Dr. Sherlock''s and mine? |
A27058 | Is there any Railing or unchristian Language in these words? |
A27058 | Is there any such thing as pride silencing, burning,& c. If yea, must it never be known, reproved, repented of and so forgiven to the penitent? |
A27058 | Is there any thing in this that deserveth the stage? |
A27058 | Is this Railing? |
A27058 | Is this against All Subscribing? |
A27058 | Is this it that you defend the Church for, and we oppose it for? |
A27058 | Is this so harsh as the common charge of Lying, used even by the most Learned sober Conformists? |
A27058 | Is this so ridiculous? |
A27058 | Is this the effect of their Order? |
A27058 | Is this true? |
A27058 | It seems he taketh me to be too Favourable to some Bishops and their followers: The question is but who they be that must be favoured? |
A27058 | It was a Proverb in Sutton- Coldfield,[ Who begun?] |
A27058 | It''s like he will appeal to my Conscience whether it were not my thought? |
A27058 | Jewel,& c. have done? |
A27058 | Lirinensis, Socrates, Sozomen, Isodore Pelusiota,& c. did something in opposition to some Church- Corruptions? |
A27058 | Maries days, and that it was they that made the Breach by being burnt? |
A27058 | Mary''s daies? |
A27058 | May not the Reader there see it? |
A27058 | Mooreland to write the story? |
A27058 | Mr. Hunt, the Author of the Conformists Plea, Mr. Baxter and who not? |
A27058 | Must Councils be the Laws of all the world, and hath the Church and Tradition kept them no better, that we know not when we have them truly? |
A27058 | Must I write many Folio''s or nothing? |
A27058 | Must a man rail at any party, or hide their Virtues or else be taken to be one of them? |
A27058 | Must none write but Rich men? |
A27058 | Must we not know when it''s night if you deny it? |
A27058 | Next comes his Logical terms,[ throwing dirt, outragious, bitter, malicious,& c.] And what''s the matter? |
A27058 | No, I favour them still? |
A27058 | Non entis non est actio: Could Bishops be Hereticks when there were no Bishops? |
A27058 | Nor was it none of their doings? |
A27058 | Not one true word? |
A27058 | O what a World is this, and by what hands are we cast down? |
A27058 | Or Chrysostome for any thing he could say to the Bishops for himself? |
A27058 | Or Emperours that promoted them, as if this crossed what I say? |
A27058 | Or John, when he said, Diotrephes loved to have the preheminence? |
A27058 | Or against Diocesanes that speaks against Patriarchs? |
A27058 | Or all those Councils of Bishops which condemned each other, far deeplier than I judge any of them? |
A27058 | Or any Circumstantials necessary in genere left in specie to the Magistrates determination? |
A27058 | Or at least some of those that conformed, with whom we prevailed not? |
A27058 | Or did they not make presently him or some other their Bishop and Head? |
A27058 | Or domineer over any? |
A27058 | Or is it the melancholy fiction of his Brain? |
A27058 | Or made him a Judge of them? |
A27058 | Or rather that they degenerated by degrees? |
A27058 | Or that a worldly proud man would not seek more for Lordship and Greatness, than a Synesius, and such others as you say fled from it? |
A27058 | Or the French in doing it? |
A27058 | Or to get great Benefices? |
A27058 | Or to give no better Reason than[ We abhor their doctrine:] How few Churches or men have nothing worthy to be abhorred, that is, No Errour or sin? |
A27058 | Or to pay 40 l. a Sermon, and to banish us five Miles from Corporations, and must not be told of any such thing? |
A27058 | Or was the defect in the Councils, or the blame to be imputed to those obstinate men that opposed the Rule established by them?] |
A27058 | Or when he said, Demas hath forsaken me,& c? |
A27058 | Or why may it not be one with twenty more? |
A27058 | Or with the Citizens, and multitudes of Commanders through the Land, who drew in ▪& encouraged General Monk? |
A27058 | Pius against his will? |
A27058 | Reader, is it true that this is against All Subscribing? |
A27058 | Sed quam sunt intenti hanc crassam& asininam ● atuitatem? |
A27058 | See what a man may do for a Bishoprick? |
A27058 | So say the Papists: what? |
A27058 | Spite and Malice are heart sins: If the same effect may come from other Causes, how know you that these are the Cause? |
A27058 | Suppose the word choice were proper here,[ Is it any justification of the Executioners?] |
A27058 | Sure not to all: Was Bishop Laud of that mind toward the Papists if Dr. Heylin say true? |
A27058 | THis also runs throughout his Book; and must such Books be answered or believed? |
A27058 | Thanks to Conscience: We feel your Animosities: But is not this man a Railing Accuser of Cyril, if I am such? |
A27058 | The 41th thought the Epistle to the Hebrews was not written by Paul, but by Barnabas or Clemens? |
A27058 | The Case that we are in is very sad, when both sides say they have the Evidence of Sense it self against each other; what hope then of Reconciliation? |
A27058 | The Irish for murdering 200000, or Sir John Temple, Dr. Henry Jones, the E. of Orery, for recording and reporting what they did? |
A27058 | The King then will condemn me by his Act of Oblivion, and by his own practice: Hath he not one of them for the Lord President of his Council? |
A27058 | Then Socrates that knew him, and protesteth against flattery, and many others, are not to be believed? |
A27058 | This is true: And what was that Rule? |
A27058 | This was true and plain enough, to have ended all the quarrel: But who laid hold on it, or did improve it? |
A27058 | This, saith he of Novatus, was the tender Conscience of the author of the Ancient sect of the Puritanes? |
A27058 | To be then strange, and never to be at all; are not words of the same sense? |
A27058 | To make themselves considerable you say, and shew what a Breach they could make? |
A27058 | To suffer Ruine in the World? |
A27058 | Unless they might have all their own Wills? |
A27058 | Was Arch- Bishop Bromhall, Forbes, Beziar, Thorndike( and many more such) of that mind? |
A27058 | Was Grotius of that mind toward them? |
A27058 | Was John Foxe the Malefactor for writing the Sufferings of the Protestants under a lawful Queen? |
A27058 | Was Seventeen years Poverty, Prohibition and Prosecution, and all this Importunity, no provocation or call to speak? |
A27058 | Was he not a most pious and peaceable Prince? |
A27058 | Was it in Hildebrand''s Time, or any time before? |
A27058 | Was it not Dioscorus and the Eutychians? |
A27058 | Was it not most in a proud, domineering worldly Spirit? |
A27058 | Was it not there extant to the sight of all? |
A27058 | Was it only the Bishops at Constance and Basil, that were against suppressing the Bohemian and Moravian Reformation? |
A27058 | Was it proved? |
A27058 | Was it the body of the Presbterians, or who? |
A27058 | Was it the sin of the Savoyards and others to kill and ruine the Protestants in Piedmont? |
A27058 | Was it to be Lord Bishops? |
A27058 | Was not their Ascent their Corruption? |
A27058 | Was not this confusio ●? |
A27058 | Was there then a good Succession of Ordination, when the World groaned to find it self Arian? |
A27058 | Was your great Friend so excellent a man, and was it a good work to silence him, with which in your Conscience you think God is pleased? |
A27058 | We can not: Our Judgments are not at our Command: What would they have us do to change? |
A27058 | Were all these Arians before their Consecration? |
A27058 | Were not about 2000 here silenced? |
A27058 | Were not the Eastern Bishops, and the Western, of the same mold and temper? |
A27058 | Were the Western Bishops or the Pope then the Western Church? |
A27058 | Were they not Bishops? |
A27058 | Were they not Episcopal? |
A27058 | Were they not commonly for ascending with them: Did not they in the East strive to be greatest? |
A27058 | Were they not down right Blasphemy? |
A27058 | Were they not, and are they not as his Army? |
A27058 | What Bishops were they that persuaded him to make a Law to confirm the Ephesine, Eutychian Council? |
A27058 | What a deal then of this man''s Book is lost and worse, on such suppositions? |
A27058 | What abundance of faults would Causabon have found in Baronius, if he had lived to go through him as he began? |
A27058 | What cure is there for thy Deceits? |
A27058 | What end will there be of Fighting? |
A27058 | What good did Philpot do in the Convocation? |
A27058 | What have I said of Fact or Canons, which Binnius and their other Flatterers say not? |
A27058 | What if I had said that this Bishop knoweth not how to interpret a plain Latine Sentence, as he saith it of himself? |
A27058 | What if all this had been true? |
A27058 | What if another had done as much against him, as he hath done against himself? |
A27058 | What if we had gone further, and taken it for a crying Church Crime, and called all the Clergy to Repentance? |
A27058 | What is it that is the root of this? |
A27058 | What is it that such Historians may not say? |
A27058 | What is it to me or any of my mind? |
A27058 | What may temptation bring even good mens Judgment to? |
A27058 | What name should one give to such Histories as these? |
A27058 | What saith he less in the main? |
A27058 | What the better was Nazianzen for speaking well in the Council at Constantinople? |
A27058 | What was it that moved them all to this Confederacy? |
A27058 | What was it think you in which the Corruption of the Clergy did consist? |
A27058 | What was that which he calleth the Established Religion? |
A27058 | What was these mens Heresie? |
A27058 | What were the Heresies named by them? |
A27058 | What would this enemy of railing have had me said more than I did of the Priscillianists? |
A27058 | What''s this but like him that run a man thorow in wrath with his Sword, and indicted him for crying, oh? |
A27058 | What, are you now ashamed of your meritorious works? |
A27058 | What, saith he, can be more unchristian? |
A27058 | What[ I that understand not the language they wrote in to pretend to know better than the Council?] |
A27058 | When he is making the most of their estate and numbers, saith he[ I pray you tell me: How great a number of all sorts of men hath our City? |
A27058 | Where do I lay all the fault on them? |
A27058 | Where it is that he will stop in his Vindication of the Bishops and their Councils, and go no further? |
A27058 | Whether he believes not verily that all these Instances prove that the Bishops have been the chief cause, and that by Ambition, Pride and Worldliness? |
A27058 | Whether he think that Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, were more for Conformity than Jewel, Bilson, and Hooker, and Abbot? |
A27058 | Whether he thought he had well defended the Church- Tyranny which I accused? |
A27058 | Whether it be not the Bishops that in the Roman and other Parties now, are the greatest hinderers of Reformation, and of Concord? |
A27058 | Whether there be no sin imposed by the Laws or Canons on Ministers and People here? |
A27058 | Whether we have any reason to report the Faults of some Bishops and Councils, from the beginning of their Depravation till the last? |
A27058 | Who can affirm or deny any thing of equivocal Words? |
A27058 | Who could make any of all this necessary, but Pope, Prelates, or Princes, who pretended a Legislative Power hereto? |
A27058 | Who denieth it? |
A27058 | Who knows how to please men? |
A27058 | Who most seeks Peace, you, or those that you prosecute? |
A27058 | Who saith, they( the Presbyterians) brought in the King, besides your self? |
A27058 | Who should be greatest? |
A27058 | Who should have the largest, fattest, and most Ruling Diocess and Seat? |
A27058 | Who then can it be but men that in general, though Episcopal, do profess Tenderness of Conscience? |
A27058 | Who were those? |
A27058 | Who will not love and praise the excellent Learning of such as Suarez, Vasquez, Victoria, Petavius and abundance such? |
A27058 | Who will not praise the piety of such as Gerson, Borromaeus, Sales, and many others, though we nevertheless disown their Popery? |
A27058 | Why are they so ordinarily reproached by the Prelatists for tolerating all Sects here in England? |
A27058 | Why doth Scripture mention it, but that we may avoid the like? |
A27058 | Why doth he not accuse him for the same description? |
A27058 | Why then are they so in France, Spain, Italy, Poland,& c? |
A27058 | Why then have you called them Presbyterians so long, and do so still? |
A27058 | Will not the fire of Lust grow greater as the fewel is greater? |
A27058 | Will you hear the proof that this is excessive Pride? |
A27058 | Will you that there be 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 an hundred thousand? |
A27058 | Would he perswade men that we give this Reason alone? |
A27058 | Would they have us Conform while we judge it as sinful as I have mentioned in my first Plea for Peace? |
A27058 | Would they have us believe all to be lawful? |
A27058 | Yea Baronius himself consenteth? |
A27058 | Yea what bitter censures doth he pass himself on no lower Historians than Socrates and Sozomen? |
A27058 | Yea, and the greatness of it? |
A27058 | Yea, doth not this man oft revile them far more bitterly than ever I did, and revile me for speaking so charitably of them? |
A27058 | Yes, he doubts it not: It was for to be a Bishop that Novatian wrought his Villanies;( what if I had thus bedawbed the Episcopal?) |
A27058 | Yes, one[ or did they protest against the proceedings of the Episcopal and Erastians? |
A27058 | Yet he himself saith[ He doth indeed in several places find fault with this Council] And can you forgive him? |
A27058 | [ A few turbulent Prelates Persecute good men] He saith thus I call the present Bishops of the Church of England; Doth he mean All or some? |
A27058 | [ But how can that be done, for I have not now the Power of the Kingdom?] |
A27058 | [ Were there ever greater violences committed than in that infamous Conventicle at Ephesus?] |
A27058 | a Narrative from Bristol how they are crowded in the Gaol on the cold ground,& c. Is the Report the Crime? |
A27058 | and by what cogent reason? |
A27058 | and is it railing for us to say,[ They are untrue?] |
A27058 | and it would not be soon done were it not through them? |
A27058 | and many more in Trust and Honour? |
A27058 | and those in the first and second Century? |
A27058 | and what men are its corrupters? |
A27058 | and which way the major Vote went? |
A27058 | be wiser or bolder than we, and be beyond all such fears, should he not suffer Fools gladly, seeing he himself is wise? |
A27058 | de Petavio:) If he lye in this, and the success of Petavius on Grotius, why should he be more trusted than others? |
A27058 | he is not a man that is not sensible of Humane frailty? |
A27058 | here rail upon a Bishop, in saying the same of him that I did, if my words were Railing? |
A27058 | i. e. for abolishing Episcopacy and Common- Prayer?] |
A27058 | if for all other your historical notices you are faln into such hands, what a mass of Untruths is in your Brain? |
A27058 | or rather one bit after another? |
A27058 | saith of Ithacius the like? |
A27058 | that they were Gnosticks and Manichees? |
A27058 | which be they? |
A27058 | will you pretend to know more than the Church and Councils? |
A27058 | yea, if he excelled not the Bishops? |
A27050 | & c. And how can they do this that are utterly out of reach, and never know or see each other? |
A27050 | & c. that the Church of Corinth had more Ministers, or Clergy men, or Pastors in it than one in Paul''s time? |
A27050 | ( But then how should Satan have used the Churches as he hath done?) |
A27050 | ( Were there not then as many Bishops as Church- Assemblies?) |
A27050 | 1. and the consent of Antiquity, that they took it for a custome? |
A27050 | 11. he saith, that the Angels before whom the Women in the Church must be veiled, are the Bishops as God''s Vicars?] |
A27050 | 14. are said to meet all in one place, and to have so many Prophets and Interpreters in that one Assembly? |
A27050 | 2. Who is either so fit, or so obliged to satisfie the Church of the Act, as he that doth it, and hath examined all the Cause? |
A27050 | 2. between the contending Bishops on each side? |
A27050 | 23, should not have such Elders as are there mentioned, which Doctor Hammond maintaineth to be Bishops? |
A27050 | 28. or One Flock either? |
A27050 | 40. or 50. miles of him? |
A27050 | 5. dwelt with? |
A27050 | 6. the power of the Keys, and make them meer converting Preachers, below Doctors and Pastors, and the same with Deacons? |
A27050 | A Parson may have divers Curates under him, and not divers Churches, much loss a thousand that have no other Bishop? |
A27050 | AND DO NOT THESE THINGS DESERVE GODS THUNDERBOLT A THOUSAND TIMES? |
A27050 | ARE THEY NOT WORTHY TO BE PUNISHED WITH THE FIRE OF HELL? |
A27050 | About what? |
A27050 | Alas Lord, How long shall Christs enemies be the Pastors of his flocks? |
A27050 | An put at Venerabilis mihi serenitas tua conceptam semel in animis religionem quam Deus ipse constituit posse evelli? |
A27050 | And 1. who doubteth but the Magistrate may do all this? |
A27050 | And Eulogius the Presbyter asked, Was the Emperour made Priest when he was made Emperour? |
A27050 | And are the Bishops higher than the Evangelists? |
A27050 | And are the Bishops in Council of another order than themselves out of Council? |
A27050 | And are these therefore indifferent things? |
A27050 | And are those Diocesan Churches that are no Churches? |
A27050 | And can one Bishop be the publick Teacher of a thousand, a hundred, or many Churches: Can he feed them, and give them their meat in due season? |
A27050 | And can that be proper to Bishops which the King may do? |
A27050 | And did his writing from Philippi to Corinth subject Corinth to the Bishop of Philippi? |
A27050 | And did not one plant and another water,( and usually more than one at once?) |
A27050 | And do I yet need to say more, what mischief hath come by overmuch backing Church discipline by the sword? |
A27050 | And doth it any where intimate that Paul was the Governour of Barnabas, or the sole Bishop of the Churches planted by them both together? |
A27050 | And doth not all this shew what Episcopacy is? |
A27050 | And doth not the Pope govern per alios yet far more, and pretend to govern the whole Christian World? |
A27050 | And he asketh whether ever man heard of more Stewards than one in one house? |
A27050 | And how arrogantly and turbulently did Epiphanius joyn with him? |
A27050 | And how come they to have more power than King Balak had over Balaam? |
A27050 | And how doth this loyal S. Ambrose carry it? |
A27050 | And how easily did he get a Synod even where Chrysostome lived to second them? |
A27050 | And how far have the Roman Bishops gone in this, even to Phocas, and such as he?) |
A27050 | And how good a man was peaceable Bishop Hall, so Usher in Ireland, Moron and many more? |
A27050 | And how great must that Diocess be, where all the Laity must chuse and vote? |
A27050 | And how little do they differ? |
A27050 | And how many Parishes can a Bishop thus serve? |
A27050 | And how many Parishes, how many hundred thousand souls can one man do all this for, think you? |
A27050 | And how many hundreds in a year can the Bishop do this for, besides all his other work? |
A27050 | And how many score miles will they send and he go to visit the Sick at midnight? |
A27050 | And how much of this will a Bishop have time to do, that hath the work of a Diocese of Christians on his hands? |
A27050 | And how prove you that he and his Flock were no Church? |
A27050 | And if commanding another to do an office work be all that is proper to the Bishop, I ask whether any thing there be proper to him? |
A27050 | And if it be not so with the Bishops Office, what is the Reason? |
A27050 | And if not on Ministers, why have there so great numbers been silenced, suspended, and troubled? |
A27050 | And if so, I enquire whether God be not the maker of the Presbyters office, and not the Bishop? |
A27050 | And if the Metropolis made not one Apostle Ruler of the rest, why should it do so by their successors? |
A27050 | And if these had been as common, why are they not as much mentioned in the ancient records of the Church? |
A27050 | And if ▪ you rise to a Patriarch or Pope, what Superiour of another Order giveth them their second Power? |
A27050 | And in good sadness do these Diocesans love the souls of all the people better than they love their own? |
A27050 | And in how many Churches at once will he do this? |
A27050 | And in how many hundred Congregations at once will they do this? |
A27050 | And indeed if all Ordination must be done by one of a Superiour Order, who shall Ordain Bishops, or Archbishops, or Patriarchs, or the Pope? |
A27050 | And is a strictness short of theirs intolerable to you, that pretend to be more holy than they? |
A27050 | And is all this too much strictness? |
A27050 | And is it like that the Flock that this Person must say so to, was all Achaia? |
A27050 | And is it probable that he began so great a Change the last year of his life? |
A27050 | And is not Church discipline the exercise of the power of the keys? |
A27050 | And is not that a Lay Office which a Lay- man may be Commissioned to do? |
A27050 | And is not this Cannon made to rule Bishops themselves? |
A27050 | And is not this a strange kind of Allegation? |
A27050 | And is not this more than the people are now condemned for, who only hear the Ministers privately? |
A27050 | And it was the Fabrica of One Church only that the Bishop was to give the fourth part to maintain( And were many hundred fabricks more forgotten?) |
A27050 | And may not Christian Kings much more? |
A27050 | And may not all this do much to keep up Concord? |
A27050 | And must I absolve him from that sin which he repenteth of without the rest? |
A27050 | And next let us inquire, whether this Church had no Bishops or Presbyters but Paul? |
A27050 | And seeing it would not alter the species, what if it should please the King and Parliament to put down all the Bishops of England save One? |
A27050 | And shall the Bishop do this for many hundred Churches? |
A27050 | And shall we still stand by, and silently see this work go on? |
A27050 | And so if a Physician commit his work statedly to another, or a Pilot, or the Master of a Family, he maketh the other a Physician, a Pilot, a Master? |
A27050 | And sure he usurpeth not so much, who will be but the Church- guide of one? |
A27050 | And that Presbyters( even in England) are members of these Synods, and so make Canons to rule the Bishops? |
A27050 | And that a Bishop and an Altar are made correlatives? |
A27050 | And that when they did come thither, they had not Apostolical Power there? |
A27050 | And then I ask whether such a society as this be not a true Church? |
A27050 | And then he must judge of their Repentance: and then he must try it: And for how many thousand can a Bishop do this, with the rest? |
A27050 | And then whether you will call this a Form of Government or not, how little care I for the meer name? |
A27050 | And therefore having opportunity by presence or nearness to know them and the witnesses, must judge of the credibility or reports or accusations? |
A27050 | And unless this were so, whence came it else that a Schismatical Bishop was said, Constituere or collocare aliud altare? |
A27050 | And was any man then made a Deacon to a Diocess? |
A27050 | And were all the Apostles so negligent and forgetful? |
A27050 | And were not Luke, Mark, Timothy, and other itinerant Evangelists, as such, of the Clergy, and such Assistants or secondary Apostles? |
A27050 | And were the same Apostles no Stewards or Key- bearers out of their( feigned) several Provinces? |
A27050 | And were there three hundred sixty five Cities think you in Ireland? |
A27050 | And were they Christians or no Christians that made the Diocesane Form? |
A27050 | And what a blind or blinding practice is it, which too many Writers for Prelacy have used? |
A27050 | And what a silencing power is that which scarce any man would be ever silenced by? |
A27050 | And what can a man gather hence to satisfie himself in this point? |
A27050 | And what followeth? |
A27050 | And what if a Patriarch or Pope put down all Bishops under him, and exercise his power only by other sorts of officers? |
A27050 | And what if in Constantine''s days the Churches grew yet greater, than they did in the second, or third age compared to the Apostles? |
A27050 | And what is Ordination but a General Investiture in the power of performing the Ministerial Office? |
A27050 | And what is the Episcopal power over Infidels, which is claimed? |
A27050 | And what is the Office( tell me if you can) beside Authority and Obligation to do the Work? |
A27050 | And what kind of Cities were those? |
A27050 | And what shall I speak of Bishops? |
A27050 | And what stop shall we make of our additions, if there be no Law or Rule to govern the universal Church? |
A27050 | And what was the cause of this one or two like to touch the Bishops of the other Churches? |
A27050 | And what''s here? |
A27050 | And when Paul tells the Romans and Corinthians what Officers God setteth in the Church, is it like there was none fixed among them? |
A27050 | And when there were so great a number of Heretick Bishops, how many were there of the Catholicks and Donatists and all other sects set together? |
A27050 | And where shall we find it? |
A27050 | And whereas he asketh whether a sick man must send for the Colledge of Presbyters? |
A27050 | And whether he be a true Presbyter or Minister of Christ that wants this power? |
A27050 | And whether it did belong to the Men or the Place? |
A27050 | And whether it was not so in the Church of Corinth''in particular? |
A27050 | And whether little Cenchrea was over them also, because Phoebe carried the Letter? |
A27050 | And whether one Church then had not many Bishops at once? |
A27050 | And whether therefore it follow that there were no Bishops under them in particular Churches? |
A27050 | And whether therefore there were many Bishops to a Diocess? |
A27050 | And whether they be impenitent in these revoltings? |
A27050 | And whether they lost any of their Power by making James Bishop? |
A27050 | And whether they revolt by Heresie or wicked lives from their profession? |
A27050 | And whether this made all the interjacent Countries their Diocesses, changing their Bishops as oft as they thus changed their Habitations? |
A27050 | And whether to the Place whence they first set out, or to every place where they came? |
A27050 | And who are they that have power to Rule the Church universal? |
A27050 | And who but the Separatists do hold, that the power of the Keys for the exercise of this Discipline is in the Peoples hands? |
A27050 | And who can prove that if there had been more men, the Apostles would have made a new Order of Presbyters, and not only more of the same Order? |
A27050 | And who knoweth not that even Bishops are under these Canons also, who are of the same order? |
A27050 | And who knoweth not that if a Tutor commit his work statedly to another, he maketh that other a Tutor? |
A27050 | And who made that form? |
A27050 | And why is a new office of Bishops set up in the world? |
A27050 | And why may not the General Power or License be given at once as at twice? |
A27050 | And why may not the Magistrate make all the same Canons who ruleth them all? |
A27050 | And why might not all Europe on these terms make one particular Church? |
A27050 | And why should not that first form stand? |
A27050 | And why should so many hundred Ministers be forbidden to Preach Christ, for not assenting, consenting and Swearing to such a vaine and brutish power? |
A27050 | And yet were these People without any proper Pastor? |
A27050 | And yet whether they are not far more negligent in the exercise of discipline? |
A27050 | Are the last words Tautological? |
A27050 | Are you the Church Governours? |
A27050 | Are you willing of a concord in your Churches upon the same terms as the Church of Rome hath it? |
A27050 | As if a Judge or a Justice were no Governour, because he is under the King? |
A27050 | As if the Presbyters were no Rulers of the Flocks, because the Bishops are Rulers of the Presbyters? |
A27050 | Before men of another Countrey, that may swear and not repent with Peter, We know not the man? |
A27050 | Before they had the Sword of the Magistrate to second them, they silenced none: For how could they do it? |
A27050 | But I would fain know of these men what more it is that they would have, and what is the Church Government which they so much contend for? |
A27050 | But alas when were these Rules observed by humane Churches? |
A27050 | But all the rest did the same, as soon as they had People enow to make many Churches? |
A27050 | But are we not likely to dispute well, when we never agree of the Subject, or terms of the Question? |
A27050 | But do not we see that a whole County can meet to chuse Parliament Men? |
A27050 | But doth not he that sendeth his servant to pay a debt, himself in Law- sense pay it per alium? |
A27050 | But how can they comfort themselves together that never came together, or see each other? |
A27050 | But how the world by the countenance of Emperours was invited to come in t the Church? |
A27050 | But how unfit is this objection for a Prelates mouth or pen? |
A27050 | But if by way of love, who knoweth not what advantage the present Pastor hath above the absent, caeteris paribus, to get the peoples love? |
A27050 | But if it were John''s work it was Theirs; And if theirs, why did they not perform it? |
A27050 | But is it not so much the better? |
A27050 | But is not the whole man edified( naturally or morally) by the edification of a part? |
A27050 | But is this all that the Bishops desire? |
A27050 | But is this an Objection fit for the Prelatists to make? |
A27050 | But no such thing was done by any of them? |
A27050 | But shall the disease or extraordinary case, or dicffiulty of such a Parish, make us change the old and true definition of a Church? |
A27050 | But the Churches grew greater after than before? |
A27050 | But the Question is not whether Bishops have the power of the Keys, but whether all Presbyters have it not also? |
A27050 | But though this be but ad homines, yet really we have had very worthy and excellent persons to be Bishops; what a man was Jewell? |
A27050 | But what can be so plain as to convince the prejudiced and unwilling? |
A27050 | But what if it were all as true as it is false? |
A27050 | But what if the Bishop bid them? |
A27050 | But what if the people will not consent to any but a Heretick or intolerable person? |
A27050 | But what''s all this to us? |
A27050 | But who be those? |
A27050 | But who can believe that Christ thus modled his Churches in his institution? |
A27050 | But who can think that this is spoken of many Congregations, where the peoples Will could not easily be signified? |
A27050 | But whoever said of all the County or Diocess[ To the County, Diocess, dwelling at York, Worcester, Warwick?] |
A27050 | But why then were they set so much higher, and had so much more power since the dayes of Constantine then before? |
A27050 | But, alas, since then what streams of blood have been shed to ● ack the Romane discipline? |
A27050 | Can the Bishops any more chuse to deliver this possession by Ordination, than to preach the Gospel? |
A27050 | Can you deny this? |
A27050 | Constance,& c.) which have ever since made Canons for Discipline? |
A27050 | Could they have made Presbyters that had no power to teach the people? |
A27050 | Did Prelacy preserve those Emperors of the East that suffered by it? |
A27050 | Did ever Presbyterians commit such an unchristian and inhumane vilany as this, by such false dissimulation and malice? |
A27050 | Did he attend the Tables of many Churches each Lords day at the same time? |
A27050 | Did it preserve Frederick, and the two Henries of Germany? |
A27050 | Did it preserve the Kingdome of Navar to the right Lord? |
A27050 | Did this favour of Bishop''s Secular Power, Magistracy or Domination? |
A27050 | Do I need to recite how great Leo himself and other Roman and Italian Bishops owned the Barbarian Conquerours? |
A27050 | Do Nonconformists speak more harshly to our Bishops? |
A27050 | Do not the people now despise them? |
A27050 | Do our hearers deal as harsshly as this? |
A27050 | Do the children beget their own father, or the sheep choose their own shepherd? |
A27050 | Do you make them believe this, by not seeing one of a thousand or many hundred of your flock once in all the time of your lives? |
A27050 | Do you not know that where Prelacy is at the highest, there Kings and Emperours have been at the lowest? |
A27050 | Doth it now preserve the Emperour of Moscovy, where the Patriarks interest is pretended in the rebellion? |
A27050 | Doth not the Reader wonder where is the Proof? |
A27050 | Doth not the Text expresly say that Paul and Barnabas long travelled together? |
A27050 | Doth not this grant to the Brownists, that the Parish Churches are no Churches, but onely parts of the Diocesane Church? |
A27050 | Doth the silencing of so many Ministers shew it? |
A27050 | Especially where Bishops make it their office to forbid the Pastors to do theirs, and to keep them from Preaching the word of life? |
A27050 | Et postea, Quid vero aliud Sacerdotium est( vel Presbyterium) quam sacer coetus, Conciliarii& assessores Episcopi? |
A27050 | Even the Communion of Christians in Doctrine, Prayer and Sacrament? |
A27050 | For may not the King command the Minister to do all the work which belongeth to his function? |
A27050 | For who is fitter to choose, or refuse, or consent at least, than he whose everlasting interest lieth at the stake? |
A27050 | For who more immoderate in their care for the things of this life than you? |
A27050 | For why can not a Lay- man Ordain with the Bishop but because he hath no such authority? |
A27050 | Had it no Government? |
A27050 | Had they so many Sects and false Teachers to trouble them, and yet no Pastors? |
A27050 | Have they all superiours to do it? |
A27050 | Have you not fine Churches and members, that are not fit to choose no nor consent to their own Guides? |
A27050 | He pretendeth to prove, that in the Apostles times Parishes began to be distinguished under one only Bishop,& c. But what''s the proof? |
A27050 | How Bishopricks were made baites for the proud and tyrannical and Covetous? |
A27050 | How big was the Diocess when this Canon was first made? |
A27050 | How big was this Diocess? |
A27050 | How big yet was the Church even then? |
A27050 | How easie a way to Heaven( which leadeth to Hell) do such good- natured( cruel) Churches make men? |
A27050 | How few of all the Heresies mentioned by Epiphanius, after that Prelacy was in force, were not Headed and carried on by Prelates? |
A27050 | How great a part of Cyprians Epistles to the Churches of Carthage and Rome, are on this subject? |
A27050 | How great think you were these Bishops Dioceses? |
A27050 | How large was this Diocess? |
A27050 | How many hundred Churches think you had a Church then in the Belly of it? |
A27050 | How many hundred thousand of the Waldenses and Albigenses did they murther? |
A27050 | How much less all these set together? |
A27050 | How then must they be confuted? |
A27050 | How then will you silence a Heretick without the Sword? |
A27050 | How worldly wealth, power and honour did indue them? |
A27050 | I askt whether the King and Parliament had not power to set up a Bishop in every Corporation? |
A27050 | I deny not but the Magistrate may moderately drive men to hear Gods word, and to do the immediate duties of their places? |
A27050 | I think all this is past contradiction And I ask then whether that all giving of power to another be proper to the Bishops order? |
A27050 | I will come to you, will ye that I come with the Rod? |
A27050 | I ● it not pity that things should be so strangely carried? |
A27050 | If Christians, were they orderly Christians, or rebellious? |
A27050 | If Paul''s carrying the Letters from Antioch to other Cities, proved Antioch the Governour of the rest? |
A27050 | If a Parish may be too large for a Bishops work, how little reason have they to make a Church, and take the Pastoral Care of many hundred Parishes? |
A27050 | If after all this evidence from Ignatius any will wrangle, let him wrangle: what words can be plain enough for such? |
A27050 | If he was of no Church, how came he by power to make Church forms, that was of none himself? |
A27050 | If it be needful to be exercised on Ministers, why not on the People also? |
A27050 | If it be not needful, why did the universal Church use it, and that so strictly from the beginning? |
A27050 | If it was not all nor many Pastors that were thus turned out( as Clemens words import) why should all Achaia be called seditious, and blamed for it? |
A27050 | If it was of another Form, I ask, what it was? |
A27050 | If not( as all say not) then I ask, whether the Bishops work or the Presbyters be the more sacred? |
A27050 | If not, the City should have none: If they are, where hath God exempted the Country from the priviledge or duty any more than the City? |
A27050 | If not, what is? |
A27050 | If of a Church, what form had that Church? |
A27050 | If of no Church, what Bishops were those, and by what power did they make new Church Forms that were of none themselves? |
A27050 | If one be chosen Bishop to keep out Hetesie, and he prove a Heretick, and the Presbyters Orthodox, whatis his power to that end? |
A27050 | If one be chosen Bishop to keep out Schisin, and he prove a Schisinatick or Sect- Master, and the rest concordant, what is his power? |
A27050 | If orderly, how happened it that they were of no Church themselves, when the Apostles setled so much of Church Form and Order, as I have before named? |
A27050 | If so, Why should we all swear to this one form, that we will never endeavour to alter it? |
A27050 | If the Churches were more numerous, why might they not have been distributed into more particular Churches? |
A27050 | If the after times may change these Orders, who can prove that they may not change all things else of supernatural institution? |
A27050 | If the former, than what differ they from a Parish Church, or an Independent Church, which is planted in a City? |
A27050 | Is all this contention that you may have the Keys alone, without the parish Ministers? |
A27050 | Is any man sick? |
A27050 | Is he not custos utriusque tabulae? |
A27050 | Is it against your Consciences meerly to make us odious with you know whom? |
A27050 | Is it an Universal Legislation? |
A27050 | Is it any thing but Humane License to Exercise the Power of Office of Divine institution before received? |
A27050 | Is it not notorious in England that no Congregations have had more Learned and holy Pastors, than where the People have had their choice? |
A27050 | Is it the making of Church Lawes or Canons? |
A27050 | Is not order for the the thing ordered? |
A27050 | Is the Bishops liberality the original of the Office? |
A27050 | Is the flock with them or among them? |
A27050 | Is this a fit answer for those that are their Ordainers? |
A27050 | Is this a laudable description? |
A27050 | Is this your Church justice, or rather malice to me? |
A27050 | It is an Essential part of the Pastoral Office to have the Power of Discipline: And what is the Power for but the Work? |
A27050 | It is their own soul that must be saved or damned? |
A27050 | John,& c. from their wars and troubles? |
A27050 | Let but the ancient Canons be perused, and how contrary to them will this course appear? |
A27050 | May not the King do the same? |
A27050 | May not the whole Church be edified per partes? |
A27050 | Must the peoples Souls be poysoned and damned, till the Bishop please to take away the poyson and to save them? |
A27050 | Must there be such swearing to the perpetuating an alterable unnecessary thing? |
A27050 | Nam quid aliud interpretatur Episcopus nisi superinspector? |
A27050 | Nay, what one considerable Parish would not find a Bishop with divers assistants work enough in all these kinds, if it be faithfully done? |
A27050 | Nay, when will he prove, that ever any Presbyter was Ordained by the Apostles, or by any others as they appointed, without the power of the Keys? |
A27050 | Need we an office of Bishops to rule Bishops of the same office? |
A27050 | No though an ignorant person ask him? |
A27050 | Now I leave it to the consideration of sober minds how many Churches, or Congregations could do all this? |
A27050 | Now how can a Diocesan judge of this, that is not within many miles of the place, nor never saw the person in his life? |
A27050 | Now is it possible for a Bishop to do this: To instruct, oversee, counsel, one of many hundreds of the flock? |
A27050 | Or how prove you that Presbyters should not rather have been increased in the number of the same Order, than a new Order invented? |
A27050 | Or if that will not inform you, try over England where you come, how many are( though but cursorily as a hasty ceremony) confirmedat all? |
A27050 | Or that had Cognisance of them or acquaintance with them? |
A27050 | Or whether they were Apostles, and not Bishops? |
A27050 | Our Controversie is like this, Whether all the Families in the Town should have but One common Master? |
A27050 | Prove the latter if you can to be included in our Baptism? |
A27050 | Quaere, Whether the thing cease not, where the reason of it ceaseth? |
A27050 | Quam immanitatem barbaram, malefici abs te in dies singulos admissa non superarunt?) |
A27050 | Qui vero inter reliquos princeps Episcopus, percontetur Episcopos& populum, an ipse sit quem praeesse petunt? |
A27050 | Quis e laudatorum virorum numero non parte exulavit? |
A27050 | Reader was not that time more strange than ours? |
A27050 | Severus give of the whole Synods of Bishops that followed Ithacius and Idacius? |
A27050 | Socrates brandeth Cyril of Alexandriae,* for the first Prelate that used the sword: and what work did he make with it? |
A27050 | Some great change was made in Churches before men could arrive at such a conceit? |
A27050 | That was not the way for 300 years after Christ: And what was Episcopacy for till then? |
A27050 | The Roman Empire was bigger than Europe: Why then might not that have been one only Church of the same Species with a Diocese? |
A27050 | The former answers serve to this: You do fairly to keep such people in the Church? |
A27050 | There is no Universal King but Christ, who else is Governour of all the world or all the Churches in the world? |
A27050 | There was a question broached a little before, whether God were a body, made after the likeness and forme of man? |
A27050 | They that lived so austerely, and favoured not the flesh; that speak so tenderly of the worth of souls? |
A27050 | They that write so strictly of the labours of the Ministery? |
A27050 | This objection it self doth intimate, seeing the Bishop may give another Power to ordaine:( and then why may not the King?) |
A27050 | Thus far I confess he speakes of the Popish Bishops: But who would believe he meant not ours that had seen them? |
A27050 | To what parpose this Sovereignty was given to Jerusalem, which was never possess''d and exercised? |
A27050 | Was a Diocese then, One Church, or two?) |
A27050 | Was all this carried him from many hundred Parishes, many score Miles? |
A27050 | Was the Church laid common to all? |
A27050 | Was there no power of the Keys? |
A27050 | We desire Appeals to the next Synod: and is that to be a Pope? |
A27050 | Were I one of these people, I would be bold to ask the Diocesan[ Sir what is the Heresie or Crime that he is guilty of? |
A27050 | Were not Bishops the meanes of the Churches concord in all ages? |
A27050 | Were not all the very Heathen Emperors heretofore, and are not all the Heathen Kings still, Kings, and as great as others, without Bishops? |
A27050 | Were they every Lords day to deposit their Collections, and have no Pastors, and so no Church- Assemblies? |
A27050 | What Learned, Judicious worthy men, were his Brother Robert Abbot and after him Davenant, Bishops of Salisbury? |
A27050 | What Nation is it that the word[ Gentiles] signifieth? |
A27050 | What a Character doth Socrates give of him? |
A27050 | What a man was Theophilus after him? |
A27050 | What abundance of Epistles did he write against them to other Bishops, and yet could not procure their correction or removal? |
A27050 | What abundance of Prelates are shamefully stigmatized, by Socrates, Sozomen, Theodoret, Euagrius,& c? |
A27050 | What bloody work did Cyril and his party make at Alexandria? |
A27050 | What did set up Luther, and Melancthon, and Illyricus, but their eminent parts? |
A27050 | What else did set up Calvin, and Beza at Geneva? |
A27050 | What else gave Zuinglius and 〈 ◊ 〉 the Presidencie at Zurich? |
A27050 | What if a Prelate, a Parliament, a Patron, or a forefather, chuse Masspriests or Hereticks for us, must we accept the choice? |
A27050 | What if the Magistrates believe you not, will you convince him by Scripture or by your Authority over the Magistrate? |
A27050 | What if we prove but the lawfulness of it, though not the Duty? |
A27050 | What is in all this against Kings? |
A27050 | What is in the nature of the thing to warrant this assertion? |
A27050 | What is it then, is it an Universal Exposition of the Scripture or of Christs Laws? |
A27050 | What is it then, is it to be the Kings Ecclesiastical Council, to prepare such Canons as he shall enact? |
A27050 | What is it to those Nonconformists that craved Bishop Ushers Episcopacy? |
A27050 | What men hath Blackfryers had, Mr. Gibbons, Dr. Gouge, and many formerly? |
A27050 | What need I tire the Reader with other Councils testimonies? |
A27050 | What people more peaceable and obedient to their superiors, for instance than the Helvetian Ministers have been? |
A27050 | What probability is there that one Apostle when all the rest were dead should make so great a change in their Church Orders? |
A27050 | What proof hath he that besides Peter and John, there were not many other Apostles per vices in the same Cities where Paul had been? |
A27050 | What proof is there that St. John did make this change? |
A27050 | What should hinder him that believeth there is no God, to do thus rather than be undone? |
A27050 | What should, I say, more of this after the copious instances of H. Fowlis? |
A27050 | What stirrs were there for many ages between the Cecilians and the Donatists? |
A27050 | What strife between Anthymius and Basil for a larger Diocese? |
A27050 | What subjection doth Hartfordshire, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire,& c. owe to the Town of Lincolne? |
A27050 | What then is proper to a Bishop? |
A27050 | What then was all the rest of his work? |
A27050 | What then? |
A27050 | What use for examination who was worthy, where there was no other to stand in Competition, and where the first Convert still was taken? |
A27050 | What work against Nazianzen to cast him out of Constantinople? |
A27050 | What work made he against Chrysostom? |
A27050 | What would they say, if our Churches were such as this orthodox Episcopal Church was? |
A27050 | What, not when such as Cartwright, Hildersham, Amesius, Parker, Dod, Ball,& c. are cast out as unworthy? |
A27050 | What, not when they have made so many Canonical Engines to keep out better? |
A27050 | When I honoured thee a private man from the bottom of my heart, how can I but honour thee being Emperour?] |
A27050 | When each of them are but one congregation, where is the difference but in the arbitrary Name? |
A27050 | When find you Augustine teaching in any Church but one( in Hippo) as part of his charge? |
A27050 | When he visiteth the sick, he hath no Power left him to judge, Whether the person be penitent and fit to be Absolved or not? |
A27050 | When none but their sworn Curates, Subscribers, Declarers,& c. may preach, yet can they get no better? |
A27050 | When so many hundred were silenced in Queen Elizabeth and King James''s days; and Eighteen Hundred of us now? |
A27050 | When the Apostles forbad any other to labour mens conversion in their Cities or Countries where they or others had been before them? |
A27050 | When themselves commonly say, that the higher Orders contain the powers of the lower? |
A27050 | When they were scattered; which of their Seats was the Metropolitan to the rest? |
A27050 | When will he prove that the Evangelists and the Itinerant Assistants of the Apostles, had not the power of the Keys? |
A27050 | Where did he ever read that all the Province of Macedonia was called Philippi; and the Saints said to dwell at Philippi that dwelt all over Macedonia? |
A27050 | Where doth Christ or Scripture say, You shall use the Keys of Church- power privately, but not in the Church, or publickly? |
A27050 | Where is your Proof? |
A27050 | Where was there three Churches in the whole world for 300 years so numerous as the Church at Jerusalem is said to have been in Scripture? |
A27050 | Where we shall find the proof that the Apostles or Evangelists set the bounds of Diocesses? |
A27050 | Whether Apostles and Evangelists did not go from City to City, sometime staying some Months or Years at one, and then passing to another? |
A27050 | Whether Peter''s being at Rome could alter this Church- Constitution? |
A27050 | Whether all the rest of the Parishes were not the Bishops Charge? |
A27050 | Whether an Order or Office of Presbyters that have not the power of the Keys even in foro exteriore, be of Divine, or Lawful Humane Institution? |
A27050 | Whether any form of Church Government be instituted by God as necessary? |
A27050 | Whether it be one of many hundreds? |
A27050 | Whether it was many hundred Churches that never saw the person, nor one another, that were to meet in one Church or place, to do all this? |
A27050 | Whether that Gods publick worship be not a duty? |
A27050 | Whether the Apostles carried this Metropolitical Prerogative with them from place to place, where- ever they came? |
A27050 | Whether the Apostles did not this as they did other parts of Church- settlement, by the Spirit of God? |
A27050 | Whether the Apostles were not, by this description, Bishops of all the World as their Diocesses? |
A27050 | Whether the Universal Headship or Papacy of the Bishop of Jerusalem be not of Apostolical Institution? |
A27050 | Whether the granting of this Episcopal Power, be a making that Man a Bishop that it''s granted to? |
A27050 | Whether the work of these Presbyters, after the institution, be not the work of their own Office, and not( in the individual acts) the Bishops? |
A27050 | Whether then an Universal Head of the Church or Vicar of Christ be not jure Divino? |
A27050 | Whether there must not be some present Pastors to officiate before the Church in all these? |
A27050 | Whether there were not fixed Bishops setled by them in all the Churches which they planted? |
A27050 | Whether they ceased to be Apostles to the People there? |
A27050 | Whether this Congregation must not be Christians, and persons qualified for Communion? |
A27050 | Whether when Paul wrote his Letters from Corinth to Rome he thereby made the Bishop of Corinth the Governour of the Bishop and Diocess of Rome? |
A27050 | Which were to have an hundred Churches and Bishops( in a small Island?) |
A27050 | Who more eager in the pursuit of riches and honor, more tenacious in withholding good from the owners thereof, than your selves? |
A27050 | Who then is this Church Ruine and Abomination long of but your selves, who have and only will have the Keys? |
A27050 | Who were more set upon the usual course of enriching above measure, and raising your families on high? |
A27050 | Who will regard our Excommunications? |
A27050 | Whoever extended the obligation of Apostolical example to such Negatives, as to do nothing which they did not? |
A27050 | Why do you not take care that the Churches by discipline may be better constituted? |
A27050 | Why is not this foolish scorne used against these foresaid relations also? |
A27050 | Why may not an Abbot as well rule a thousand Monasteries, per alios non Abbates, as a Bishop a thousand Churches per alios non Episcop ● s? |
A27050 | Why may not the King and Parliament put it down as aforesaid? |
A27050 | Why should Lordships ▪ wealth and honours, be allowed Bishops for that which is not needful? |
A27050 | Why then may they not now be forbidden publick Government in foro Ecclesiae exteriore? |
A27050 | Why then should the Temple be so called from the Church, when no Church at all, but a Particle only of a Church doth meet there? |
A27050 | Why was this? |
A27050 | Why was this? |
A27050 | Will any knowing man deny that he contradicteth not only Hierom and Theodoret, but the common Exposition of the Fathers, by this his odd Opinion? |
A27050 | Will the righteous God be always mocked? |
A27050 | Will they say that they can get no better? |
A27050 | Will you yet have more? |
A27050 | Without a Prelate? |
A27050 | Yea which all Emperours have formerly used? |
A27050 | Yea, even by their cruelty, so far was cruelty from preventing it? |
A27050 | Yea, or Corporations either? |
A27050 | Yea, whether they had not more Bishops or Presbyters than one? |
A27050 | [ But where good Sir, do I say, they must have the sole power in Ordination, which you have so oft objected, and now again repeat? |
A27050 | a Bishop of a whole Church, not at all obliged to Teach, or Guide in personal worshipping, any part of that Church but one? |
A27050 | and Hooker in their Principles of Government?) |
A27050 | and admitted the first sort only to Communion? |
A27050 | and are not Christians only members of the Church? |
A27050 | and even Hierome make himself partaker? |
A27050 | and how large was such a Diocess? |
A27050 | and how many Churches could he thus oversee? |
A27050 | and how many Congregations did they contain? |
A27050 | and must he not corect mal- administration in ministers, and drive them to do their duty? |
A27050 | and not the Gnosticks, nor Jews, but Nero beheaded Paul; and the Jews themselves were banished Rome? |
A27050 | and one Apostle could undo what all together had done? |
A27050 | and so a Jerusalem Papacy be not essential to the true Church and Religion? |
A27050 | and so to the Original? |
A27050 | and so whether we must have such an office? |
A27050 | and so, whether it be not jure Divino? |
A27050 | and such as is described in scripture? |
A27050 | and such as should ordinarily be continued in the world? |
A27050 | and suffer men to make merchandice of Souls, and to vilifie them and set them at cheaper rates than they would do a goose, a pig, or a dog? |
A27050 | and that God consented to this change? |
A27050 | and that abuse the Church by feigning an Office of Presbyters that are not Presbyters, and proving that Church- Governors are not Church- Governors? |
A27050 | and that are chidden for suffering him in their Communion? |
A27050 | and that are directed when they meet together to cast him out, and not to eat with him? |
A27050 | and that more than by one Apostle, even by all of them that were then at Jerusalem? |
A27050 | and this to prove that an University is one College? |
A27050 | and who made the Form of that other Church which made this Church Form? |
A27050 | at Newark, or Gainsborough, or Boston, what shall they all do between that and Barnet, or the remotest part of Buckinghamshire? |
A27050 | be examples to them that are out of the notice of their words and lives? |
A27050 | before them that never saw or heard them? |
A27050 | carry on all his business with the Monks, and for the deposing of Chrysostome? |
A27050 | did ye diligently instruct the ignorant? |
A27050 | make you no conscience of publishing untruths? |
A27050 | may he not appoint Magistrates, and make Law to command it? |
A27050 | may he not punish those that do it not? |
A27050 | must the Magistrate let Hereticks alone till it please the Diocesan to judge them? |
A27050 | not they that preached almost daily? |
A27050 | of France? |
A27050 | of the English Prelates Treasons? |
A27050 | or all left to humane prudence? |
A27050 | or doth it not encrease their condemnation? |
A27050 | or else by a distinct Superior Authority, more powerful than the Ministers? |
A27050 | or from all because he repenteth of one? |
A27050 | or of several bearers of one Key? |
A27050 | or should not have such Episcopos gregis overseers of this flock, as are impowered to do all the foresaid works of their proper Office? |
A27050 | or than a Christian Emperour had over Chrysostom? |
A27050 | or that we must bow to every ancient Canon? |
A27050 | or to many hundred Churches? |
A27050 | or to more than one? |
A27050 | or to the place where they dyed? |
A27050 | or were they all equal? |
A27050 | or( as the& caetera Oath) never consent to the alteration of it, when we know not but the King may alter it, or command us to endeavour it? |
A27050 | reprehending the Confessors and Presbyters for taking lapsed persons into Church Communion before they had fulfilled their penitential course? |
A27050 | severely punish the disobedient? |
A27050 | that all the rest were not served so too? |
A27050 | that is, Who shall be pronounced fit or unfit for it, by our selves? |
A27050 | they say themselves, what would the Keys signifie without the Sword? |
A27050 | to pretend Ignatius to be for them, who is so much and plain against them? |
A27050 | under whose examination and hands all men enter into the Ministery? |
A27050 | what Bishop called you to the office? |
A27050 | what can it be better, if you grant that we are not only for Episcopacy in genere, but even for the same species with your selves? |
A27050 | what meaneth he by that which can be good sence? |
A27050 | what need we more witness? |
A27050 | what then would they do if they had their wills? |
A27050 | when God licenceth them to the work, when he calleth them to that office, which essenti? |
A27050 | where one of a thousand never heard his voice nor saw his face? |
A27050 | whether men commission him or not? |
A27050 | whether when he returned from the other to Antioch again, he made not the other the Governours of Antioch? |
A27050 | who is it but Bishops( or so much as them) that you think should be called unto Councils? |
A27050 | who is the real Architect he that buildeth the house, or he that hath the title, and doth nothing unless it be hindering the builders? |
A27050 | who know him no more than one in another kingdom? |
A27050 | whose work is to hinder the Ministers of Christ from their officwork, under pretence of a power of Licensing them to it? |
A27050 | will it follow that still more new Orders may be devised, as Subpriests were? |
A27050 | would you indeed have such a concord? |
A27050 | yea part of his Church, yea equally with the other part? |
A27050 | yea that it belongeth to him to regulate such things as these? |
A27050 | yea, by a more eminent Authority than the Scriptures, which were written by parts, by several single Men, some Apostles, and some Evangelists? |
A27050 | — But, alas in what kind of things do they bear themselves as Bishops? |
A27050 | † Doth a publick Church Pastor govern but privately? |
A26912 | & c. If not every one, which of them is it? |
A26912 | ( For then when I am in one Church, I separate from all other in the world?) |
A26912 | ( unless you call the Communion a fault of which we are to speak anon) Did I ever seek to abate your dislike of the sins which you most speak against? |
A26912 | 18 I appeal to Universities, Tutors and Schools, whether they know none such? |
A26912 | 3 and 4? |
A26912 | 4 ▪ Is it not a shameful receding from our Reformation, now to use an unreformed Liturgie? |
A26912 | 5? |
A26912 | Alas, brother, how impertinent is your question? |
A26912 | Alas, brother, will you leave England no hope of a Cure? |
A26912 | Alas, how ignorant even honest people remain; And how slowly they come on in knowledge? |
A26912 | Alas, poor Christians, that ever you should either be instructed at this rate? |
A26912 | Alas, whither would you carry the people of the Lord? |
A26912 | Alas, will God leave us also, even us to the obdurateness of Pharaoh? |
A26912 | And I admire that the Prelates that ask so often[ What will satisfie us?] |
A26912 | And I appeal to all men that are awake, whether there be no Christian children in the World? |
A26912 | And I would you knew what spirit you are of, whether you have none of the same spirit your self? |
A26912 | And a thing beyond dispute? |
A26912 | And all the Churches on earth that use a Liturgie? |
A26912 | And all they that followed Swinkfeldius, and Behmen, and Sti ● felius, and Muntzer, and such others? |
A26912 | And all they that have followed Dr. Crispe, or Arminius, or the Leading Anabaptists, or Seekers, of these ages? |
A26912 | And also whether this earnest prayer( or Curse) and this bold Appeal to God, be not prophane, and rather a fruit of passion, than charitable zeal? |
A26912 | And an Armies force upon the Parliament which they promised obedience to? |
A26912 | And are not the Watch- men of Christ still bound to tell the Church of their danger on the one side, as well as the other? |
A26912 | And are not your disorders and unmeet expressions sins, as well as theirs? |
A26912 | And at what age do they come to know all things, and to be past the title of Ignorant? |
A26912 | And be not such a way as Papists, Quakers, and most deluded people commonly boast of? |
A26912 | And couldst bring thy heart accordingly to condemn them, and separate from them? |
A26912 | And did I ever change my mind? |
A26912 | And did not the Presbyterians think that the Sectaries persecuted them? |
A26912 | And do not many besides Rutherford think the same of him? |
A26912 | And do not many turn to them of late? |
A26912 | And do we not feel it? |
A26912 | And do you imitate Nehemiah and others of Gods Servants, that use to Confess the sins of all ranks and sorts of men? |
A26912 | And do you not implicitly charge all or most Protestant Writers with insolence and intolerable pride as well as me? |
A26912 | And do you not remember? |
A26912 | And do you not suppose me to think otherwise of it? |
A26912 | And do you not think that this is because I understand it not? |
A26912 | And do you not undoubtedly hereby give up all honesty to be avoided? |
A26912 | And do you think that they would not have silenced my book, if it had been in their power? |
A26912 | And fathering all this on God and Religion be not a sad aggravation of it? |
A26912 | And for that( if you will take the word ▪ false- worship] in that sense) do not you also worship God falsly when you worship him sinfully? |
A26912 | And guilty of all which he calleth the Effects? |
A26912 | And had they not now broken the Church sufficiently, and made it small enough, when they had made it none? |
A26912 | And have not all mankind a deficiencie of understanding? |
A26912 | And having ears, hear yee not? |
A26912 | And how he took that occasion to warn them by the comparison of a child, and by his washing and wiping of their feet? |
A26912 | And how many parties have I thus been pitied by? |
A26912 | And how should a man know the names of all that look in at a Church- door? |
A26912 | And how small a Church doth any one sect make? |
A26912 | And if it prevail, what abundance of hurt will it do? |
A26912 | And if you bring poor souls no better directions for their full assurance, peace and joy, whether in the end you will not prove a miserable Comforter? |
A26912 | And in other parts of knowledge, al ● s, what are we to Reignolds, Ames, Parker and several of the rest? |
A26912 | And is it not as lawful to think so of the Papists? |
A26912 | And is it pride and insolence to say so? |
A26912 | And is it pride for a man to say that he can easier speak what is in his mind? |
A26912 | And is it pride to thank the World for their Civilities to me, in mixing comm ● ndations, which I disown, with their censures? |
A26912 | And is it sin to tell your selves of your former sins, and none to tell the Bishops of it? |
A26912 | And is not all this yet an open signification of their Dissent from the things which they so far deny complyance with? |
A26912 | And is not this to silence that Teaching which is against your judgement? |
A26912 | And is that a secret which their books and their assemblies tell the World? |
A26912 | And is the thing I say true or false? |
A26912 | And is this in you inconsistent with all Love? |
A26912 | And is this probatum given against malignity a word of pride too? |
A26912 | And many others there were afterwards under several Usurping Powers; And do you call all these one? |
A26912 | And must all Christians in the World be taught to fly from one another as Idolaters? |
A26912 | And must any man consent to sin? |
A26912 | And shall I no ● be so with you, if I obey your challenge? |
A26912 | And shall they use our hands to do their works, and pull their freedom out of the fire? |
A26912 | And shall we now contradict our selves, and say that things necessary are not sufficient for our union? |
A26912 | And should I not do my best, to prevent such a course of daily sin? |
A26912 | And that God hateth the prayers of all Christian Families and Christians that use a form? |
A26912 | And that men dare yet continue such sayings while the book is visible to prove them false? |
A26912 | And the Atomists of Epicurus, Democritus and Lucretius; and the Cartesians of their Master? |
A26912 | And then would you not have hindered me from Preaching the same thing, if you could have done it? |
A26912 | And this before ever they saw my book, or ever spake with man that saw it? |
A26912 | And to do all this as for God, with dreadful appeals to him? |
A26912 | And we must first know, How far God made the Scripture for our Rule? |
A26912 | And what assurance have they of it more than all the rest that are as confident? |
A26912 | And what more can be done to destroy mens souls, than to harden them against the Word? |
A26912 | And what reason have you to charge any other mens sins on them? |
A26912 | And what signs of such mutability did they shew? |
A26912 | And when I cite Gildas, calling such no Ministers, but enemies and traytors,& c. Were you not very rash in this? |
A26912 | And when in the history of Martin, I tell you how neer it I am my self, as to such as Martin separated from? |
A26912 | And when in the scheme in the conclusion I describe it? |
A26912 | And when they have done, whether they will also proceed to a Family Excommunication of them for the same causes? |
A26912 | And where shall we find it? |
A26912 | And whether I purposely justifie persecution? |
A26912 | And whether all such children are cured of Ignorance and Injudiciousness, and know all things by the anointing of the Spirit? |
A26912 | And whether both as Affirmer among Logicians, and as Accuser among men of justice, the proof be not incumbent on him? |
A26912 | And whether he here knew what spirit he was of? |
A26912 | And whether it be any great fault to silence you and me and all the Preachers in the Land, if prayer be the only means of knowledge? |
A26912 | And whether to say so, be enough to make people afraid of being honest? |
A26912 | And whether we have not greater Light into these Controversies than they? |
A26912 | And whether we have not greater Light into these Controversies, than they had? |
A26912 | And whether you do not before you are aware still agree with them whom you most avoid, who cry up Church- prayers to cry down Preaching? |
A26912 | And whether your way here opened( by receiving sudden Comfort by a remembred Text) be sounder doctrine? |
A26912 | And who knoweth not how fair a game the Papists have to play by the means of our divisions? |
A26912 | And why Hearing and Preaching are so much urged? |
A26912 | And why Paul bids Timothy give himself to Reading, and meditate on these things, and give thy self wholly to them? |
A26912 | And why did you not answer my instance of the Pharisees long prayers? |
A26912 | And why should I? |
A26912 | And why should it divide us more, if mens practice be according to their judgements, rather than for them to sin against their Consciences? |
A26912 | And why should not you bear with my dissent, as well as I do with yours? |
A26912 | And why you wrote this book against me, if your earnest prayers against me, and the people, be the only means? |
A26912 | And will any Christian deny the truth of this except the Enthusiasts? |
A26912 | And will you put sorth such a book as your own to the World, and when you have done deny the Ignorance and Injudiciousness of all Christians? |
A26912 | And would you have had all the Churches of Christ on Earth, to be dissolved, when they were dissolved? |
A26912 | And yet is all this to be justified, or silenced? |
A26912 | Answer this, as to Mr. Nie about hearing, and to me about Praying; if you can? |
A26912 | Are Papists insulting over us in our shame? |
A26912 | Are all the Hungarian, and Transilvanian, and old Polonian Protestants, that come neer this order, withour Order, or unsetled? |
A26912 | Are all these therefore in the right? |
A26912 | Are not all the Preachers in England forsakers of Gods work that preach not in London? |
A26912 | Are not all these reasons enough? |
A26912 | Are not you, brother, by your own censure notoriously insolent and intolerably proud, if this hold good, as well as I? |
A26912 | Are our Rulers by all this exasperated to the severities which we feel? |
A26912 | Are the falls of Gods servants recited in Scripture, a reason to teach men to flye from honesty or religion? |
A26912 | Are there any such Christians or not? |
A26912 | Are there no such presumptuous boasters? |
A26912 | Are these Questions now to be answered by me? |
A26912 | Are these beseeming self denying humble persons? |
A26912 | Are thousands hardened by these and such like dealings into a scorn of all Religion? |
A26912 | Are we made by it the by- word and hissing of the Nations, and the shame and pitty of all our friends? |
A26912 | Are you for more Infallibility and Perfection than the Papists themselves? |
A26912 | Are you not here partial? |
A26912 | Are you sure that none of all these were honest? |
A26912 | Are you sure that they that followed their Leaders into all those sects which Epiphanius and others mention, were all dishonest? |
A26912 | As I write for my opinion, so do you for yours? |
A26912 | As if we must grant that, if men can but prove this straying disposition in many honest persons, they must be afraid to be honest? |
A26912 | Ask any that ever did Converse with me; whether ever I was suspected of flattery, or dawbing with men sins? |
A26912 | Ask the Bishops that Conferred with us at the Savoy, 1660? |
A26912 | Ask your self that read our Reply then? |
A26912 | At what age were you past your ignorance and injudiciousness, and knew all things? |
A26912 | BRethren, why should I wonder at the fruits of those weaknesses which we are all subject to( some more, some less) in this state of imperfection? |
A26912 | BUT will not this course divide us among our selves; while one goeth to the Parish Churches and another doth not? |
A26912 | Behold the children of Israel have not hearkened unto me: how then shall,& c. ● saith Moses? |
A26912 | Besides my five Disputations of Church Government, how oft have I written against Persecution? |
A26912 | Brethren, what now Comparatively are all the separated Churches or parties upon Earth? |
A26912 | Brother, Do you think men must trust their souls on your naked word? |
A26912 | Brother, do you like this way, or do you not? |
A26912 | But I beseech you promote superstition no more, and feign no Divine Laws which you can not shew us? |
A26912 | But are all these Christians that you plead for separation from, and charge with Idolatry, Infidels, and denyers of Christ? |
A26912 | But how did he know this? |
A26912 | But how? |
A26912 | But is it not this very suffering and reproach, and insulting of others, which maketh you think that it is not your duty? |
A26912 | But is this impartial enquiring into the truth? |
A26912 | But le ts hear the Charge? |
A26912 | But not the best which we can not do? |
A26912 | But still How hard is it to know our selves? |
A26912 | But suppose I had said little against it, will you charge me with Negatives or omissions before you know my Reasons? |
A26912 | But what if I had not in this Book spoken much against Persecution, Is it not enough that I have done it in others? |
A26912 | But what if in all this I be mistaken, and if Communion in the Liturgie prove unlawful? |
A26912 | But what if in this book I write neither against the prophane, nor the Iews, nor the Mahometans? |
A26912 | But what if the Text had meant properly[ yee know all things;] Do you prove that this is spoken of all true Christians, and that in all ages? |
A26912 | But what is the Charge against me here? |
A26912 | But when many of us vend untruths, and slanders against our brethren about the land, who aggravateth this or repenteth of it? |
A26912 | But where''s his reason or Confutation? |
A26912 | But why are you so angry with me for being and doing so bad, when I have no freedom to be or to do better, any more than the fire not to burn? |
A26912 | But why should a Preacher think that a man must speak against no sin which he is guilty of himself? |
A26912 | But you ask,[ How comes the Scripture not to be mentioned?] |
A26912 | But you most unhappily chose this Instance for your quarrel, I think in the judgment of all the Land, that have read my writings? |
A26912 | But, O brother, how injurious a Course is this that you take? |
A26912 | But, brother, doth every one reproach you, that telleth you of your danger, and would save you from infidelity and hell? |
A26912 | But, if indeed I was as guilty as you mention, why is it in me a most unbecoming practice, to blame that which you think I did occasion? |
A26912 | But, saith our brother, who shall tell us what is the Universal Church? |
A26912 | But, what spirit was that, brother, that first took up the forms and words that now we speak of? |
A26912 | By which they little know what they wi ● ● against the interest of the Christian and Pro 〈 … 〉 nt Religion in this Land? |
A26912 | Can I believe that this offendeth you? |
A26912 | Can not we hold union among our selves, if some go to the publick assemblies, and some do not? |
A26912 | Can you name any? |
A26912 | Could I separate from all these on the reasons now in question? |
A26912 | Could you possibly believe your self in this? |
A26912 | Could your Reasons have conquered them, more than Mr. Ainsworths, Iohnsons, or Cannes? |
A26912 | Cromwell to Maximus, and whether I dedicated a flattering Book to his Son? |
A26912 | DOth not the Covenant make it now unlawful, to hold Communion in the use of the Liturgie? |
A26912 | Dare you or any man, not blinded and hardened, justifie all this? |
A26912 | Did I ever lay so heavy a charge on you? |
A26912 | Did I ever perswade you to think well of the faults of other men, while I perswaded you to love their persons? |
A26912 | Did I ever say that it is unlawful to have Communion with you, as you say it is to have Communion with others? |
A26912 | Did I not put prayer first, and other means next? |
A26912 | Did I speak one word of the principality, or which was the principal way? |
A26912 | Did ever any man put such points of high speculation to the Major vote? |
A26912 | Did ever man read the histories of the Schismes and Heresies of the Churches, and not find out this Cause, this old, this ordinary Cause? |
A26912 | Did not Pauls carnal Corinthians, and Lgeal Galatians go astray one after another? |
A26912 | Did you ever read any sober Writer of another mind? |
A26912 | Did you never before hear it done by others? |
A26912 | Did you never read any man that warned others to avoid these sins and errors? |
A26912 | Did you never read how common the high place- worship was even under godly Kings? |
A26912 | Did you never read of Christs rebuke of his Disciples for their hardness of heart, their ignorance, their striving who should be greatest? |
A26912 | Did you not know this? |
A26912 | Do I need to cite you an hundred Texts in which this sinning, straying inclination is charged upon honest men? |
A26912 | Do not all the Peripateticks say the same of Aristotle in Philosophy? |
A26912 | Do not the Protestants say so of Calvin, as to all that went before him? |
A26912 | Do not the Ramists say so of Ramus? |
A26912 | Do not the Sectaries think that the Presbyterians did or would have persecuted them? |
A26912 | Do not the multitudes of Sects and Errors, and Contentions that have torn the Church from the Apostles daies till now prove it? |
A26912 | Do we not know it? |
A26912 | Do you desire their Repentance and humiliation whose faults you would have concealed? |
A26912 | Do you dislike adding to God''s word, and will you adde to it so boldly, as to say, he hateth that which he never once forbad? |
A26912 | Do you know as much as Twisse or Bradwardine for all the Scriptures are plain? |
A26912 | Do you not believe that also? |
A26912 | Do you not believe that to be true? |
A26912 | Do you not here tell us, that how bad soever you shall say of us, you never do or can say bad enough? |
A26912 | Do you not see that here you seem to deny what you said so confidently in the last Exception? |
A26912 | Do you not take all that you say against me( or some part at least) to be plain and full, and to be Christian sense and reason? |
A26912 | Do you not tell the world here the reason why you write so vehemently against my Principles of Love? |
A26912 | Do you not think that I am Ignorant and Injudicious? |
A26912 | Do you not think your self, that multitudes of Conformists, yea Ministers are Ignorant and Injudicious? |
A26912 | Do you not yet perceive that you also have a silencing spirit? |
A26912 | Do you not your selves condemn a Carnal state? |
A26912 | Do you think all that is done in one land, or one age, or by one Army, is one War? |
A26912 | Do you think that Christs body needed not created means? |
A26912 | Do you think that Christs humane nature was not a Creature? |
A26912 | Do you think that all Creatures are not Dependant on the Creator? |
A26912 | Do you think we know the sincere from hypocrites? |
A26912 | Do you use in publick humiliations to confess this ignorance of Professors or not? |
A26912 | Do you well to intimate that I say the contrary? |
A26912 | Do you well, brother, to trouble the World at this rate of discourse? |
A26912 | Doth it follow that because lawful separation is not from the same uncharitable spirit, that persecution is, therefore unlawful separation is not? |
A26912 | Doth it follow, that only the ablest of all these may be joyned with, because that all the rest do worse? |
A26912 | Doth it forbid us to Repent of sin, or to perswade our brethren to repent? |
A26912 | Doth not Dr. Twisse say the like of Bradwardine and of Piscator? |
A26912 | Doth not judgment begin with us? |
A26912 | Doth not the Covenant make it now unlawfull? |
A26912 | Doth not the second Commandment and Gods oft expressed jealousie in the matters of his Worship, make it a sin to communicate in the Liturgie? |
A26912 | Doubtless they may have the spirit then: If not, where is it that you will set the bounds? |
A26912 | Enquire whether this be true or not? |
A26912 | Even when they contradicted, yea, killed one another? |
A26912 | False Worship distinguished and opened: Whether I speak very little against persecution? |
A26912 | First upon eleven members; next upon the greater part of the house; and lastly upon the remainder? |
A26912 | For what can be more done to make men despise the word, than to teach them to despise or abhor the Preacher? |
A26912 | For what follows in justification of his unwarrantable conceit exceeds all bounds of sobriety, — whither will not Pride and overweening carry a man? |
A26912 | For when they see so many, they say, How can I tell that this or that is in the right, rather than the other? |
A26912 | Go to their meetings, and see if they so far separate, as to forbid you? |
A26912 | Have I not read it many books of Experiences? |
A26912 | Have most or many of the Separation said more against severities than I have done? |
A26912 | Have not I heard it with these ears from multitudes in melancholy and other weakness that have perverted the Texts which they alledged? |
A26912 | Have yee your hearts yet hardened? |
A26912 | Have you more and plainer texts of Scripture agninst the Common Prayer than all these are? |
A26912 | Have you or any of your party, done so much to have stopt that cause of divisions which you accuse, as I have done? |
A26912 | Having eyes see yee not? |
A26912 | He addeth[ If this be not to sit in the Chair of Scorners, what is?] |
A26912 | He is called a Tyrant, because he was a Usurper; And do you think that Cromwell was not so; when he pull''d down both King, Parliament, and Rump? |
A26912 | How commonly are they against the Quakers, and the Familists, and the Infidels, and Heathens, and( with us) the Papists? |
A26912 | How do you reflect on God that forbiddeth us, to forsake the assembling of our selves together? |
A26912 | How few separated Churches do now exist, that were in being an hundred years ago? |
A26912 | How few separated Churches know you on earth, that have no Covetous person or railer? |
A26912 | How know you that they were never present at any such as Paul reproveth in the Corinthians? |
A26912 | How many meditations and prayers are used before any holy flame appeareth? |
A26912 | How much more insolent a Charge is this? |
A26912 | How openly and fully have we declared our utter dissent from the things which you suppose that we shall countenance them in? |
A26912 | How sad is it to read in Ho ● nius, Salmasius and others abroad, such horrid descriptions of the English sects and scandals? |
A26912 | How then shall we repent? |
A26912 | I appeal to almost all the disagreeing disputers of this and every age, whether they charge not one another with it? |
A26912 | I appeal to any judicious man, whether he find not the judicious even among good Christians; yea, and Ministers to be, alas, too rare? |
A26912 | I appeal to most Parishes in England, whether many of the people charge not their Ministers themselves with it? |
A26912 | I appeal to the experience of all Masters of Families, whether they meet with no such Christians there? |
A26912 | I appeal to the experience of every self- knowing Christian, whether he find not abundance of dulness, ignorance and injudiciousness in himself? |
A26912 | I appeal to the prayers of almost all Christians, whether they charge not themselves with this to God? |
A26912 | I beseech you, brother, preach not the contrary whatever you think, lest you justifie the silencers, while you blame them? |
A26912 | I desire them to prove it, or not affirm it? |
A26912 | I hope the Act of Oblivion was not made to frustrate Gods Act of Oblivion, which giveth Pardon to the Penitent? |
A26912 | I know some men judge of others by their Own opinions and self interest: But is that indeed the Christian Rule? |
A26912 | I need not mention the great moderation of New- England, where their late healing endeavors greatly tend to increase our hopes of reconciliation? |
A26912 | I protested openly that my meaning was not what he affirmeth it to be; And could he know it better than I? |
A26912 | I said expresly,[ In the necessary Articles of Faith,] And must we therefore agree with them in all their sins and errors? |
A26912 | I take you for a Christian and a Protestant: Are you not so far of us? |
A26912 | I think you preached not for many years, when you lay so long in prison: Did you then forsake Gods work? |
A26912 | I told you, we Consent not to the faults of our own prayers, much less to anothers, that are less in our power? |
A26912 | I understand not what you mean by saying[ If they persecute any, they contract a guilt upon all?] |
A26912 | If I had, would you not have blamed me for writing one thing so oft? |
A26912 | If any man lack wisdome, let him ask it of God? |
A26912 | If consenting to sin be unavoidable? |
A26912 | If healed, should it be reproved or concealed? |
A26912 | If in his own judgement all men be Idolaters, that use any thing in Gods worship not commanded? |
A26912 | If it be so bad, why are you so angry with me, for being against it, and th ● like, or ● ny scorns at other mens tolerable devotion? |
A26912 | If it be, why is it pride to utter it, as a proof that I plead for Love, and not for my own interest? |
A26912 | If none of all this was Rebellion or Treason, or Murder, is there any such Crime, think you, possible to be committed? |
A26912 | If not, how dare you tempt them to vilifie and despise their Teachers? |
A26912 | If not, what a kind of humiliation do you make? |
A26912 | If the later, why will you grosly abuse your Reader by such a deceit, which tendeth to tempt him unto Poperie? |
A26912 | If they are, should their fault be healed or cherished? |
A26912 | If this be not true, why did you not question the truth of it? |
A26912 | If you dare not say, that you would have all the rest to be dam ● ed, dare you say, you would not have them be taught by others? |
A26912 | If you dissent, why did you answer none of the six Reasons I gave for what I said, nor seem to take notice of them? |
A26912 | If you do, what a spirit are you of? |
A26912 | If you should be guilty of the blood of thousands by one sin, will it excuse you that another was more guilty? |
A26912 | If you would kindle this latter in your own or others hearts, alas, what holy labour doth it require? |
A26912 | Is all this reviling, all this false doctrine, all his untruths commanded of God? |
A26912 | Is any of this true? |
A26912 | Is any one of all these Parties, the whole Church of God? |
A26912 | Is he a scorner that saith, that a man may speak the same words mistakingly in melancholy which another speaketh truly? |
A26912 | Is it Conformity or Non- conformity which I have most defended? |
A26912 | Is it as a Conformist or a Nonconformist that I have been judged and used these 33. years? |
A26912 | Is it at 4, or 5, or 7 years old? |
A26912 | Is it in supposing that there are any Conformists weaker than my self? |
A26912 | Is it not the language of many ● Popish Nun and Fryer that pretend to Revelation? |
A26912 | Is it not uns ● vo ● ● y to name men in such stories? |
A26912 | Is it pride in me to think that I am righter than you or to express it? |
A26912 | Is it pride to confess so openly the weakness of my memory? |
A26912 | Is it slighting Christ to speak the words and undenied truth of Scripture? |
A26912 | Is it yet to us, even to us, a crime intolerable to call us to Repentance? |
A26912 | Is it your judgement that we should conceal the faults or ignorance, or errors of the Bishops, Conformists, and Parish members? |
A26912 | Is not every man naturally most favourable to those of his own opinion? |
A26912 | Is not the Liturgie, Ceremonies, and Ministery the same? |
A26912 | Is not the Non- conformists doctrine the same with that of the Church of England, when they subcribe to it, or offer so to do? |
A26912 | Is not this to censure all men as Idolaters? |
A26912 | Is that[ a new Cause of separation] which hath been the Cause since the daies of the Apostles to this day? |
A26912 | Is the matter of this prayer unlawful? |
A26912 | Is there a word to perswade you to Communion with Persecutors? |
A26912 | Is there ever a word in all my Book, perswading you to Communion with a Diocesan Church, as such? |
A26912 | Is there not crying sin with us? |
A26912 | Is there one word to perswade you that every Parish is a true Church, and fit to be Communicated with? |
A26912 | Is this good Divinity, that it is unbecoming a Minister to mention heinous sin with bitterness which we have bin guilty of? |
A26912 | Is this no reason 〈 ◊ 〉 alter it? |
A26912 | Is this the fruit of the spirit of Christ? |
A26912 | Is this the way of Love and Unity? |
A26912 | It is contrary to the Scripture which never useth the word[ IDOLATRY] in that sense? |
A26912 | It is publickly known that I did openly and constantly speak the same things all the time of Cromwell''s Usurpation: Why then is it unbecoming now? |
A26912 | Let the Reader observe whether ever Christ, his Apostles, or the Pharisees medled with the Controversie about the lawfulness of forms? |
A26912 | May not two persons or parties be both guilty of Division? |
A26912 | Methinks I hear them hissing on each party, and saying to one side, Lay more upon them, and and abate them nothing? |
A26912 | Might not many of them be men that since conform, and make the same complaint now openly? |
A26912 | Might not some be such as have done the same in print themselves? |
A26912 | Must every one of the Parties renounce Communion with all the rest? |
A26912 | Must we all do over again, all the faults that Religious men have done these 30 years? |
A26912 | Must we deny God and Christ because we live in a land where they are owned? |
A26912 | Must we not pray in the spirit?] |
A26912 | Must we not repent, because they must repent? |
A26912 | Nay, is it not almost the common opinion of all Learned men? |
A26912 | Nay, whether they would not have liked it as my zeal? |
A26912 | Nor of some lawful things feigned to be unlawful? |
A26912 | Nor read of the sins, of the Polygamy, the putting away of wives, and other faults of the better sort, and the generality of the Jews? |
A26912 | Nor that Paul said that the Ministers of Satan transformed themselves into Ministers of Righteousness? |
A26912 | Nor that all forsook him at his appearing before Nero? |
A26912 | Nor that all his Disciples forsook Christ and fled? |
A26912 | Nor yet how the Law was neglected till the book was almost unknown? |
A26912 | Nor yet of his rebuking their common expectation of a temporal Kingdom? |
A26912 | Nor yet of touch not, taste not, handle not? |
A26912 | Nor yet that he said, I have no man like minded,( as Timothy,) for all seek their own things, and not the things that are Iesus Christs? |
A26912 | Nor yet the ejecting of them that refused the engagement? |
A26912 | Nor yet the imprisonment and banishment of the London Ministers, and the death of Mr. Love and Gibbons? |
A26912 | Nor[ Whether a man be a Separatist from another Church, meerly because he is not locally present with it? |
A26912 | Nor[ Whether caeteris paribus local Communion with a purer and better Church, be not ordinarily to be preferred before local Communion with a worse? |
A26912 | Nor[ Whether it be lawful to remove ones dwelling, for Communion with a better Minister and Church, supposing that we are free? |
A26912 | Nor[ Whether we may keep in Communion privately with our lawful Pastors, if they be turned out of the publick Temples?] |
A26912 | Nor[ Whether we may remove both from Church and Countrey, by the occasions of our Callings or Trades, or other outward weighty reasons? |
A26912 | Nor[ Whether you should Communicate with every Parish Church, or any one whose Pastors are through insufficiency, heresie or impiety intolerable? |
A26912 | Not any of the Armies, neither of the Earl of Essex nor of Cromwel himself? |
A26912 | Not any of the chief Speakers there? |
A26912 | Now shall a man aggravate the crime of such things as these, and yet do what you do himself? |
A26912 | O how hard is it to know what spirit we are o ●? |
A26912 | O how hard is it to please all men ▪ What man in Eagland hath been less suspected to be a flatterer of such as he moaneth than my self? |
A26912 | O how unlike is this doctrine to that of the Holy Ghost? |
A26912 | O what will pass for proof with them that will not take such experience for proof? |
A26912 | Of partial tenderness as to Reproof? |
A26912 | Of your own selves shall men arise speaking perverse things to draw away Disciples after them? |
A26912 | Or are you sure that none of them went astray? |
A26912 | Or are you sure that some seduced not the rest? |
A26912 | Or at least, where the people hold it their dutie to separate from their own Church, if any Covetous person or railer be there? |
A26912 | Or be they not commonly multiplied and aggravated? |
A26912 | Or can he prove that I spake it jestingly, when I took it to be the serious prayer of my grieved heart? |
A26912 | Or do you think that I know as much as you? |
A26912 | Or do you think that all were dissolved with them? |
A26912 | Or doth he not make himself an Idolater? |
A26912 | Or else you must say that the Parliament raised War against themselves, to pull down themselves, and set up a Protector? |
A26912 | Or if it must be but with one sort, how shall I know which of them it must be? |
A26912 | Or is Repentance an unbecoming thing? |
A26912 | Or is this kind of writing fit to satisfie sober men? |
A26912 | Or may we use no words( as Lord have mercy on us,& c.) which others use unreverently? |
A26912 | Or of any wiser than the most? |
A26912 | Or set our selves at the greater distance from them? |
A26912 | Or should any Godly Minister rise up against it? |
A26912 | Or that I make prayer it self an easie thing? |
A26912 | Or that I prefer study or reading, or other means before prayer? |
A26912 | Or that I speak lightly of prayer in Comparison of the other? |
A26912 | Or that either hypocrites or sincere are without sin? |
A26912 | Or that none of this was persecution? |
A26912 | Or that there are no Ignorant Christians among them? |
A26912 | Or that we must take no warning by good mens falls? |
A26912 | Or that you would not have them profit by the Word they hear? |
A26912 | Or to tell you how unable I have ● ound back- biters, to prove their accusations in doctrinals to my face? |
A26912 | Or were none of them Ignorant and Injudicious? |
A26912 | Or whether we may sometimes Communicate with a Parish Church or not? |
A26912 | Or whether we shall pray with them that use the Liturgie? |
A26912 | Or will you not prefer that one mans judgement before all the rest? |
A26912 | Osiander, Swenkfieldius,& c.) Is there no Christianity? |
A26912 | Perceive yee not yet, neither understand? |
A26912 | Reader, try if you can find one syllable of what he speaks in all my book? |
A26912 | SHall we not hereby countenance the Prelates in Church- Tyranny and Usurpation? |
A26912 | Separating and narrow principles befriend not Godliness, as they pretend to do, but lamentably undermine it? |
A26912 | Shall such a suffering Preacher as you teach us all, that its unbecoming to Repent? |
A26912 | Should you not have some care to avoid sin your selves, as well as to preserve others from it? |
A26912 | Sure you do; And can you judge them all to be no Christians? |
A26912 | Tell me Reader, whether this be not true? |
A26912 | That I have here one word of Comparing prayer and study? |
A26912 | That a man should go on in such dealing as this? |
A26912 | That he increased in wisdom in his youth? |
A26912 | That he would not enter upon his publick Ministry till he was about 30 years of age? |
A26912 | That it is none of our Question,[ Whether you should Communicate with the Parish Churches alone, and no other? |
A26912 | The case is somewhat hard with abundance of godly faithful Ministers? |
A26912 | The question is, Whether this be the language of no melancholy person? |
A26912 | Therefore it is none of the Question[ Whether you must own our Diocesan Bishops?] |
A26912 | Therefore those that are but meer Independents, refuse not communion with the Parish Churches: And why should you refuse communion with them? |
A26912 | Untruth, composed of many? |
A26912 | WHether the Case be not much altered since the old Non- conformists wrote against separation, then called Brownisme? |
A26912 | WIll it not strengthen and encourage the adversaries of Reformation? |
A26912 | Was all this lawful? |
A26912 | Was it impositions or tyranny that bred sects in the Armies, and in England and Ireland in the daies of liberty? |
A26912 | We are already so far divided in our judgements, as for one to hold it to be lawful, and another to be unlawful: And who can cure this division? |
A26912 | Were all those in the Catalogues of Epiphanius, Augustine, Philastrius,& c. Certainly graceless? |
A26912 | What Repentance, while we justifie our sins? |
A26912 | What a Godliness is that, which abhorreth Repentance? |
A26912 | What a scandal is it to the world, and dishonour to your self, that such Doctrine should be found thus under your hand, deliberately delivered? |
A26912 | What do you think then of such sayings as these following? |
A26912 | What hope, while we are impenitent? |
A26912 | What if I be worse than Iudas? |
A26912 | What if I had done otherwise? |
A26912 | What if there be Prophaneness to be reproved; doth it sollow that we must not be reproved also? |
A26912 | What is imposed on you as a condition to your Communion in the Doctrine and Prayers of the Parish Churches, but your actual Communion it self? |
A26912 | What is this but to have the imposing domineering Spirit, which we speak so much against? |
A26912 | What not the Parliament themselves? |
A26912 | What proof is there here of any one word of all this? |
A26912 | What separation Scripture calleth us to, and what not? |
A26912 | What should one answer to such dealing as this? |
A26912 | What signification have I given of unsetledness? |
A26912 | What then can you think should draw me to be too sharp against them, and too favourable to the other? |
A26912 | What then is here that is a slighting of Christ? |
A26912 | What wonder if you should hate all men perfectly whom you count natural, and so perfectly evil? |
A26912 | What work would this one opinion of yours make in the World? |
A26912 | What''s that to my words which you seem to contradict? |
A26912 | What''s that to our case in hand? |
A26912 | What, not any of the other party neither? |
A26912 | When I disputed daily almost with such in Cromwell''s Army, was that a secret? |
A26912 | When I disputed in the publick Church at Kiderminster with the Quakers, was that a secret? |
A26912 | When I disputed with Mr. Brown( an Army Chaplain) and his adherents for the Godhead of Christ, in a publick Church at Worcester, was that a secret? |
A26912 | When I have openly Catechized men, was that a secret? |
A26912 | When I know this, and can not choose but know it, why should any be angry with me for knowing it? |
A26912 | When did any one of us pray without sin? |
A26912 | When will God give us Repentance unto life? |
A26912 | When you come to your selves you will confess that this was no unreasonable nor unchristian motion? |
A26912 | Where have I said a word to ease them of it? |
A26912 | Where lieth the pride of these expressions? |
A26912 | Whether Christ needed not prayer, but as a pattern to us? |
A26912 | Whether I be a Revealer of mens secrets? |
A26912 | Whether I be strongly inclined to deny Original sin? |
A26912 | Whether I did ill in disswading men from jeering and jesting at other true Christians manner of Worship? |
A26912 | Whether I never mention the prophane, but with honour? |
A26912 | Whether I slight prayer? |
A26912 | Whether I speak slightly of Christ? |
A26912 | Whether I speak slightly of Prayer in comparison of Study? |
A26912 | Whether I understand by the[ flesh] only the sensitive Appetive? |
A26912 | Whether I were as guilty as any in stirring up the War? |
A26912 | Whether Paul commanded the Corinthians to separate from the Church, because such men were in their Communion? |
A26912 | Whether Paul himself in communicating with that Church, did not that which you write against? |
A26912 | Whether a Papist can go beyond a Reprobate? |
A26912 | Whether all History be uncertain? |
A26912 | Whether all that use any thing in Gods worship not commanded( and in particular a form of prayer) be Idolaters? |
A26912 | Whether an Idolater be not an odious person, and unfit for Christian Communion? |
A26912 | Whether any hearers use to be more moved with the affectionate delivery of meaner than with a colder delivery of more excellent things? |
A26912 | Whether by Separatists, I meant the Independents as such? |
A26912 | Whether by this rule, we should not take heed most of scandalizing those Christians that are aptest to sin? |
A26912 | Whether ever Christ condemned them? |
A26912 | Whether he that counts all natural men as bad as he can name, will not hate them, and say bad of them without fear of slander? |
A26912 | Whether here be a syllable of proof, but his angry affirmation? |
A26912 | Whether honest people be not in danger of following others into error and sin? |
A26912 | Whether in points of difficult speculation, one clear judicious well studied Divine be not to be more hearkened to, than the Major Vote? |
A26912 | Whether it be a slighting of Christ, to say that he increased in wisdom? |
A26912 | Whether it be new or intolerable, to advise men not to imitate Religious people in the sins which they are most prone to? |
A26912 | Whether it be unbecoming a Minister to blame the sin which he hath been guilty of? |
A26912 | Whether my prayer was jesting? |
A26912 | Whether my saying, that God hateth neither extemporate prayers nor forms, be as if I could never speak meanly enough of prayer? |
A26912 | Whether no persecution can consist with Love? |
A26912 | Whether no persecution may consist with love? |
A26912 | Whether nothing of the late Military Actions, be to be openly repented of? |
A26912 | Whether our presence at the prayers of every Church, be a professing of consent to all that is faulty in those prayers? |
A26912 | Whether preaching against God and Religion, be not worse than talking against it in an Ale- house, or in prophane discourse? |
A26912 | Whether the Universality of Christians ever took the Pope for their Head? |
A26912 | Whether the case be not much altered since the Old Non- c ● nformists wrote against separation, then called Brownisme? |
A26912 | Whether the perfection and plainness of the Scriptures prove all Christians to be of equal understanding, or to need no others help? |
A26912 | Whether the same Spirit may not now use the ancient Prayers and Responses which first brought them in, or used them? |
A26912 | Whether there be any Article necessary to salvation unknown to the universal Church? |
A26912 | Whether there ● e any weak, ignorant and injudicious Christians; and whether they hereby have been any cause of our divisions? |
A26912 | Whether this earnest prayer be a Curse? |
A26912 | Whether this kind of talk be not sport to the Papists, to hear us call one another Idolaters, as well as them? |
A26912 | Whether this text, which you so abuse, well considered, is not sufficient against all your Cause, and for that which I maintain? |
A26912 | Whether those that are most displeased with us for Communion in the Liturgie, be such as you will say, are most in danger of yielding to sin? |
A26912 | Whether we must avoid that good which is owned by bad men? |
A26912 | Whether you mean such weak ones that you would not have me offend? |
A26912 | Whether you would do as Paul doth, Call those weak brethren, who to that day did eate in Idols temples, and that as a thing offered to idols? |
A26912 | Whether, think you, this brother or I, think meanlier of them? |
A26912 | Which War is it that you mean? |
A26912 | Which of all these Parties is it that you are angry with me for perswading you to Communion with? |
A26912 | Which of all these sects is in the right? |
A26912 | Who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A26912 | Who hath said more against this, than I have done? |
A26912 | Who hath spoken plainlier in this, than I? |
A26912 | Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge among you? |
A26912 | Who is it now that is put to shame? |
A26912 | Why did you not answer the proofs I gave you of the Lutherans, Armenians, Greeks, and other Kingdoms that run together in an error? |
A26912 | Why do the Scotists, so far follow Scotus, and the Nominals, Ockbam, and the Dominicans, Aquinas,& c. if this were a singular opinion? |
A26912 | Why do you find none of my Parliament Sermons in Print? |
A26912 | Why reason yee because yee have no bread? |
A26912 | Why should this, brother, be so extream impatient with me for calling Dividers, weak and pievish, and censorious Christians? |
A26912 | Why then should you not bear with lesser Contradiction, when others must bear with far greater from you? |
A26912 | Why, brother, do not you think as confidently that you are righter than I? |
A26912 | Will any Christian besides you, that is sober, deny that we should study to escape them? |
A26912 | Will any man but you, that is sober, and awake, deny the antecedent, that seeth our several parties, and knoweth what we have done? |
A26912 | Will it not divide us among our selves, while one goeth to the Parish Churches, and another doth not? |
A26912 | Will it not strengthen and encourage the adversaries of Reformation? |
A26912 | Will you proclaim your selves to be the more impatient? |
A26912 | Would you not have hindered the Printing of this Book of mine, if you could have done it? |
A26912 | Would you not only reproach the non- Conformists, but all Protestants, and all Christians? |
A26912 | Would you teach your hearers to put their doctrines or practices to a Major Vote of Professors? |
A26912 | Y ● ● say[ May we not justly suspect that to be bad in the worship of God, which the wicked sort do love?] |
A26912 | Yea the crying sin; 〈 ◊ 〉 well as the uncharitableness and hurtfulness of others? |
A26912 | Yea, how hard it is to meet with better? |
A26912 | Yea, or all they that did and said those contrary and confounding things in our late troubles, which must not to you be mentioned? |
A26912 | Yea, was Christ a professed Consenter to all that he was present at? |
A26912 | Yes, I could name you more than one such? |
A26912 | You adde,[ And had not Mr. Baxter told us before, that he understood by Flesh, only the sensitive Appetite?] |
A26912 | You say[ Persecution in no case can consist with love?] |
A26912 | You see by this manner of teaching what you have brought your selves and your Teachers to? |
A26912 | Your words[ Doth not God regard the manner of our addressing our selves to him? |
A26912 | [ How imperfect and lame is the work of grace in that person who wants Charity to cover a multitude of offences? |
A26912 | [ How long Lord must thy Church and Cause be in the hands of unexperienced furious fools ▪& c.] Do I honour them when I so much display their sin? |
A26912 | [ What if it be only proved unlawful for you to impose it, though not for others to joyn with you when you do impose it? |
A26912 | and I foresaw how the people under such Ministers would be affected to Religion, and to the Bishops, and Ministry? |
A26912 | and a pulling down what we have been building? |
A26912 | and do you not as Confidently utter it? |
A26912 | and invite them to go further, and to make more burdens of Forms and Ceremonies to lay upon the Churches? |
A26912 | and make his own fictions the ground of such tragical exclamations when he hath done? |
A26912 | and name of it at all to be openly repented of? |
A26912 | and need him not? |
A26912 | and revile against it when they confess that they never read it? |
A26912 | and that as holy? |
A26912 | and to the other, stand it out and yield to nothing? |
A26912 | as the earth, the air meat and drink, and sleep and rest? |
A26912 | or more accused of the contrary that hath any reputation of ministerial sobriety? |
A26912 | or no ignorance and injudiciousness apparent in them? |
A26912 | or of none but holy men? |
A26912 | or should deny this? |
A26912 | or to blame the Effects, if he encouraged the Cause? |
A26912 | or which of them do you mean? |
A26912 | or yet have need to be instructed against it? |
A26912 | should you be so impatient as not to bear with one that in such an opinion differeth from you? |
A26912 | was I ever thought to be kinder to them than to you? |
A26912 | when as our writings upon the same subjects shew that we are far in that below them? |
A26912 | which of them can say that, about Episcopacy, as Gersom, Bucer, Didoclaue, Blondell, Salmasius have done? |
A26912 | who dare say so? |
A26912 | yea, and all the non- Conformists that used and joyned in the Liturgie? |
A26865 | ( And is it a sign of covetousness, to dye for what they hold?) |
A26865 | 20. even when Rulers were against it? |
A26865 | 3. Who knoweth not that such accusing inferences are usually brought by all factious, quarrel some Divines against their adversaries? |
A26865 | 3. where mutual forbearances, and Receiving dissenters is commanded, against both Censurers and Despisers? |
A26865 | 4. Who are those dozen men? |
A26865 | A rare example; that a man should be known standing at a bar, shackled in bolts( but quaere quo jure?) |
A26865 | Again I ask, Is there any Oath that you dare not take? |
A26865 | And Conscience discerning duty to God, is it that is here to be orderly distinguished from Conscience discerning duty to man? |
A26865 | And are all these Writings no evidence of their judgments? |
A26865 | And are we like to win Souls on such terms as these? |
A26865 | And are you sure you can go along with them in all as far as they will go? |
A26865 | And being asked what God the Son was? |
A26865 | And being asked what the Holy Ghost was? |
A26865 | And can we speak louder than by the Press? |
A26865 | And did not almost all the people of the Land Conform before the Wars? |
A26865 | And did not the Papists so by the Reformers? |
A26865 | And did we ever dream that no Sectary is moved by Pride to Nonconformity? |
A26865 | And did you ever consider what a work it is to bring many thousands or hundreds of those in a Parish, unto solid understanding? |
A26865 | And do you never give God thanks for his grace of Sanctification your selves? |
A26865 | And do you not know what they will say and think of you upon such observations? |
A26865 | And do you think it desirable to comply and embody with them in such a schism and factious combination against all the rest of the Churches of God? |
A26865 | And doth he think that we get more now than a Bishoprick or Deanery would have amounted to? |
A26865 | And doth not the prosecution of the Nonconformists tell it us? |
A26865 | And doubtless some one must first Elect him to be a Bishop indeterminately? |
A26865 | And either the unjust silencing of Ministers by the Usurpers, was well done, or ill done? |
A26865 | And even in Doctrinals( which are more than Ceremonies) you know what a notorious difference there is among your selves? |
A26865 | And from whom else would you save the people? |
A26865 | And had it been otherwise, what were our thoughts to 2000 men that were absent? |
A26865 | And have the people no sense, nor acquaintance with the persons? |
A26865 | And here also I ask, Would you do so your selves? |
A26865 | And how do these charges of a loose doctrine and great seeming sanctity, well agree? |
A26865 | And how do your scruples engage you thus to break the Laws? |
A26865 | And how have you cured all that ignorance of the people which you lament? |
A26865 | And how knoweth he that it is but a shew? |
A26865 | And how knoweth he that knoweth not hearts, that this is but seeming? |
A26865 | And how shall we hear without a Preacher? |
A26865 | And how shew we that we are Wolves? |
A26865 | And how will these things appear in the review, when you shall stand in that more clear convincing light? |
A26865 | And if all this be so, what is here left for Pride to work upon? |
A26865 | And if deliberately you will venture on such a cause your selves, what would you wish the silenced Ministers to do? |
A26865 | And if he may judg that there shall be no preaching, then why not that there shall be no praying and worshipping God? |
A26865 | And if so in London, why not in other places? |
A26865 | And in good sadness, doth not England know that( call them what you will) the Divines commissioned by the King did give their reasons against more? |
A26865 | And indeed is not your Religion the same with ours? |
A26865 | And indeed, is it because the Articles are not intelligible? |
A26865 | And is it indeed to preserve your honour, that we must undergo all these convulsions? |
A26865 | And is it not fine reasoning to say, If a man must be the discerner of his duty to God and the King, he can be no good subject? |
A26865 | And is it not smattering ignorant half- wited Christians which your selves much complain of, and which make most of the trouble in the world? |
A26865 | And is not all this yet enough? |
A26865 | And is not both better than one? |
A26865 | And is this casting them out of the Church? |
A26865 | And is this kind of scandal, think you, which consisteth in tempting, ensnaring and damning men, regardable or not? |
A26865 | And is this the happiest Unity that you might attain? |
A26865 | And is this true? |
A26865 | And it being no part of the old Conformity, how could this be put into their heads by me? |
A26865 | And it is meet that the Colledg that can best judg, be the discerners who shall be a Licensed Physician? |
A26865 | And might not you be as largely characterized as a stubborn unquiet people, as we are by you now? |
A26865 | And must not our light so shine before men( though not for their applause), that they may see our good works, and glorifie God? |
A26865 | And must such abundance be silenced for the opinions of a few, whom they never signified any consent to? |
A26865 | And now, Reader, what a shake doth this instance give to the credit of History, at least such as is written by interessed factious men? |
A26865 | And seeing we are accounted the Pharisees, Come on, and let us recite the Pharisees Character, and see who is likest him? |
A26865 | And shall we incur all this guilt by ceasing for nothing, yea even now while we are licensed by the King? |
A26865 | And shall we then be guilty of suppressing it at home? |
A26865 | And then what Councellors, Judges and Justices shall he have? |
A26865 | And then, what if three Bishops Consecrate one, and three another, and three another, over one Diocess? |
A26865 | And we will not desire you to execute the Laws as seldom on us, as they are executed on them; which is not, I think, for one Oath of Twenty thousand? |
A26865 | And were it not as easie then to declaim against your Disobedience and Nonconformity, as it is now for you to do it against ours? |
A26865 | And what doeth renouncing the Covenant concern the people,& c? |
A26865 | And what get we by so doing? |
A26865 | And what if a child be uncrossed, when the Parents so desire it, or done by another when they desire it? |
A26865 | And what if such principles and practices would make us guilty of the Perjury and impenitence of many hundred thousand persons? |
A26865 | And what is it that those do who subscribe the same doctrine with you, to make other men heterodox? |
A26865 | And what is one Minister in a Parish for the doing of all this work? |
A26865 | And what is the credit for which their pride doth seduce them? |
A26865 | And what is the matter of the Debaters Dialogues to any of this? |
A26865 | And what is this to the case of the many hundred Nonconformable Ministers in England? |
A26865 | And what now is the hurt that these Scripture primitive terms would bring? |
A26865 | And what reason have we to maintain and breed up men to use us as he hath done in his late Treatise? |
A26865 | And what stricter Laws would you have both for banishment and death, than is made here against the Romish Priests? |
A26865 | And what will this come to at last? |
A26865 | And what worse do the Separatists do by you, as to communion? |
A26865 | And when he was asked what he thought would become of his soul? |
A26865 | And which side hath the most serious, religious sort of persons? |
A26865 | And who shall compensate the Kings damage? |
A26865 | And why doth he now suffer so much obloquy and displeasure from the separating part of the Nonconformists, if it be reputation that he stuck upon? |
A26865 | And why doth not a far stronger worldly interest more prevail with us? |
A26865 | And why might not Crossing be under the like liberty? |
A26865 | And why might they not now have more if they could conform? |
A26865 | And why should any men use a means that will subvert, and will never attain his ends? |
A26865 | And why then should not their Assemblies take the fittest time of the day as well as yours? |
A26865 | And why? |
A26865 | And will not the long experience of so great a Church, do something to convince you of your mistake? |
A26865 | And will you prove wiser and better than the Apostles at the last? |
A26865 | Are 1800 or 2000 men accusable upon the account of four mens secret thoughts? |
A26865 | Are Presbyterians so intollerable a sort of people? |
A26865 | Are all men so proud and void of humanity and love, that they must needs be factious if they do but differ in an opinion or ceremony from others? |
A26865 | Are not the Laws in Power, and Judges to execute them against any that shall speak or do disloyally? |
A26865 | Are not you and we agreed that God is the chief Ruler, and to be first obeyed, and no man against him, but only under him? |
A26865 | Are such mouths fit to call others Fire- brands? |
A26865 | Are the Conformists more Godly or Holy, than all the ignorant, drunken, unchast, voluptuous, carnal rabble, or are they not? |
A26865 | Are the bishops absolute Judges, or not? |
A26865 | Are the two or three that you named, the major part of Eighteen hundred? |
A26865 | Are they all the Bishops of that Diocess? |
A26865 | Are they any Bishops whatever, or some in special above the rest? |
A26865 | Are they hot to one, and cold to another? |
A26865 | Are they like to be better that shew no zeal? |
A26865 | Are they not men of strange facinating power, that could make 1800 such Ministers( distant in all Counties) to deny Conformity? |
A26865 | Are they therefore wholly disobliged as to each other? |
A26865 | Are those that suffer, and do so much for that which they think to be the truth of Christ, well charged with hating Christ? |
A26865 | Are we grown better and wiser now than the Churches all were for 600 years? |
A26865 | Are we worse than petty thieves? |
A26865 | Are you humble men, and teachers of humility? |
A26865 | Are you penitent men, and Preachers of Repentance? |
A26865 | Are you willing to run all that danger for us? |
A26865 | Articles and the Book of Homilies? |
A26865 | As I said already, who would have thought that enow should have escaped Queen Maries Bonefires to have planted a Protestant Church so soon? |
A26865 | Ay, but what then must we hear and bear from such as you, when we wonder that any of you can doubt of the unlawfulness of what we refuse? |
A26865 | B. Lauds life, and you would make it impossible? |
A26865 | But 1. did he not know our advantage in Learning then was a great cause of the success of the Reformation in Luthers days? |
A26865 | But I pray you forget not( for here it concerneth you esse memores) what a few contemptible people you think it is whose applause doth byas us? |
A26865 | But are you sure that you mistake not, to the injury of the sufferers? |
A26865 | But by what Act is this application? |
A26865 | But how notoriously do bad means overthrow the ends of them that use them? |
A26865 | But if you do, then there remaineth no more controversie, whether our Ministerial helps be needful? |
A26865 | But if you do, why is there not need of the help of such as have more skill for such a work? |
A26865 | But is it so in London now? |
A26865 | But is this also the case of those that succeeded them? |
A26865 | But it may be you will say, that the Nonconformists must be judged of, not by an odd person as your self is, but by the major part? |
A26865 | But many of the Parish- churches are half empty? |
A26865 | But must I forgive enemies, and not friends? |
A26865 | But were no worse men suffered? |
A26865 | But what divisions and heresies shall we have if all the people shall chuse their Pastors? |
A26865 | But what escape is possible from such Accusers? |
A26865 | But what excellent Preaching or Labours have you to boast of more than others, that your Preaching must be thought so necessary? |
A26865 | But what if Perjury prove a greater sin, than not conforming to it? |
A26865 | But what if it prove otherwise, and that we must be judged as sacrilegious for alienating consecrated persons from Gods work? |
A26865 | But what if the Rulers be against it? |
A26865 | But what is the dependance of our calling on the Bishops( supposing them of Gods appointment)? |
A26865 | But what wonder if Conformity by Oaths, Subscriptions, Declarations and Covenants seem lawful to Doctors of such principles as these? |
A26865 | But when all''s done, it is not meet that any one be forced on the sick without their own consent? |
A26865 | But who are the second determing Electors? |
A26865 | But who be these Consecrators? |
A26865 | But who can you name that came out convinced that his way was wrong? |
A26865 | But why do I ask you such a question, when your undertaking would but shew your greater obdurateness, and neither save us nor your selves? |
A26865 | But why do you not go preach among the Indians, or in other lands where there is more need, if liberty of Preaching be all that you desire? |
A26865 | But why is it not as much long of your selves as of us? |
A26865 | But why must all others needs be of your judgment? |
A26865 | But why will you not then subscribe and swear in the words of the Law, but in your own? |
A26865 | But with what conscience do you come into Cities, Corporations, or within five miles of them, or of your former Preachingplaces? |
A26865 | But you chide us because we perswade them not to conformity? |
A26865 | But you''l ask, How came those Lay- men to scruples, whom I before mentioned, if not from Ministers? |
A26865 | But, 1. can you not distinguish, and yet be just? |
A26865 | But, 2. as long as we let others alone with their additions, why may they not live in peace with us, and let us alone without them? |
A26865 | Can a man believe the great things of Heaven and Hell, and preach them without great seriousness and zeal, and not play the hypocrite? |
A26865 | Can you endure these words of Hooker? |
A26865 | Can you perswade all Popish Priests in England, that they depose the King? |
A26865 | Can you think of two such instance; as Dioclesian and Charles the fifth, without admiration? |
A26865 | Cry aloud, lift up thy voice like a trumpet? |
A26865 | Did Grotius, did your Bishop Forbes, doth your Mr. Herbert Thorndike go upon such terms with them, or not? |
A26865 | Did Peter Heylin, or Archbishop Laud and his adherents, if Heylin belie him not, deal with the Papists on such terms as these? |
A26865 | Did he not preach against the Rulers will? |
A26865 | Did it not shew that you had a mind of them? |
A26865 | Did not the Heathens do thus also by the ancient Christians, when Sects swarmed among them, and deride and accuse them for their divisions? |
A26865 | Did the difference mentioned by Heylin between Bishop Mountague and Wren, about coming up to the Altar to communicate, make any factions? |
A26865 | Did they not baptize decently without the Cross? |
A26865 | Did they not pray decently without a Surplice? |
A26865 | Did they then want any needful uniformity? |
A26865 | Did we make those Laws against our selves? |
A26865 | Do not his subjects bodies and lives belong to his care? |
A26865 | Do not the Parliament and Laws tell us how they are affected? |
A26865 | Do not the people know that we differ from you in these things, as much when we are silenced, as when we preach? |
A26865 | Do not we teach them the saving truth? |
A26865 | Do the Pastors themselves no better know the Parish bounds, and the peoples wants, or the worth of souls? |
A26865 | Do they not toto& nudato pectore taelum recipire& tantum non, with great Cameron unbutton them, and cry Feri miser? |
A26865 | Do they print and publish their professed Religion to the World? |
A26865 | Do we contend for our selves, or for Truth, and love, and unity, and peace? |
A26865 | Do we justifie the secret thoughts of all Nonconformists, whom we know not? |
A26865 | Do we persecute our selves? |
A26865 | Do you help us by drawing the people from us to your selves? |
A26865 | Do you judg of others by your selves? |
A26865 | Do you know that there are any, or many among us, that live after the flesh, an ungodly, sensual, worldly life? |
A26865 | Do you know your selves, and teach the people to know themselves? |
A26865 | Do you not tell them that their arguments and exceptions are but the same that have been answered to their predecessors long ago? |
A26865 | Do you not think that they are more, and more honourable persons, whom our conformity would have pleased? |
A26865 | Do you think all these are in a good and safe condition? |
A26865 | Do you think that men can not differ from your opinions, unless we put it into their heads? |
A26865 | Do you think the bare name of a Christian and his Baptism, will save those thousands that know not what Christianity is? |
A26865 | Do you think verily that all these were mistaken? |
A26865 | Doth God bid you preach just here? |
A26865 | Doth he not here much commend the charity of those that are for the Nonconformists, before he is aware, in comparison of others? |
A26865 | Doth the difference now between your Arminians and Calvinists, which we ordinarily hear in your own Pulpits, make such Factions? |
A26865 | Doth the different modes of Cathedral and Parish- worship, make such Factions? |
A26865 | Else he might judg that men shall not be saved? |
A26865 | Et quis illos in nomine Christi dixerit Congregatos, qui hac mente unitatem quaerunt Ecclesiae? |
A26865 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of a man which is in him? |
A26865 | For whatever you say of your self, you can not but know that it is so in London, and in many other places? |
A26865 | For you to determine that they shall be damned if the Bishop will, and then come in with a second question, Who shall answer for it? |
A26865 | Forgive me if I ask you, whether you dare appear before God with no better a Repentance? |
A26865 | Had Paul a soft head, in having so soft a conscience in this point? |
A26865 | Hath he talkt with the most of us? |
A26865 | Hath not God forbidden Kings Idolatry, Perjury, Blasphemy, Murder, Tyranny, Oppression, Adultery,& c? |
A26865 | Hath not a Nonconformists Conscience something of the command of Christ to countenance his practice? |
A26865 | Hath your Ministry done that which maketh the help of others needless, yea or no? |
A26865 | Have all other faults more suitable punishments, save only those of the Ministers of Christ? |
A26865 | Have not the Friendly Debate, and the Politician fully and unanswerably opened the folly and villany of your Religion? |
A26865 | Have the Nonconformists so often changed their cause, that you should be put to talk of so frequent change of Laws? |
A26865 | Have these mens souls any need of teaching? |
A26865 | Have you ever considered and regarded, whether the Apostles ever took your course? |
A26865 | He may judg if it become a publick Controversie, whether God shall be worshipped? |
A26865 | Herring, Mr. Barlow, and abundance more of the old Nonconformists? |
A26865 | How came it into their heads to think ill of Bishops, and to scruple Ceremonies, and Corporation- Oaths, but by you? |
A26865 | How common are the sins of Sodom throughout all the Land? |
A26865 | How contemptible doth the Novel Ecclesiastical Politician, and the Debate- maker, among many others render us? |
A26865 | How different are mens judgments of vice and virtue? |
A26865 | How easily then may a Papist, or an Atheist shake off all Oaths of Allegiance or Supremacy, by adding one unlawful Particle? |
A26865 | How else could this be noted as a difference? |
A26865 | How knoweth this man what Mr. Calamy received? |
A26865 | How long have they suffered, not only poverty and reproach, but that silencing which they account a greater evil? |
A26865 | How many of the Ministers were ever cast out for drunkenness, fornication, deceit, swearing, perjury, or any loose living or immorality? |
A26865 | How small a matter is that in comparison of the want of knowledg and faith, of grace and salvation? |
A26865 | I answer, We shall be so far united, as that they will approve of all our Religion, though we approve not of all theirs? |
A26865 | I crave your answer containg the proof of this? |
A26865 | I know the common answer is,[ Who is that long of, but of themselves and you?] |
A26865 | I was hungry, and ye fed me — I was in prison, and ye visited me? |
A26865 | If all are none of Christs, that have not his spirit, may not they give God thanks for it that have received it? |
A26865 | If all the Decrees of General Councils were imposed on all men to be subscribed, would not thousands be Nonconformists that are now conformable? |
A26865 | If any one thing or word which you judge unlawful to be done or subscribed, were put on you by a Law, would not you then be the Nonconformists? |
A26865 | If any, then any wicked Bishops may make more, and undo the Church? |
A26865 | If but few, is not Preferment rather to be got from many than from few? |
A26865 | If it be cured, that argument for the necessity of your Preaching is gone? |
A26865 | If it be in the Bishops power to judg that nine parts of London shall have no preaching, why may he not so judg of the other tenth part? |
A26865 | If it have not, why should you hate assistance, or think that help will do no good? |
A26865 | If not, let us be put in the stocks and whipt, as Paul and Silas were ▪ so we may but preach Christs Gospel? |
A26865 | If not, punish us no worse than they are punished? |
A26865 | If not, what Preachers, what Christians, what Men are these? |
A26865 | If not, what are the limits of their power? |
A26865 | If not, why do they take it for a wrong to hear of much less? |
A26865 | If not, why should it make a Faction for one man to cross a child in Baptism, and another not? |
A26865 | If not, why should they be angry with others for thinking of them, as they think of themselves? |
A26865 | If not, you are strangers to the Land which you inhabit? |
A26865 | If the bare different opinion and practice make them undervalue you, will not they think worse of you when they think you do worse? |
A26865 | If the publick Ministers Preaching will not do it, why should yours? |
A26865 | If the question was, Whether the owner or the Bees must be accused of the crime? |
A26865 | If they are not cured, how can you yet think to cure them? |
A26865 | If they are( as I doubt not but very many are), do they so esteem themselves, or not? |
A26865 | If they do, what matter of fact can ever be so notorious, as that we can hope that such men can know it? |
A26865 | If they have eaten sowr grapes, why must our teeth be set on edge? |
A26865 | If yea, give over Preaching against them: If not, do not better men differ from them? |
A26865 | If yea, you tell the world what your Religion is? |
A26865 | If you be tollerated, why not all others as well as you? |
A26865 | If you do, how shall a man know that you are not as very Hypocrites in so doing, as the Nonconformists? |
A26865 | If you say, What be those means? |
A26865 | If you should turn your charge upon the Sectaries, who hath written more against the Antinomian loose opinions, than the Nonconformists have done? |
A26865 | If you think otherwise, why distinguish you the Sons of the Church from others? |
A26865 | If you thought it were Lying, Perjury and false Worship which was imposed on you, would you change your judgment, by threatnings or by punishments? |
A26865 | In good sadness would you have men have a judgment of private discerning, or not? |
A26865 | Is Christianity so vile a thing? |
A26865 | Is he saulty that robs your child of his hat, or book, or victuals? |
A26865 | Is it a crime to rent your clothes, and is it none to rend your flesh? |
A26865 | Is it a crime to steal the feathers, and none to steal the goose? |
A26865 | Is it by Election? |
A26865 | Is it justice to charge men with seditious Preaching that never were accused or convict of any such Doctrine before any competent Judg? |
A26865 | Is it likely that he knoweth what he saith to be true? |
A26865 | Is it not Words that you require as satisfactions in your Subscriptions and Oaths? |
A26865 | Is it only Nonconformists? |
A26865 | Is not every man as much concerned for his own soul, more than the King is, or any other, as he is for his health or life? |
A26865 | Is not every mans free ▪ will as much and more to be exercised for his salvation as for his health? |
A26865 | Is that foolish and seditious? |
A26865 | Is their fearing an Oath a greater sin than prophane swearing? |
A26865 | Is there a necessity laid on ordinary Pastors also, or not? |
A26865 | Is there any sin much greater than that which he listeth himself a defender and practiser of? |
A26865 | Is there any thing in the world, that you think unlawful? |
A26865 | Is this flaming- hot Disputer so much better acquainted with us, than we are with our selves and one another? |
A26865 | Is this long of us too? |
A26865 | Is this the Justice of Sacred Clergy- men? |
A26865 | It is a fine world when it is become a controversie, Whether that which so many thousands in three Kingdoms hear and see be true? |
A26865 | It is obedience that beseemeth tender consciences: Disobedience is as the sin of witchcraft; And would you have any countenance you in so great a sin? |
A26865 | It''s true( except Mr. Fisher and some few) they were not ejected, but enjoyed their places; And did not you as well as they? |
A26865 | Judg but by your own experience: Do you not see that the people are yet ignorant and uncured? |
A26865 | Let the world judge whether his testimony then of that party be not more credible than his that so little knoweth them? |
A26865 | May they not take it for a greater mercy than all the riches of the World? |
A26865 | Mr. Durel did you ever know either me or the man you speak of that was cast out, or ever hear or see the articles against him? |
A26865 | Must all that differ in a ceremony from you, be silenced and hunted about the world, lest the people should think worse of you than of them? |
A26865 | Must the Laws be changed as oft as tender heads will scruple? |
A26865 | Nor whether to be drunk or sober? |
A26865 | Nor whether we shall give food to him that is dying through famine? |
A26865 | Nor whether we shall seek to save mens lives from fire or water, or other dangers? |
A26865 | Nullane perjuri capitis, fraudisque nefandae Poena erit? |
A26865 | O hear these expostulations of miserable Souls, before you are speechless under the Expostulations of the tender Saviour of Souls? |
A26865 | O that he would name those many, and let us try the case? |
A26865 | O the candor and impartiality of this age? |
A26865 | O who should not fear what his soul may be seduced to think and say? |
A26865 | Of all the silenced Ministers, or some? |
A26865 | On the Bishops first Ordination? |
A26865 | Or are we worse than drunkards, or fornicators? |
A26865 | Or can any be ignorant that it is not so? |
A26865 | Or can we believe that he believeth himself? |
A26865 | Or doth it follow that Christian Rulers may not silence Ministers, because they might not? |
A26865 | Or for the Order and Circumstances of operation? |
A26865 | Or is it because we perswade the people to hear them( if they are but tollerable men?) |
A26865 | Or is it because we rebuke those that vilifie them? |
A26865 | Or on his continued Will? |
A26865 | Or put us in the House of Correction, and use us as the Israelites were used in Egypt, rather than forbid us to labour to save the peoples Souls? |
A26865 | Or that the Diocesan- Ministers, supprest by Cromwell, should revive to the strength that they were in, within three years after his death? |
A26865 | Or that the desolations, which for the Interim were made among the German Ministers, should so soon be repaired? |
A26865 | Or to steal a tile, or pick a lock, and not to burn the house? |
A26865 | Or when a man is conscious what God forbiddeth, he may do it if man command it? |
A26865 | Or will they forget all the difference, think you, when we are out of sight? |
A26865 | Paul spake this of himself; but was it of himself only as extraordinarily called? |
A26865 | Pierce but retort it on him unthankfully to his reproach, as holding too loose a doctrine? |
A26865 | Query, Whether they were a Liturgy or not? |
A26865 | Quid loquar de exercitio suae jurisdictionis? |
A26865 | Quis dabit mihi homines literatos& sanctos in ecclesiis Dei praeesse Pastores, sin non in omnibus, certe in pluribus, certe in aliquibus saltem? |
A26865 | Quisnam hominum est quem contentum videris uno Flagitio? |
A26865 | Reader, is this the Religion taught by St. Paul? |
A26865 | Shall Clergy- men provoke Magistrates to make such Laws as he calleth smart, and then make our sufferings to be one of our methods? |
A26865 | Shall not the soul that sinneth dye? |
A26865 | Shall the Physician deny his Patient that Physick which his stomack can take, because it was long of himself that he can take no other? |
A26865 | Shall we believe his Sermons, or his profession and practice? |
A26865 | Speak out, Do you think us or the Papists nearer to you? |
A26865 | Suppose it be long of themselves, must their souls be therefore cruelly forsaken? |
A26865 | Suppose that one thing were by a Law imposed on you: would you think that a change of that Law would be a dangerous thing? |
A26865 | Suppose that one thing were imposed on you? |
A26865 | Sure the Spirit of God foresaw what would be said against Preaching in our times; was not Timothy ordained by man? |
A26865 | Tam ferreus ut teneat se? |
A26865 | That it is the Bishops will that they shall rather be all damned in their ignorance and sin, than taught, converted, and saved by Nonconformists? |
A26865 | The Churches will not hold the tenth person in the Parish; and how few Churches near* are standing? |
A26865 | The Explication of the Nonconformists sense of it, you have much in the Assemblies Catechisms and Confession? |
A26865 | The great question therefore, Whether none are converted but by special effectual grace? |
A26865 | The next question then is, Whether it will make them hypocrites, and force them to go against their judgments? |
A26865 | The question therefore is, Whose lives do most contradict their profession? |
A26865 | The same I say of Covenants of Peace between several Princes? |
A26865 | There is no hindering it; God will have it so, and who can gainsay him? |
A26865 | These that you talk of were Infidel or Heathen Rulers; and will you compare our with them? |
A26865 | This is my disease, or else what need I come to Church for cure? |
A26865 | This may be something for your conference with them family by family; but what is it for your preaching unto Congregations? |
A26865 | To speak to many when they can have time to hear, and to speak also to single persons when we can? |
A26865 | To think and speak well or ill? |
A26865 | We grant that all have need enough of Teaching: But what can your teaching do more than other mens? |
A26865 | We were just now accused by him and another, about our deliberate refusing of Church Dignities? |
A26865 | Were he innocent that would scourge men, women and children till they bleed, and then call out for Justice against the felons that cryed? |
A26865 | Were not almost all the Westminster- Assembly Espiscopal conformable men, when they came thither? |
A26865 | Were not those few sons liker to get Livings, if their fathers got favour by conforming? |
A26865 | What History of such Writers can deserve any credit? |
A26865 | What Nonconformist hath not groaned for our divisions, and been indeed aweary of them from the first day, and longed for our common Concord? |
A26865 | What a case are we in with such men as these, when we must needs be proud whether we accept or refufe? |
A26865 | What a stink hath the name of David Seton in Scotland, of Bonner of London, and Gardiner Bishop of Winchester, left behind? |
A26865 | What are the Cups, and Fonts, and Tables for,( do they praise the glorious mystery of Redemption?) |
A26865 | What are the Houses for, but for the convenient habitation of the Pastors? |
A26865 | What are the Lands and Tythes for, but for their maintenance while they do the work of God? |
A26865 | What are the Temples for, but to be the convenient places of their and the peoples worshipping of God? |
A26865 | What are they to them? |
A26865 | What are you then, that with your tribunals and jurisdictions would be Lords and Rulers over Christs inheritance? |
A26865 | What changes doth Thorndike plead for? |
A26865 | What confusion is this? |
A26865 | What could a Separatist have said more of you? |
A26865 | What doth he mean by talking against sin? |
A26865 | What enemy have you so much need your selves to resist, and to be saved from, as from your selves? |
A26865 | What false Religion do they contain? |
A26865 | What good doth subscribing a sentence which he believeth not, do either to the soul of the lyar himself, or to the Church? |
A26865 | What if a Popish Prince or People, put an unlawful clause into their Covenants? |
A26865 | What if the Law imposed one word on you which you could not conform to, and you differed from the Church in nothing else? |
A26865 | What if you kept all that Wisdom to your selves, in which you excel the Apostles, and put no more upon the Churches than they did? |
A26865 | What if you required no Subscription to any thing as certain truth, but only to the infallible Oracles of the Spirit? |
A26865 | What if you required no more Oaths of obedience to the Bishops, than the Apostles required to themselves, or to any Pastors of the Church? |
A26865 | What if you would learn of the Holy Ghost to impose no other than Necessary things? |
A26865 | What is this to all the rest? |
A26865 | What more common with them, than to say, All these Sects swarm out from you? |
A26865 | What more than Words is it that you would have? |
A26865 | What of all this have you to charge on those forenamed? |
A26865 | What say you? |
A26865 | What scorn or derision does Bishop Reignolds now undergo, or many of your Doctors, who some were, and some reputed formerly of our mind? |
A26865 | What then can we expect from others? |
A26865 | What would follow on the other side, if all men must have Physicians forced on them? |
A26865 | What would you have more than Words, and that mens Estates and Lives be answerable for their offences? |
A26865 | When they and you thank God for the same mercy, how shall we know but by the fruits, which of you is sincere? |
A26865 | When was it then that we were in Power? |
A26865 | Where find they in Scripture a Bishop made, that was not made the Bishop of a particular Church? |
A26865 | Where have I lived? |
A26865 | Whether Princes may silence us? |
A26865 | Whether he do well to mention our refusing of Bishopricks at all, which we our selves so studiously silence? |
A26865 | Whether the King is not as truly the Governour of his subjects as to their lives, as he is as to their Salvation? |
A26865 | Whether this be a good proof that it was not Conscience, but Interest that these men stuck upon? |
A26865 | Which doth the world among us take for the plainer dealers? |
A26865 | Which side are the generality of the Blasphemers, Whoremongers, Drunkards, and Debauched persons on? |
A26865 | Which side hath( generally) the strictest followers? |
A26865 | Who can repent of hating and destroying so odious a sort of hypocrites as he describeth? |
A26865 | Who cry out against Sects so much as the Papists? |
A26865 | Who hath hardened himself against him, and hath prospered? |
A26865 | Who that is able would not rather with Paul get their bread by some labour, than fordidly live on a barren and backward sort of charity? |
A26865 | Who will defend such a monster in War against his enemies, when no enemy can bring them into greater slavery? |
A26865 | Who will set the bryars and thorns against him in battel? |
A26865 | Whom do you speak this of? |
A26865 | Whom is it that we cry up for Saints? |
A26865 | Why are we censured for preaching against mens sins, if we are flatterers? |
A26865 | Why are you not more tender of offending and disobeying your Governours? |
A26865 | Why did you demur so long before you refused Preferments? |
A26865 | Why did you never charge us with errors in Doctrine? |
A26865 | Why do the people make such a difference between conformable Preachers as they do? |
A26865 | Why do they honour and crowd after one, and slight another? |
A26865 | Why do they not do the rest? |
A26865 | Why do you not go preach among the Indians? |
A26865 | Why do your party tell him that he is more calumniated by the Nonconformists, than by any others? |
A26865 | Why must our Souls be left to damnation, because our Teachers think that a sin, which you think you your selves have made a duty? |
A26865 | Why not all tolerated as well as you, and so let in Popery? |
A26865 | Why then do we so much desire to be out of this state, and to take up with reformed Parish- interest? |
A26865 | Why wrote you not to prove them to be another Religion? |
A26865 | Will ever Church on Earth have Concord on these terms? |
A26865 | Will he not go through them, and burn them up together? |
A26865 | Will imprisonment or banishment make us agreed, or make the people think we are agreed? |
A26865 | Will no experience teach you such easie and obvious things? |
A26865 | Will not all sober by- standers think that we have very hard measure, and have to do with a strange generation? |
A26865 | Will not even strangers from such words suspect that our adversaries own not, or have not at least so much as such a seeming sanctity of carriage? |
A26865 | Will not the Salvation or damnation be his own? |
A26865 | Will they not distast a Conformable man, whom they judg an envious persecutor, more than a Conformable man whom they judg a meek and loving man? |
A26865 | Will you do nothing to help the people to Heaven, but that which is lyable to no abuse, or inconvenience? |
A26865 | Will you give us leave openly to tell the people where our controversie lyeth? |
A26865 | Will you say, Eat this or famish, it is long of your selves? |
A26865 | Will you therefore think you are discharged from Preaching? |
A26865 | Would he have us not so much as seem holy( and so not seem Christians) that we may escape such censures? |
A26865 | Would it not be a greater prey for covetousness for both Father and Son by conforming to have Livings, than for the Son alone? |
A26865 | Would the inconveniences of this weigh down the mischiefs which are now upon the Churches throughout the world by the contrary course? |
A26865 | Would you do that which you think to be Lying, Perjury, renouncing Reformation,& c. against your consciences, rather than suffer? |
A26865 | Would you have taken the rescinding of all these Laws for a dangerous change? |
A26865 | Would you not say that a difference should be made? |
A26865 | Yea, for 1800 Ministers to have Livings, than 40 or 50 of their sons alone? |
A26865 | Yea, how many new Doctrines hath Mr. Thorndike published, and yet his Ministry is tollerable? |
A26865 | Yea, those that declared themselves to be against it? |
A26865 | Yet here you may as handsomely exclaim, What? |
A26865 | You think so highly of your selves, as if men can not be saved unless they be taught by you? |
A26865 | You think we should grant you leave to Preach; but what leave did you give us when you were in power? |
A26865 | and as guilty of the blood of all those souls that have perished by our silence and neglect? |
A26865 | and can you yet for shame desire leave to preach and propagate such a Religion as that? |
A26865 | and encourage the people in their Separations? |
A26865 | and how contrary is it to the rest of their Accusations? |
A26865 | and how unhappy will they find themselves at last? |
A26865 | and if all the rest conformed too? |
A26865 | and is he innocent that killeth him, or that robs you of your child? |
A26865 | and is not the exception a prophane scorn of Christ? |
A26865 | and is this so necessary a thing? |
A26865 | and see also whether they are a considerable number? |
A26865 | and so whether there shall be any Gospel, Religion, or Salvation? |
A26865 | and so, whether there shall be a Ministry? |
A26865 | and that consequently this is the chief reason that 1800 men subscribed not? |
A26865 | and whether the Churches Lights be not put under a bushel? |
A26865 | and whether they are snuffed or put out? |
A26865 | and which party for the more smooth and toothless Preachers? |
A26865 | and why doth he not name them, and prove his charge? |
A26865 | and will you measure and denominate the Religion of the Nonconformists ▪ by two or three mens Writings( against which also you have no more to say)? |
A26865 | and would you exclaim against it as now you do? |
A26865 | and yet who in all the world more cause them, even by the manifold Laws by which they pretend to cure them? |
A26865 | any thing that in Gods worship you durst not use? |
A26865 | any thing that you dare not subscribe to and declare? |
A26865 | chaste or unchaste? |
A26865 | how many sins of theirs and ours have had a hand in this calamity? |
A26865 | nor friends from foes? |
A26865 | nor their sufferings neither? |
A26865 | of most, or few? |
A26865 | or any also by that which in its own nature is meerly sufficient, and made effectual by mans will? |
A26865 | or by another Consecration? |
A26865 | or for the first 300 either? |
A26865 | or have the most ever said or written, that it is only the Covenant that we stick at? |
A26865 | or have they contrary meanings to fit the use of every subscriber? |
A26865 | or how? |
A26865 | or on Mr. John Ball, Mr. John Paget, Mr. Langley,& c. or on Dr. Twisse, Dr. Arrowsmith, and the rest of that Assembly? |
A26865 | or so many as is necessary to mens Salvation? |
A26865 | or that they can endure to see none live at liberty out of Gaols, that be not in all such things of their mind? |
A26865 | or that they can not live in love and peace with any that differ from them in an opinion or ceremony? |
A26865 | or those be of your way that are not of your judgment? |
A26865 | or those that live in enmity, contempt or neglect of the Laws of Christ? |
A26865 | or what Religion we should be of, Christians or Infidels? |
A26865 | or what get they by it? |
A26865 | or what to preach on? |
A26865 | or which? |
A26865 | or would you not? |
A26865 | quando recepit Ejectum semel attrita de fronte ruborem? |
A26865 | shall every woman, every boy, every sottish rustick and tradesman, have liberty to put his life into the hands of women or foolish Empericks? |
A26865 | that so many thousand Souls must pay so dear, for a few mens experience? |
A26865 | then men must not discern whether to preach or be silent? |
A26865 | what answer would you give to such an Objection as this, which equally excludeth Chillingworth and Knot? |
A26865 | what murdering of men by medicine shall we then have? |
A26865 | what not the innocent from the guilty? |
A26865 | where are any more against Bishops and Conformity than your hearers? |
A26865 | whether God should be honoured or blasphemed? |
A26865 | whether Ministers shall preach in his Dominions? |
A26865 | whether he may be blasphemed? |
A26865 | whether the Scripture be Gods word? |
A26865 | whether there be a life to come? |
A26865 | who having proposed this doubt, Why did many of them deliberate so long whether they should accept of Dignities in the Church? |
A26865 | would this answer seem wise and honest to your selves, if you did but see the things you hear of? |
A26865 | would you Conform to it or not? |
A26865 | yea a sin meet for none but utterly debauched Consciences, and such as threatneth dreadful ruine? |
A26865 | yea what a reproach to humane nature? |
A26865 | yea, and do to this day? |
A26865 | yea, or can we expect that God should bless our labours, when we offer him Lying, Perjury,& c. for a sacrifice, and so blaspheme him? |
A26865 | yea, or his poor Curate, if he have one( as few have) for his help? |
A27035 | & c. 23. Who maketh National Churches in absolute Hereditary Monarchies, where are no Parliaments to signifie popular consent? |
A27035 | & c.[ Must a man quit his just right because some dislike it? |
A27035 | ( By the way, do either Synods or People( the old chusers) chuse our Bishops or Priests?) |
A27035 | ( Saith he) I say because it was received by the common consent of the whole Nation in Parliament, as other Laws of the Nation are?] |
A27035 | 1. Who is supposed so fit to judge as men and Seniors of the same Office? |
A27035 | 1200? |
A27035 | A man that knoweth what to say can speak it when the ignorant can not? |
A27035 | All, or some? |
A27035 | And am I so tyed? |
A27035 | And are not all these Offenders still Members of your Church? |
A27035 | And are we not agreed that this is a real and most excellent Political Church ▪ and that all other Visible Churches are parts of it? |
A27035 | And as to Convocation consent, how binds it all those that never consented to them? |
A27035 | And can any Christian deny either of these? |
A27035 | And did not the Doctor think I needed help by such Citations? |
A27035 | And do the certain Doctrines of the Gospel and Church set up the Pope? |
A27035 | And do you not seem to prevaricate and highly honour the Jesuits, on pretence of dishonoring Spiritual prayer? |
A27035 | And doth any of this disprove the peoples consenting right? |
A27035 | And doth any thing else make them formally One Politick body or Church? |
A27035 | And doth not all this confirm what I plead for, as to the Peoples, Synods and Princes several parts? |
A27035 | And doth the Doctor think that the judgment of all parties is not as sure as of one alone? |
A27035 | And doth this meddle with the peoples Recipient power? |
A27035 | And for Grotius, I have over and over cited his own words, and shall not now repeat them: And was this the drift of Conformity of old? |
A27035 | And for what are they maintained by Tythes, Glebe, and all the dignities, honours and wealth they have? |
A27035 | And for what do men so much contend for them? |
A27035 | And had his mistake no Occasion? |
A27035 | And have you now said more against me or your self? |
A27035 | And he will make us a hard task of it, to know when the Priest speaks as God''s Minister, and when as the peoples Minister or mouth? |
A27035 | And he wisely overlooketh the Question, who chose those Pres byters that were the chusers of the Bishop? |
A27035 | And his arguing that it is unlawful to preach to them because it is unlawful to hear; What was the meaning of all this if not silencing us? |
A27035 | And how else do you justifie the Church of England against the Papists charge of Schism? |
A27035 | And how great were their Churches then? |
A27035 | And how shall we know which of them to believe? |
A27035 | And how should I disown his rashness better than to write what I wrote against him, and say what I said to him? |
A27035 | And if Christ made no such, whether men may make them? |
A27035 | And if any other Churches neglect themselves, what reason is it that the rest should? |
A27035 | And if it be by Parliament consent, how old is your Church? |
A27035 | And if it prove so, whether they should all either have sinned or been silent in obedience? |
A27035 | And if shortly after the King had Licensed them to assemble and Preach, would they have refused it as a sin? |
A27035 | And if so why might not I at once be judged a Member of two Churches at once, so far as I communicate oft with both? |
A27035 | And if so, How long it hath been their judgment? |
A27035 | And if so, what are these superior Pastoral Churches, wh ● ther Diocesan, Provincial, National, Patriarchal, Papal, or all? |
A27035 | And is any word of all this true? |
A27035 | And is he a Pastor to such men that refuse all this? |
A27035 | And is it by your bare authority that they must so judge? |
A27035 | And is it not lawful for Parents to enter their own Children at Baptism in Covenant with God? |
A27035 | And is it possible that such a man should dissent in this? |
A27035 | And is not all this in ours? |
A27035 | And is not my case the same? |
A27035 | And is not that as faulty as for Dr. Moulin too much to blame you? |
A27035 | And is not this more than Dr. Moulin did? |
A27035 | And is not this to judge whether he be a Heretick,& c. or not? |
A27035 | And is not this true? |
A27035 | And is the disputing of a question falsly stated of any profit? |
A27035 | And shall he that refuseth Communion chuse one to give it others, because he hath a Soul himself? |
A27035 | And to forbear silencing, excommunicating, fining and imprisoning us? |
A27035 | And to whom this Family Government most belongeth? |
A27035 | And was not his fear of the disagreement of the Clergy? |
A27035 | And were then no more Churches that had governing Pastors? |
A27035 | And what a Case is the Church of England in, that hath still so many Ministers that pray as the Jesuits Disciples? |
A27035 | And what a Church was it that made the Canons against them on that supposition? |
A27035 | And what a dangerous invention is it to say that the Minister here speaketh not from Christ but the Church, in receiving in those dedicated to him? |
A27035 | And what did Austin but perswade them to consent? |
A27035 | And what if the name of Government or the Keys had been put in, when it is denyed in its essential part? |
A27035 | And what is all this to our case of total and peremptory exclusion? |
A27035 | And what is all this to the many thousand Noncommunicants, who quietly remain members of your Churches? |
A27035 | And what is it of[ Worship established by Law] that individuates your Church? |
A27035 | And what then becomes of its Laws, and all the Treatises of its Church- Policy? |
A27035 | And what''s this to the Case the Peoples election or consent? |
A27035 | And whether he hath not instituted an office to judge of this and by Government execute it? |
A27035 | And which be those Seats? |
A27035 | And who but Philosophers judge of Graduates and Professours in Philosophy? |
A27035 | And who can find any Answer to this? |
A27035 | And who doubts but a great General Council had the greatest power then? |
A27035 | And who gave it them? |
A27035 | And who knoweth then who are of their Church? |
A27035 | And who shall judge whether the disagreement be in Substantials? |
A27035 | And why Father and Mother rather than Prince and Priests are named in the Fifth Commandment? |
A27035 | And why doth he mention that the People consented and received him, if they had no consenting Vote, or right on just cause to dissent? |
A27035 | And why else was the peoples resistance feared? |
A27035 | And yet they shall judge and choose for themselves, and speed accordingly, who can help it? |
A27035 | And you that praise his death- bed repentance, should not Characterize him by failings twenty years repented of? |
A27035 | And, is that according to God''s word? |
A27035 | Are all these no difference of case? |
A27035 | Are none of them true Churches in sensu politico? |
A27035 | Are not you the Author of the Defence of B. Laud, and say, That Christ gave the Keys to Peter as the representative of the whole Church? |
A27035 | Are the benefits so bestowed no Graoe? |
A27035 | Are there none in all the same Books he citeth? |
A27035 | Are they such circumstances before named: Oaths, Declarations, Subscriptions, Doctrine,& c? |
A27035 | Are we looser than Pope Nicholas that forbad men to hear Mass from a Fornicating Pricst? |
A27035 | Are you loth to be understood? |
A27035 | As if our question had not been, Which is the Regent part of the Church of England? |
A27035 | As if the common Souldiers and not the Generals were the cause of the War? |
A27035 | As if the same effect might not, yea must not have a Suprior and Inferior Cause? |
A27035 | As to Beza''s Letter, have not I said more against Separation than he doth? |
A27035 | As to his question, Was there less necessity then or now? |
A27035 | Aud why do you make such a stir with Separatists to bring them to your Churches? |
A27035 | But 1. he proveth that they were all of that mind, by citing four of their Books against Brownists; and were four or forty times four, all? |
A27035 | But I appeal to the reason and humanity of mankind, into what hands the silenced and persecuted Ministers are fallen? |
A27035 | But I would ask the Dean himself, whether a man may not be a fixed Member of two or three Churches at once? |
A27035 | But are these Laws good that forbid it? |
A27035 | But are they not excommunicate then, before they are so oft denounced, yea or at all, as far as aforesaid? |
A27035 | But asketh[ whence cometh all this zeal now against a National Church?] |
A27035 | But did they deny that which all the Christian World confesseth? |
A27035 | But do you not say also to the Presbyters Receive the Holy Ghost? |
A27035 | But doth he in all his Book do any thing to satisfie any mans Conscience, that would know from what Churches he may or may not separate? |
A27035 | But doth not the Doctor thus grievously accuse the Church which he would defend? |
A27035 | But doth not this make the people Judges whether Princes and Parliaments are Orthodox, and is not that as dangerous as to judge of the Teachers? |
A27035 | But how comes that Church to command and bind, which hath no such Ruling power? |
A27035 | But how fallaciously is this urged? |
A27035 | But how shall we know whether we agree or not, if we are no judges of it? |
A27035 | But in what common things? |
A27035 | But is not my inference necessary? |
A27035 | But it''s intimated, that this was because we agreed in other things? |
A27035 | But may not the unjustly excommunicate that can not on just terms be restored, worship God in some publick Church? |
A27035 | But must it be otherwise? |
A27035 | But must they not therefore be discerning Judges, who is their Landlord, Master, Husband, What Schoolmaster may not unlearned men miscensure? |
A27035 | But put the case within your sight? |
A27035 | But really doth he think that this doth unavoidably set up the Pope? |
A27035 | But were good and bad Bishops in all Ages thus minded, or was it only Popes? |
A27035 | But what Infants? |
A27035 | But what if the Parents are bid provide such? |
A27035 | But what need had you to say all this of Images? |
A27035 | But what was the Altar that was taken with particular respect to the Bishop? |
A27035 | But when( Destruction) signifieth( Damnation) it is a hard bargain? |
A27035 | But who can reconcile this with the scope of his whole Book? |
A27035 | By what way this National consent is to be declared? |
A27035 | Can a man be a Pastor against his will, or that con ● enteth not, but renounceth it? |
A27035 | Can he be a true Pastor that is uncapable of the Office? |
A27035 | Can it be more Immediate than in the very present dedicating act, to use the sign and expressing the dedicating signification? |
A27035 | Can they at once hold contradictions? |
A27035 | Churches preaching? |
A27035 | Consent to what? |
A27035 | Could any man have so far searcht his heart as to know that he spake only against Separation in this one City? |
A27035 | Could you judge it honest zeal had it been to others? |
A27035 | Dare he say that all true Churches are not real parts of Christ''s Universal Church, as a Governed body? |
A27035 | Dare he say, that all imposed must be owned? |
A27035 | Did I say that my hearers are constant hearers in your Churches? |
A27035 | Did he think any of this concerned me? |
A27035 | Did he think that this is inconsistent with the opinion that they work it morally? |
A27035 | Did not I write against his opinion of Church- Government? |
A27035 | Did the Church at Alexandria ever after chuse their Bishops, and not before? |
A27035 | Did the Doctor think this was to the purpose? |
A27035 | Did the Heptarchy make England one Kingdom, when seven Kings Governed the whole by parts, but none the whole, as such? |
A27035 | Did the Synod of D ● rt make us one with them? |
A27035 | Did they meddle by Force, with Body or Purse? |
A27035 | Did they not tell us then their sence? |
A27035 | Do large Councils make many Nations one Church? |
A27035 | Do not Nonconformists differ from Erastians? |
A27035 | Do not all do so too, till now? |
A27035 | Do not we now differ about the undoubted certainty of the salvation of all dying baptized Infants? |
A27035 | Do the Clergy represent the King? |
A27035 | Do the words suppose that which is plainly excepted in them? |
A27035 | Do you also tell us which is your National Church- power and I have done? |
A27035 | Do you make England in essentials any more one Church, than England and any Foreigners agreeing are one? |
A27035 | Do you not know our Reasons? |
A27035 | Do you not now absolve all men from the duty of obeying the Church of England a ● such, and from all guilt of disobeying them? |
A27035 | Do you not see your own Contradictions? |
A27035 | Do you think that there is more force in the name of a Jesuit to disgrace Spiritual prayer, or in the name of Spiritual prayer to honour the Jesuits? |
A27035 | Doctor will you take your Oath that you are thus a true Minister?] |
A27035 | Doth any Protestant doubt of what I assert? |
A27035 | Doth any of us deny that the Bishops were the Ordainers of Bishops? |
A27035 | Doth he agree with us in all the Substantials of Religion who knoweth not the very essentials of Christianity? |
A27035 | Doth he agree with us in all the substantials that is a Heretick? |
A27035 | Doth he any where tell us, in what cases and how far they must judge? |
A27035 | Doth he believe that he meant that all or the twentieth part of the Nonconformists wrote or subscribed it? |
A27035 | Doth he believe that the Kingdoms of the World are not visible parts of God''s Universal Kingdom? |
A27035 | Doth he doubt of this? |
A27035 | Doth he himself take any one of these for a true political Church? |
A27035 | Doth he not confess that I own general Visitors or Archbishops and appeals? |
A27035 | Doth he not perceive that he turneth the Controversie, from the necessity of a Regent head, to the necessity of his visibility? |
A27035 | Doth he think that the Catholick Church consenteth not to one Governing Head, Christ? |
A27035 | Doth he think that the Presbyters choice excludeth the Peoples when it is a known thing that the Canons and Custom constantly conjoyned them? |
A27035 | Doth he think the Papists take the Conformists or the Nonconformists to be nearer to them and less against them? |
A27035 | Doth it die and live again as oft as Parliaments change it? |
A27035 | Doth none of all this difference their case and ours? |
A27035 | Doth not Doctor Stillingfleet heavily reproach his own Church for such usuage of them? |
A27035 | Doth not a stock of knowledge enable you to Preach without book? |
A27035 | Doth not all this shew their mind? |
A27035 | Doth not he pretend also in his way to declare the terms of Concord? |
A27035 | Doth not the Doctor unhappily chuse his testimonies? |
A27035 | Doth not this instance prove, that the Bishop had not power to chuse one of himself? |
A27035 | Doth not this prove that their choice or consent was necessary? |
A27035 | Doth not this shew that the people were the chusers? |
A27035 | Doth such a wicked sentence bind men to live like Atheists till death? |
A27035 | Doth the Dr. believe indeed that these writings signifie that the Nonconformsts of those times thought it a sin to Preach eo nomine because forbidden? |
A27035 | Doth this Political description of Parochial, Diocesane, Provincial, Patriarchal Churches, also bring in Popery? |
A27035 | Doth this doctrine justifie the Papists? |
A27035 | Doth your Church require this ad esse, or but ad melius esse? |
A27035 | Et propter hoc interrogat accedentes ad baptismum an credant? |
A27035 | Fixed Government to a fixed Church, and transient temporary Government to an answerable Church? |
A27035 | For what concord hath Christ and Belial? |
A27035 | Had he meant as aforesaid, had my words been Rage, or necessary confutation? |
A27035 | Had it not been better to have past over this Council? |
A27035 | Had it not been requisite that you should have justified all that we stick at as unlawful, before you charge us with crossing this Rule? |
A27035 | Had the neighbour Heathens and Hereticks of old power to chuse Bishops for the Church, while they refused to be of the Church themselves? |
A27035 | Hath he named any? |
A27035 | Have none of these, have not each of these a Regent Constitutive part? |
A27035 | Have such representatives more power to express our consent than we our selves? |
A27035 | He before saith,[ Was the Cross a dedicating sign to God, or a declarative sign to men?] |
A27035 | He instanceth in mens censure of me for the Doctrine of Justification and asketh, Are men bound to separate from me? |
A27035 | He is again at his talk of only occasional Communion? |
A27035 | He motioned a Bishop to end the difference; And who opposeth that? |
A27035 | He saith, Is our worship directed to it or may we kneel before it, as Mr. B. allows men may do before a Crucifix? |
A27035 | He yet more pleads as for Separation[ why then above once or twice? |
A27035 | How can men Govern that are no Governours? |
A27035 | How come Dissenters bound by Parliament consent? |
A27035 | How do you know that the Dr. repented not of his too hard words of you till his death- bed? |
A27035 | How doth he prove it? |
A27035 | How easily might he have known that we would deny the consequence? |
A27035 | How much more say these than my[ intolerable indiscretion?] |
A27035 | How much of this goeth to make a Separatist? |
A27035 | How prove you that the Clergy represent the Laity in the Convocation? |
A27035 | How shall one get all the world to be wise and good? |
A27035 | How shall one know among all these, who are, or are not of your Church? |
A27035 | How shall one know how far consent is necessary to a Member, and dissent unchurcheth him? |
A27035 | How shall we know whether we keep them or not, or will you take upon you the guilt of our sins in disobeying his will? |
A27035 | How unhappily are the Church- Defenders and Conformists disagreed? |
A27035 | How was it known in the beginning of Queen Elizabeths days, when the Papists came to Church? |
A27035 | How was the Church of England known from Papists, in the beginning of H. 8. or in the middle, or in the end? |
A27035 | I again say that either the Reader hath read the Church History and Canons, or not? |
A27035 | I am glad you are not for separating for want of Episcopacy or Episcopal Ordination? |
A27035 | I have fully told him how in a whole Book of concord, And hath their way caused greater peace and order? |
A27035 | I never met with man that pretendeth to know them, and therefore never met with man that can thus tell, whether he be of the Church of England or not? |
A27035 | I pray you tell us, from whom our Arch- bishops receive their power? |
A27035 | I regarded not the censures of any that go too far, so as to keep me from doing what I judged lawful: And did it tend to peace? |
A27035 | I see none of those, I come in divers where many can not hear the Preacher; and would you have more? |
A27035 | I therefore answer his question further, what Church I was a Member of? |
A27035 | I thought no man but Mr. Cheny and some odd Papists had been of this Opinion? |
A27035 | I was a Member of Christs Universal Church? |
A27035 | If Church worship be needless, why is a Clergy to be so honoured, and maintained at so dear a rate? |
A27035 | If I name one Obligation to Communion with you, is it a learned Note to gather that I deny all other? |
A27035 | If every Law of Order be essential to your Church, few Conformists are of it: If only the true essentials, why are not we also of it? |
A27035 | If false, O what a sort of men were these Prelates that so stigmatized and accused and so used so many hundred such men, on so false a charge? |
A27035 | If it be All Infants, then how come the Heathens Infants to be baptizable and have right, when the Parents have none? |
A27035 | If it be the later, is it one in specie or in individu ● politico? |
A27035 | If it deserve such a Character to censure Arminians as dangerously erroneous and befriending Popery? |
A27035 | If it never was in their minds to trust them as Consenters for them? |
A27035 | If none, why are we not confuted? |
A27035 | If not so, How to know that our silencing Laws and Bishops must be obeyed, and not theirs? |
A27035 | If not, how can he tell who to believe that report them? |
A27035 | If not, is it not a contradiction to call it a governed Church? |
A27035 | If not, what a divided party are the Conformists, while so many use it and pray spiritually? |
A27035 | If not, what makes them and not me to be of that Church? |
A27035 | If sin, who should be most offended? |
A27035 | If the Gospel be needless, why do we wish the Heathens had it? |
A27035 | If the Peoples consent can make a National Church, why may it not make an Independant or Presbyterian Church? |
A27035 | If the corruption of one have been the generation of another, how many Churches of England have you had? |
A27035 | If the first, all Canon- breakers are dismembred? |
A27035 | If the former, is it all false Doctrine or but some, and what? |
A27035 | If the later, why am not I of your Church? |
A27035 | If they be and do in good earnest desire to know how to please God and serve him, what directions will they give him? |
A27035 | If they have him, why can not they speak their own hearts in other words than yours? |
A27035 | If true, how untrue are Doctor Stillingfleet''s? |
A27035 | If we should renounce our Christianity for them, we are never the nearer: for we are still Men and therefore loth to be destroyed in Hell? |
A27035 | If when the blind lead the blind both fall into the ditch, must we not note the difference? |
A27035 | If yea then is he a Pastor that wants what is essential to a Pastor? |
A27035 | If yea, is it nothing to him to seem thus seriously to plead against his conscience? |
A27035 | If you are, did the Jesuits teach it you? |
A27035 | If you can not see your own face, let any impartial Reader be your glass, and ask him whether you do not that which you are condemning? |
A27035 | If you know the Teachers heart, how know you the Peoples? |
A27035 | If you meant only Civil? |
A27035 | If you say from the Bishops, and so Inferiours or Equals may give power, why may not Presbyters make Presbyters or Bishops, and generare speciem? |
A27035 | Is Baptism and the Lords Supper a sign to God, or to man? |
A27035 | Is a Layman a true Pastor that is not truly called to it? |
A27035 | Is forming new Churches and not communicating with the old ones all one? |
A27035 | Is he a zealous Enemy of Schisin that taketh all this for none? |
A27035 | Is he not unreverend to their Canons? |
A27035 | Is his Rule true only in England, or in France, Spain, Italy, Muscovy,& c. also, or where, that the Law maketh men true Pastors? |
A27035 | Is it any easier to do evil In obedience to a Patriarch than a Pope? |
A27035 | Is it necessary then that the Universal Head must be visible if the subordinate be so? |
A27035 | Is it no older than the Liturgy or Canons? |
A27035 | Is it not enough to turn us all out of the publick Ministry? |
A27035 | Is it not lawful for peace to forbear forcing men to disoblige 1000? |
A27035 | Is it our Salvation that we must sacrifice to Priests, Prelates or Princes wills? |
A27035 | Is it such men that thus make you agents for a Pope? |
A27035 | Is it unlawful to Christen such as scruple your use of the Cross? |
A27035 | Is malignant opposing Godliness and pleading for prophaneness or ungodliness an agreement in all the Substantials? |
A27035 | Is not Government essential to a Governed Church? |
A27035 | Is not this a strong proof that the people had no such agreeing or chusing power, because the Metropolitan and Synod also had their vote? |
A27035 | Is not this in the School of Christ, and in the method of the Gospel a plain disorder? |
A27035 | Is not this plainly to chuse damnation? |
A27035 | Is not this the Pharises vae? |
A27035 | Is not this to prefer Mint and Annis to faith aud judgment and mercy? |
A27035 | Is not this to wa ● ● the outside of the Cup, and leave the inner part uncleansed? |
A27035 | Is that none? |
A27035 | Is there no dependancy in any of these, or all? |
A27035 | Is this called the Church diffusive one Governed body Politick? |
A27035 | Is this edifying? |
A27035 | Is this hard to be understood? |
A27035 | Is this just dealing, And doth it not confute himself? |
A27035 | Is this only occasional joyning? |
A27035 | Is this our Champion against Popery now? |
A27035 | Is this our satisfaction? |
A27035 | Is this the same that the old Separatists did? |
A27035 | Is this true? |
A27035 | Is your Governed Church as such only Civil, or a Kingdom only? |
A27035 | It is called Praefatio I. F. And can every Reader know that I. F. meaneth not John Fox? |
A27035 | It is therefore the later that is all my Question, which is the Church- Head? |
A27035 | It would be an odd argument to prove, that a woman had no power of choice in Marriage, because one was put to perswade her to consent? |
A27035 | It''s not so old as Luther? |
A27035 | Judge absolutely who shall be a Minister of Christ? |
A27035 | Mans tradition before the ordinance of God? |
A27035 | Many Nations may agree in the same Rules of Religion, yea, so all Christians do: Doth this constitute National Churches? |
A27035 | May not the Nation withdraw such consent? |
A27035 | Must all the people trust only such Pastors as the Prince or Patrons choose all over England? |
A27035 | Must not I tell them that urge me, what sin I fear, least they say you represent us as such? |
A27035 | Must not the people on that account disown them, by his way? |
A27035 | Must they not judge when Forreigners heretofore were set over them, whether they speak English or no? |
A27035 | Must we all be of the Kings or Patrons Religion? |
A27035 | Must we believe that we agree, because you say so? |
A27035 | Must we neither be silent nor speak? |
A27035 | My Parlour hath on all four sides the pictures of our living friends: must I not pray in that room because my face will be still towards some of them? |
A27035 | National body, and never distinguish any necessary parts of Faith, Government and Worship, from the rest, nor tell us how to know them? |
A27035 | Next he answereth the Question, How all the Congregations in England make up this one Church?] |
A27035 | Next p. 267. he comes to the point in question, whether they have the Pastoral Power of the Keys over their own Flocks? |
A27035 | Now shall we fight for the Popes coat, his head and body being banished? |
A27035 | Now the Question is, Of which sort is the National Church of England? |
A27035 | O how great a difference have I found, from my youth to this day? |
A27035 | Or constantly when no better can be had without greater hurt than benefit? |
A27035 | Or doth he mean, This Diocesan Church? |
A27035 | Or if he be a profest Infidel, Can he be a Christian Pastor? |
A27035 | Or is not his citing one half of the words as he doth, to deceive his credulous Reader, if not worse? |
A27035 | Or my Church- Covenant? |
A27035 | Or my actual Communion? |
A27035 | Or one Government of all the National Church? |
A27035 | Or really whether any reject not some one forme, word or office? |
A27035 | Or such as it is unlawful to communicate with occasionally? |
A27035 | Or to receive those to Communion that scruple your Gesture? |
A27035 | Or whether the Act of seeing be from the sun or the eye? |
A27035 | Or why do you so reproach your Church and Ministry? |
A27035 | Or would not such Princes chuse such Bishops? |
A27035 | Ordinary Tradition saith it was Fox''s: And what should I sooner believe in such a case? |
A27035 | Personal Faults I distinguished from Ministerial and tolerable Ministerial from intolerable, then and now: and is this Contradiction? |
A27035 | Question, How comes it to be One National Church? |
A27035 | Quid est Altare nisi sedes& corporis& sanguimis Christi? |
A27035 | Read Mr. Dodwell and many such others that take the Church to be a Governed body Politick and see what they will judg of you? |
A27035 | Reader, are we not in a hard strait between Wickliffe and Dr. Stillingflect? |
A27035 | Reader, is not this true? |
A27035 | Readers, do you remember how even now he exposed to odium, the peoples judging whether the Pastors be Hereticks? |
A27035 | See Reader, whether any of this be true? |
A27035 | See how well the defenders of Prelacy agree? |
A27035 | Shall I abuse time to confute gross Contradictions? |
A27035 | Shall he that will not be of the Society chuse for the Society? |
A27035 | Should Glocesier take Goodman a Papist for their Bishop because the King chose him? |
A27035 | That I own Associations which he makes the state of the Church of England? |
A27035 | That I own Synods for obliging concord? |
A27035 | That I own the Magistrates Government of all? |
A27035 | That it is not lawful for you to joyn with us? |
A27035 | That the Emperour deposed him not, but by a pack ● Council of Bishops( which we know had a deposing power?) |
A27035 | That''s right: But what Government is it, Civil, or Ecclesiastical? |
A27035 | The Independants much insist on this? |
A27035 | The Laodicean Canon cited by him speaketh for me as the rest:( Did he think I wanted his help to cite more for my self?) |
A27035 | The Parish Churches be no true Churches? |
A27035 | The question is not whether more Churches are desirable? |
A27035 | The question is still unanswered, What is the One common Governing power in the Church which this Parliament consent hath ● ● t up? |
A27035 | The question is, whether that man will Communicate with the Church on Christs terms? |
A27035 | The terms are sar harder to Ministers? |
A27035 | The whole Nation did not consent by Parliament when the Lords and Commons voted down the Bishops and Liturgy: was there then no National Church? |
A27035 | Then all the question is, what''s lawful on both sides? |
A27035 | Then how great a deed of charity is it to bring an Army among them to baptize their Children by force? |
A27035 | These be but circumstances: What if the Plague drive away the Parish Ministers? |
A27035 | This Collection I feared; But how could I avoid it? |
A27035 | This mans acts were no nullities to us that knew it not: but when we knew of such must we take them for true Pastors, and it for a true Church? |
A27035 | This was before said[ that the people might give them power? |
A27035 | Was an Arians Tyranny, a note of right? |
A27035 | Was it not the material place of Communicn? |
A27035 | Was it voluntarily which they were adjudged to do? |
A27035 | Was your Churches Rule then made? |
A27035 | What Husband the Wife? |
A27035 | What Landlord may not the Tenants deny? |
A27035 | What Master the Servants? |
A27035 | What Parliament first made it? |
A27035 | What Physician may they not vilisie? |
A27035 | What a great Impertinency had this been,& c? |
A27035 | What are the parts of their worship which he saith I joyn not in? |
A27035 | What did he? |
A27035 | What hope then of being understood? |
A27035 | What if I had said so by you? |
A27035 | What if I remove for my Edification from a drunkess ignorant Priest, to the Church of a wise and holy Pastor? |
A27035 | What if it be in an unknown Tongue? |
A27035 | What if it were not Immediate? |
A27035 | What if the Church be but schismatical? |
A27035 | What if the Church have no true Minister? |
A27035 | What if the Church want half the Church- Worship? |
A27035 | What if the Law should change, and allow of various Churches? |
A27035 | What if the Worship be not Idolatrous, but Blasphemous, or utterly Ridiculous, tending to contempt of God? |
A27035 | What if they impose any one sin on me without which they will not receive me to Communion? |
A27035 | What if they put down all preaching save reading some dry Homilies, and all Discipline, is it not lawful elsewhere to serve God better? |
A27035 | What if we agree in all Substantials with an unordained Layman imposed on us? |
A27035 | What in the world is more abused than Reason and Freewill? |
A27035 | What is the Medium? |
A27035 | What is the Pastoral specifying form of the Church of England? |
A27035 | What is the constancy that this Dr. maketh necessary to a member? |
A27035 | What is this against the peoples right? |
A27035 | What made you before talk of being under one Government? |
A27035 | What meant all the ancient Churches to forbid Communion with Hereticks? |
A27035 | What meant all those Fathers and Councils, that make him no Bishop that cometh not in with the peoples consent? |
A27035 | What more natural than to propagate what men like, and oppose what they hate? |
A27035 | What my Thoughts were? |
A27035 | What shall one think could bring such a man to such a word? |
A27035 | What the National Church of England is? |
A27035 | What then would he be at? |
A27035 | What was the Souldiers Sacramentum Militare more, from which the Church seems to have borrowed the name? |
A27035 | What''s that to the general rule here asserted? |
A27035 | What''s this to our question? |
A27035 | What? |
A27035 | When men differ in no part of Religion, they will not separate unless merely locally: Are all the things named in my first Plea, no parts of Religion? |
A27035 | When prove you that I am only for occasional Communion when I have so long practised constant Communion with you? |
A27035 | Where Usurpers deny the King''s Right, ought not the people to judge him to have right, because they may err? |
A27035 | Whether all men that are more seriously religious must be forsaken by us, and ruined by them, if they be not of their mind and form? |
A27035 | Whether an ordained Minister must be a private Member of another mans Church? |
A27035 | Whether any man have authority to suspend this Law or Office? |
A27035 | Whether he acquainted them with the Kings Licences, and our being accused of Schism, even when Licensed? |
A27035 | Whether he acquainted them with what we have said for ourselves lately in divers Books; or they judg''d us unheard? |
A27035 | Whether he be no Christian that is not a fixed Member of a particular Church? |
A27035 | Whether he be no Christian, that is not a fixed Member of a particular Church? |
A27035 | Whether he made them truly understand the difference between the ancient Episcopacy, and the English Diocesan frame in all its parts? |
A27035 | Whether he made them understand that it was about 2000 Ministers that were silenced, and what men are in many of their places? |
A27035 | Whether he made them understand that we are ipso facto excommuncate by their Canon for telling our judgment? |
A27035 | Whether he made them understand what measure of Communion we still maintain with the Church of England and the Parish Churches? |
A27035 | Whether he put the case as of denying active Communion in the practice of unlawful things; or as denying Communion in the rest which are lawful? |
A27035 | Whether he put the case to them, whether we that have Communion with them are Schismaticks, if we also have Communion with others whom they prosecute? |
A27035 | Whether he put the question to them, whether we are lawfully silenced? |
A27035 | Whether he that sought their judgment did make them understand what all our present Impositions and Acts of Conformity are? |
A27035 | Whether is the worse and more dangerous condition, to fall under the reproach of Schism, or to fall into Schism it self? |
A27035 | Whether it be a duty to gather Churches or Preach publickly when it is like to do more hurt than good, by the Magistrates opposition? |
A27035 | Whether the Excommunicating Church, or the Excommunicated for not Communicating when Excommunicated be guilty of Schism? |
A27035 | Whether they be singular? |
A27035 | Whether,[ How comes it?] |
A27035 | Which did Paul mean? |
A27035 | Which mean you by[ his] when they were two? |
A27035 | Who but Physicians are fit to judge who is meet to be a Licensed Physician? |
A27035 | Who doubteth that the People being not the sole judges, if they took in an un- Ordained or un- approved man without the Synods consent, it was void? |
A27035 | Who would strive against so friendly a disputer, that goeth on to say the same as I? |
A27035 | Why doth he accuse us for that which he dare not contradict? |
A27035 | Why doth he silently balk the chief things which I had named? |
A27035 | Why subscribe you against mens hopes of being saved in all their several Religions? |
A27035 | Why then did you before put( agreement in Doctrine) among the requisites to our Accusation? |
A27035 | Why then doth he himself elsewhere argue that there were Bishops then, because these Cities were Metropoles? |
A27035 | Why then must not all Hereticks, Papists,& c. be received, why then are all your volumnious Accusations produced to prove us justly silenced? |
A27035 | Why will he not be intreated to tell us in what Countries, or with what Limitations the contrary Doctrine must be received? |
A27035 | Why, first is there a word of this that a sober Christian dare deny? |
A27035 | Will freedom from Spiritual ▪ prayer honour your Church? |
A27035 | Will he conclude that when ever History nameth not the Peoples choice, they are left out? |
A27035 | Will he perswade us when the People are not the chusers, that they are not necessarily the consenters or refusers? |
A27035 | Will he turn Papist if this be proved, and the Christian World be not deceived? |
A27035 | Will this warrant a separation? |
A27035 | Would it be any wonder if Bishop Goodman of Glocester kept not out any Popish Teacher? |
A27035 | Would you have an undeniable Confutation, ad hominem, in few words? |
A27035 | Yes, for deserting them both? |
A27035 | You are mistaken? |
A27035 | You are too unmerciful to your self; but what kind of Churches should there be upon your terms? |
A27035 | [ Main] signifieth not[ Only:] who doubts but the People were to discern the Lives of chosen persons? |
A27035 | [ Were we not Baptized into this Church, and do you not Renounce Membership? |
A27035 | and Mr. Dodwels to prove us no Ministers of Christ, if we want nothing but a human power to impose us on the Churches, and a Patron to present us? |
A27035 | and even some Popes and Councils to hear Mass of Fornicators? |
A27035 | and how can we obey them? |
A27035 | and how prove they their claim? |
A27035 | and if not, whether rebus sic stantibus we are bound to forbear our Ministry? |
A27035 | and should we Covenant never to endeavour an Alteration? |
A27035 | and that their whole power of the Keys which they talk so much for, seems to themselves a dead and uneffectual thing? |
A27035 | and to antiquity? |
A27035 | and to the universal Church itself? |
A27035 | and what Prince or Prelate may not the people judge Usurpers? |
A27035 | and what alterations are made in the Church of England since the beginning of Bishop Lands power? |
A27035 | and what claim their ancient Flocks lay to many of them; and what men they are, and what they did to prevent all our divisions? |
A27035 | and why all their Churches ceased not when prohibited? |
A27035 | and why did I constantly twice a day lead them thither, though some disliked it? |
A27035 | and yet God invisible? |
A27035 | and yet are not they visible? |
A27035 | and yet is in the Creed? |
A27035 | as Seneca thought Cato''s name would do more to honour Drunkenness, than Drunkenness could do to dishonour Cato? |
A27035 | as to have Preaching and Prayer without Sacraments? |
A27035 | but must take him for their Pastor be he what he will? |
A27035 | but whether it must be visible? |
A27035 | hath not this preposterous order a woe? |
A27035 | how far is this from truth? |
A27035 | is he therefore our true Pastor? |
A27035 | must the King bear all the blame, if mens Souls be not provided for,& c? |
A27035 | must we agree and not judge whether we agree or not? |
A27035 | nor that can tell of others, and who is not? |
A27035 | or also in Ireland, France, Spain, Italy, Germany, among Lutherans, Calvinists, Greeks,& c. supposing the Law be on that side? |
A27035 | or can that be a true Pastoral Church that hath no Pastor? |
A27035 | or deprive them of their right to all God''s Ordinances? |
A27035 | or doth his bare repeating it disprove it? |
A27035 | or how known when it began? |
A27035 | or if a Socinian deny Christs Godhead or the i m ▪ mortality of the Soul, whether he be Competent or not? |
A27035 | or if we falsly judge his opinion Heresie, do we agree with him? |
A27035 | or invited yet to give our proofs? |
A27035 | or is Representing no Representing? |
A27035 | or is he none of the Church? |
A27035 | or is he therefore not obliged by it? |
A27035 | or is this the kind of Conformity that he would teach us, by denying what we subscribe to? |
A27035 | or now as to Church- Papists? |
A27035 | or only of living in Communion with them which do such things? |
A27035 | or shall we believe the Doctor against the Church? |
A27035 | or that my refusing a Physician is any wrong to his Licensers or him? |
A27035 | or that the Christian World doth not commonly consent to? |
A27035 | or that we may kneel before a Crucifix;) when I had before excepted the Images of God, Christ,& c. in worship, on several reasons? |
A27035 | or whether his character of me agree with his motion to silence and ruine all such? |
A27035 | or will you go on to follow them? |
A27035 | shall brethren persecute brethren for a forked Cap, devised singularity of him that is our enemy? |
A27035 | shall the Prince or Patron? |
A27035 | shall the controversie so fall out in conclusion ▪ that for lack of necessary furniture( as it is esteemed) labourers shall lack wages? |
A27035 | shall we not teach? |
A27035 | the Doctor or me? |
A27035 | what dependancy more doth he assert? |
A27035 | what hope of Justice from such Judges? |
A27035 | what if the Churches be burnt and the people forsaken? |
A27035 | what if the King license them? |
A27035 | what need Basil perswade them to accept him, when they had no power to refuse? |
A27035 | whether you do not consequently so stigmatize the old Church of England, before Bishop Laud''s time? |
A27035 | which Church do you mean? |
A27035 | which is only levelled against Princes and Lay Patrons Impositions, and deposeth the English Clergy and Church? |
A27035 | who shall judge whether the Pastors or People agree? |
A27035 | whom they never knew, from being obliged by an Oath and Vow to that part of the matter which is good? |
A27035 | why do you trust known Adversaries and mistrust your Brethren? |
A27035 | why doth he barely say and not prove, that it''s but a pretence? |
A27035 | why then did I use no publick preaching, while I lived in such Villages where the people might go to Church? |
A27035 | why then do they argue as Mr. Dodwell? |
A27035 | will excusing some things make others lawful? |
A27035 | will this satisfie Conscience? |
A27035 | would you be so disowned for your own faults? |
A27035 | would you have a Synod called to reprove every rash word? |
A27035 | yea and declare their own dissent, as most of the Nation did lately against Prelacy and Liturgy, yea and their chosen representatives? |
A27035 | — Is here no more than judging their lives? |
A27035 | 〈 … 〉 forbear Canonical Excommunicating all professed Nonconformi ● … Land? |
A26915 | ( and that is the best that can come of it) And who would now wilfully make work for sorrow? |
A26915 | 18? |
A26915 | 19. how much more evidently is this declared in the death of Christ? |
A26915 | 28? |
A26915 | 38 And I pray you consider, whether it belongs of right to God or you, to determine of the day and hour of your coming in? |
A26915 | 3? |
A26915 | 6. how small an apparition of his anger, did make a carouzing King look pale, and his joynts to tremble, in the midst of his jovialty? |
A26915 | ? |
A26915 | Ah Sirs, doth Conscience justifie you in this? |
A26915 | Am I ready to die, if it were this hour? |
A26915 | Am I sure of my Salvation? |
A26915 | And and what you have been doing all your lives? |
A26915 | And are you thankfull to a plain Reprover, though he tell you of the most disgracefull sinne? |
A26915 | And can you expect that God should deal so by you? |
A26915 | And can you fear least Conversion would bring you into a worse condition then this? |
A26915 | And can you have while for every thing, except that one thing, which all the rest are meerly to promote? |
A26915 | And can you not bear such a sorrow for a little while? |
A26915 | And did you ever consider, who and how many do stay for you while you delay? |
A26915 | And do you as it were see the Judge approaching, and damnation hasting on, and yet will you delay? |
A26915 | And do you not yet know why? |
A26915 | And do you think it a small thing, to deface so noble a Creature as man, and to turne your selves into beasts, and mad- men? |
A26915 | And do you think it indeed a wise mans part to live any longer at such a loss as this, and that wilfully and for nothing? |
A26915 | And do you think it wise, or safe, or mannerly for you to make the God of Heaven to wait on you, while you are serving his Enimy? |
A26915 | And had you rather sorrow as they do, then as the godly do? |
A26915 | And have they not more Reason to seek their Own Salvation? |
A26915 | And have you all this to do, and yet will you delay? |
A26915 | And how can it choose but be a troublesome distracting thing to your mind, to be unresolved what course to take for your Everlasting state? |
A26915 | And how can you more plainly shew that you despise God, and Heaven, then by such a course as this? |
A26915 | And how comes it to pass that you think not of your own misery, that believe no better in the holy Ghost? |
A26915 | And how free are his offers? |
A26915 | And how have I dispatcht it? |
A26915 | And how many would be saved, if we could but tell how to make men Consider ● te? |
A26915 | And how shall he know when to restrain his sorrows? |
A26915 | And if they escaped not, that refused him that spake on Earth, much more shall not they escape that turn away from him that speaketh from Heaven? |
A26915 | And if you must lay out your thoughts on some thing, is it not better lay them out on these things, then on any other? |
A26915 | And is it meet, is it reasonable, is it ingenious, for you to come out of such a Case, without lamentation that you staid in it so long? |
A26915 | And is it not time for a man in so much danger to Consider of them, that he may know how to escape? |
A26915 | And is there any thing in this life which you have cause to be afraid of? |
A26915 | And is this a state to stay in an hour? |
A26915 | And is your Everlasting happiness a matter to be wil ● ully hazarded, by causeless and unreasonable delays? |
A26915 | And it is a sign also that you are in love with sinne: For else why should you be so loath to leave it? |
A26915 | And must God Consider of you, that will not Consider of him, or your own Souls? |
A26915 | And now consider what a case you are in, while you remain unconverted? |
A26915 | And now who shall condemn us? |
A26915 | And seeing it is a thing that must be done, were it not best for you to take the easiest and the surest way to do it? |
A26915 | And shall I runne again into the misery that I was saved from? |
A26915 | And shou ● d not these be thought on? |
A26915 | And should I not be as serious, in the Matters of Everlasting Life? |
A26915 | And should you not Study how to save your own? |
A26915 | And therefore next ask your selves, Why should I not now Resolve and fixedly Resolve, to Turn without any more delay? |
A26915 | And therefore to your more excellent immortall Souls, and that in a work that must needs be done, how exceeding unsuitable are Delaies? |
A26915 | And thus follow on the discourse with your hearts? |
A26915 | And what are the Reasons which you have on the contrary to hinder you from Resolving? |
A26915 | And what business was I sent into the world about? |
A26915 | And what causeless fears are they that use to afflict the Servants of God, concerning their outward troubles, and necessities? |
A26915 | And what hurt would Holiness do thee? |
A26915 | And what is more contrary to this then Delay? |
A26915 | And what other Reasons have you against Resolving? |
A26915 | And what pitty is it that so much should be lost? |
A26915 | And what the better are you for being men and having Reason, if you have not the Vse of your Reason, when you need it? |
A26915 | And where you have been all this while? |
A26915 | And wherein do you differ from the beasts, so much as in your Reason? |
A26915 | And who was ever the worse for Holiness? |
A26915 | And why but to see and admire the Wisdom, and Power, and Goodness, and Mercy, and Justice of God, shining forth in the Redeemer? |
A26915 | And why is all this? |
A26915 | And why is this? |
A26915 | And why not without so much adoe? |
A26915 | And why should I not do so now, when they are as sure as if I saw them, and when I must see them ere it be long? |
A26915 | And why then will you not Resolve for it? |
A26915 | And will a man that is unresolved forsake his friends, estate, and life, for the sake of Christ, and the hopes of Glory? |
A26915 | And will any man do this for he knows not what? |
A26915 | And will not God then Love his Own do you think? |
A26915 | And will the great and blessed God invite thee to his favour, and wilt thou delay and demurre upon the Return? |
A26915 | And will you now Delay to accept the benefit, and turn to him? |
A26915 | And will you say, It''s time enough to morrow? |
A26915 | And will you trifle then in a work that must be done? |
A26915 | And withall consider, that when it comes, it will be most sore to such as you: and then what thoughts do you think you shall have of these Delaies? |
A26915 | And yet after all these Reasons art thou not Resolved? |
A26915 | And yet are you unresolved? |
A26915 | And yet for all this will you not Resolve to do it? |
A26915 | And yet is not the way to Heaven fair enough for you? |
A26915 | And yet is not this your everie- daies practice? |
A26915 | And yet these same men can not Resolve in seaven years time, and seaven to that, whether Heaven or Earth should be more loved and laboured for? |
A26915 | And yet will you Delay to accept the blessed offers of Grace, which is a greater thing? |
A26915 | And yet will you delay when it is not another, but your selves, that are sinking, and drowning, and within a step of death, and desparation? |
A26915 | And yet will you delay your Conversion, and the making sure of Heaven? |
A26915 | And yet will you not be drawn to the Consideration of such astonishing things as these? |
A26915 | And yet will you not do it? |
A26915 | And yet would you stay longer in it? |
A26915 | And yet you will hypocritically pretend that you love God above all, when you will not so much as seriously Think of him? |
A26915 | Are our Praiers, and tears, and groane; to be despised? |
A26915 | Are our studies, and our labours worth nothing, think you? |
A26915 | Are our watchings and waiting, worth nothing? |
A26915 | Are you Resolved that it should be done, and must be done, and yet will you not Resolve to do it? |
A26915 | Are you not able to go somtimes by your selves, and Consider of these matters? |
A26915 | Are you not able when you are alone in your beds, or as you travail in the way, or at your labour, to bethink you how things stand with your Soules? |
A26915 | Are you not blind if you see not this is in your selves? |
A26915 | Are you not deep enough in debt to God already, and have you not yet sinnes enough to answer for upon your Souls? |
A26915 | Are you not perswaded in your Consciences, that it''s better to dye in a Holy and Heavenly state, then in a loose and careles worldly state? |
A26915 | Are you not yet gone far enough from God? |
A26915 | Art thou content to be thrust out of that Eternal Inheritance? |
A26915 | As the Prodigal said, How many hired servants of my fathers have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger? |
A26915 | Ask your selves, Is my Judgment Resolved, or is it not? |
A26915 | Besides, how unfit is age to be at that paines, that youth can undergo? |
A26915 | Bethink you what you have done, and whether you have done the work that you were sent to do, or not? |
A26915 | But if I did it in Baptism, what need I do it again? |
A26915 | But if it be so dangerous to sorrow, either too little, or too much, what shall a poor sinner do in such a streight? |
A26915 | But if still you say, you will turn, when will you do it? |
A26915 | But if you are convinced that it is Good, and necessary, is it not better now then to stay any longer? |
A26915 | But to whom is it that God doth thus Demosntrate his Glory? |
A26915 | But what of that? |
A26915 | But when is it that my sorrow is too short, and I should labour to increase it? |
A26915 | But when you have searcht the Scripture, and find that it is the Word of the God of Heaven, dare you despise it then? |
A26915 | But would you have the Spirit come in, while you hold the dore against him? |
A26915 | But yet shall we undervalue so glorious a work, in which the Divine perfections do so fully reveale themselves to the world? |
A26915 | Can any heart be so senseless, or deluded? |
A26915 | Can it bring you into a worse condition then you are in? |
A26915 | Can not you crush this Serpent when it is but in the Spawne; and can you encounter it in its Serpentine strength? |
A26915 | Can not you pluck up a tender Plant, and can you pluck up an Oak or Cedar? |
A26915 | Can not you spare God the Tenths; no nor the hundreth- part of them? |
A26915 | Can you be content with Heaven alone? |
A26915 | Can you better turn to God, when a godly life is the common scorn of the Countrey, as it was a while agoe? |
A26915 | Can you deny your eyes, and your appetites their desires? |
A26915 | Can you for shame beg of God to hasten your deliverances, when you remember your delaies, and still continue to trifle with him, and draw back? |
A26915 | Can you forget that others are in Hell at this very hour, for as small sinnes as those that you are yet intangled, and linger in? |
A26915 | Can you have while to work, to plow, and sow, and reap, and can not you have while to prepare for Eternal Life? |
A26915 | Can you lament your sinne and misery, when you are unacquainted with it? |
A26915 | Can you let go friends, and goods, and life, for a Glory which you have no Knowledge of? |
A26915 | Can you love or serve a God that you Know not? |
A26915 | Can you make it the principall business of your lives to seek for a Heaven whose Excellencies you know not of? |
A26915 | Can you quietly beare it, when you are vilified by others, because you know your selves to be so vile? |
A26915 | Canst thou bring any Reason, that is Reason indeed, against these or any of these Reasons of the Lord? |
A26915 | Canst thou hear any livelyer Teaching then thou hast heard? |
A26915 | Consider I beseech you what you do; And if it be so vile a thing to make any question of it, what is it then to be still unresolved? |
A26915 | Consider but whence you are coming? |
A26915 | Consider with your selves, whether a life of sin be that which you were made for? |
A26915 | Could you for shame put up such a request to God as this? |
A26915 | Dare you deny this? |
A26915 | Dare you say, I am Resolved never to be Converted? |
A26915 | Darest thou say that ever a one of them is false, or insufficient? |
A26915 | Darest thou speak out and say that sinne is better; and that Satan hath provided thee a better work then God hath done? |
A26915 | Darest thou thus abuse me to my face? |
A26915 | Did I say They are Consid ● ring? |
A26915 | Did it ever do you good? |
A26915 | Did thy lusts, and sports, and wantoness deserve all; and did not God deserve some of them? |
A26915 | Do I need to tell you how hard the way of Salvation is, that fly from it on mistake, because you think it harder then it is? |
A26915 | Do not these Questions plainly shew that you Love not the work, and Delight not in a holy life; and that you had rather let it alone? |
A26915 | Do sinners indeed believe that God and Holiness will do them hurt, and that sinne will do them greater good? |
A26915 | Do you account this for Certainty and Excellency to be worth all? |
A26915 | Do you doubt whether it be necessary to make so much adoe to be saved, and to be so strict, and make Religion our cheifest business? |
A26915 | Do you doubt whether you should serve God with your families? |
A26915 | Do you fear lest God will yet hate you? |
A26915 | Do you imagine that you can better suffer Hell- f ● re, then hunger, or nakedness? |
A26915 | Do you know better then God? |
A26915 | Do you know what a life of Holiness is? |
A26915 | Do you live upon him, and should you not obey him? |
A26915 | Do you question whether a man may not be saved, without conversion, regeneration, and holyness? |
A26915 | Do you think a man can be saved that is a worldling? |
A26915 | Do you think a man can be the Servant of God, that liveth a fleshly life,& will keep his sin? |
A26915 | Do you think a man may be saved that doth as the most do? |
A26915 | Do you think a man that truly knows what Heaven is, and what Hell is, can still be in doubt whether he should turn or not? |
A26915 | Do you think an unhumbled Soul may be saved? |
A26915 | Do you think it a hard question whether you should turn or not? |
A26915 | Do you think it would stand with the Wisdom of Christ, to give such unspeakable blessings as these, to men that have not hearts to value them? |
A26915 | Do you think meanly of your own sayings and doings, and think better of others, where there is any ground, then of your selves? |
A26915 | Do you think that God forgets your sins, as you forget them? |
A26915 | Do you think that God will not call you to account for your Reason, how you have used it? |
A26915 | Do you think that Herod had not some good Desires, that heard John gladly, and did many things accordingly? |
A26915 | Do you think that there is ever a Saint in Heaven, yea or on Earth either, that is sorry that he stayed not longer unconverted? |
A26915 | Do you think to bring down Christ and Heaven to lower rates, and to be saved hereafter with less adoe? |
A26915 | Do you think to take so dangerous a surfeit, and then to be cured without a Vomit? |
A26915 | Do you think you stand on drie ground, or in a safe condition? |
A26915 | Dost thou believe Heaven and Hell as thou takest on thee to do? |
A26915 | Dost thou ever use to retire into thy self, and spend any time in this need ● ull work? |
A26915 | Dost thou not know that I look on? |
A26915 | Dost thou regard thy own Soul? |
A26915 | Durst they live so peaceably in a state of death, and in the slavery of the Devill, if they did but well Consider of it? |
A26915 | Especially, if it were your servant, or your child that owed you much more? |
A26915 | For how should the grave detain the innocent, and death overcome the Lord of Life? |
A26915 | Forsooth you shall be mockt or jested at by others: By whom I pray you? |
A26915 | God asketh you, whether you will be Converted and Sanctisied or not? |
A26915 | Good Lord, what a thing is a senseless sinner? |
A26915 | Good Lord, what a thing is a sensless heart? |
A26915 | Had I not been better have spent it in his Service, and the work of my Salvation? |
A26915 | Had I not sorrow, and fear, and care enough, but I must go back again for more, and renew my trouble? |
A26915 | Had you rather be broken in Hell by Torments, then on earth by Grace? |
A26915 | Had you rather howl with Devils and rebels, then weep with Saints and Children? |
A26915 | Hast thou groaned, and wept, and confessed and bemoaned thine own condition? |
A26915 | Hast thou prayed, and read, and heard, and fasted, and changed thy company, and much of thy course of life? |
A26915 | Hath it not been the drudgery of sinne, and the offending of your Lord, and the destroying of your selves? |
A26915 | Have you a desire to grieve, when you can not passionately grieve, and a desire to weep when you can not weep? |
A26915 | Have you any Better matters to think on then these? |
A26915 | Have you any Greater matters? |
A26915 | Have you any Thing that better deserves your Consideration, then God, and your Salvation? |
A26915 | Have you any hopes of Gods acceptance, and your Salvation, or not? |
A26915 | Have you been all your life time surfeiting of the creature, and causing your own disease, and now will you grudg at the trouble of a cure? |
A26915 | Have you not abused us enough? |
A26915 | Have you not long enough been swallowing the poison of sinne? |
A26915 | Have you not purposes in your mind to Repent hereafter? |
A26915 | Have you spent you daies in seeking after God? |
A26915 | He Reasoneth with thee also from thy own experience: What good hath sinne done thee? |
A26915 | He fetcheth Reasons from his own Dominion, and Soveraignty? |
A26915 | He fetcheth his Reasons from the certaine, everlasting flames of Hell: and is there not force enough in these for to Resolve thee? |
A26915 | He reasoneth with you from his Almightiness: You are all at his Mercy, and wholly in his hands; and yet dare you disobey him? |
A26915 | How can it go ill with him that hath God dwelling in him, and that dwells in God? |
A26915 | How can you shew greater contempt of any thing, then to cast it out of your minds, as unworthy to be thought on? |
A26915 | How dare you venture to live another day in an unconverted state, least death should find you so? |
A26915 | How faire are you yet for Heaven? |
A26915 | How full are his promises? |
A26915 | How glad would many a thousand in other Countries of the world be, to have but the helps to Heaven that you have? |
A26915 | How hard is it to cure a worldling of the love of money? |
A26915 | How have I spent my time, my thoughts, my words; and how shall I answer for them? |
A26915 | How joyfully may we pray and praise God with them, when we think how they must joyn with us in the Celestial Praises? |
A26915 | How little do they use for God, when they have with seeming devotion resigned all to him? |
A26915 | How little or nothing canst thou say against them? |
A26915 | How long have some of your minds been troubled whether to turn or not? |
A26915 | How long must we stand by with the light in our hands, while you are serving the flesh, and neglecting that which we are sent to call you to? |
A26915 | How long will thy fleshly delights endure? |
A26915 | How long will you keep it? |
A26915 | How long would you have us wait yet? |
A26915 | How long ye simple will you love simplicity, and scorners delight in scorning, and fools hate knowledg? |
A26915 | How many such hath the world that God pronounceth a Wo to? |
A26915 | How much more may God be displeased, when he must stay so long for his own, and that for your benefit? |
A26915 | How unfit to begin the holy Warfare against the flesh, the world, and Devil? |
A26915 | How will such men applaud a Sermon that drives at the Conversion of a sinner, and that tels them their misery while they are unconverted? |
A26915 | How willingly should we prepare them the bread of life, when we see they feed and live upon it? |
A26915 | I know as long as you are awake you are alway thinking of somewhat,( and perhaps when you are asleep) And what is it on? |
A26915 | I know not how others think of time, but for my part I am forced daily to say, How swift, how short is time? |
A26915 | I pray you Consider; Can you reasonably think that Conversion will do you any harm? |
A26915 | I say, to make such a question as this, or one of these, is little better then to put a scorn upon the God of Heaven? |
A26915 | If God and Heaven be not matter of comfort, I know not what is? |
A26915 | If God should give the pardon of sinne, to the unhumbled, how soon would it be cast away? |
A26915 | If I have nothing of my own, what need I to sinne, for the saving of any thing? |
A26915 | If a Feast be prepared and spread before them, a good stomack will not stand to ask; How can you prove it my duty to eat? |
A26915 | If any Papist put it into your head to ask[ who shall be judge of the sence of Scripture] I answer, who shall be judge of the judge of all the world? |
A26915 | If he be threathened by men, to move him to forsake his duty, he saith, Whether it be better to obey God or man, judge ye? |
A26915 | If he build a Navy, and you shew a man two or three pig- troughs and say,[ These are the Kings ships] would he not take it for a scorn? |
A26915 | If he had not Thought on it, and Thought againe, how miserable shoud we have remained? |
A26915 | If he lay you under his Judgments, and speak to you by his Rod, and give you a lash with every word, and ask you whether yet you will Consider of it? |
A26915 | If it be bad, and a needless thing, then let it alone for altogether? |
A26915 | If my eyes were but open to see that which I pretend to believe, and which is certainly true; even to see a glimpse of the Majesty of the Lord? |
A26915 | If not, what Reason have I to delay? |
A26915 | If one of these our wise neighbours, should study seaven years, to know whether the Sea be fire or water, whether a mountain be heavy? |
A26915 | If such Books, and such Company, and such Mercies, and such Afflictions have not done it, what hope canst thou have? |
A26915 | If such Sermons as thou hast heard could not do it, what hope is there of it? |
A26915 | If the Bethshemites cry out, who is able to stand before this Holy Lord God? |
A26915 | If the question were, whether you will be pardoned or no? |
A26915 | If they say They know these things, judge by their lives whether they know them Practically or not? |
A26915 | If this were all that a man did exceed a beast in, what a silly wretched wight were man? |
A26915 | If thou care not for God, dost thou care for thy self? |
A26915 | If you can not bend a twig, how wil you be able to bend it when it is a Tree? |
A26915 | If you can not now find in your hearts to turn and live a holy life; What would you have done in the daies of the Apostles, or antient Christians? |
A26915 | If you can not row with the stream, how will you row against it? |
A26915 | If you can not turn when you have all these helps and means, what will you do when they are taken from you? |
A26915 | If you could speak with any of those hopeless Souls, and ask them, How came you to this place of torment? |
A26915 | If you did throughly know what a life of holiness is, how speedily would you choose it? |
A26915 | If you have Reason, and will not use it, you bruitifie your selves? |
A26915 | If you think us partiall, sure God is impartiall, what better judge can you have now, then he that is infallible, and must judge you all at the last? |
A26915 | If you will not think of God, and your Souls, of Heaven, and Hell, what then will you think of? |
A26915 | If your Landlord would for nothing renew your lease; if any man would give you houses, or lands, would you delay so long before you would accept them? |
A26915 | In the Name of God Sirs what do you think of? |
A26915 | Is God an Enemy, that you are loath to come to him? |
A26915 | Is Holiness a Misery? |
A26915 | Is a certain Kingdom, an Everlasting, glorious Kingdom, nothing to thee? |
A26915 | Is a fleshly careless life so good? |
A26915 | Is it a seemly thing for a man to be driven to Heaven by scourges? |
A26915 | Is it a small thing for you to weary men, but you will weary my God also? |
A26915 | Is it better to pamper a carcass that must shortly stink as the dung, then to provide for a living immortall soul? |
A26915 | Is it enough for you, though you be despised and persecuted in the world? |
A26915 | Is it not a pitifull case, that such points as these, should seem so hard to reasonable men, as to be so long in Resolving of them? |
A26915 | Is it not most likely to be only the fear of death that makes you take up these Resolutions? |
A26915 | Is it not out of a state of wrath? |
A26915 | Is it not the sooner the better? |
A26915 | Is it not time therefore to make out to Christ for strength; and should not the very sense of your disability disswade you from delay? |
A26915 | Is it not your Judgment? |
A26915 | Is it one hour of a hundred, of a thousand, of ten thousand, with some of you, that is thus spent? |
A26915 | Is it your Resolution to live and die as you are? |
A26915 | Is my Soul Converted, and truly Sanctified by the Holy Ghost? |
A26915 | Is not God, is not your Redeemer worth the Thinking on? |
A26915 | Is not the case plain before me? |
A26915 | Is not this laid up in store with me, and sealed up among my Treasures? |
A26915 | Is sinne a Paradise? |
A26915 | Is the devil a Friend that you are so loath to leave him? |
A26915 | Is the filthy pleasure of the flesh for a few hours, better then the endless joys of the Saints? |
A26915 | Is there any difficulty in the point? |
A26915 | Is there any good in it? |
A26915 | Is there ever a man so mad that he dare speak this and stand to it? |
A26915 | Is this the work that I made thee for, and that I feed and preserve thee, and continue thee alive for? |
A26915 | It is he that must give you the pardon of your sinnes; and doth it not then belong to him to appoint the time of your receiving it? |
A26915 | Love borne of a Virgin? |
A26915 | Must God as it were hold the drunkard the candle while he reeles and spues? |
A26915 | Must another man make it the business of his life, to Think how to do you good, that you may be saved? |
A26915 | Must he draw the curtain, while the filthy wretch doth once more please his fleshly lusts? |
A26915 | My Question is this; Hast thou ever s ● berly Considered of thy waies, and laid th ● se greatest matters to heart, or hast thou not? |
A26915 | Not a man but a miserable fool will do it? |
A26915 | O how the Kingdom of Satan would down, if we could but tell how to make men Considerate: How fast the Devil would lose his servants? |
A26915 | O let not the Just and Jealous God stand over thee, and see thee guilty of such wickedness? |
A26915 | O precious time ● what hearts have they, what lives do those men lead, that think time long? |
A26915 | O sinners, what do you do, to make your recovery so difficult by delay? |
A26915 | O then how earnestly should I think of these things? |
A26915 | O then think of this poor sinner: Hast thou gone so farre, and done so much, and shall all be lost, because thou wilt not follow it to the end? |
A26915 | O what a Confounding charge would this? |
A26915 | O what a dangerous ticklish condition have you stood in all this while? |
A26915 | O what a thing is a stony heart, that can forget not only the God that he liveth by, but also the place where he must live for ever? |
A26915 | O what an ease is it to the Soul, to be free from so much of the burden of sinne? |
A26915 | O you will think with your selves; was not God more worthy of my youthfull daies? |
A26915 | Of the time you have had; and how you have spent it? |
A26915 | Oh then it will come with horrour into your mind, How oft was I perswaded, and told of this? |
A26915 | One would think it should be an easier question, whether you should turn to God and a Holy life, for the saving of your immortal Souls? |
A26915 | Or canst thou think of the endless miseries of the damned, and yet be unresolved whether to turn or not? |
A26915 | Or did it ever do any man good? |
A26915 | Or how can you prove that it is my duty? |
A26915 | Or rather will it not torment you one day to remember it? |
A26915 | Or rather would you not either soundly whip them, or take their meat from them, till hunger teach them to use it better? |
A26915 | Or what hath it ever done for you, that you should love it? |
A26915 | Or when it may possibly cost you your lives? |
A26915 | Or whether it be better to turn to God, or not? |
A26915 | Or will you strive against sinne as the greatest evil, when you know not the evil of it? |
A26915 | Seeing so great a mercy is offered to the world, why may not I partake of it as well as others? |
A26915 | Shall God be your Master indeed, and shall Christ be your Saviour& Lord? |
A26915 | Shall Heaven be your happiness, and have your hearts indeed? |
A26915 | Shall Holiness be your business indeed? |
A26915 | Shall I linger till death come, and find me unconverted? |
A26915 | Shall all the rest of your work be undone? |
A26915 | Shall he see thee read such urgent Reasons, and yet wilt not Resolve? |
A26915 | Shall he see thee read these earnest requests, and yet not Resolve? |
A26915 | Should a worm thus use the Lord that made him? |
A26915 | Should not a creature obey the Lord that made him? |
A26915 | Should you not bethink you a few hours, of the place, and state that you must live in for ever? |
A26915 | So when Reason is laid asleep, and out of the way, what may not the Appetite do? |
A26915 | Tell me but this: Are you vile in your own eyes, because you are guilty of sinne, and that against the Lord, whom you chiefly love? |
A26915 | That God should assume the Nature of man into personal Union? |
A26915 | That Reasonable Creatures should be so phrenet ● ck, that they can not be resolved whether it be better be saved, or be damned? |
A26915 | The last thing that I would set before you to be Considered, is, What''s like to be the end of it, if after all this you should die unconverted? |
A26915 | The question is not, what good meanings, or wishes, or purposes, you may have, but whether you are Resolved, and firmly Resolved? |
A26915 | Then how wouldst thou abhor the name of sin: and how weary wouldst thou be of the pleasantest life that sensuality could afford thee? |
A26915 | There is but one Infinite, unconceivable, perfect Good; and shall he be abased by such a question? |
A26915 | Thou numbrest my steps: dost thou not watch over my sinne? |
A26915 | Thou wilt never have better opportunities then thou hast had? |
A26915 | To make once a question whether God or flesh should be pleased; whether Christ or the world should be loved, and followed? |
A26915 | To what end? |
A26915 | Upon the death of 50070 men; how much more may the guilty Soul say so, when he thinks on the Crucified Sonne of God? |
A26915 | Was I so hardly recovered, by a Miracle of Mercy? |
A26915 | Was ever man made Happy by it? |
A26915 | Was it not in the power of Satan? |
A26915 | Was this it that he preserved you for, and daily gave you in provision for? |
A26915 | Well Sirs; if you will be Christians, count what it must cost you? |
A26915 | Well Sirs; you see now what you must do: the next question then is, what you will do? |
A26915 | Were it not better provok and despise all the world? |
A26915 | Were it not better to lose the favour of all the world? |
A26915 | What Reason have I to stand questioning the matter any longer, and to be unwilling to be happy? |
A26915 | What a case are you in, if death find you unconverted? |
A26915 | What a cheating, blinding thing is the world? |
A26915 | What a confusion and warre do you thus make in your own Souls? |
A26915 | What a loss will this be? |
A26915 | What a shamefull unreasonable course is this? |
A26915 | What a sweet work is it to live in the daily Love of God? |
A26915 | What abundance Christ would gaine? |
A26915 | What abundance of things have you to Consider of? |
A26915 | What advantage hath youth? |
A26915 | What an honour is it to have the Spirit of God within us, and to have a Nature so truly Heavenly and Divine? |
A26915 | What an unreasonable appetite? |
A26915 | What are you afraid of? |
A26915 | What brings so many thousand Souls to Hell, but because they would not Consider in time? |
A26915 | What contrivances some of them make for riches, or rising in the world? |
A26915 | What do we fear, and groan under, and complaine of, but our Fathers physick, and the means of our Salvation? |
A26915 | What hast make other Creatures in your service? |
A26915 | What hast makes the Sunne about the world, to return in its time to give you light? |
A26915 | What have you done with all your talents? |
A26915 | What have you to do on Earth but to Consider how to get well to Heaven? |
A26915 | What hours of the day, can a man come to you, and find your Thoughts altogether idle? |
A26915 | What if it were but the case of my body, or state, or name, should I not earnestly consider of it? |
A26915 | What is it sirs that you stick at, that you make so many delayes before you''l turn? |
A26915 | What life is in his promises? |
A26915 | What likelihood is there that ever so foolish a sinner should be recovered and saved from his sinne? |
A26915 | What matter is it for having Reason at all, if it be not that we may use it for the matters of God, and Eternall life? |
A26915 | What means of overcoming Ignorance like Teaching; and what means of overcoming Habituated Wilfullness, like Perswasion, added to informing truths? |
A26915 | What minute of an hour can a man come and ask you, What are you now Thinking on? |
A26915 | What need I to venture upon unwarrantable means, to preserve either credit, or goods, or life? |
A26915 | What plain and plentifull teaching have you? |
A26915 | What purpose you to do for the time to come? |
A26915 | What rageing passions? |
A26915 | What reason of distrustfull feares can you now have? |
A26915 | What say you Sirs to this reasonable request? |
A26915 | What say you, Sirs? |
A26915 | What say you? |
A26915 | What say you? |
A26915 | What sweetness in every passage of his grace; and what a feast in his unmeasurable Love? |
A26915 | What then should a Christian fear, but sinne? |
A26915 | What violent rebellious senses to contend with, to Master and to rule? |
A26915 | What was the Sonne of God, but Love Incarnate? |
A26915 | What will this do for thee in thy extremity? |
A26915 | What wise man would live an hour in such a case for all the world? |
A26915 | What work transcendeth the incomprehensible Miracle of the Incarnation? |
A26915 | What: is it that common Grace doth, if it no whit dispose them towards God? |
A26915 | What? |
A26915 | What? |
A26915 | What? |
A26915 | What? |
A26915 | What? |
A26915 | What? |
A26915 | When should men make Hay but when the Sun shines? |
A26915 | When sickness comes, and death draws near, you beg, and cry, and groan, and promise: When you feele the rod, what Christians will you then be? |
A26915 | When you are thinking of the Reasons that should move you to be Converted, ask your selves? |
A26915 | Whether Heaven or Earth should be more carefully sought after? |
A26915 | Whether Heaven or Earth ▪ Eternal Glory or the transitory pleasures of sinne should be preferred? |
A26915 | Whether a Holy, or a careless, wicked life be more to be desired? |
A26915 | Whether do you think that Earth or Heaven will be the more glorious and durable felicity? |
A26915 | Whether the Holy Ghost or the Devil should dwell in us, and guide us? |
A26915 | Whether the Saints of God, or the servants of the Devil should be our chosen company? |
A26915 | Whether the Word and Minsiters of Christ, or the examples and words of wicked men, should more prevail with us? |
A26915 | Whether the fire be hot or cold? |
A26915 | Whether these Reasons be not cleare, and what you have to say against them? |
A26915 | Whether you should care and labour more to be saved from sinne and Hell, or from poverty and worldly crosses, and reproaches? |
A26915 | Whether you will dwell with God and Angels, or with Devils? |
A26915 | Whether you will live in Heaven or Hell for ever? |
A26915 | Which of them was it that lost his goods, and which did save them? |
A26915 | Which of these think you is the wiser man? |
A26915 | Who can cause the Sunne to delay its Course? |
A26915 | Who cares for the Physician that feels no sickness, and feares not death? |
A26915 | Who was it that brought you to this Necessity of sorrow? |
A26915 | Who will believe that you love the Light, when you shut the windows, and draw the curtains? |
A26915 | Who will take a servant that is not resolved to do any service? |
A26915 | Who will take an unresolved person if he knows it, as a wife, or friend into his intimate love? |
A26915 | Who would travail on an hour longer, that knowes he is out of his way, and must come back again? |
A26915 | Whom have you to blame, and find fault with but your selves: was it not you that sinned? |
A26915 | Why Sirs, a man that is well in his wits, would think that these matters should be more out of doubt then the former, and speedilier resolved on? |
A26915 | Why Sirs, are not your Souls worth the Thinking on? |
A26915 | Why Sirs, if you had a hundred mile to go, in a day or two, upon paine of death; would you delay? |
A26915 | Why Sirs, it is far grosser folly, I tell you again, it is far grosser folly, to be unresolved whether you should be Holy or unholy? |
A26915 | Why Sirs, shall these trifles be done without delay, and shall your Salvation be put off? |
A26915 | Why are you not able? |
A26915 | Why do I not set about it, and speedily resolve? |
A26915 | Why else did he give us such leisure, and ability to improve it? |
A26915 | Why how can you be so blind? |
A26915 | Why is it that all the reasoning in the world, will do no more good on a man that is deaf, then if you said nothing? |
A26915 | Why this he hath done in his Word, and doth it by his Embassadors, and why then should I not consider it? |
A26915 | Why what is this but to be condemners of your selves? |
A26915 | Why? |
A26915 | Why? |
A26915 | Why? |
A26915 | Will Heaven intice the man that thinks not of it? |
A26915 | Will Hell deterre the man that thinks not of it? |
A26915 | Will any man forsake all that he hath, unless it be for something better, which may be as sure to him as that he had, and may make him more happy? |
A26915 | Will they lie at his feet, and beg for mercy, that feel themselves well enough without him? |
A26915 | Will you Resolve without any more ado, and ease us of our grief and fears, and give us but leave to preach more comfortable Doctrine to you? |
A26915 | Will you Turn this hour without delay? |
A26915 | Will you be unresolved till the night come on? |
A26915 | Will you believe in a Christ whom you do not know, and trust your souls and all upon him? |
A26915 | Will you delay till this Harvest time be over, and the Winter of persecution come again? |
A26915 | Will you obey God, and your own Consciences, or will you not? |
A26915 | Will you rather throw away your Thoughts then God shall have them? |
A26915 | Will you rest upon a Promise, or fear a Threatning, or be ruled by a Law, which you do not understand? |
A26915 | Will you then make as light of his mercy as you do now? |
A26915 | Will you therefore think to mend the matter, by sending one that knoweth not a step of the way, nor will not learn it? |
A26915 | Will you turn or not? |
A26915 | Would not these be your cries, if God should call you presently away? |
A26915 | Would so many thousands live in ease, and quietness under the guilt of so many sinnes, and the wrath of God, if they did, but well Consider of it? |
A26915 | Would th ● ● swallow down their cups so greedily, and give up themselves to the world so eagerly, if they did but well Consider what they do? |
A26915 | Would they do no more to prepare for their speedy appearing before God, and for the scaping of Hell fire, if they did but Consider of it? |
A26915 | Would you fain have one years sinnes more, or one daies sinnes more to be charged upon you? |
A26915 | Would you not think him a mad man that would say, I will go on a little further, and then I will turn back? |
A26915 | Would you stand month after month, intreating and waiting on them, as God doth on you, in a foolisher course? |
A26915 | Yea and to choose the worser part, and stick to it in your heart and life? |
A26915 | Yea he reasons with thee from the experience of all the world: Who was ever the b ● tter for sinning? |
A26915 | Yea that you should undo all that we are doing, and make us lose our labour and our hopes: And yet do you not think to pay for this? |
A26915 | Yea would you justifie God, if he should condemn you? |
A26915 | Yea, all that fear God about you are bound to Study to do you good? |
A26915 | Yea; but who knows whether these last Resolutions be sincere? |
A26915 | Yet are you not ready to turn to God? |
A26915 | You are Souldiers in fight, and your Salvation lieth on the victory: and will you trifle in such a case, when death or life is even at hand? |
A26915 | You are travailers to another world, and will you stay till the day is almost past, before you will begin your journey? |
A26915 | You live like mad men: for what is Madness, but a loss of the use of Reason? |
A26915 | You may send a man on your errand that knows the way and yet will not go it, but loiter and deceive you: But what of that? |
A26915 | You then think God deales somewhat hardly with you: And why will you not turn then by gentler means? |
A26915 | You will do it, and you hope you shall, but when? |
A26915 | Your present prosperity, and worldly delights are posting away without Delay: and should you delay to make sure of better in their stead? |
A26915 | and another lash and ask him, What say you now, will you yet obey? |
A26915 | and are you n ● t as much bound to do good to your selves? |
A26915 | and can you ● eep that which he calleth you to forsake? |
A26915 | and could not be Resolved after so many years Consideration; what would you think and say of these wise men? |
A26915 | and how little or nothing hath God had of all? |
A26915 | and in comparison of which they are all but dreams? |
A26915 | and shall I go to it again? |
A26915 | and shall all this be lost, for want of going to the bottom, and making a through work of it? |
A26915 | and shall sinne be your hatred, and the flesh and the world be your enemies indeed, and used accordingly from this day forward, without any more ado? |
A26915 | and should you not bethink you then, of the things that concern your own good? |
A26915 | and still are you unresolved? |
A26915 | and that I may not have Communion with the Saints in Holiness? |
A26915 | and that I may not sanctifie the Lords Day? |
A26915 | and what happy advantages have you for Salvation? |
A26915 | and what may not Temptations do with the Soul? |
A26915 | and what may not the Passions do? |
A26915 | and when every one will be deriding and railing at you? |
A26915 | and when will it once be? |
A26915 | and whether any thing that can be said to the contrary, can prove it better for you to be as you are, and to remaine unconverted? |
A26915 | and which of them shouldest thou preferre? |
A26915 | and, What canst thou do more?] |
A26915 | and, What would you have done in Spain or Italy, where it would cost you your lives? |
A26915 | are you not Convinced that it were your wisest course to part with them this very day and hour? |
A26915 | are you not led by Reason? |
A26915 | did thy Land, and Livings, worldly matters deserve all thy Thoughts, and did not the saving of the Soul deserve some of them? |
A26915 | do you not know that you forsake it by not for saking it, and lose all, by saving any thing? |
A26915 | how oft had I inward motions to return? |
A26915 | how oft was I purposed to be holy, and to give up my heart and life to God? |
A26915 | how unready to appear before the dreadfull God whom you have offended; and what a terrible appearance do you think that will be to you? |
A26915 | if I should tell you but one half the blessings of a Sanctified and spirituall state? |
A26915 | is Sanctification but such a thing as this? |
A26915 | nor know the meaning of your Baptismall Covenant? |
A26915 | not to come home to thy God, to thy Father, to thy Saviour, to to thy self, after so long and wilfull sinning? |
A26915 | of all your life past; of the Relations you have born; and how you have performed the duties of those relations? |
A26915 | or are you not? |
A26915 | or speak any holyer words then thou hast spoken? |
A26915 | or whether sinne with Hell after it, be better than Holiness with Heaven after? |
A26915 | or who can stay the ascending flames? |
A26915 | p. 181. l. 1. r. this be? |
A26915 | shall I provoke God by dallying with him, and hazzard my Soul by lingering out my time, in such a miserable state? |
A26915 | that being reviled, reviled not again: that gave his life, an offering for sinne, and dyed, and prayed for them that murdered him? |
A26915 | that never was contrite, and broken hearted for sin? |
A26915 | then whether you should eate, or drink, or sleep, for the preservation of your bodies? |
A26915 | they would be readier to say, How can you prove that I may not pray with my Family? |
A26915 | till the Lord of the Feast shall take them to task, and say, Friend, how comest thou in hither, not having on a wedding garment? |
A26915 | to carry a Judge about with you in your own brests, that is still passing sentence against you? |
A26915 | was ease and idleness, or eating, or drinking, or vaine discourses, or recreation, the business that you came into the world about? |
A26915 | was it not you that laid in the fuel of sorrows, and sowed the feeds of this bitter fruit, and cherished the Cause of trouble in your selves? |
A26915 | was sport and merryment the end that you were created for? |
A26915 | what a case art thou in, if this should once be the resolution of God? |
A26915 | whether God or the flesh should be first obeyed, and loved? |
A26915 | which is in plain English, whether it be better go to Heaven or to Hell? |
A26915 | which is the more desireable? |
A26915 | which of these is the better for thee? |
A26915 | 〈 ◊ 〉 Do you think that Judas himself had not some good Desires, that followed Christ so long, and preached the Gospel? |
A27009 | & c. Is none of this Gospel? |
A27009 | & c. then to hear, so much in such a Feast? |
A27009 | ( And why should they call them Venial if they need not pardon?) |
A27009 | ( though not so well as you would perform them?) |
A27009 | 1 ▪ 7, 8, 9. and 2.12,& c. What more common? |
A27009 | 13.7, 17. should not the shepherd know his sheep, and their strayings and diseases? |
A27009 | Abels sacrifice was of the best, and it was accepted: And God saith to Cain, If thou do well, shalt not thou be accepted? |
A27009 | Alas, how ignorant are most of the best? |
A27009 | Alas, how is it possible then for us to forbear troubling you? |
A27009 | Alas, if we are so unfit to part with one outward comfort now, upon the disposal of our fathers providence, how should we forsake all for Christ? |
A27009 | Alas, what soul is so holy on the Earth, but must daily say, Forgive as our trespasses? |
A27009 | Alas, what work should we make, if we should stroak and smooth all men with Antinomian language? |
A27009 | Also, Suppose yet that you are Graceless: Is it nothing that a sufficient Sacrifice and Ransome is given for you? |
A27009 | And Whether we can love or serve God too much? |
A27009 | And also, is it not a great help to you, to hear other Christians tell how they have come into those troubles; and how they have got out of them? |
A27009 | And do not his Apostles go the same way? |
A27009 | And do you not Accept of Christ as he is offered therein? |
A27009 | And doth it not incroach much on the Lords own day? |
A27009 | And doth not Paul make it the Case of all Christians? |
A27009 | And even among these, What a number are grossely ignorant and prophane? |
A27009 | And for Communion with God, let me ask you: Have you no recourse to him by Prayer in your straits? |
A27009 | And here we are cast unavoidably to try whether we do perform our resolutions by actual obedience? |
A27009 | And how can one man, yea or five, do this to five thousand souls? |
A27009 | And how can such a one have any true Grace: or be saved? |
A27009 | And how come I to go on in the same fault my self? |
A27009 | And how should you dare to deny the same to your self? |
A27009 | And if yet any be troubled with this Doubt, if the Churches and Common trouble be any trouble to them, shall I be bold to tell them my thoughts? |
A27009 | And is it not so in too great a measure with the best on earth? |
A27009 | And is it not so with our Master? |
A27009 | And may not that Comfort ● e truly the Joy of the Holy Ghost? |
A27009 | And may we not take Comfort in that which tends to save our own and our brethrens souls? |
A27009 | And of these five that are Christians, how great a part are of the Aethiopian, Greek and Popish Churches? |
A27009 | And shall I keep the Devils counsel? |
A27009 | And shall we ever have low and suspicious thoughts of the Gracious and Mercifull Nature of Christ after so strange and full a discovery of it? |
A27009 | And then do I need to say any more to the Confirmation of the third Point, That few Christians reach this measure of Grace? |
A27009 | And then more dark is it and impossible to discover, How farre a man may go in these grosser sinnes; and yet have the prevalent habits of Grace? |
A27009 | And therefore it must needs be that the soul that most sinneth must needs be most in doubt whether the Interest of Christ or the flesh be predominant? |
A27009 | And what a snare is this to us, as well as a grief? |
A27009 | And what was the cause of his sorrow? |
A27009 | And whether some Temptations which overcome not a strong Christian, would not overcome a weak one, who yet hath true Grace? |
A27009 | Are not you less Censorious, and more Peaceable then heretofore? |
A27009 | Are not you ready in most of your fears, and doubts, and troubles, to go to God before all other for relief? |
A27009 | Are these signs that your day of Grace is over? |
A27009 | Are you fain to lye on your knees crying for Mercy? |
A27009 | Are you heartily willing to live in the performance of those holy and spiritual Duties of heart and life, which God hath absolutely commanded you? |
A27009 | Are you heartily willing to take Jesus Christ as he is offered in the Gospel? |
A27009 | Are you not more fully Resolved to stick to Christ to the death then formerly you have been? |
A27009 | Are you not resolved to stick to Christ and his holy Laws and Waies, whatever changes or dangers come? |
A27009 | Are you not willing to be more holy? |
A27009 | Are you not willing to wait on God in the use of his Ordinances, in that poor weak measure as you are able to perform them? |
A27009 | Are you willing to do this? |
A27009 | Art thou ever able to hold out in so strict a course? |
A27009 | As Austin saith, Shall we deny that which is plain, because we can not reach that which is obscure and difficult? |
A27009 | As if God had not done enough, or would not sufficiently afflict us? |
A27009 | Ask your self every morning, Which way may I this day most further my Masters business, and the Good of men? |
A27009 | Ask your self every night, What Good have I done to day? |
A27009 | At least is it not lawfull for man to judge as God doth? |
A27009 | BVt I am a stranger to the witness of the spirit, and the Joy of the Holy Ghost, and Communion with God, and therefore how can I be a true Believer? |
A27009 | Believers would rather have their Happiness in God then in the Creature: But how fain would they have it without Dying? |
A27009 | But doth not Scripture lay as much on Love, as on any Grace? |
A27009 | But have you Done all that he bid you? |
A27009 | But if God were so infinite in Mercy, as you say, Why doth he not make all these men willing, that so they may be saved? |
A27009 | But is it a Duty, or is it not? |
A27009 | But is it not the known voyce of Sensuality and Hell, to cast reproaches upon the way and ordinances of God? |
A27009 | But perhaps you will ask, Is doubting of our own sincerity and Salvation no sin? |
A27009 | But perhaps you will say, How should I get more Grace? |
A27009 | But still, it will be more difficult to shew punctually what this Imperfect or Virtual Justification is? |
A27009 | But suppose you do not grow? |
A27009 | But the flesh cries louder then both these, Wilt thou leave thy pleasures? |
A27009 | But what doth God say to them for it? |
A27009 | But what got he at this one game? |
A27009 | But what is that? |
A27009 | But what''s all this to you that do Repent? |
A27009 | But where do you find that in Gods Word? |
A27009 | But who bid you look for any better? |
A27009 | But will this means serve turn, or must the same course be taken, to remove the sorrows of the wilfully disobedient? |
A27009 | But( you may say) what if God call me not to suffering or hazards? |
A27009 | But, alas, how hard is this lesson learned? |
A27009 | Can he that erreth be fully perswaded in his errour? |
A27009 | Can not he make a Law that shall change its Moral Action according to the change of the actions or inclinations of sinners? |
A27009 | Can not you forbear most of the actual sinnes you commit, and perform the duties that you omit, if you be Willing? |
A27009 | Can not you resist Pride, Worldliness and Sensuality if you be willing? |
A27009 | Can there be Communication of Prayer, and Obedience from you? |
A27009 | Can you doubt whether God be willing to give you Christ and Life, when he hath given them already? |
A27009 | Can you have Cause to fear that your day of Grace is over, that have Received Grace? |
A27009 | Can you not ▪ nay ought you not to put your self to greater labour for mens souls? |
A27009 | Certainly you have more reason? |
A27009 | Consider first in how narrow a compass the Church was confined before Christs coming in the flesh? |
A27009 | DO you know what the spirit of Prayer is? |
A27009 | Did Christ come to save any but sinners, and such as were lost? |
A27009 | Did he weep over a rejected unbeleeving people, and was he desirous of their desolation? |
A27009 | Did not the Devil get more in his Gown in a day, then he could get by his Sword in three hundred years? |
A27009 | Did not the rich young man go farre before he would break off with Christ? |
A27009 | Did not this one act found the Seat of Rome? |
A27009 | Did not you hear and believe that Christ dyed for sin, as soon as you understood your Sin and Misery? |
A27009 | Do I need to go over the other particulars? |
A27009 | Do I need to prove that to you? |
A27009 | Do Rich men never think to lie rotting in the dust? |
A27009 | Do not worldly hopes delight you too much? |
A27009 | Do not you cut short duties in your family and in secret, if not frequently omit them, that so you may be again at your worldly business? |
A27009 | Do not you daily strive against the flesh, and keep it under, and deny it its desires? |
A27009 | Do not your very speeches of Christ and heaven grow few and strange, because the world must first be served? |
A27009 | Do these men think that a Rebell may have the love of his Prince, and as much comfort from him as a Loyal subject? |
A27009 | Do they not know that it will comfort them more at Death& Judgement, to hear in their reckoning, Item so much given to such& such Poor? |
A27009 | Do they think that Christ himself knew not what it was to preach Christ? |
A27009 | Do you lose your Children? |
A27009 | Do you lose your Goods? |
A27009 | Do you lose your Health? |
A27009 | Do you not Desire Christ and Grace, Justification and Sanctification? |
A27009 | Do you not deny the world when it would hinder you from works of Mercy or publique Good, according to your ability? |
A27009 | Do you not feel some unquietness in your sinful Condition? |
A27009 | Do you not feel that God made these fears at your first conversion, the first and a principal means of your Recovery? |
A27009 | Do you not hear God daily offering you Christ and Grace? |
A27009 | Do you not look to God as him who alone is able to supply your wants, and bids you ask that you may receive? |
A27009 | Do you not understand the things of the Spirit better then you formerly did? |
A27009 | Do you not value God, Christ, Glory and Grace at higher rates then formerly? |
A27009 | Do you not wait at his mouth for the Law and direction of your life? |
A27009 | Do you perform them, or do you not? |
A27009 | Do you see, and hear, and feel, and taste Mercy and Love? |
A27009 | Do you think Christs satisfaction is not sufficient? |
A27009 | Do you think that God hath any Pleasure in your sorrows as such? |
A27009 | Do you think you must needs Despair, or give up all Hope and Comfort, or conclude your self irrecoverably lost, because you are Graceless? |
A27009 | Do you utterly despair of help, and to seek to none? |
A27009 | Do you value Christ above the world? |
A27009 | Doth God seem to forsake you? |
A27009 | Doth God so much regard this dirty flesh, that he should do all this meerly for its ease and relief? |
A27009 | Doth Gods Spirit breath out Groans after Christ and Grace, within you? |
A27009 | Doth any of the Apostles speak more of hell- fire, and the worm that never dyeth, and the fire that never is quenched, their Christ himself doth? |
A27009 | Doth it do him Good to see you dejected, afflicted and tormented? |
A27009 | Doth not the love of the world make you hard to your servants? |
A27009 | Doth not the very language of complaining Christians shew this? |
A27009 | Doth not your soul stick so fast in this mud and clay, that you can scarce stirre it Godward in Prayer or heavenly Meditation? |
A27009 | Doth not your troubled spirit there finde its first vent? |
A27009 | Doth there need any more to the establishing of the Romish and Hellish darkness? |
A27009 | Examine, whether the thoughts of the world grow not sweeter to you, and the thoughts of God and glory more unwelcome, and unpleasing? |
A27009 | For how can there be greater then the turning of a soul from the creature to the Creator? |
A27009 | For how few Believers be there that understand well, what is a sound evidence, and what not? |
A27009 | For when a man is enquiring into the state of his soul, Whether he do subject himself to Christ as his only Soveraign? |
A27009 | Go into the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature:( what''s that Gospel?) |
A27009 | God is the first suitor and solicitor: God Prayes you to Take Christ, and you Pray him to give you Christ: what have you now to do, but to Take him? |
A27009 | God offereth his Love in Christ, and Christ with all his benefits to you: Are you willing to Accept them? |
A27009 | Had David no former experiences to remind? |
A27009 | Had you any of these holy desires, endeavors or resolutions of your self by nature? |
A27009 | Hath God forgotten to be gratious? |
A27009 | Hath it not been thus oft with you? |
A27009 | Hath not Christ led us, commanded us and taught us this way? |
A27009 | Have not these fears been chief preservers of your diligence and integrity ever since? |
A27009 | Have not you both these? |
A27009 | Have you discountenance from men? |
A27009 | Have you horrid temptations? |
A27009 | Have you made Conscience of the Duties of Praise, Thanksgiving and Cheerful Obedience, as much as of Grieving for sin? |
A27009 | Have you made conscience of this great duty according to its excellency and these pressing Commands of God? |
A27009 | Have you no Pity now on such stupid souls as these? |
A27009 | Have you received no holy desires, or other Graces from him? |
A27009 | Have you strong lusts? |
A27009 | He requireth that you Delight your self in him: And how can you do that when you habituate both mind and body to a sad, dejected, mournful garb? |
A27009 | How came you by that Grace of holy Des ● res? |
A27009 | How came you to desire that you were such a one as God would have you to be? |
A27009 | How can you then say, that you have no Communion with him? |
A27009 | How can you think then that he will take pleasure in your consuming and destroying your own bodies? |
A27009 | How could he have manifested more willingness to save? |
A27009 | How desirous are diseased persons to talk with others that have had the same disease? |
A27009 | How easily may a Christian try himself at such a time when God is trying him? |
A27009 | How easily put off with an excuse? |
A27009 | How easy to maintain two or three poor Scholars at the Universities for the service of the Church? |
A27009 | How else shall he cure them? |
A27009 | How exceeding smal a number is left then that are such as you? |
A27009 | How fully might this be proved from the examples of Job, David, Jeremy and others in Scripture? |
A27009 | How little Love, or Faith, or Zeal, or heavenly- mindedness, or Delight in God, have they? |
A27009 | How little acquainted with their own hearts? |
A27009 | How many have taught them that the least unfeigned Love to God, or to the Brethren, is a certain Mark of saving Grace? |
A27009 | How many have the Antin ● mians and Anabaptists thus seduced? |
A27009 | How o ● t hath the Devil preached thus, to tye the hands of those that might wound him? |
A27009 | How oft doth the Holy Ghost press this upon us? |
A27009 | How oft hath God professed to resist and take down the Proud, and to give Grace to the humble and dwell with them? |
A27009 | How sad a thing is it, that we should thus add to our own Afflictions? |
A27009 | How tenderly did Christ deal with all sorts of sinners? |
A27009 | How then should a man know just when he was past the highest step of common or preparative Grace, and arived at the first step of special Grace? |
A27009 | How unacquainted with a frequent exercise of these Graces? |
A27009 | How unacquainted with the way of self- examination? |
A27009 | How was Davids zeal for Justice allaied, as soon as he heard, Thou art the man? |
A27009 | How will you answer God for the neglect of all that service which you should have done him, and might, if you had not disabled your bodies and minds? |
A27009 | How? |
A27009 | I am content to stand to the Judgement of all humble self- knowing Christians, whether this be not true of most of themselves? |
A27009 | I would ask you but this: Whether you are willing or unwilling of all that hardness, insensibleness, and dulness which you complain of? |
A27009 | If Christ were not first willing, he would not be the suitor and make the motion: and if he be willing, and you be willing, what can break the match? |
A27009 | If I be a Father where is mine honour? |
A27009 | If Tormenting Fears and Doubtings be a sin, why do you not make Conscience of them? |
A27009 | If he had such power of you, would you not think your self certainly his slave? |
A27009 | If not, how unwisely have you done? |
A27009 | If then it be glad tidings and tidings of great joy to all the unconverted where it comes, why should it not be so to you? |
A27009 | If these men will not hear him, but wilfully poison themselves, is he therefore unmercifull? |
A27009 | If thou Do Well, shalt thou not be Accepted? |
A27009 | If you are willing of it, what makes you complain of it? |
A27009 | If you ask me why I speak so much of these things here? |
A27009 | If you be Graceless, is it nothing to know that God is exceeding merciful, slow to anger, ready to forgive, pardoning iniquity, transgression and sin? |
A27009 | If you have a thorn in your foot, will you go on halting and lamenting, or will you pull it out? |
A27009 | If you say, I can not help it: why then do you cherish them? |
A27009 | If you send reapers into your harvest, which would you like better? |
A27009 | If you will make Promises to your self, and then your own Promises deceive you, whom should you blame for that? |
A27009 | If you will put your head under every stroke that we give against sin and sinners, how can we help it if you smart? |
A27009 | If your Child offend you, would you have him when he is pardoned no longer to believe it then you are telling it him? |
A27009 | If your Doubting be onely Whether you be sincere in Beli ● ving, Loving, Hoping, Repenting and Obeying? |
A27009 | If your day of Grace be past, tell me,( and do not wrong God) Where had you the Grace of Repentance? |
A27009 | If your selves make the suffering, how can you with any encouragement beg strength of God to bear it? |
A27009 | Is Baptism to be Reformed? |
A27009 | Is his glory worth no more then so? |
A27009 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
A27009 | Is it not a foolish Patient that will come home from the Physitian, and say, I have heard all that he said: but I am never the better? |
A27009 | Is it not better venture thy self in the same way as thou hast gone in, as well as others do, and as so many of thy forefathers have done before thee? |
A27009 | Is it not the grief of your soul when you fall? |
A27009 | Is it not thus with you? |
A27009 | Is it not your daily care and business to please God, and do his will, and avoid sinning in your weak measure? |
A27009 | Is it nothing to know that the Lord hath brought Infinite Mercy and Goodness down into humane flesh? |
A27009 | Is it nothing to you, that all your sins have a sufficient Sacrifice paid for them, so that you are certain not to perish for want of a Ransom? |
A27009 | Is not he thy Father that bought thee? |
A27009 | Is not here enough got at one Cast? |
A27009 | Is not this the common case of Godly people? |
A27009 | Is not your complaint in this the very same that the eminentest Christians have used in all times? |
A27009 | Is not your heart raised to a Hope that yet God is mercifull to you, and means you good? |
A27009 | Is there no ground of comfort in these examples of the Saints? |
A27009 | Is there not a middle between these two? |
A27009 | It is well that you desire them: But though you be not Certain of Salvation, do not you see a great likelihood, a Probability in all this? |
A27009 | It may be you will say, But God is no Father to the Graceless? |
A27009 | It s possible some do so: But if by these perswasions the silly people should lose their lives, how well had their new preacher befriended them? |
A27009 | Know ye not that to whom ye Yield your selves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey? |
A27009 | Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey? |
A27009 | Lay these now to your own heart, and tell me, Are you not unfeignedly willing to have Christ on the termes that he is offered? |
A27009 | Let me ask you now whether you have indeed taken this course in your doubtings? |
A27009 | Matter of Sorrow and Matter of Doubting? |
A27009 | May not he well say to you, If you set so much by the world, take it, and see what it will do for you? |
A27009 | May not wicked men be Willing to have Christ? |
A27009 | Moreover, is it not a reviving thing, to hear Christians open the Goodness of the Lord? |
A27009 | Must the Lord set up Love and Mercy in the work of Redemption, to be equally admired with his Omnipotency manifested in the Creation? |
A27009 | Must you needs be esteemed either Innocent, or Hypocrites, or such as shall be damned? |
A27009 | Nay how can you pray for deliverance from Gods Afflictings, when you make more of your own? |
A27009 | Nay may it not draw out your heart in Love, Delight and Thankfulness? |
A27009 | Nay, are you sure that you are not a member of Christ, who is one with him? |
A27009 | Nay, what if you had no Grace? |
A27009 | Now I am perswaded that you frequently see a strong Probability of your Sincerity: and may not that be a very great stay and comfort to your soul? |
A27009 | Now I would but ask those very Christians that think they do know the very Sermon that converted them, Did that Sermon bring you to this Resolution? |
A27009 | Now can any man on earth tell us just how great or how often sinning will stand with true Grace, and how much will not? |
A27009 | Now do not you Believe the truth of the Gospel? |
A27009 | Now how should an unwilling soul be made willing? |
A27009 | Now if this were none of his Nature, how could he be the pattern of our new nature herein? |
A27009 | Now in this Case, how shall those that have but little Grace be able to discern it? |
A27009 | Now is not this as much as belongs to God as Governour of the Creature according to its Nature? |
A27009 | Now what man can punctually determine just how often a true Christian may be guilty of any such omission? |
A27009 | Now what''s the use that I would have you make of this? |
A27009 | Now your first work is, Presently to accept it: not to make an unseasonable enquiry, Whether Christ be yours? |
A27009 | O but yet he will not save the Graceless? |
A27009 | O how narrow is the path between these two mistaken roads? |
A27009 | O if a poor bruised, wounded soul had but heard this Sermon from his Saviours own mouth; what heart- meltings would it have caused? |
A27009 | O that you knew what a Work of wonderfull Mercy, Wisdom and Power the Spirit performeth in the renewing of a soul? |
A27009 | O what the Devil hath got by Over- doing? |
A27009 | Oh how gloriously doth a tried faith shine, to the comfort of the Believer, and the admiration of the Beholders? |
A27009 | Or Him that would do his work chearfully as well as he can? |
A27009 | Or do you make your addresses by Prayer to any but God? |
A27009 | Or do you not customarily hurry them over because the world will not allow you leasure to be serious? |
A27009 | Or else how could holy men rejoyce in Tribulation, and be exceeding glad that they are accounted worthy to suffer for Christ? |
A27009 | Or have the ungodly about you any of them? |
A27009 | Or if you were ready to famish, and food were offered you; would you stand asking first, How shall I know that it is mine? |
A27009 | Or that your corn is growing on your land, or your cattel in your grounds any longer then you are looking on them? |
A27009 | Or was it not only some troubling, rowsing preparation hereto? |
A27009 | Perhaps you will say, What comfort is there in this to a poor weak Christian? |
A27009 | Seeing therefore that all the question will be, Whether you have true Faith? |
A27009 | Shall I lay open all the matter expressed in this section, by a familiar comparison? |
A27009 | Shall he do such wonders in you and for you, and you not know it, or acknowledge it? |
A27009 | Shall not Love be acknowledged to be Love, when it s grown to a Miracle? |
A27009 | Shew me, if you can, where the Scripture saith, He that can not Weep for sin, shall not be Saved, or hath no true Grace? |
A27009 | Should he be still asking you over and over every day, Father, am I forgiven, or no? |
A27009 | Should not one answer serve his turn? |
A27009 | So also in sins of Commission: Alas, what sins did Noah, Lot, David, Solomon, Asa, Peter,& c. commit? |
A27009 | So that you had rather have him, and Gods favour, and a Holy heart and life, then all the glory of the World? |
A27009 | Suppose it be so: Do you see no great Likelyhood or hopes yet that they are sincere? |
A27009 | Suppose you are yet Graceless, is it nothing to you that it is a God of Infinite Mercy that you have to do with? |
A27009 | THe Question is not, with God, what you have been, but what you are? |
A27009 | Tell me now whether the first of these sick persons be not like to be more troubled then the other? |
A27009 | The Heathen could tell him that askt him, How men might be like to God? |
A27009 | The Question Answered, Whether all Virtue be in the middle? |
A27009 | The Question therefore is not whether you have an unwillingness& backwardness to Good? |
A27009 | The third part is Thankfulness and Praise? |
A27009 | The word is nigh you, even the offer of Grace: you need not say, who shall ascend to Heaven, or go down to hell? |
A27009 | This is the sin against the Holy Ghost: And dare you say that you are guilty of this? |
A27009 | This will necessitate you to further Unthankfulness: for who can be Thankful for a Mercy that thinks he never received it? |
A27009 | Though you may do it with backwardness, and dullness, and weakness, yet do you Do it? |
A27009 | Thus you speak, saying, If our transgressions and our sins be upon us, and we pine away in them, how should we then live? |
A27009 | To dream of Perfection on earth, is to dream of Heaven on earth: And if Assurance may be here perfect, why not all our Graces? |
A27009 | To hear them give you their frequent and full experiences of Gods hearing and answering their Prayers, and helping them in their distresses? |
A27009 | Was it Prosperity, and Riches, and Credit, and Friends, that God called you to Believe for? |
A27009 | Was it never in the power of our Rulers to have helpt us here? |
A27009 | Was it not a base wickedness in them that offered their Children in sacrifice, to think that God would be pleased with such cruelty? |
A27009 | Was not this Reverend Zeal? |
A27009 | Was not this a low ebb and a sad case that David was in? |
A27009 | Was nothing sold for other uses, that was once Devoted and Dedicated to God, and might have helpt us in this our miserable distress? |
A27009 | We have looked for Wonders from Scotland, and what is come of it? |
A27009 | Were you not acquainted with the evil of sin, and danger and misery of sinners in your very Childhood? |
A27009 | What Comfort would such an Answer give them? |
A27009 | What a multitude of such passages may you find in Scripture? |
A27009 | What a number of these choice experiences do we all receive? |
A27009 | What abundance of difficulties will be in the way? |
A27009 | What can be more contrary to its nature, and to Gods design in forming it, then for the Professors to live such dejected and dolorous lives? |
A27009 | What can be plainer? |
A27009 | What cure now should a wise man wish to such people as these? |
A27009 | What doctrine could more desperately undo you if entertained? |
A27009 | What if your godly friends should come about you in this Case, and bend all their wits and speeches to perswade you that you are but an Hypocrite? |
A27009 | What is your reason? |
A27009 | What opportunities of Doing very great Good hath been long in their hands? |
A27009 | What then is all the rest of the work? |
A27009 | When God in the Gospel bids you, Take Jesus Christ, and beseecheth you to be reconciled to him; what will you say to him? |
A27009 | When you see your brother have need, do you not shut up the bowels of your compassions from him? |
A27009 | Where do you finde in Scripture that none who have true Grace, do sin knowingly or Deliberately? |
A27009 | Where doth Scripture say as you say? |
A27009 | Where hath God laid our salvation upon the strength of our Memories, the Readiness of our Tongues, or measure of the like Gifts? |
A27009 | Whether you do perform the Condition of the new Covenant? |
A27009 | Who dare say, I am more Mercifull then God? |
A27009 | Who ever meets with a distressed complaining soul, where one or both of these is not apparent? |
A27009 | Who knows how many souls they may win to Christ( if God shall send them forth into his harvest) whom you have thus assisted? |
A27009 | Who knows not that the Consolation of Martyrs is usually above other mens, who hath read of their sufferings and strange sustentations? |
A27009 | Who made you Willing to have Christ for your Lord and Saviour? |
A27009 | Why do you not do this instead of Doubting? |
A27009 | Why is it that you can scarce name a Creature near you, that is not a scourge to you, but because you can scarce name one that is not your Idol? |
A27009 | Why then do you entertain them? |
A27009 | Why then do you that are Believers, so much forget the End of your Faith? |
A27009 | Will he ever give his Mercy and the blood of his Son, to one that hath so abused it? |
A27009 | Will the Lord ever save such an unworthy wretch as I? |
A27009 | Will this ever cast out Tormenting Fears? |
A27009 | Will you do any thing save what you should do? |
A27009 | Will you not believe that your money is in your purse or chest any longer then you are looking on it? |
A27009 | Will you please the Devil so far, and so far contradict the gracious way of Christ, as that you will needs either sin still, or Despair? |
A27009 | Will you strive as much to work it to this Delight as ever you did to work it to sorrow? |
A27009 | Will you therefore Doubt because you have slavish fears? |
A27009 | Wilt thou beggar thy self? |
A27009 | Would not this put you harder to it? |
A27009 | Would these men have fought well by Sea or Land, if they had apprehended no danger? |
A27009 | Would they avoid fire, or water, or thieves; but through an apprehension of danger? |
A27009 | Would they take Physick when they are sick? |
A27009 | Would you not be angry at such childish unprofitable diligence or curiosity as is a hindrance to your work? |
A27009 | Would you rather that God had permitted you to do this? |
A27009 | Would you see any further how he hath play''d this successful game of Over- doing? |
A27009 | Would you speed better then the best? |
A27009 | Would you, in the midst of your groans, and complaints, and fears, take it for a small mercy, to be certain that you shall have Christ if you will? |
A27009 | YOur soul stands in extreme need of a Saviour: God offereth you a Saviour in the Gospel, what then have you next to do, but Accept him? |
A27009 | Yea among our selves hath the Devil used successfully this plot: What Confession of the purest Church hath not some more then is in Scripture? |
A27009 | Yet in a godly jealousie and distrust of your own heart, do renounce your own strength, and resolve to do this only in the strength of Christ? |
A27009 | You have had Hopes and Probabilites of your sincerity: Did you endeavor to answer those Probabilities in your Joys? |
A27009 | [ Cease ye from man, whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be accounted of? |
A27009 | and Overseers of them? |
A27009 | and Resolve to choose him before the world? |
A27009 | and Taken all the Medicines that he gave you? |
A27009 | and a Communication of any life of Grace from God, by Christ and the Spirit? |
A27009 | and all because of their Afflictions? |
A27009 | and all this on Condition of your Acceptance or Consent? |
A27009 | and all this without Communion? |
A27009 | and also of the necessity of a Saviour, and that Christ dyed to save all sinners that will believe and Repent? |
A27009 | and are not quite past all Remedy? |
A27009 | and are you heartily sorry that you perform them no better? |
A27009 | and beg of him to make you so? |
A27009 | and bewail it that you have been so guilty of them? |
A27009 | and call forth the World to this sweet imployment, that in Secret and in Publick it might be the business of our lives? |
A27009 | and come not among them? |
A27009 | and cry out with Paul, O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from this body of death? |
A27009 | and deny the Lord that bought them? |
A27009 | and deride thy holy word as a fable? |
A27009 | and desire you could do it better? |
A27009 | and do not your duty for the saving of their souls? |
A27009 | and do you not after sinning Resolve to be more watchfull for the time to come? |
A27009 | and doth not Christ say, that except we Love him above all, we can not be his Disciples? |
A27009 | and doth not your heart sigh and groan to him when you can scarcely speak? |
A27009 | and endeavour to Do it better then you have formerly done? |
A27009 | and for all their Time, and Power, and Interests? |
A27009 | and hath he deserved no better at your hands? |
A27009 | and hath not this fastned on your heart, and been working in you by Degrees ever since? |
A27009 | and hath taken on him the most blessed office of Reconciling, and is become the Lamb of God? |
A27009 | and how God dealt with them while they lay under them? |
A27009 | and how backward to it? |
A27009 | and how carnal and corrupt even that visible Church then was? |
A27009 | and how dull and careless in it? |
A27009 | and how few of those are fit to begin here the works of their Priestly Office, which they must live in for ever? |
A27009 | and how hard a thing, and how rare is it to finde it and to keep in it? |
A27009 | and how little tenderness of Conscience, and care of obeying have they? |
A27009 | and how mutable are their Apprehensions? |
A27009 | and how soon do they lose that Assurance which they once attain? |
A27009 | and if I be a Master where is my fear? |
A27009 | and if he were not infinitely Mercifull himself, how could we be required to be Mercifull as he is? |
A27009 | and if you have not strength, what will you do? |
A27009 | and is it unmercifulness yet if such men perish? |
A27009 | and just how long he may continue it? |
A27009 | and lament your misdoing it? |
A27009 | and look so kindly on a competitor? |
A27009 | and make your life a blessed life? |
A27009 | and more tender compassion to the souls of men, then he hath fully manifested? |
A27009 | and much more your worldly possessions? |
A27009 | and of how much soarer punishment shall he be thought worthy that treads under foot the blood of the Covenant? |
A27009 | and of living after the flesh, and preferring the world before him? |
A27009 | and own them? |
A27009 | and perform these Resolutions? |
A27009 | and plead and dispute for them? |
A27009 | and preach more for them? |
A27009 | and rather forget you in a Sermon then them? |
A27009 | and rather to forsake friends and all that you have, then to forsake him? |
A27009 | and say you do well to Doubt, and you have Cause? |
A27009 | and so whether he did sincerely take Christ for his Soveraign? |
A27009 | and so whether his obedience be true or no? |
A27009 | and so you have no time to deal in good earnest with Christ or your soul? |
A27009 | and some motions and strivings at your heart to get out of it? |
A27009 | and study more for them? |
A27009 | and tell us which be so Damning, and which not? |
A27009 | and that Repentance and sincere Obedience, are parts of the Condition of the new Covenant? |
A27009 | and that for which it is that you Believe? |
A27009 | and that in particulars, as upon experience they have found him to their own souls? |
A27009 | and that is, whether he be a true Believer? |
A27009 | and that they watch for their souls, as those that must give an account? |
A27009 | and that to his Disciples? |
A27009 | and that you are so troubled that you can not do it? |
A27009 | and that you were able to Love God, and Delight in him, and please him even in perfection? |
A27009 | and the Bodies Resurrection that must shortly follow? |
A27009 | and the people therefore bound to obey them? |
A27009 | and the rest to leave my Posterity in the like pomp? |
A27009 | and therefore daily beg it of him? |
A27009 | and think so meanly of it, and so hardly acknowledge it? |
A27009 | and this without any change in God? |
A27009 | and to be undone? |
A27009 | and to desire that all your sins were dead, and might never live in you more? |
A27009 | and to finde this to be the summe of the Gospel? |
A27009 | and to forsake all and lay down thy life for Christ? |
A27009 | and to give such loving entertainment to his enemy? |
A27009 | and to use the means with more resolution and diligence? |
A27009 | and try whether whether it will not be the truest way to comfort? |
A27009 | and upon every occasion quite lose the sight of their evidences? |
A27009 | and was not the Devil seemingly now a Christian of the most judicious and forward sort? |
A27009 | and what an addition to your comfort this may be? |
A27009 | and what an unconstancy and unevenness is there in our Peace? |
A27009 | and what distractions and tumults are there in their thoughts? |
A27009 | and what hath he left to support his soul? |
A27009 | and what helped them? |
A27009 | and what the duties be which he may possibly so omit, and what not? |
A27009 | and where is your great joy? |
A27009 | and whether it will not remove almost all the fears and troubles of the latter to hear of a Certain Remedy as soon as he heareth of the disease? |
A27009 | and whether the Authority and Love of Christ will do more with him, then the temptations of the world, flesh and devil? |
A27009 | and wil you after all this oppose the greatness of your sins against the greatness of this Mercy and Satisfaction? |
A27009 | and will he be favourable no more? |
A27009 | and would he not compel you to come in? |
A27009 | and would not the Hope of Salvation draw you from sin to duty, without the fear of Damnation in Hell? |
A27009 | and yet do you still doubt of it? |
A27009 | and yet is the day of Grace over? |
A27009 | and yet shall it be so overlookt or questioned, as if you lived without Love and Mercy in the World? |
A27009 | and you have seen the Name of God engraven on them? |
A27009 | and your greatest trouble that you can not walk more obediently, innocently and fruitfully? |
A27009 | as Iobs friends did by him? |
A27009 | but think it belongs not to you but to others? |
A27009 | do not belye your own heart, and tell me, Had you not rather be Holy then Unholy? |
A27009 | do they never think that they must be accountable for all their Riches? |
A27009 | do you Live wholly on it? |
A27009 | doing it by the halves, as Laban searched Rachels Tent? |
A27009 | doth his promise fail for evermore? |
A27009 | either danger of sinning, or falling away, or perishing for ever? |
A27009 | for once that I have heard it demanded, How should I bring my heart to love them better? |
A27009 | for once that you ask, How shall I know that I believe or love? |
A27009 | for so have all: Nor yet whether you have any cold uneffect ● al wishes? |
A27009 | for so have the ungodly: Bu ● whether your Willingness be not more then your unwillingness? |
A27009 | hard to those you buy and sell with? |
A27009 | hath he in anger shut up his tender mercy? |
A27009 | hath he not made thee and established thee? |
A27009 | he hath no way to be resolved but by feeling the Pulse of his own Will? |
A27009 | how bold are they in sinning? |
A27009 | how confused are their mindes? |
A27009 | how frequently do they wound Conscience, provoke God, and obscure their Evidences? |
A27009 | how much deceitfulness remaineth in their hearts? |
A27009 | is he unmercifull unless he will do so by all the rest of his Kingdom? |
A27009 | loving mankinde? |
A27009 | must I cast my self upon it without a Call? |
A27009 | no arguments of comfort to consider of? |
A27009 | nor preaching Christ? |
A27009 | or a stubborn rebellious son or servant have as much love and comfort from their Father or Master as the dutifull? |
A27009 | or a whorish woman have as much love and comfort from her husband, as a faithfull Wife? |
A27009 | or after better accommodations and contentments in House, Goods, or other worldly things? |
A27009 | or at least, after a fuller portion and provision for your children? |
A27009 | or by such a signe the turning point may be certainly known? |
A27009 | or could I endure to die so many times over? |
A27009 | or deep wounds in conscience, or a heavy burthen of doubtings or distress? |
A27009 | or make thy self a scorn and mocking stock to the world? |
A27009 | or must I be therefore without Comfort? |
A27009 | or not? |
A27009 | or pitty them not as you should? |
A27009 | or that he dyed for small sins and not for great? |
A27009 | or that he set us a patern too low for our imitation? |
A27009 | or that thou mightest sin no more? |
A27009 | or that you became Christians for, or that you had an absolute promise of in the Word? |
A27009 | or whether Scripture be true, or the Soul immortal? |
A27009 | or whether he should go in the foot- path, or in the road? |
A27009 | or whether it be not a very little sin? |
A27009 | or whether they should not let Christ alone to do it himself? |
A27009 | or with Satans temptations, and waies of deceiving? |
A27009 | or would you not presently Take it that it may be yours? |
A27009 | or, at least, which you do not expect more from, then you ought? |
A27009 | pleasing to God, then displeasing? |
A27009 | should we more regard the comforting of one, then the saving of an hundred? |
A27009 | should you not wish us so to do? |
A27009 | should you therefore deny the sincerity of your Grace? |
A27009 | so much at dice, at cards, at horse- races, at cock- fights? |
A27009 | so much in excess of Apparel? |
A27009 | so much to maintain poor Scholars while they study to prepare themselves for the Ministry? |
A27009 | so much to promote the Gospel? |
A27009 | their Low expectations from God hereafter, or their high expectations from the Creature now? |
A27009 | though yet you had no further Assurance how you should be used? |
A27009 | to a wicked generation, whose spot was not the spot of his children, Do ye thus requite the Lord, O foolish people and unwise? |
A27009 | to drive you to a serious consideration of your state and waies, and to look after Christ with more longing and estimation? |
A27009 | to entertain such Gallants? |
A27009 | to help our Infirmities in Prayer: but how? |
A27009 | to please such Noble friends? |
A27009 | to wit, Chearful Amendment? |
A27009 | what a fearful guilt should we draw upon our own souls ▪ Nay, what a snare may you thus prove to the greater part of the Congregation? |
A27009 | what hurt them? |
A27009 | what if we should he so moved with compassion of your troubles, as to fit almost all our Doctrine and Application to you? |
A27009 | what need you a Saviour, if you were not Condemned? |
A27009 | when he saith, The Good which I Would do, I do not? |
A27009 | when you found a want of Faith and Love, have not you weakened them more, and so made them less discernable? |
A27009 | whether of sin unto Death, or of Obedience unto Righteousness? |
A27009 | whether of sin unto death, or of Obedience unto Righteousness?] |
A27009 | whether you have not an eagerness after a fuller estate, and too keen an edge upon your desires after riches? |
A27009 | who can finde those punctual bounds in the Word of God? |
A27009 | who knoweth not that it is the very Office of the Ministery, to be Teachers and Guides to men in matters of salvation? |
A27009 | will you make it your end in hearing, reading, praying and meditation to raise your soul to Delight in God? |
A27009 | wilt thou be made a scorn or laughing stock to all? |
A27009 | wilt thou undo thy self? |
A27009 | with no more cheerfulness, delight, success and constancy? |
A27009 | would it not revive you, and overcome your fears? |
A27009 | would you spend your time and thoughts in searching whether this Pardon be already yours? |
A27009 | yea and Remit their actual Resolutions, and so lose much of the Evidence it self? |
A27009 | yea your own self delivered up to Christ? |
A23622 | ''t is well? |
A23622 | 14. the Margin and given such a promise to him thereupon, and will not you put in for a share, neither in the praise, nor the promise? |
A23622 | 46. and will not you own it with your practise? |
A23622 | A selfish Spirit is unworthy of a Christian: are the common concernments of Gods Glory, and the prosperity of the Church, much upon your hearts? |
A23622 | Again, hath Christ recorded his Name in your hearts? |
A23622 | Again, how do You stand affected towards Holiness? |
A23622 | Against which of these Rules have I offended, in the day foregoing? |
A23622 | Ah vile and putrid Carkases? |
A23622 | Ah what a Block doth Unbelief make of man? |
A23622 | Alas what will their favour avail you? |
A23622 | Alas, hath he not a thousand ways, both outward and inward, to make up a little outward disadvantage to us? |
A23622 | Alas, what do I here? |
A23622 | Am I a mourner for the sins of the Land? |
A23622 | An heir of Glory? |
A23622 | And O that the Lord might be loved the better, and glorified the more for our sakes: Will you tell us wherein we may shew our love to Him? |
A23622 | And Oh what hard and stupid hearts have we? |
A23622 | And are you all fat and well liking? |
A23622 | And how great a Solace was this in his Sufferings, when he could be in a Goal, and in Heaven at once? |
A23622 | And how great and how near is it? |
A23622 | And how much Super- natural Revelation presupposeth, and findeth ready to entertain it and befriend it in the Light and Law of Nature? |
A23622 | And if the friends do rejoyce, how much more doth the father? |
A23622 | And if this be true, I pray you, tell me whether GOD heth not dealt well with us in counting us worthy of this little Tribulation for his Name? |
A23622 | And of all the wrath of God, that hath been lately manitested and reveal''d from Heaven against us, more ways then I am able to express? |
A23622 | And on the other side, alass, how ordinary is it for Zeal to make a bussle in the Dark, and for those that are very earnest to be very blind? |
A23622 | And once again, when the righteous turueth away from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, shall be live? |
A23622 | And shall the Grant of Heaven signifie little with thee? |
A23622 | And shall we be insensible of such a stroke? |
A23622 | And should not they walk more cautiously, and charily, than any alive, that are under so exact and curious an Eye? |
A23622 | And still would justifie and 〈 ◊ 〉 God, and say, Shall I receive good at God''s hand, and no evil? |
A23622 | And therefore God comes in and interrupts them, why what''s the matter with you, can you tell why you take on in this fashion? |
A23622 | And what have we to do, but to believe, and wait, and love, and long, and look out for his coming, in which is all our hope? |
A23622 | And what is thy business without Gods Blessing? |
A23622 | And where saith he of mourning thou art mad, and of sorrow, What is it that thou doest? |
A23622 | And why for them? |
A23622 | And why is this World so much forsaken? |
A23622 | And will he come? |
A23622 | And will you miss of all, for want of Patience? |
A23622 | And will you not be much more ashamed, that God and Conscience should find you tardy? |
A23622 | Are You at peace with no sin, or do you not hide some Iniquity as a sweet morsel under your Tongue? |
A23622 | Are not we his Jewells? |
A23622 | Are there no secret Stitches at the Hearts of any of you, upon this consideration? |
A23622 | Are they capable of the mysteries of your trade, and are they not capable of the plain principles of Religion? |
A23622 | Are they in Health? |
A23622 | Are you for the present World, or for that to come? |
A23622 | Are you for your Temporal enjoyments, or do you seek for Glory, Honour, and Immortallty? |
A23622 | Are you more affraid of sin than ever? |
A23622 | Are you more earnest upon the duty of Mortification? |
A23622 | Are you naked and are you not afraid? |
A23622 | Are you naked and not ashamed? |
A23622 | Are you not betrothed unto Christ? |
A23622 | Are you yet willing to turn? |
A23622 | As he doth of joy and laughter, Where do you find a blessing poured out on laughter, as you do on tears and mourning? |
A23622 | As the Father hath given him, so do your hearts give him a Name above every Name: Is Christ uppermost with you in your estimations and affections? |
A23622 | Ask your self, what sin have I committed, what duty have I omitted? |
A23622 | At least no further returns? |
A23622 | Being asked by a Friend, How he could be so well contented to lie so long under such weakness? |
A23622 | Being often askt by my self and others, how it was with his Spirit in all this weakness? |
A23622 | Believed thou this? |
A23622 | Beloved, GOD hath used you like Fondlings now, rather than like Sufferers: What shall I say? |
A23622 | Beloved, shall not the Vessel be for the use of the Porter that made it? |
A23622 | Beloved, what can you do? |
A23622 | Besides, is not ours a Religion of self- denial? |
A23622 | Besides, the Husbandman hath long patience, and will not you have a little patience? |
A23622 | Beware they be not found among the Families that call not upon Gods Name; for why should there be wrath from the Lord upon your Families? |
A23622 | Brethren beloved, How fares it with your Souls? |
A23622 | Brethren, how stands it with you? |
A23622 | Brethren, shall I yet prevail with you? |
A23622 | Brethren, what are you for? |
A23622 | But O what shall we render? |
A23622 | But alas, how long shall I be a seeking? |
A23622 | But alas, though those things are duly to be considered too, yet what good am I like to do? |
A23622 | But alas, what are they the better for any, for all this? |
A23622 | But alas, what are we, and what is this little that we call our All? |
A23622 | But be of good comfort, the shame of Holiness is real Glory: how confidently doth Paul shake his Chain? |
A23622 | But have you all done this? |
A23622 | But is he gone to Heaven too soon? |
A23622 | But it may be you will say, how shall I know if I am an object of Electing love? |
A23622 | But one cast for Eternity, and will You not be carefull to throw that well? |
A23622 | But tell me my Beloved, is he a loser any way? |
A23622 | But we may now cry out as the Psalmist, in his complaint, O ye sons of men, how long will ye turn my glory into shame? |
A23622 | But what Repentance did he seek with tears? |
A23622 | But what do I speak of my Love? |
A23622 | But what shall I say? |
A23622 | But where shall I begin, or when should I end? |
A23622 | But who are Christs Sheep? |
A23622 | But why should I doubt of your acceptance, who have so readily embraced me in all our converses? |
A23622 | But why, my Pylades, why is thy stile towards me changed? |
A23622 | But will it suit with such a state of sin and danger, as the best of you are in? |
A23622 | But will you now? |
A23622 | But you will ask me, For whom shall we weep then? |
A23622 | Can Fulness fill you? |
A23622 | Can Omnipotence secure you? |
A23622 | Can a woman forget her Child, that she should not have compassion on the Son of her Womb? |
A23622 | Can all Content you? |
A23622 | Can not your consciences witness, can not your families 〈 ◊ 〉 you have not? |
A23622 | Can they undo your souls? |
A23622 | Can unsearchable Riches suffice you? |
A23622 | Can you bring me Scripture- proof? |
A23622 | Can you forget your Children? |
A23622 | Can you shew me the Marks of the Lord Jesus? |
A23622 | Chear up, my Brethren, look what a Crown, what a Kingdom here is; What say you? |
A23622 | Christians, shall he that hath gotten an inriching Office boast of his Booty? |
A23622 | Christians, where are your affections? |
A23622 | Could you make out your Claim? |
A23622 | Deaths can stand before it? |
A23622 | Did I eat, drink for the glory of God? |
A23622 | Did not God find me on my Bed, when he looked for me on my knees? |
A23622 | Did not I arise from the 〈 ◊ 〉 without dropping any thing of God there? |
A23622 | Did not I mock with God when I pretended to 〈 ◊ 〉 a blessing, and return thanks? |
A23622 | Did not I rashly make, nor falsly break some promise? |
A23622 | Did not I sit down with an higher end than a Beast, meerly to please my Appetite? |
A23622 | Did they not know what they are, born to trouble, as the sparks fly upward, so that they have a natural tendency to it? |
A23622 | Did you ever read or hear of a man so mad as to run upon the swords point, to avoid the scratch of a Pin? |
A23622 | Did you set out for God to day? |
A23622 | Do I first seek the kingdom of heaven, and the righteousness thereof? |
A23622 | Do I live in nothing that I know or fear to be a sin? |
A23622 | Do I speak any thing but what God hath spoken? |
A23622 | Do I think Heaven will drop into my mouth? |
A23622 | Do I think to be crowned, and yet never fight? |
A23622 | Do You follow after Holiness? |
A23622 | Do You hate every sin and long to be rid of it as your most irksome burden? |
A23622 | Do You hunger and thirst after it, and desire it more than any Temporal good? |
A23622 | Do You in your very Hearts, prefer a Godly strict Life in communion with and conformity to God, before the greatest prosperity of the World? |
A23622 | Do You thirst for Holiness? |
A23622 | Do any of you Question whether you are so happy as to have your Names recorded above? |
A23622 | Do but view it believingly and considerately, as it is darkly drawn there, and tell me, what think you of that worthy portion, that goodly Heritage? |
A23622 | Do not you know who hath said to you so often, Remember me? |
A23622 | Do these Letters come to none that are yet unsanctified? |
A23622 | Do they prosper? |
A23622 | Do you abstain from sin out of fear, or out of dislike? |
A23622 | Do you ask for marks how you may know your souls be in a thriving case? |
A23622 | Do you believe this? |
A23622 | Do you believe yet? |
A23622 | Do you choose it? |
A23622 | Do you desire the Preparatives of Languages, and Philosophy? |
A23622 | Do you eat and sleep by rule? |
A23622 | Do you grow more out of love with mens esteem, and set less by it? |
A23622 | Do you hate every sin as the Sheep doth the Mire? |
A23622 | Do you look for an high degree of Zeal? |
A23622 | Do you love it? |
A23622 | Do you need Motives?] |
A23622 | Do you not find your selves uncovered? |
A23622 | Do you not know that you are naked? |
A23622 | Do you not know that you do in vain name the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, except you depart from iniquity? |
A23622 | Do you prize it above all Prosperity and worldly Greatness? |
A23622 | Do you regard no Iniquity in your Hearts? |
A23622 | Do you strive against, and oppose all Sin, though it may seem never so necessary, never so natural to you, or have you not you secret Haunts of evil? |
A23622 | Do you take more delight in the Word than ever? |
A23622 | Do you take more notice of God in every thing, than heretofore? |
A23622 | Do you think it is enough to remember him for an hour? |
A23622 | Do you thirst after God, and after grace, more than heretofore? |
A23622 | Do you throughly believe? |
A23622 | Doth he not own us for his Members, for his Children? |
A23622 | Doth not Conscience say, Thou art the man? |
A23622 | Doth not my Master deserve more than theirs? |
A23622 | Doth not sin sit light? |
A23622 | Fear is a slavish principle: do you find that you are acted less by fear, and more by love? |
A23622 | First, Lest while Christ is in your mouths, the world run away with your hearts: There is many a seeming Professor that will be found a meer Idolater? |
A23622 | For First, He hath bestowed more on them than on others: Now where much is given, much shall be required; Can you think of that without trembling? |
A23622 | God hath said it, and who shall reverse it? |
A23622 | Hath he his everlasting Rest too soon? |
A23622 | Hath not God been out of mind? |
A23622 | Hath not God said, that if we suffer with him we shall also Reign with him; and that these light afflictions work for us a weight of Glory? |
A23622 | Hath not Mercy wooed them? |
A23622 | Hath not he reproved the greatest for his Peoples sakes, saying, reproach not mine anointed? |
A23622 | Hath the Law of the Lord been in my mouth as I fat in my House, went by the way, was lying down, and rising up? |
A23622 | Have I been diligent in the duties of my Calling? |
A23622 | Have I been much in Holy Ejaculations? |
A23622 | Have I been often looking into mine own Heart, and made conscience of vain thoughts? |
A23622 | Have I bridled my Tongue, and forced it in? |
A23622 | Have I come into no company where I have not dropped something of God, and left some good savour behind? |
A23622 | Have I desrauded no man? |
A23622 | Have I digested the Sermon I heard last? |
A23622 | Have I done any thing more than ordinary for the Church of God, in this time extraordinary? |
A23622 | Have I dropped never a lye in my Shop or Trade? |
A23622 | Have I redeemed my time from too long or needless visits, idle imaginations, fruitless discourse, unnecessary sleep, more than needs of the World? |
A23622 | Have I spoke evil of no Man? |
A23622 | Have I took care of my Company? |
A23622 | Have I 〈 ◊ 〉 it over? |
A23622 | Have You chosen the way of Gods Precepts, and had rather live Holily than be allowed to live in your sins? |
A23622 | Have any ventured themselves upon him in his way, but he made good every word of the Promise to them? |
A23622 | Have not I given way to the workings of Pride, or Passion? |
A23622 | Have not I neglected, or been very overly in the reading God''s Holy Word? |
A23622 | Have not I prayed to no purpose, or suffered wandering thoughts to eat out my duties? |
A23622 | Have you been soundly convinced of your sins? |
A23622 | Have you done it all accordingly? |
A23622 | Have you never a Sacrifice to lay upon his Altar? |
A23622 | Have you no sense and feeling of it? |
A23622 | Have you taken him for your blessedness? |
A23622 | He answered, What, is God my Father, Jesus Christ my Saviour, and the Spirit my sweet Friend, my Comforter, and Sanctifyer, and Heaven my Inheritance? |
A23622 | He bears your names, but where? |
A23622 | He hath you upon his heart, but why? |
A23622 | He hath 〈 ◊ 〉 of You; Yet How do his) Compassions melt over perishing Sinners? |
A23622 | He lived as if he had been quickned with that saying,( which I have somewhere met with in Tertullian) Quid prodest esse, quod esse non prodest? |
A23622 | Heaven out of sight? |
A23622 | His glorious Recompence too soon? |
A23622 | How closely doth he cling? |
A23622 | How did it look? |
A23622 | How do You pray with all Prayer and Supplication, if You do not with Family Prayer? |
A23622 | How do many men take on, when they are crost in prosecution of their lusts, and hindred in their sins, which is in deed a great mercy? |
A23622 | How do your Souls prosper? |
A23622 | How excellently able was he to deal with the Naturalist at his own Weapons, aud to shame them that call Religion an unproved or unreasonable thing? |
A23622 | How feelingly doth he cry out at the hurt of his poor Members on Earth? |
A23622 | How fully doth he Relie upon God? |
A23622 | How is it then that you read not the Sentence passed on the fruitless Tree? |
A23622 | How it 〈 ◊ 〉 to 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 to you? |
A23622 | How long shall I live at such a distance from my God, at such a distance from my Countrey? |
A23622 | How long will you continue in an unprofitable and customary Profession? |
A23622 | How long will 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉, and follow 〈 ◊ 〉 Leasing, and trust in lying Words? |
A23622 | How long ye simple ones, will you love 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A23622 | How many friendly Visits from those that you could but little expect of? |
A23622 | How merciful was God to him, whom he hath taken to himself, and how severe to us, in this Stroke? |
A23622 | How much ado have many poor Saints had at last to put into this harbour? |
A23622 | How much are you behind- hand? |
A23622 | How much are you grown? |
A23622 | How often are we called upon to weep in Scripture? |
A23622 | How often do Princes forsake their greatest Favourites? |
A23622 | How often have you heard that sweet Word since you came hither? |
A23622 | How shall I reach them? |
A23622 | How tenderly should they walk, that are entrusted with such a Jewel? |
A23622 | How throughly had he searched the Writings of Philosophers? |
A23622 | How were we mistaken? |
A23622 | How will you look upon him whom you have pierced? |
A23622 | I have sent you an help on purpose: what shall all my perswasions be but speaking in the wind? |
A23622 | I heard a worthy Minister say of him once,( not withont much admiration) Whence hath this man these things? |
A23622 | I know you do: but who is there that will leave his sins for me? |
A23622 | I know you lov''d him, as there was cause enough you should; but say in truth, have you Improv''d him? |
A23622 | I mean at my requests: with whom shall I prevail to give up himself in strictness and self denial to the Lord? |
A23622 | I might tell you, God but I would have you that God hath[ laid out] upon You; but who can tell what he hath[ laid up] for them that fear him? |
A23622 | I pray, I hear, I read, but may not a meer Hypocrite do all this? |
A23622 | I remember your strict walkings, your holy converse, your many tears: will you lose the things that you have wrought? |
A23622 | I say, driving them violently down the hill, till they be choaked in the Water, and drowned irrecoverably in the Gulf of endless Perdition? |
A23622 | I shall bring it to a speedy issue: Do you Question whether Christ hath taken your Names? |
A23622 | I was once affected with the Picture of a devout man, to whom a voice came down from Heaven, saying, Quid vis fieri prote? |
A23622 | If the Reward of Religion would be presently in hand, who would not be Religious? |
A23622 | If the earnest be so great, what will the Possession be? |
A23622 | If you ask, What Labours he hath left behind him? |
A23622 | In his trespass that he hath trespassed, shall he not die? |
A23622 | In the day time, he would( seasonably) ask People, How did you set out to day? |
A23622 | Is Christ more precious than all the World to you? |
A23622 | Is Christ within You? |
A23622 | Is he got home to his Fathers house too soon? |
A23622 | Is he with God, and Christ, and Angels, and glorified Saints too soon? |
A23622 | Is his Image and Superscription there? |
A23622 | Is it for this world, or for the world to come? |
A23622 | Is it meat and drink of you, to do the Will of God? |
A23622 | Is it not enough to have a whole eternity of Happiness yet behind? |
A23622 | Is it not from him that you fetch every breath? |
A23622 | Is it wisdom after you have begun in the Spirit, to end in the flesh? |
A23622 | Is not he the Rock that begat you? |
A23622 | Is not here a worthy Portion, a goodly Heritage? |
A23622 | Is not this best of all for him? |
A23622 | Is piety more diffusive than ever with you, doth it come more abroad with you, out of your Clossets into your Houses, your Shops, your Fields? |
A23622 | Is the Communion of Saints worth the venturing for? |
A23622 | Is the Name of Jesus deeply engraven upon your Souls? |
A23622 | Is the Name of Jesus the Beloved name with you? |
A23622 | Is there no other Name under Heaven so dear and sweet to you? |
A23622 | Is there not much more advantage accordingly? |
A23622 | Is there not some practice that You are not willing to know is a sin for fear you should be forced to leave it? |
A23622 | Is this a strange, thing? |
A23622 | Is this that which your very hearts are set upon? |
A23622 | Is thy name written in Heaven, and yet dost thou not rejoyce? |
A23622 | Is weekly Catechising up in every one of your Families? |
A23622 | It is not only expedient for me, but it is expedient for you? |
A23622 | It is the Glory of God, and will you count it your shame? |
A23622 | Kiss the Son: Why shouldst thou 〈 ◊ 〉 in the way? |
A23622 | Know you not that we are the Apple of his Eye? |
A23622 | Know you not, that you must wrestle with Principalities and Powers? |
A23622 | Know you not, that your fleshly lusts do war against your souls? |
A23622 | Let me ask you, Is Heaven upon your Hearts? |
A23622 | Let them have your prayers as duly as their meals, is there any of your families, but have time for their taking food? |
A23622 | Let us think with our selves, what though our Purses, our Estates, may thrive better in a place of a larger maintenance? |
A23622 | May not Christ say to some among you, Behold these three years have I come, seeking fruit, and finding none? |
A23622 | Men do not use to die in jest: Who will impoverish himself to enrich his Friend? |
A23622 | Must not you be shortly forgot among the Dead? |
A23622 | My most dearly beloved mine own howels in the Lord, will you satisfie the longings of a travelling Minister? |
A23622 | Nay, is he not an infinite gainer? |
A23622 | Nothing for a Prisoner of Jesus Christ? |
A23622 | O Brethren, look within; Are you not more indeared one to another? |
A23622 | O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, said Christ, and O Taunton, Taunton, may I say from him, how often? |
A23622 | O Man, is Christ thine, and yet dost thou live at a low rate and Comfort? |
A23622 | O Sinners, where will you then appear? |
A23622 | O man, hast thou a charge of Souls to answer for, and dost thou not yet bestir thy self for them, that their Blood be not found in thy Skirts? |
A23622 | O my Pylades, what shall I say unto thee now I begin to write, where shall I begin, when shall I end? |
A23622 | O sinners, cast your selves into his Arms? |
A23622 | O sleepy Professors, how long will you drive on in this heavy course? |
A23622 | O where shall we find a sitting sacrifice? |
A23622 | O wherein may you rejoyce me? |
A23622 | O why will you flatter your selves, and wilfully deceive your own selves? |
A23622 | Often ask your Hearts, What if God should this night require my Soul? |
A23622 | Oh make sure of Heaven betimes, walk humbly with God, beware of a proud heart and a lofty spirit; abhor your selves, else God will not accept you? |
A23622 | Oh my dear Friends, What have your sins done? |
A23622 | Oh when shall I be where my heart is? |
A23622 | Oh? |
A23622 | Once more, hath Christ drawn out his own similitude upon You? |
A23622 | Once you could say with David, I am a companion to all them that fear thee: is it so now? |
A23622 | Onely believe and wait: What not watch with him one hour? |
A23622 | Or Christs Patent for thy Sonship and Partnership with himself be like a Cypher? |
A23622 | Or is there a more even spun thred of holiness through your whole course? |
A23622 | Or shall he do more for a crop of Corn, than you will do for a crop of Glory? |
A23622 | Or the Merchant sit down and give up his hopes, when within sight of the Harbour? |
A23622 | Or too great for him? |
A23622 | Or will the Husbandman 〈 ◊ 〉, and give up all for lost, when he sees the fields even white for the Harvest? |
A23622 | Pride is the Timpany, passion the Feavour of the mind; how restlesly raging is the mind where they reign? |
A23622 | Shall I commend to you the Lesson that I am about to learn? |
A23622 | Shall I leave the fatness of the Olive, and sweetness of the Fig- tree, and of the Vine, and go and put my trust under the shadow of the Bramble? |
A23622 | Shall I not be content without Limbs and Health? |
A23622 | Shall I tell you of the thing which shall be hereafter? |
A23622 | Shall a man put forth to Sea and reckon upon nothing but the calm? |
A23622 | Shall not Gods Priests be Cloathed with Righteousness, and shall not Princes Live above the rate of Peasants? |
A23622 | Shall not the servant Trade for his Master with whose goods he is entrusted? |
A23622 | Shall the Children of the Kingdom, the Candidates of Glory, the chosen Generation, the Royal Priesthood, be like other men? |
A23622 | Shall we have tears enough to waste upon our petty Losses, and not to have a tear to spend on this Inestimable and Irreparable one? |
A23622 | Sinner, art thou not yet melted? |
A23622 | So much bounty and kindness, and no returns of Love? |
A23622 | So that it may be said of you, as it was once of Israel when Moses was a way, that you are naked; And what, are you in Laodicea''s case indeed? |
A23622 | Soul, believest thou this? |
A23622 | Suffer me to be free with thee, where should I pour out my Soul, if not into thy bosom? |
A23622 | Suppose Christ should put that awakening Question to you, What do you more than others? |
A23622 | Suppose I should ask you one by one, Where are your Evidences for Heaven? |
A23622 | Suppose he had willed you to burn our Temples, would you have done it at his request? |
A23622 | Sure your Lot is fallen in an happy place; What in the Bosom of Christ? |
A23622 | Surely I have done and suffered more for you then this comes to: will you deny me? |
A23622 | Take heed you make not God a Lyar: His Word is nigh you: Have you not the Writings in your hands? |
A23622 | The Lord incourage you in it: yet give me leave to ask you what you have gained? |
A23622 | The Lord is not unrighteous to forget this: Is not this upon record with him, and sealed up among his Treasures? |
A23622 | The earnest and pittiful beggings of a poor Prisoner, do use to move some Bowels: hear O Friends, will you do nothing for a Minister of Christ? |
A23622 | Their Patience is it? |
A23622 | There are many that have in a great measure learnt this lesson, and why should not we be some of them? |
A23622 | Thou givest them Medicines, and 〈 ◊ 〉 them when they be Sick, and dost thou not so much 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 Swine? |
A23622 | Thou providest Meat and Drink for 〈 ◊ 〉 agreeable to their Natures, and dost thou not the 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 thy Beasts? |
A23622 | Travellers Lots: know you not that you are in a strange Land? |
A23622 | Treasure up much in Heaven: What profit is it that you have more than others? |
A23622 | WHat Subject fitter for this sad Occasion, then a Theam of Weeping? |
A23622 | Was not mine Appetite too hard for me? |
A23622 | Was there not more of custome, and fashion in my Family Duties, than of Conscience? |
A23622 | Were it not pity to lose all this for want of Diligence and Patience? |
A23622 | Were you never within sight of Death? |
A23622 | What are our Interests unless as they may be subservient to his Interest? |
A23622 | What are we for but for God? |
A23622 | What can you say to this question? |
A23622 | What charges are there like to be? |
A23622 | What continual molestation am I subject to by reason of this flesh? |
A23622 | What did then trouble you most? |
A23622 | What did you wish for most at that time? |
A23622 | What dost thou do for thy children, and Servants? |
A23622 | What doth our Faith serve for? |
A23622 | What hath GOD been doing ever since you came to this Prison? |
A23622 | What hath GOD been doing, but pouring out his Love upon you? |
A23622 | What hath your barrenness, and your unfruitfulness, and your backsliding done? |
A23622 | What have I, what do I more than others? |
A23622 | What have You so many Family 〈 ◊ 〉, Family wants, Family Mercies, what and yet no Family Prayers? |
A23622 | What have you the power of loving for, but that you should love him? |
A23622 | What have you your Authority for, if not to use it for God, and the good of their souls? |
A23622 | What if Bonds and Banishments abide us for a season? |
A23622 | What if it be hard at first? |
A23622 | What if men should be angry with you, have they the Keys of Hell, and of Death? |
A23622 | What if we have but a little in the World? |
A23622 | What is a Candle for, but to be burnt? |
A23622 | What is it worth a year? |
A23622 | What is my life unless I am serviceable? |
A23622 | What know you not your own selves? |
A23622 | What mean you to live at Uncertainties? |
A23622 | What progress in Grace? |
A23622 | What room hath Christ in you? |
A23622 | What shall neither Gods charge, nor your promise, nor profit hold you to your work? |
A23622 | What should Travellers look for else? |
A23622 | What spoil have you made upon your Corruptions? |
A23622 | What though You are much upon the spending 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A23622 | What though it should seem slow? |
A23622 | What though we can not distinguish the Tares from the Wheat? |
A23622 | What though you seem to have lost Ministers, Husbands, Friends for a Season? |
A23622 | What tire by the way, or think of looking back, when Heaven is the prize? |
A23622 | What were your Morning Thoughts? |
A23622 | What will not men do to screw themselves into the favour of the Mighty? |
A23622 | What( my Brethren) shall we be 〈 ◊ 〉 than Publicans? |
A23622 | What, do you think that all this doth signifie nothing? |
A23622 | What, doth he wish that he were back again with you? |
A23622 | What, shall the Husbandman have more patience for the Fruits of the Earth, than you for the pretious fruits of your Faith? |
A23622 | What, to this day without solemn catechizing in your houses? |
A23622 | What? |
A23622 | What? |
A23622 | When he Fed you, have you prosper''d? |
A23622 | When he could, after the terrible torment of Convulsions, have the foresight and taste of Heavenly Pleasures? |
A23622 | When shall I receive the Purchase of my Saviour, the fruit of my prayers, the harvest of my labours, the end of my Faith, the Salvation of my soul? |
A23622 | When shall it once be? |
A23622 | When such as he are hous''d, what dreadful storms may there be like to fall? |
A23622 | When will God open my Lips, that I may stand up and praise him? |
A23622 | Whence do you think this came? |
A23622 | Where else should you bestow your Loves? |
A23622 | Where is that immortal soul of yours like to be lodged for ever? |
A23622 | Wherein have I denyed my self this day for God? |
A23622 | Whether you are upon his heart? |
A23622 | Who can tell the Mercies that you have received here? |
A23622 | Who ever gave Demonstration of the reallity of his Love at so dear a rate as Christ hath done? |
A23622 | Who in all the Earth should admire and commend this Love if I should not? |
A23622 | Who shall condemn? |
A23622 | Who will follow Christs Colours? |
A23622 | Whom you have persecuted? |
A23622 | Whose account my Beloved, is like to be so great as yours? |
A23622 | Whose great Salvation you have neglected and despised? |
A23622 | Why criest thou for 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A23622 | Why should Beltshazzars charge be against you? |
A23622 | Why should it not be thus? |
A23622 | Why should the Lord repent that he had made you? |
A23622 | Why should you die? |
A23622 | Why should you die? |
A23622 | Why what''s the matter? |
A23622 | Why will you die? |
A23622 | Why will you forsake your own Mercy? |
A23622 | Why, my beloved, have ye not other manner of things then these to grieve for? |
A23622 | Will a man be easily perswaded to lose his life? |
A23622 | Will any of you think of returning into Egypt? |
A23622 | Will it not, thinkest thou my dear Heart? |
A23622 | Will not all this make you 〈 ◊ 〉, for your stay? |
A23622 | Will not you return Love for so much Love? |
A23622 | Will the Garrison yield when relief is at hand? |
A23622 | Will you answer the Calls of Divine Providence? |
A23622 | Will you not be made clean? |
A23622 | Will you not spin a fair thread of it, if while you are pursuing after earthly things, you lose your soul in the 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A23622 | Will you reject me now also? |
A23622 | Will you set forth in a Journey, and promise your selves nothing but fair- way and fair weather? |
A23622 | Will you suffer your Jewells to lie in the Dirt, or make no reckoning of them whether they are lost? |
A23622 | Wilt thou do no more for immortal Souls, than thou wilt do for thy Beasts that perish? |
A23622 | Would you chose holiness and strictness, if it were to do again? |
A23622 | Would you have taken up the Profession of Christ, though you had foreseen all this that is come and coming? |
A23622 | Would you plant Nurseries for the Church of God? |
A23622 | Would you remove the Incumbent, or prevent the impending Calamities? |
A23622 | Would you that God should build your Houses, and bless your Substance? |
A23622 | Yea, but this is not that I beg of you; will you gratifie me indeed? |
A23622 | Yea, what is this to all I have to tell You? |
A23622 | You have had supplies; to what purpose is it, unless you love GOD the more? |
A23622 | You will call them up, and force them to do your work; and should you not, at least be as zealous in putting them upon Gods work? |
A23622 | [ What do you more than others?] |
A23622 | amongst Devils, or amongst Angels? |
A23622 | and all my pains but labouring in the fire? |
A23622 | and debase himself to admiration below his own degree to contract affinity with him? |
A23622 | and divest himself of his honour to advance him? |
A23622 | and do you more highly prize, and more diligently seek after conformity to him, and the fruition of him than any, than all the goods of this World? |
A23622 | and doth the World abate in your esteem? |
A23622 | and have we any of this little to spare for him? |
A23622 | and is your greatest delight( ordinarily, and when you are your selves) in the thoughts of God, and in your conversings with God in Holy Exercises? |
A23622 | and let none of his works, nor words pass without some careful attention, and observation? |
A23622 | and prayed it over? |
A23622 | and stick between the Womb and the World? |
A23622 | and that your own hearts are not true to you, but deceitful above all things? |
A23622 | and the Ship against the Voyage? |
A23622 | and the daily workings of corruption a continual grief of mind to you? |
A23622 | and though Religoin may cost you dear, do you resolve if God will assist you by his Grace, to go through with it, let the cost be what it will? |
A23622 | and upon all occasions turning aside to talk with God in some short Ejaculations? |
A23622 | and use all Gods means against it as far as you know them? |
A23622 | and would you not be put to a blush, to give me an answer? |
A23622 | and your utter inability to lick your selves whole again by your own duties? |
A23622 | are the sins of others your sorrows? |
A23622 | are they in a thriving case? |
A23622 | are you believers, and yet are affraid you shall be loosers by Christ? |
A23622 | are you fit to die yet? |
A23622 | are you grown more universally consciences, more strict, more humble, and more sensible of your many and great defects, then you were before? |
A23622 | are you more in love with secret Prayer, and more abundant in it? |
A23622 | are you more strict and severe than ever in the duty of daily Self- examination, and holy Meditation? |
A23622 | are you not marvellous tender of being slighted? |
A23622 | are you often darting up your souls Heaven- wards? |
A23622 | are you sure of Heaven yet? |
A23622 | are your sins a greater pain to you than heretofore? |
A23622 | are your very hearts set upon the glorifying and enjoying of God, as your greatest happiness, which you desire more than Corn and Wine and Oyl? |
A23622 | are your very infirmities, your great afflictions? |
A23622 | beloved, what else have you strength for, but for God? |
A23622 | but how? |
A23622 | can I produce Chapter and Verse to justifie my self? |
A23622 | can I prove by Scripture my claim to Heaven? |
A23622 | can any thing be too good for him? |
A23622 | can not you be content with your 〈 ◊ 〉 dinary Seasons, but are ever and anon making extraordinary Visits to Heaven? |
A23622 | can save you or damn you at his pleasure? |
A23622 | can they pardon your sins? |
A23622 | can they send you to Hell? |
A23622 | can you ever enter into Gods Hill, without you be of clean hands, and a pure heart? |
A23622 | can you heartily value, and love them that think meanly of you? |
A23622 | can you rejoyce to see others preferred before you? |
A23622 | canst thou find time to eat in, and not time to Pray in? |
A23622 | did not Obed Edom, and his House, get the blessing by entertaining the Ark there? |
A23622 | did the poor woman call upon her friends and neighbours to rejoyce together with her at the finding of a lost Groat? |
A23622 | do I not build without a foundation? |
A23622 | do I venture my Salvation upon meer uncertainties? |
A23622 | do not I know in my very heart that I must be converted or condemned? |
A23622 | do the wounds in Gods Name and Glory go deep into you? |
A23622 | do you come off more freely with God, and answer his Calls, and open at his knocks, with more Alacrity and readiness of mind? |
A23622 | do you go more out of your selves? |
A23622 | do you grow more universally conseiencious? |
A23622 | do you hold the Reigns harder upon the Flesh than ever? |
A23622 | do you hope to get in at the wide Gate, in the broad way? |
A23622 | do you indeed not know that he that runs most hazard for Christ, doth express most love to Christ, and shall receive the greatest reward? |
A23622 | do you keep a stricter watch upon your Appetites? |
A23622 | do you live upon Christ as the Spring of your life, and make more use of him upon all occasions than ever? |
A23622 | do you look more frequently to the things not seen than ever? |
A23622 | do you love me? |
A23622 | do you make good the ground from which you were formerly often beaten off? |
A23622 | do you manage your talk and your Trade, by the rules of Religion? |
A23622 | do you not fetch all your bread from Gods door? |
A23622 | do you ponder upon, and pray over his Word, and his Providences? |
A23622 | do you set a stronger guard upon your Tongues? |
A23622 | do your bear upon you the marks of the Lord Jesus? |
A23622 | do your cares for and desires after the World abate? |
A23622 | do your souls prosper? |
A23622 | doth every one of your Consciences acquit you? |
A23622 | doth he dwell in your Hearts? |
A23622 | doth he maintain servants, and shall not he look for their Work? |
A23622 | doth it journey with you, and buy and sell for you? |
A23622 | doth the house of Saul grow weaker and weaker, and the house of David stronger and stronger? |
A23622 | doth the main work go on? |
A23622 | doth your care of your ways abate, or doth it increase, by the constant use of this duty? |
A23622 | for thy wonted Liberties, for thy former plenty, and variety wherewith the Lord hath blessed thee? |
A23622 | go and talk with dying men, and see what apprehensions they have of the World? |
A23622 | had you rather be the holiest than the richest and greatest in the World? |
A23622 | hath it the casting voice in all you do? |
A23622 | hath not the Word been brought to their Doors? |
A23622 | have not many of our own standing in Religion lest us far behind them? |
A23622 | have they not been called under the Wings of Mercy? |
A23622 | have they not been followed from the Publick, to their own Houses? |
A23622 | have they not been intreated? |
A23622 | have they not been sought unto? |
A23622 | have you a more jealous eye upon your hearts? |
A23622 | have you found out another a nearer way to Heaven? |
A23622 | have you laid hold on eternal life? |
A23622 | have you made sure work for everlasting? |
A23622 | have you past the straits of the New- Birth? |
A23622 | hear you not the 〈 ◊ 〉 of his Bowels? |
A23622 | his he 〈 ◊ 〉 is 〈 ◊ 〉 within him, And shall not this 〈 ◊ 〉 your 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A23622 | his 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 are kindled together; and that not this 〈 ◊ 〉 You 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A23622 | how little, how very little would our love be, it he had it all, infinitely less than the Glow- worm to the Sun, or the Attome to the Universe? |
A23622 | how long shall I spend my days in wishing and desiring, when my glorified Brethren spend theirs in rejoycing and enjoying? |
A23622 | how long shall the Lord Jesus stretch our his hands toward you? |
A23622 | how long shall the patience of God wait for you? |
A23622 | how long will you stay in the place of the breaking forth of Children? |
A23622 | how much work have we yet to do? |
A23622 | if they be pleased, can they stand between the Wrath of God and you? |
A23622 | is not this he that can crucifie you or release you? |
A23622 | is the Maintenance certain and sure? |
A23622 | look upon your crucified Lord: do you not see a sacred stream flowing out of every Member? |
A23622 | more Liberty, more Comfort, more Health, more Wealth, than others? |
A23622 | of your damnable and undone condition in your selves? |
A23622 | or a little Ale or vain mirth, or loose company? |
A23622 | or a little of the gain of unrighteousness? |
A23622 | or do you think God hath never a Blessing for those that shall with much Self- denial entertain his Messengers, his Saints, his Worship? |
A23622 | or he that hath obtained the Kings Patent for an Earldome, glory in his Riches and Honour? |
A23622 | or our esteem or reputation, unless we may hereby glorifie him? |
A23622 | or to run upon a roaring Canon, rather than indanger his being wetshod? |
A23622 | precious above all; next to your Hearts? |
A23622 | save your souls? |
A23622 | secure your Eternal concernments? |
A23622 | speak conscience, Is there never an one within the hearing of this Letter, that is a neglecter of this duty? |
A23622 | suppose there be somewhat more danger to him that gives the Minister entertainment? |
A23622 | that I did but know the words that would pierce them? |
A23622 | that I knew how to do you good: Ah? |
A23622 | that I must be sanctified, or can never be saved? |
A23622 | that Your Father should bless You? |
A23622 | that glory and immortality will be gotten with a wet finger, with cold prayers, and heartless wishes, while the world carries the main of my heart? |
A23622 | that we are ready to cry out, if the first fruits be so sweet, what will the Harvest be? |
A23622 | the Author of your being and well- being? |
A23622 | though you 〈 ◊ 〉, hard, and 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A23622 | to do loose sinner? |
A23622 | to enter at the strait gate, and never strive? |
A23622 | to get the race, and never run? |
A23622 | to no ignorant sinner? |
A23622 | to no unfound professor? |
A23622 | to overcome Principalities and Powers, and never wrestle? |
A23622 | to what use do you put your faculties? |
A23622 | too too really lost? |
A23622 | upon a bed of Flames, or in the joys of Paradise? |
A23622 | what Language can we better speak, or more agreeable to the dark Providence that we are under, then Sighs, and Cries and Lamentations? |
A23622 | what an endless work hath such an one to do? |
A23622 | what designs do I drive at? |
A23622 | what did he get by it when he gained Naamans Talents, and came off with his Leprofie? |
A23622 | what doth the Creature signifie separated from his God? |
A23622 | what else should I do all my days, but love, and fear, and preach, and praise, so good a God? |
A23622 | what good am I like to get? |
A23622 | what is my chief care? |
A23622 | what progress do you make in Sanctification? |
A23622 | what seekest thou? |
A23622 | what think you of the horrible Abominations, and woful desolations of the Land? |
A23622 | what think you of your own sias, with all their bloody aggravations? |
A23622 | what time, what Sabboths, Sormons, Sacraments, are upon the matter lost? |
A23622 | what was the Candle made for( saith one) but to be burnt? |
A23622 | what, when God, that can not lie, hath said, If you live after the flesh, you shall die? |
A23622 | when shall I be set at liberty from this Prison of my body? |
A23622 | when shall it once be? |
A23622 | when shall these Fetters of mine be knocked off? |
A23622 | where is all there favour or good will, when they or you come to die? |
A23622 | where is your Zeal for the Lord of Hosts? |
A23622 | whereas you were wo nt to come with an ill- will to holy duties, do you come to them as a hungrie Stomach to its Meats? |
A23622 | wherefore serves joy or desire, but to long for him and delightfully to embrace him? |
A23622 | wherein we may best please and serve Him? |
A23622 | wherewithall shall we come before the Lord, or bow our selves to the Most High God? |
A23622 | whether art thou going? |
A23622 | which way do I bend my course? |
A23622 | who can tell how often, would Gods servants have gathered you, and you would not? |
A23622 | who will be intreated by me to set upon neglected duties, or reform accustomed sins? |
A23622 | who will come under his Banner? |
A23622 | whosoever will, let him take of the Waters of Life freely; what miss of life when it is to be had for the taking? |
A23622 | why hast thou lost the old and wonted strain of our former pleasing familiarity? |
A23622 | why should not you be all happy? |
A23622 | why should your Creator say, he hath made you in vain? |
A23622 | will it no way content you to dwell in plenty, peace, and safety your selves, except you may see peace upon Israel? |
A23622 | will slender returns suffice you in answer to such a love? |
A23622 | will you give your hands, your names to him? |
A23622 | will you not be made clean? |
A23622 | will you perish when mercy wooes you? |
A23622 | will you run into everlasting burnings with your eyes open? |
A23622 | will you subscribe to his Laws, and consent to his Offices, and be at through defiance with all his Enemies? |
A23622 | will you yet come in? |
A23622 | would you lighten my burden? |
A23622 | would you loosen my bonds? |
A23622 | would you make glad my heart? |
A23622 | would you that your Children should bless you? |
A23622 | yet where are our graces, our souls, like to thrive any way answerable to what they are in this? |
A23622 | you can not think of it in every step in your Journey; but without intending some glory to God by serving his will in your place and station? |
A23622 | you did run well, who hath hindred you? |
A23622 | 〈 ◊ 〉, what a discouragement to your teacher is this? |
A26974 | & c. — Dare any say that God hath not commanded good works? |
A26974 | & c.] Is it not necessary that these be done then, both as duty commanded, and as a condition or some means of the end propounded and promised? |
A26974 | ( For the instrument is an efficient cause): And what if I dare not give so much to man? |
A26974 | ( and Receiving as Lord, to be the fides quae?) |
A26974 | ( what''s that to Gospel obedience?) |
A26974 | 1. Who dare say so, but the Vbiquitarians, and Transubstantiation men? |
A26974 | 13.10 Was the Precept of Accepting Christ, loving him in sincerity and obeying him& c. no part of that Gospel ▪ to which Paul was separated? |
A26974 | 2. Who doubteth but God could have bestowed pardon and justification on other terms or conditions, if he would? |
A26974 | 20. of Justification? |
A26974 | 22. that say there is? |
A26974 | 24. and It is God that justifieth: who is he that condemneth? |
A26974 | 5 Doth Trusting or Believing him cure these men as the Instrument? |
A26974 | 5. Who denyeth that we have Faith and Repentance before Justification? |
A26974 | 8.18? |
A26974 | ? |
A26974 | ?] |
A26974 | A DISPVTATION OF JVSTIFICATION: Whether any Works be any Conditions of it? |
A26974 | A naked term[ Condition] expounded by you that never saw my heart? |
A26974 | Active or Passive? |
A26974 | Am I credible only when I speak amiss, and not at all when I speak right? |
A26974 | Am not I like to have a fair hand think you of this Disputer? |
A26974 | An efficientis Causalitas, Actio? |
A26974 | And I pray search, whether in this Question, you do not confound your Notions ex parte objecti, and ex parte Actus? |
A26974 | And can you think then that Remission and Justification have several conditions? |
A26974 | And do I need to say any more now in defence of this opinion, which my Reverend Brother saith is not to be endured? |
A26974 | And do not men that make address, address themselves in like variety? |
A26974 | And do we make any doubt of this? |
A26974 | And do you think Ghemnitius did join with the Papists of Trent, when he confuted them? |
A26974 | And do you think in good sadness that one single Physical act can be the act of both the faculties? |
A26974 | And do you think that we can any better tell when we have all that are Essential? |
A26974 | And doth he not thereby make over, as it were under his hand, the Lord Jesus, and all his Benefits to them that will receive him? |
A26974 | And doth it therefore follow that they can be no Conditions of our continued Justification? |
A26974 | And doth not every man that is saved so fulfill the conditions of the new Covenant? |
A26974 | And first, We must understand what it is that is distinguished: whether the Habit of faith, or the Acts? |
A26974 | And how can that Law pronounce a man, or his action righteous, which curseth him, and condemneth him to Hell for that same Action? |
A26974 | And how could you over- look it, that your Argument flyeth too boldly in the face of Christ, and many a plain Text of Scripture? |
A26974 | And how do these men vilifie them, and rob them of their highest honor, that deny them to be the Laws of God? |
A26974 | And how many new Methods and Doctrines of Philosophy this one age hath produced? |
A26974 | And how oft hath Bellarmine been called Sophister for supposing, we mean such an apprehension? |
A26974 | And how? |
A26974 | And if faith be a passive physical instrument, it must have a Physical Efficiency? |
A26974 | And if he had said,[ He that repenteth, or loveth, or calleth on the name of the Lord, shall be justified or saved] would not these have done it? |
A26974 | And if means, of what sort, if not conditions? |
A26974 | And if this be common to Hypocrites and Reprobates, what a case are we in then? |
A26974 | And if you did not mean that these are conditions of Pardon, and Justification, when you say they are, who can understand you? |
A26974 | And indeed what man denyeth it? |
A26974 | And is it not Christs whole Law which is of force when he is dead, and called his Testament? |
A26974 | And is it not great partiality to let the same pass as currant from them, which from me must be condemned? |
A26974 | And is it now come to that pass that these can not be known? |
A26974 | And is not Justification one benefit? |
A26974 | And is not final Justification a freeing us from that Curse? |
A26974 | And is not perseverance in faith as necessary as perseverance in obedience? |
A26974 | And is not that the Law and Testimony to which we must seek? |
A26974 | And is not that to say as much as I? |
A26974 | And is not the Promise undoubtedly Gods Deed of Gift? |
A26974 | And is not the imperfection of faith and repentance a sin? |
A26974 | And is the condition of her Dignity, only the Taking him as a Prince who is Rich and Honourable? |
A26974 | And is this wholly superfluous? |
A26974 | And may not this tend to an accommodation between us in this Point? |
A26974 | And now was here a fit occasion to speak reproach fully of Paul, as extream ignorant, or unfaithful, or immanis sophista? |
A26974 | And of our Divines that say there is inherent Righteousness? |
A26974 | And on the other side, whether it may not be of dangerous consequence, as injurious to Christ, to deny so great a part of his Dominion? |
A26974 | And so to Believe, is not agere, but pati or recipere? |
A26974 | And so whether we are justified by Works as such a Condition? |
A26974 | And that repentance is not recipient, how easily do I yeild to you? |
A26974 | And then how were all the faithful justified before Christs Incarnation and Ascension? |
A26974 | And then the question still remaineth, whether those qualifications are means or no means? |
A26974 | And what Reference to Justification is it? |
A26974 | And what Transient Act is it that God then and there puts forth or performeth? |
A26974 | And what do the generality of our Divines mean, when they say that Faith and new Obedience are our conditions of the Covenant? |
A26974 | And what do your defences do to justifie such dealing? |
A26974 | And what is Presumption, if it be not this very faith which Divines call justifying? |
A26974 | And what is the unwarrantable sense? |
A26974 | And what is the 〈 ◊ 〉 or Aptitude of faith but this? |
A26974 | And what is this, but plainly to forbid me to dispute with you? |
A26974 | And what then? |
A26974 | And what think you is the happy Light that deserveth all this ostentation? |
A26974 | And wherein is the Essential, formal difference between a wicked mans resting on Christ for Justification, and a true Believers? |
A26974 | And whether it be not introduced by Pious Divines meerly in heat of Disputation, which usually carryeth men into extreams? |
A26974 | And whether they stick in the air, and have all their Being first there, as Magyrus, and other Peripateticks? |
A26974 | And which is the more clear, certain and safe? |
A26974 | And which should you take to be indeed my sense? |
A26974 | And who ever said that in all or any of these the Soul is Passive and not Active? |
A26974 | And why do not stones wast by such an uncessant emanation? |
A26974 | And why may it not be added also to the Predicate, as well as it may Reduplicatively? |
A26974 | And why may not I be judged Orthodox in that point, when I heartily subscribe to the National Assemblies Definition? |
A26974 | And why may not I with Dr. Preston, Mr. Wallis,& c. say it is an Acceptance, or consent, joyned with Assent? |
A26974 | And why may we not say,[ A state of Sonship or salvation] as well as of Justification? |
A26974 | And why might not Abraham be instanced in? |
A26974 | And why speak you not of faith in one part of your comparison, as well as in the other? |
A26974 | And why then may not we call it faith? |
A26974 | And will you meet all these with your objections, and say,[ How shall I know when I have the full number? |
A26974 | And yet do you think this too big to be essential to Christian Faith? |
A26974 | And yet must we voluminously differ, when I have told you that I allow it? |
A26974 | And yet will you say that faith or inherent righteousness is Legal and not Evangelical? |
A26974 | Are not Knowledge, Words, Works, ours, by all which God saith, we are justified? |
A26974 | Are these things doubtfull among Divines or Christians? |
A26974 | Are we so well agreed, that you marvell at my supposition of this difference? |
A26974 | As for your discourse, whether Paul disputes what is our Righteousness? |
A26974 | At least do they not compound their Righteousness( as to the law of Works) partly of Christs satisfaction, and partly of their own Works? |
A26974 | But I ask, if there be justifying works, how saith Paul true? |
A26974 | But I wonder at his proof of his Sequel[ Because he who is ungodly is not legally righteous] what is that to the Question? |
A26974 | But Paul doth not resolve there[ what is the Condition on which Christ makes over this Righteousness of his?] |
A26974 | But are you indeed of the contrary opinion, and against that which you dispute against? |
A26974 | But do you indeed think that when Paul excludeth the works of the Law, that he excludeth them only as Recipient? |
A26974 | But do you not hereby confess that I give no more to works then you, but only less to faith? |
A26974 | But do you think that Repentance is not necessarily Antecedent to Justification, as well as to Remission? |
A26974 | But for works; How shall I know when I have the full number of them? |
A26974 | But from what interest? |
A26974 | But here is the question, Can a godly man dying, think the Righteousness of Christ is made his by working or believing? |
A26974 | But if it be the Object that he meaneth, then what force or sense is there in his Argument, from the terms,[ Purposing, Intending, Confessing?] |
A26974 | But if you do use it as a means, then what means is it? |
A26974 | But if you mean not this simple apprehension( as sure you do not) then how is it possible to imagine the understanding should be passive in it? |
A26974 | But if you will say so, what remedy But perhaps I intimate so much in my words; In what words? |
A26974 | But if[ only] be here understood, really doth not this Brother desire to know Christ obeying, Christ risen, Christ teaching, ruling, interceding,& c? |
A26974 | But in what sence James saith, we are justified by works, and not by Faith only? |
A26974 | But is it Christ or the believer that you put in these various Relations? |
A26974 | But is it not possible that it may cheat or deceive themselves, though some never utter it to the deceiving of others? |
A26974 | But is this the state of the question with us? |
A26974 | But now, on the other side, what inconvenience is there in the Doctrine of faith and justification as I deliver it? |
A26974 | But the question is whether the Interest of the several acts of our faith be accordingly distinct? |
A26974 | But to his Argument, I deny the consequence of the Major; and how is it proved? |
A26974 | But was it possible for them to be justified without the blood of Christ? |
A26974 | But what Condition? |
A26974 | But what are those All things? |
A26974 | But what condition? |
A26974 | But what if I be mistaken in this point? |
A26974 | But what if works and faith were both of them applyed to procure our Justification? |
A26974 | But what if you had only said that Faith is morally passive, and not physically? |
A26974 | But what is this to you? |
A26974 | But what remedy? |
A26974 | But what strange Arguments are these, that are such strangers still to the question? |
A26974 | But why do you say only of Repentance that[ it is the condition of Remision] and of forgiving others, that[ it is the condition of entring into life?] |
A26974 | But yet further, if Faith be passive Physically, let us find out first what is the Agent? |
A26974 | But you ask[ If Christs righteousness be able to satisfie, what is the matter that it removeth not all our Evangelical failings? |
A26974 | But your Doctrine, what Oedipus is able to unfold? |
A26974 | But, saith he, to what purpose did Paul dispute against Justification by the works of the Law, If the Righteousness of faith were not sufficient? |
A26974 | By what physical act of the Agent? |
A26974 | By what physical contact faith doth receive this? |
A26974 | Can I not tell you that your Argument is a Fallacy, but you will thus exclaim of me, as making you an Impostor? |
A26974 | Can every poor man or woman reach to know what a passive Action, or a passive Passion, or a Passive Instrument is? |
A26974 | Can he know that all shall work to him for good, though he know not whether he love God? |
A26974 | Can no man but the Perfectly obedient, perform the condition of pardon in the Gospel? |
A26974 | Can you find any lower place to give it? |
A26974 | Can you tell? |
A26974 | Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden,( Guilt is the great load:) But under what Notion will Christ be come to? |
A26974 | Dare you tell any man of yout Hearers that though he have not so much as a Purpose to mend, yet he is justified by Faith? |
A26974 | Did Christ expiate the sins, that by the Gospel men are obliged to punishment for? |
A26974 | Did I ever deny that faith must eye and follow Christs death to bring us to God? |
A26974 | Did ever man that writ of Philosophy once think that the soul did componere, dicidere, ratiocinari, judicare, patiendo& non agendo? |
A26974 | Did not Abrahams Obedience, and other works flow from Grace? |
A26974 | Did not each of these forsake that which by the former was accounted the good sound Definition? |
A26974 | Did they ever tell you that this distinction is in them? |
A26974 | Did we ever deny that Faith must be directed to Christ as Priest? |
A26974 | Did you doubt of these? |
A26974 | Did you ever see my Papers, or theirs? |
A26974 | Digbyes Atomes or number of small bodies which are in perpetual motion? |
A26974 | Do I ascribe any of Christs honour in the work to man? |
A26974 | Do I call the duty, a work of the Law, because I say the Law condemneth the neglecters of it? |
A26974 | Do I say any more then the Assembly saith in the preceding Question? |
A26974 | Do you believe in your conscience, that Christ is presented and represented in the Supper only as dying? |
A26974 | Do you believe this your self? |
A26974 | Do you indeed think, that to be an efficient cause of our justification, and to be a bare condition, is all one? |
A26974 | Do you not believe this? |
A26974 | Do you not discern that the Question concerneth you and every man, as much as me? |
A26974 | Do you not give up the Protestant cause here to the Papists in the point of certainty of salvation? |
A26974 | Do you not see that it is against you? |
A26974 | Do you not your selves call it fides formata charitate? |
A26974 | Do you think he did? |
A26974 | Do you think that I deny a godly life to be a comfortable testimony, and a necessary qualification of a man for pardon? |
A26974 | Do you think that any of these do make the pardon to be of Debt, and not of Grace? |
A26974 | Do you think that only the first instantaneous act of faith doth justifie, and no other after through the course of our lives? |
A26974 | Do you think that the Law doth not threaten unbelievers, when the Gospel hath commanded faith? |
A26974 | Do you verily believe that Repentance and Faith have no Interest in our Pardon, in sub- ordination to Christ? |
A26974 | Does not every man that undergoes various relations, variously act according to them? |
A26974 | Doth God every moment at a Court of Angels Declare each sinner in the world, remitted of his particular sin? |
A26974 | Doth he that speaks of receiving a man to be our Husband, King, Master,& c. mean it of one only Act? |
A26974 | Doth his Title cease as oft as he shuts his lips from saying, I thank you? |
A26974 | Doth it intervene between Christ and the effect? |
A26974 | Doth not Christ say, Take my yoak learn of me to be meek and lowly, that they may have ease and rest? |
A26974 | Doth not the Apostle contradict you by expounding himself in the very next verse before those you cite? |
A26974 | Doth that dishonour it? |
A26974 | Doth the Doctrine of faith alone without Christ advance Grace? |
A26974 | Doth the Gospel justifie us? |
A26974 | Doth the first acceptance here serve turn for continuance of what is first received, without the following Homage and Fidelity? |
A26974 | Doth[ Trusting him and Believing him] exclude a Resolution to obey his Directions and the future actual obedience? |
A26974 | Ease and Rest? |
A26974 | Else why may not they see it in it self? |
A26974 | Enquire whether videre, audire, be only Grammatical Actions( as you call them) and natural passions? |
A26974 | Ergo,& c. The Major is evident: What Saint dare say, that he hath a work that makes not the Reward of Grace, especially when it is a work of Grace? |
A26974 | Even the performance of the Conditions on mans part? |
A26974 | Even they that raise questions, what one act of faith doth justifie, whether of the Vnderstanding or Will? |
A26974 | First you say, you exclude a co- operation effective, but why do we strive about words? |
A26974 | First, Did ever any man deny the necessity of inherent Righteousness, that was called a Protestant? |
A26974 | For how can they have any comfort that know not whether they are justified and shall be saved? |
A26974 | For is not this all that Paul ayms at in speaking so oft of Faith in Relation to Christs death and Righteousness, rather then to his Government? |
A26974 | For is that the state of the question with us? |
A26974 | For to what purpose did Paul dispute against Justification by works of the Law, if the righteousness of Faith were not sufficient? |
A26974 | For what Divine denyeth works to be a condition of Salvation, or of the final Justification? |
A26974 | For what is our final Justification, but a Determination of the Question by publick sentence, on our side, Whether we have Right to salvation or not? |
A26974 | For what should I do? |
A26974 | For your question, How come the imperfections in our conditions to be pardoned? |
A26974 | From what? |
A26974 | Had I but delivered such a Doctrine as this, what should I have heard? |
A26974 | Hath not God said?] |
A26974 | Hath the Covenant of Grace( which promiseth Justification and Glorification) any condition on our parts, or none? |
A26974 | Have not I ever yielded to you that all works are excluded from Justifying as works? |
A26974 | Have you not Christs express words, that forgiving others is a condition of our Remission? |
A26974 | He instances in Abrahams works, and excludes them: now were Abrahams works, works done by the meer strength of the Law? |
A26974 | Here is causality, though improper; Here is a causa dispositiva: and yet shall I be blamed after I had removed Efficiency and Merit? |
A26974 | His fifth Argument is, that[ These two Justifications overthrow each other: If by one we have peace with God, what need the other? |
A26974 | His own received him not; What is that but they refused him? |
A26974 | How can good works perfect our Justification, being themselves imperfect?] |
A26974 | How can justifying faith qua talis in the act of Justifying, and Repentance, be reducible duties to the Law taken strictly? |
A26974 | How could he have brought a plainer evidence against himself? |
A26974 | How could you wink so hard as not to see that your Argument is as much against your self as me, if you do but turn it thus? |
A26974 | How doth it receive it? |
A26974 | How oft doth the Scripture expresly mention faith in our Lord Jesus Christ? |
A26974 | How strangely is it painted? |
A26974 | How then can you tell the world in print, that it seems I have met with a pack of Impostors, even them you mention? |
A26974 | How then is Love the fruit of faith, and as Divines say, a consequent of Justification? |
A26974 | How will they know when they Repent and Believe, when they have performed the full of these? |
A26974 | How will you ever prove, that our Entering into Life, and our continued remission or Justification have not the same conditions? |
A26974 | How would you have your Reader understand these two insinuations? |
A26974 | I deny his Consequence: And how is it proved? |
A26974 | I wonder that men should so little know the difference betwixt Earth and Heaven; a sinner in flesh, and a Saint that is equal to the Angels of God? |
A26974 | I wonder what made you think me of such an opinion that I have so much wrote against? |
A26974 | I would know 1. whether we are Guilty( not only facti, sed poenae) of every sin we commit? |
A26974 | I would sain know what that is which you here call Faith, and say its passive? |
A26974 | If God had not said[ He that believeth shall be justified and saved,] would Believing have done it? |
A26974 | If Satan say, This man both deserved death by sining since he Believed( as David) must we not be justified from that Accusation? |
A26974 | If faith should deserve the name of an instrument, when I think it is but a condition? |
A26974 | If faith were such a Physical Passive( or Active) Instrument, whether that be the formal direct reason of its justifying? |
A26974 | If he[ have not works, can faith save him?] |
A26974 | If it be no cause of pardon; Is it a condition sine qua non, as to that manner of pardoning that your prayer doth intend? |
A26974 | If it were, Whether that be the primary, formal Reason of its justifying vertue? |
A26974 | If medii, then what medium is it? |
A26974 | If of that, it s granted: but it s still denyed that perseverance is any of the Condition of our first pardon? |
A26974 | If one righteousness may serve, may not Pilate and Simon Magus be justified, if no man be put to prove his part in it? |
A26974 | If so, what hope of Justice? |
A26974 | If the later, you might as well have said, the Socinians assert that there is a God, and so do we: But to what purpose? |
A26974 | If we are Guilty, how can that consist with a justified state? |
A26974 | If we must fulfill him ▪ why may not a dying man look on them? |
A26974 | If you have, what place is it? |
A26974 | If you say, What need you then dispute the point, if they deny it not whom you dispute with? |
A26974 | Indeed if the Condition be never performed, then it destroyes or prevents the effect, and so the Instrument doth not agere: And why? |
A26974 | Is Believing attributed to God, or is it an act of man? |
A26974 | Is Love any part of the Condition of her Pardon and Dignity? |
A26974 | Is Prayer any cause of Pardon? |
A26974 | Is believing and trusting the Physitian some one single act, excluding all others? |
A26974 | Is here any room for further disputing? |
A26974 | Is it Christ himself that is physically received by faith? |
A26974 | Is it a Passion? |
A26974 | Is it a clear and profitable way of teaching to confound all these, under the general name of Covenant- breaking? |
A26974 | Is it any danger to give less to faith then others, while I give no less to Christ? |
A26974 | Is it fit to Dispute with such dealing as this? |
A26974 | Is it harsh when yet you never once shew the fault of the Speech? |
A26974 | Is it justice for you still to perswade the world that I mean some causality, though not efficiency? |
A26974 | Is it meant they took him not in their hands, or received not his Person into their houses? |
A26974 | Is it not a good Argument Negative, Abraham was not justified by works, therefore we are not? |
A26974 | Is it not at all an Act therefore? |
A26974 | Is it not safe when a man hath prerformed these conditions, to look on them either living or dying? |
A26974 | Is it not this, whether the Gospel Righteousness be made ours, otherwise then by believing? |
A26974 | Is it repent, and Christs Righteousness is by this made yours, and rest in Christ? |
A26974 | Is it the Act of Faith? |
A26974 | Is it the Habit? |
A26974 | Is it the Name or the Thing that you mean? |
A26974 | Is it then a meet phrase to say, that she is pardoned and dignified by loving such a Prince? |
A26974 | Is it then any whit probable that it is Gods meaning to exclude this respect of the act from any conditionality herein? |
A26974 | Is it true, that[ this is that in effect, which the Papists affirm in other words?] |
A26974 | Is not Christ the Law- giver? |
A26974 | Is not Faith ours as much Love,& c? |
A26974 | Is not Love and Obedience part of the Condition? |
A26974 | Is not one kind of work omitted when it s my duty, enough to invalidate my Justification? |
A26974 | Is not this all that our Divines say, or require? |
A26974 | Is not this as much as I say? |
A26974 | Is not this as plain as may be? |
A26974 | Is not this one of the Opinionists, that so far joyneth with the Socinians and Papists? |
A26974 | Is not your Testament that gives your Legacy, because it gives conditionally? |
A26974 | Is that man justified that believeth not in Christ as the King and Prophet of the Church? |
A26974 | Is the Gospel that must be published among all Nations, the History only? |
A26974 | Is the condition of her Deliverance and Pardon, the taking him only under the Notion of a Pardoner or Deliverer? |
A26974 | Is there a further condition required to this condition? |
A26974 | Is there any difficulty in this, or is there any doubt of it? |
A26974 | Is there no aptitude in Christs legal Righteousness to give us life? |
A26974 | Is this a sweet and Christian sense? |
A26974 | Is this adding to the Scripture unjustly? |
A26974 | Is this an Act too? |
A26974 | It can not possibly by any one single Act or Passion which you call the passive Instrument: and do you think to find out many such? |
A26974 | Item quomodo causarentur relationes rationis, sive intentiones logicae, quae sunt in actu collativo? |
A26974 | Must not those Conditions be fulfilled by our selves? |
A26974 | My last Question was, Whether now your Doctrine or mine be the more obscure, doubtfull and dangerous? |
A26974 | Nay is it like to be the great business of that day to enquire whether Christ have done his part or no? |
A26974 | Nay the act is but a moral act, such as a Statute or Bond acteth, and what need Faith to be a physical Instrument? |
A26974 | None''s here so fruitfull as the Leaning Vine: And what though some be drunken with the Wine? |
A26974 | Nonne quod dicere quoque periculosum est, sed ad adificationem proferendum est, d ● abolum Domino praeponit? |
A26974 | Nor what Faith justifieth? |
A26974 | Nor whether Faith justifie? |
A26974 | Nothing to assure men of Justification by faith, but immediate communications to Believers? |
A26974 | Now I pray you tell me whether here be not full as much as Dr. Ward or I say? |
A26974 | Now how will they avoid Tompsons Doctrine of Intercision of that Title to Salvation, upon the committing of such sins? |
A26974 | Now the question is, what is the condition of this womans deliverance and Dignity? |
A26974 | Now would you perswade us that Paul excludeth this kind of Interest, or opposeth faith to it? |
A26974 | OR, Whether all Humane Acts, except one Physical Act of Faith, be the Works which are excluded by Paul in the Point of Justification? |
A26974 | OR, Whether all Humane Acts, except one Physical Act of faith, be the Works which are excluded by Paul in the Point of Justification? |
A26974 | Of a Cause? |
A26974 | Or are there no such conditions which man must perform himself or perish? |
A26974 | Or can any thing but the want of this personal righteousness then hazard a mans soul? |
A26974 | Or do you think none were justified before? |
A26974 | Or doth every weak Christian believe all the twenty Articles that you mentioned at first? |
A26974 | Or from what Agent and Act? |
A26974 | Or he that gives any great matter on Condition of such Receiving, Doth he mean that any one single Act is that Condition? |
A26974 | Or is it excluded? |
A26974 | Or is it that Repentance is conjoyned as to our first Justification, and obedience as to that at Judgement? |
A26974 | Or is it the Intellective Reception of his species? |
A26974 | Or is that Promise to them only that suffer for the Declarative part only? |
A26974 | Or that believing in Christs blood for everlasting Life and happiness, should be any more called works then believing in his blood for Justification? |
A26974 | Or that it is this or that only Act? |
A26974 | Or the omission of many individual acts of faith? |
A26974 | Or was it ever his intent to advance some one act of theirs? |
A26974 | Or what do you say less then I do here? |
A26974 | Or what m ● ● ● Paul to rejoyce in the testimony of his Conscience, that in simplicity and godly sincerity he had his conversation? |
A26974 | Or whether it is meerly Pati? |
A26974 | Or whether their Being is only in the eye? |
A26974 | Or, Whether all Humane Acts, except one Physical Act of Faith, be the works which Paul excludeth from Justification? |
A26974 | Or, Whether it have only Entity and Verity, or only Goodness for its Object? |
A26974 | Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his Glory? |
A26974 | Our Question is, How the sense of James shall be known? |
A26974 | Our question then is only of the nature, and reason of that necessity? |
A26974 | Pauls Question is, What is the Righteousness which must denominate a sinner just at the Bar of the Law? |
A26974 | Repented of all sins that must be Repented of? |
A26974 | Reply, First, I hope you would not make the world believe that I deny it; Did I ever exclude a dying Christ from the object of justifying faith? |
A26974 | Secondly, But what if that were so? |
A26974 | Seeing you think( truly) that Pardon is iterated as oft as we sin, by what Transient Act of God is this done? |
A26974 | Shall I again tell you the true ground of mens mistake( as I think) in this Point? |
A26974 | So that it is not the natural, but the moral Truth, that is wanting: And what is that? |
A26974 | So that it is one question to ask, Why doth Faith or Works of Obedience to Christ Justifie? |
A26974 | Still the Question wanting in the conclusion: Who denyeth that Christ crucified is the object of justifying faith? |
A26974 | That Readers do you expect, that will take an Assertion of Fear- Love, and Obedience, in stead of an assertion concerning Faith? |
A26974 | That by works he means not simply good Actions, as James doth, but such as make the reward to be of debt and not of Grace? |
A26974 | That the Church must be thus molested by such disputing volumes against it, to make the Papists and other enemies believe we hold I know not what? |
A26974 | The Question is not whether Faith work? |
A26974 | The conclusion never was acquainted with our Question? |
A26974 | The fifth Question is, Whether Faith be any Instrument of our Justification? |
A26974 | The fourth Question is, Whether other Graces may not be as properly called physical passive Instruments as Faith, is your sense? |
A26974 | The like I may say of a Testament or Deed of Gift: But what need many words in a case where the Truth is so obvious? |
A26974 | The question that James disputed, was, Whether men are justified by meer believing without Gospel- Obedience? |
A26974 | The third Question is, Whether faith be passive in its instrumentality? |
A26974 | Therefore it solely dependeth on it: And if these things were true, what are they to our question? |
A26974 | Thirdly, The words of the Jews to John( If thou be not that Christ nor Elias, nor that Prophet, why baptizest thou? |
A26974 | This Union is by Faith: We are united to him as to a Head, Husband and Prince, and not only as a Justifier? |
A26974 | This is the Wills first act towards it object; and will you say that Love goes before justifying faith, and so before Justification? |
A26974 | Thus methinks all that I desire is granted already: what Adversary could a man dream of among Protestants in such a Cause? |
A26974 | Truly it is quite beyond my shallow capacity to reach what you here mean to be so harsh: what should I imagine? |
A26974 | WHether Besides the Righteousness of Christ imputed, there be a personal evangelical Righteousness necessary to Justification and Salvation? |
A26974 | WHether the Faith which Paul opposeth to works in Justification, be one only Physical Act of the Soul? |
A26974 | WHether we are justified by believing in Jesus Christ as our King and Teacher, as well as by believing in his blood? |
A26974 | WHether works are a condition of condition of Justification, and so whether we are justified by works as such a condition? |
A26974 | Wards is to that of the Council of Tre ● t? |
A26974 | Was it ever the less a Law or Promise, the Object of Faith, or Instrument of Justification? |
A26974 | Was it not the Gospel which Christ and the Apostles preached? |
A26974 | Was it only the Declaration of Christs Death, Resurrection,& c. which is the Gospel according to which mens secrets must be judged? |
A26974 | Was not Abraham our Father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the Altar? |
A26974 | Was there no Gospel- grant then extant? |
A26974 | Were Abrahams works in opposition to Christ? |
A26974 | Were it not then better to perswade all people, even when they are whoring, or drunk, to trust on Christ to pardon and justifie them? |
A26974 | Were you not comparing faith in Christ as King, with faith in Christ as Priest only? |
A26974 | What Agreement then hath this Argument with all the rest, or with his question? |
A26974 | What Mystical Relative Union is that which is not a Moral Union? |
A26974 | What a pack of Arguments are here? |
A26974 | What are the Conditions? |
A26974 | What are therefore these two kinds of Righteousness, but contradictory to each other? |
A26974 | What be the Deeds that you know my mind by to be contrary to my words? |
A26974 | What doth faith thus receive? |
A26974 | What doth it concern a sinner to be justified or condemned now before a Court of Angels, where he is not present, nor knows any thing of it? |
A26974 | What if Faith were passive in its Instrumentality? |
A26974 | What if I dare not do so, but give that glory to God, and not to the nature of our own act? |
A26974 | What if the Law condemn the neglect of a Gospel duty? |
A26974 | What is it that you call Sanctification? |
A26974 | What is it then? |
A26974 | What is justifying Faith? |
A26974 | What is more obvious, then that there are many conditions in justificato, which are not in actu justificationis? |
A26974 | What is the Terminus ad quem? |
A26974 | What is this thing called Faith, which you make such a Proteus, to be Active and Passive as to several Objects? |
A26974 | What more proper to the reformed Religion, as such, then to honour the Scriptures? |
A26974 | What not the signs by which faith it self should be known, and therefore should be notiora? |
A26974 | What real difference between the godly and the wicked, the saved and damned? |
A26974 | What room is there for them all, without confusion, If both color, quantity, odor, and all be there? |
A26974 | What sense would you make of it if you should interpret this and such texts as this of all moral Acts? |
A26974 | What the Action? |
A26974 | What the Patient or Object? |
A26974 | What then in the whole world shall escape that censure? |
A26974 | What then is the matter? |
A26974 | What tolearable sense can be given of that multitude of plain Scriptures which I have cited? |
A26974 | What''s this to the Question? |
A26974 | What''s this to the Question? |
A26974 | What, that Faith should be this subservient Righteousness? |
A26974 | When Tolet disputeth utrum ixtelligere sit pati? |
A26974 | When these plants of Hell do thrive upon us, under all our care to weed them up: what will they do when the Vineyard is left desolate? |
A26974 | When will you prove the Consequence of this Argument? |
A26974 | When you ask how saith Paul true? |
A26974 | Whence? |
A26974 | Whether Affiance, Recombency, Assurance,& c. or whether a Passion? |
A26974 | Whether Believing be so, only verbum activum, but Physically passive? |
A26974 | Whether Besides the Righteousness of Christ Imputed, there be a Personal Evangelical Righteousness necessary to Justification and Salvation? |
A26974 | Whether Christ himself be not the object of it? |
A26974 | Whether Faith be any proper Instrument of our Justification? |
A26974 | Whether Good be not the object of the Will, and so Christ be not willed as Good? |
A26974 | Whether Works are a Condition of Justification? |
A26974 | Whether a moral? |
A26974 | Whether faith be passive in its Instrumentality? |
A26974 | Whether is the Condition of the species or individuums of works? |
A26974 | Whether it be necessitas medii ad finem, as to the continuance or consummation of our Justification? |
A26974 | Whether justifying faith be not an act of the Will as well as the Understanding? |
A26974 | Whether the Faith which Paul opposeth to Works in the Point of Justification, be one only Physical Act of the Soul? |
A26974 | Whether the Faith which Paul opposeth to Works in the Point of Justification, be one only Physical Act of the soul? |
A26974 | Whether the same may not be said as truly of other Graces? |
A26974 | Whether they be an image or similitude begotten or caused by the Object, as Combacchius and most? |
A26974 | Whether this or that act? |
A26974 | Whether this willing be not the same as Loving, as love is found in the rational appetite? |
A26974 | Whether to Believe be only verbum activ ● m? |
A26974 | Whether we are Justified by Beliveing in Jesus Christ, as our King and Teacher; as well as by believing in his Blood? |
A26974 | Whether you can call Affiance, or any other act of the will justifying faith, excluding this willing, or not principally including it? |
A26974 | Whether your Opinion or mine be the plainer or safer? |
A26974 | Which call you the good, sound definition of Faith? |
A26974 | Which of those acts do you think goes not before Justification? |
A26974 | Who ever said, and where, that passive Justification( yea or active) is the Gospel it self, or the sign? |
A26974 | Who speaks more against faith, they or I? |
A26974 | Who then gives more to works, you or I? |
A26974 | Who will say so? |
A26974 | Who would have thought that you had held such a point? |
A26974 | Why do I not understand with every dull thought? |
A26974 | Why from what they came burdened with? |
A26974 | Why may not Christ given us ▪ justifie us as the meritorious cause, and a principal efficient; and his Gospel- grant, as his Instrument? |
A26974 | Why may not a man know when he believeth in Christ as King and Prophet, and is his Disciple, as well as when he believeth in him as Priest? |
A26974 | Why may not faith be a condition, as well as an Instrument of receiving the pardon of its own Imperfection? |
A26974 | Why not Conditions as well as Instruments or Causes? |
A26974 | Why then do you still harp upon the word[ works] as if I did give more to them? |
A26974 | Why then should I aim at this mark? |
A26974 | Why then we say, it is his Ransom, his love and free mercy,& c. And if the Question be, what is it in him that dignifieth her? |
A26974 | Will any say that the Saints do no good works? |
A26974 | Will it not be as dangerous to omit that one as all, seeing that one is required as a Condition? |
A26974 | Will not such think they may sin salva fide? |
A26974 | Will not the omission of Repentance for one sin invalidate it? |
A26974 | Will you ask now[ If faith be imperfect, how comes the guilt of that Imperfection to be pardoned? |
A26974 | Will you call to any judicious Reader, to tell you that which I particularly exprest to you? |
A26974 | Will you not maintain it against a Papist when you are returned to your former temper? |
A26974 | Will you not produce your faith and repentance for your Justification against this charge, and so to prove your Interest in Christ? |
A26974 | Will you say, not by the words, but by the sense? |
A26974 | Will you thence infer that none are justified till death? |
A26974 | Will you therefore conclude that the Moral Agency or Efficiency of these Laws is past, and therefore they do not condemn or justifie? |
A26974 | Would you have us say more of them, or less? |
A26974 | Ye will not come to me that ye may have life: How oft would I, and ye would not? |
A26974 | Yea and whether there be any such thing? |
A26974 | Yea how great a controversie is it what the sensible and intelligible species are? |
A26974 | Yea is it not a notorious truth, that it is quite another thing which the Papists affirm in somewhat like words? |
A26974 | Yea what a dangerous loss will Christians then be at, who will hardly ever be able to find out this single Act, what it is and when they have it? |
A26974 | Yea when the rest are acknowledged to be part of the Condition? |
A26974 | Yea who doubteth but he might have given them without any condition, even that of acceptance? |
A26974 | Yea, Why do the best Divines preach so much against Presumption? |
A26974 | Yet in the places cited, who knows not the same word hath different senses? |
A26974 | You ask, Were Abrahams works in opposition to that,& c? |
A26974 | You ask[ Is it repent, and Christs righteousness by this is made yours?] |
A26974 | You confess that by ungodly, is meant such, though Regenerate and holy, that have not an adequate holiness: Adequate; To what? |
A26974 | You demand,[ Will you exclude his Obedience, Resurrection, intercession]? |
A26974 | You here ask me,[ Whether I think you deny a godly life to be a comfortable Testimony, or necessary qualification of a man for pardon?] |
A26974 | You know by Justification they mean principally Sanctification? |
A26974 | You reply, If there be justifying works, how saith Paul true? |
A26974 | You say the question is,[ Whether the Gospel righteousness be made ours otherwise then by believing?] |
A26974 | You say, how then saith James true? |
A26974 | Your conclusion now is nothing to the Question? |
A26974 | [ For if Faith( say you) justifie as a work] But who saith it doth justifie as a work? |
A26974 | [ He that spared not his own son, but gave him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things?] |
A26974 | [ Repent and be baptized( saith Peter) for the remission of sin; Of what sin? |
A26974 | [ The true meaning( saith he) of the Question[ whether we are justified by Faith or by Works?] |
A26974 | [ What doth God require of us, that we may escape his wrath and curse due to us for sin? |
A26974 | [ Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect? |
A26974 | [ can faith save him?] |
A26974 | and 10 29? |
A26974 | and all because he would not deny either Christ or Faith? |
A26974 | and excuse not Infidels from the guilt of Rebellion against the Redeemer? |
A26974 | and have limited our justification to any one act? |
A26974 | and how called? |
A26974 | and how can they know that, when they know not what justifying saith is? |
A26974 | and how can they know that, who know not whether they have faith? |
A26974 | and how can they know what it is, when it is by Divines involved in such a cloud and maze of difficulties? |
A26974 | and how we receive Christ, as a man takes a gift in his hand? |
A26974 | and instead of the act we are now set to enquire after the passion? |
A26974 | and is that positive or vehement affirming it? |
A26974 | and not as qualifying? |
A26974 | and saith, God giveth to will,( that is, to believe) and to do,& c. that all this is meant of meer Passion? |
A26974 | and should dream of such perfection short of heaven, the place of our perfection? |
A26974 | and so actively justifie us? |
A26974 | and so another to that with a processus in infinitum? |
A26974 | and so is Evangelically righteous? |
A26974 | and such a Love as is distinct from justifying faith as being no part of it? |
A26974 | and that it is of aequal difficulty upon your own and others opinion, as upon mine? |
A26974 | and the King? |
A26974 | and the very same? |
A26974 | and what is that? |
A26974 | and whether it be not the plain and frequent speech of Scripture? |
A26974 | and why hath it not been discovered unto the world? |
A26974 | and will there be joy in heaven for reducing a man from such an opinion? |
A26974 | and yet meerly Recipient? |
A26974 | are not those acts conditions? |
A26974 | believed all necessary Truths? |
A26974 | but what of that? |
A26974 | by him performed? |
A26974 | de Dieu, Bucer, Calvin, Zanchy? |
A26974 | especially least they should yield to universal Redemption in any kind? |
A26974 | except Mr. Pemble and a very few that with him make Sanctification and Vocation to be all one? |
A26974 | from what? |
A26974 | if not guilty: then what need of Pardon, of daily praying Forgive us our Debts, or of a Christ to procure our Pardon? |
A26974 | if so; then doth not faith justifie directly, as the condition of the Gift, Promise, or new Covenant? |
A26974 | is any excepted to the Penitent Believer? |
A26974 | is it by a further condition, and so in infinitum?] |
A26974 | is there any danger in it? |
A26974 | is there any danger in this? |
A26974 | it is God that justifieth: who is he that condemneth? |
A26974 | no deed of Gift of Christ and his Righteousness to all that should believe? |
A26974 | nor his Intercession,( for who shall condemn us? |
A26974 | of that gift? |
A26974 | or do you think the difference to be of no moment? |
A26974 | or doth Scripture tell you? |
A26974 | or doth it signifie any one act? |
A26974 | or else that they do such good works as make the Reward to be not of Grace but of debt? |
A26974 | or is it only a condition without which he will not cure them? |
A26974 | or of another gift? |
A26974 | or of such sins as Davids, before Repentance? |
A26974 | or rather to advance the Lord Jesus whom faith Receiveth? |
A26974 | or shall any be saved that saith,[ I did not repent or believe, but Christ did for me?] |
A26974 | or should I be spoke against for the Doctrine of obedience, as if I gave more to man then you, when I give so much less? |
A26974 | or that ever such a thing can be proved? |
A26974 | or that there is no condemnation to him, though he know not that he is in Christ, and walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit? |
A26974 | or the act of any one single faculty that the people of the land must perform? |
A26974 | or to see through all the difficulties that I have discovered here in your Doctrine? |
A26974 | or to the constitution of the condition in the Gospel? |
A26974 | or what proof is there from Scripture for this? |
A26974 | or yet to enquire, whether the world were sinners? |
A26974 | or yet, that he hath commanded us in the Gospel, so to work that the Reward may not be of grace, but debt? |
A26974 | that every Grass, Flower, Tree, Bird, Stone,& c. and other bodies, have their several distinct species in the Air night and day? |
A26974 | that is to bring Christ down from above: or who shall descend into the deep? |
A26974 | that is to bring up Christ again from the dead: But what saith it? |
A26974 | that we deny even to all: Of a Condition? |
A26974 | that[ If thou confess with thy mouth, and believe in thy heart,& c.] that[ If] is a conjunction conditional? |
A26974 | the Trusting to Christ for Pardon and Salvation only, without taking him for their King and Prophet? |
A26974 | the satisfaction of a surety? |
A26974 | to justifie? |
A26974 | to note[ what in Christ received doth justifie] rather then[ what respect of our act of faith is the condition?] |
A26974 | to the Law? |
A26974 | what is the danger? |
A26974 | what need any more then to be said of it? |
A26974 | when I say, that[ all that I have to do with, grant the Antecedent] and what''s that to the question in hand? |
A26974 | whether Assent only, or Affiance? |
A26974 | whether they can be the Subjects of Passion; and so be passive Acts? |
A26974 | which yet because it is no way made ours but by believing, therefore he so puts the Question, whether by works of the Law, or by faith? |
A26974 | why by its fruits and concomitants, and that we take Christ for Lord as well as Saviour, or to save us from the power of sin as well as the guilt? |
A26974 | why is not the willingness he should raign, part of saving, justifying faith? |
A26974 | why then if you be so tender, who may deal with you? |
A26974 | with most do affirm? |
A26974 | would not men think that learning made them dote? |
A26974 | yea and what Law shall condemn them, if the Law of Works justifie them? |
A26974 | yea deny this to the Gospel it self? |
A26974 | — But the Righteousness which is of faith speaketh on this wise: Say not in thy heart, Who shall ascend into Heaven? |
A26974 | — For where was any Legal Righteousness of the good thief on the Cross, condemned for legal unrighteousness? |
A27047 | 12,& c. And hath the Almighty said that thus it shall be? |
A27047 | 18. and would you have us bring your blood upon our own heads by a lye? |
A27047 | 2. Who are his Angels? |
A27047 | 28) Sirs, I am loth to leave you till the bargain be made: What say you? |
A27047 | 4. Who will you give that to which you spare from God? |
A27047 | 4. Who would set the briars and thorns agaist me in battel? |
A27047 | 4. how unable then shall we be against Gods Sentence to Justifie you? |
A27047 | 40, 41, 43. shall all these decide the Question? |
A27047 | 48, And did this means secure them? |
A27047 | 6. and told us how sad a time it will be to those that are unready? |
A27047 | 9. and we are almost at the barr, and it is so short a time to this assize, what soul that is not dead will be secure? |
A27047 | A merciful Judge will hang a man for a fault against man: By proportion then what is due for sin against God? |
A27047 | Alas, how little cause have we to fear lest we should give God too much of our hearts or of our lives? |
A27047 | Alas; how quickly will it be so with us? |
A27047 | All the death and calamity which you see in the world, comes from the anger of this merciful God: why then may not future misery come from it? |
A27047 | And are Love and Delight such grievous things? |
A27047 | And are these little little sparks so intolerable hot? |
A27047 | And can you think that we should be for any one against our Maker and Redeemer? |
A27047 | And can you think that you shall not hear of this again, and pay for it one day? |
A27047 | And canst thou not now be perswaded to embrace him and obey him must the world be courted while he stands by? |
A27047 | And could you think that it was the will of God, that you should mind your bodies more then your souls, and this life more then that to come? |
A27047 | And did it not seem as unlikely to you, that his word should be false? |
A27047 | And did you not hear these things read to you in the Congregation by the Minister? |
A27047 | And did you think so basely and blasphemously of God, that he would falsifie his Word, lest such as you should suffer? |
A27047 | And do you think the undermining enemies of the Church have not a special Design upon you in this point? |
A27047 | And do you think you shall not hear of this? |
A27047 | And dost thou think then to be the first? |
A27047 | And how can you give him more then all? |
A27047 | And how importunate should we all be with sinners for their Conversion, when we consider that themselves also must shortly be Judg ● d? |
A27047 | And if Christ be not obeyed, what a stir will conscience make? |
A27047 | And is it not Reason, that it should go worse with contemptuous sinners, then with those creatures that never sinned? |
A27047 | And is not hell worse then the hardest way to heaven? |
A27047 | And is not the hearty embracing of Christ and subjection to him, a cheap prevention of all this? |
A27047 | And is this thy requital? |
A27047 | And is thy might and Power any greater then thy Policy? |
A27047 | And might you not have gone where a powerfull Minister was, with a little pains? |
A27047 | And must he then have such a stir to do thee good? |
A27047 | And must our differences have so sharp a cure? |
A27047 | And must you not much more use diligence in much greater things? |
A27047 | And now Hearers, what is your resolution? |
A27047 | And now their time is past, what is it? |
A27047 | And shall not the Judge of all the earth judge righteously? |
A27047 | And should men be imitated be they many, or be they few, in such a course as this? |
A27047 | And should not a matter then that so concerneth thy self, go neer to thy heart, and awake thee from thy security? |
A27047 | And the Judge may thus expostulate with them,[ Did all these mercies deserve no more Thanks? |
A27047 | And was it wise or equal dealing, to preferr your lusts before that glory? |
A27047 | And was not heaven worth the enduring of a scorn? |
A27047 | And were you not as earnestly perswaded by God to forsake sin and erve him, and yet that would not prevail with you? |
A27047 | And what did God entice you with? |
A27047 | And what is holiness, but our sincere dedication, and devotedness to God? |
A27047 | And what the better was he? |
A27047 | And whose threatning should you have chiefly feared? |
A27047 | And why did you not hearken to God that enticed you the other way? |
A27047 | And why is this so? |
A27047 | And why might not you have done so, if you had been as Industrious as they? |
A27047 | And why then might not godliness have been your ease and recreation? |
A27047 | And will you wilfully sin, and think to scape because God doth not hinder you? |
A27047 | And yet you have his written word that speaks plainer then all these; And will you despise them all? |
A27047 | Answ 1. Who should be first served? |
A27047 | Are all the people that hear me this day, devoted in heart and life to their Redeemer? |
A27047 | Are there no poor Children that you might set Apprentices to godly Masters, where soul and body might both have helps? |
A27047 | Are they all for God that follow the world so eagerly, that they can not spare him a serious thought? |
A27047 | Are those so sincerely devoted to Christ? |
A27047 | Are thy thoughts of Christ thy freest and thy sweetest thoughts? |
A27047 | Are you afraid of being losers by him? |
A27047 | Are your hearts set upon the Lord Jesus? |
A27047 | At least it doth God no harm, and therefore why sould he do us so much harm for it? |
A27047 | Before you venture on them, enquire whether they will bear weight in Judgement, and be sweet or bitter when they are brought to tryal? |
A27047 | But I hope you will not say that all men have Free Will ● And if my will were not free, how could I choose but sin? |
A27047 | But I suppose some will say, There is no man that wholly lives to God, for all are sinners: how then can our Salvation depend so much on this? |
A27047 | But Whither must they Depart? |
A27047 | But are you excusable if he do not? |
A27047 | But did he not also give you Reason to govern that Appetite? |
A27047 | But doth not the Scripture make believing the condition of the Covenant? |
A27047 | But from whom were we redeemed? |
A27047 | But hath he indeed their hearts? |
A27047 | But how remain? |
A27047 | But how shall Heathens bejudged by the Law of grace, that never did Receive it? |
A27047 | But how shall infants be judged by the Gospel, that were uncapable of it? |
A27047 | But if Christ have satisfied for my sins, and dyed for me, then how can I justly suffer for the same sins? |
A27047 | But if men will not hear, and there be no remedy, who can help it? |
A27047 | But seeing thou art also guilty of those special sins which he never shed his blood for, who shall deliver thee from that Accusation? |
A27047 | But shall I pr ● ach for my self, while I pretend to be preaching you from your selves to God? |
A27047 | But the last Question, which must decide the Controversie, will be, whether we have performed the condition of the Gospel? |
A27047 | But were there no seditious persons but Apostles and Christians? |
A27047 | But what if the way to heaven had been harder then it was? |
A27047 | But who be they that are ready? |
A27047 | But why do I speak thus? |
A27047 | But why is it called a fire prerared for the Devil and his Angels? |
A27047 | Can foolish sinners think to lie hid or escape at that day, that will now sin wilfully before their Judge? |
A27047 | Can the Seat you sit on, over- top your counsels? |
A27047 | Canst thou do none of these? |
A27047 | Canst thou part with goods and friends, and all that thou hast, in hope of a promised Glory which thou never sawest? |
A27047 | Certainly Sathan did not create you, or redeem you; what right then hath he to you, that he should be served? |
A27047 | Christ said not of his life and precious blood, It is too much; And will you say of your poor unprofitable Service, It is too much? |
A27047 | Consider that you have no right of propriety to your selves; if you have, how came you by it? |
A27047 | Could not God requite your labour or sufferings? |
A27047 | Could you expect that those should come to heaven, that would not believe there was such a state, but refused it, and preferred the world before it? |
A27047 | Could you have taken no time from your rest or eating, or at other Intermissions? |
A27047 | D ● re you deny it? |
A27047 | Dare you doubt of this which the God of Heaven hath so positively affirmed? |
A27047 | Darest thou run upon fire, or water, sword or canon, rather then wilfully run upon his displeasure? |
A27047 | Despisest thou the riches of his goodness, and forbearance, and long suffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance? |
A27047 | Did God hide these things from you? |
A27047 | Did God make the world so easily? |
A27047 | Did Gods Word make Heaven and Earth? |
A27047 | Did he not stand by you when you were in your cups and lustfull Pleasure? |
A27047 | Did he not tell you of the danger, and offer you far better things, if you would obey him and despise those baits? |
A27047 | Did he pitty thee in thy lost estate, and take thee up when thou laist wounded in the way, and make thee a plaister of the blood of his heart? |
A27047 | Did not Christ cell thee, One thing is necessary? |
A27047 | Did not Christ tell you, that if you were ashamed of him before men, he would be ashamed of you before his Father and the Angels of heaven? |
A27047 | Did not God also threaten you with everlasting Death, if you were not ruled by him? |
A27047 | Did not God purpose also to manifest the glory of his Remunerative Justice? |
A27047 | Did not God tell you all this and much more; aud plainly tell it you? |
A27047 | Did the knees of King Belshazzar knock together with trembling, when he saw the hand- writing on the wall? |
A27047 | Did you doubt of his will, or of his power? |
A27047 | Did you joyn with the godly so far as they are all agreed? |
A27047 | Did you make your selves? |
A27047 | Did you not feel pain and misery begin in this life? |
A27047 | Did you not there solemnly by your parents, resign your self to Christ as his? |
A27047 | Did you spend no time in Recreation, nor Idleness, nor vain talking? |
A27047 | Did you think God was no wiser then you, and understood not himself, because you understood him not? |
A27047 | Didst thou attend diligently on the word in publike, and think of what thou heardest when thou camest home? |
A27047 | Didst thou go to the Minister, or to others that could teach thee, and intreat them to tell thee the way to salvation? |
A27047 | Didst thou pray daily for it to God? |
A27047 | Didst thou use all the means thou couldst to get it? |
A27047 | Do not ask what God will do with you? |
A27047 | Do not you use to ask this of your own hearts? |
A27047 | Do we desire this sad fruit of our Labours? |
A27047 | Do you all live as Christ''s, and not your own? |
A27047 | Do you ask how? |
A27047 | Do you fear giving more to God then his due? |
A27047 | Do you know the secrets of your Masters counsel? |
A27047 | Do you love his weak, his poor despised Members? |
A27047 | Do you remember the time when yon were the servants of sin, and when Sathan led you captive at his will? |
A27047 | Do you soundly Believe this Doctrine which I have preached to you? |
A27047 | Do you stand to the Covenant that you made by your parents? |
A27047 | Do you think sirs, that you shall then have the face to say, I thought Lord, that I had been made and redeemed for my self? |
A27047 | Do you think this will not one day cost you dear? |
A27047 | Do you understand that you are all by nature Condemned men and lyable to the everlasting wrath of God? |
A27047 | Do you visit them, cloath them, feed them to your power? |
A27047 | Dost thou daily and spiritually worship him in private, and in thy Family, and teach thy Children and Servants to fear the Lord? |
A27047 | Dost thou know its form, or didst thou feel it enter? |
A27047 | Dost thou say, Speak, Lord, for thy Servant heareth? |
A27047 | Dost thou take him for thy onely Saviour? |
A27047 | Doth any Repent when they come to Heaven, that it cost them so dear to come thither? |
A27047 | Doth it make the Crown sit faster on the heads of Kings? |
A27047 | Doth this Book know what is written in it? |
A27047 | Doubtless, only those whom he hath bought: but who are those? |
A27047 | Especially when thou art every hour uncertain whether thou shalt see another hour, and not be presently snatch away by death? |
A27047 | Examine a little also your love to Christ, Do you thus kiss the Son? |
A27047 | FOR the Fourth Particular, who will be the Accuser? |
A27047 | FOR the Third Point, Who are they that must be judged? |
A27047 | FOR the seventh head, What will be the cause of the day to be enquired after? |
A27047 | FOR the sixth particular, What Law is it that men shall be Judged by? |
A27047 | First, in what sense we are said to be bought with a price? |
A27047 | For he knoweth vain man; he seeth wickedness also, and will he not consider it? |
A27047 | For how should it be? |
A27047 | For the poor creature to stand before his Maker and Redeemer, to be Judged to everlasting Joy or Torment? |
A27047 | Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having on a wedding gatment? |
A27047 | From whom? |
A27047 | God thought not all these too good for you, and did you think your hearts and services too good for him? |
A27047 | God will make us Judge you, and witness against you; Can we absolve you, when the righteous God will condemn you? |
A27047 | God, or man? |
A27047 | Hast thou laid all down at the feet of Christ? |
A27047 | Hath Christ now the only soveraignty in your souls? |
A27047 | Hath he not told you, that he will say, In as much as ye did it to one of these little ones, ye did it unto me? |
A27047 | Hath not God been merciful to thee in bearing with thee so long, and offering thee Grace in the blood of Christ, till thou didst wilfully reiect it? |
A27047 | Hath the world ever gained by resisting Christ? |
A27047 | Have not his word and service and sabbaths been a burthen to you? |
A27047 | Have not multitudes ventured their lives against his Ordinances and Government? |
A27047 | Have you not loathed this busie diligent serving of him? |
A27047 | He served yous w th the weary labours of your fellow creature: and should you have grudged to bear his easie Yoak? |
A27047 | He sufferered more then scorns forth you: and could not you suffer a scorn for i m and your selves? |
A27047 | He told you it was an enemy that tempted you: and would you hearken to an enemy? |
A27047 | How can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God? |
A27047 | How can you make shift to read such Texts, and not perceive that they speak to you? |
A27047 | How canst thou live merrily, or sleep quietly in such a Condition, as if thou shouldst dye in it, thou shouldst perish for ever? |
A27047 | How could I be saved if Christ d d not dye for me? |
A27047 | How diligently should a Minister study? |
A27047 | How do men make shift to quiet their Consciences in such gross hypocrisie? |
A27047 | How easily now might they finde their mistake, if they would but be at the pains to examine themselves? |
A27047 | How easily will Christ then evince his right in you, and convince you that it was your duty to have lived unto him? |
A27047 | How familiar is he in their hearts to fill them with covetousness, malice, pride, or the like evils? |
A27047 | How familiarly doth Satan use their tongues, in cursing, swearing, lying ribaldry, backbiting, or slandring? |
A27047 | How many have been smitten with Herod in the midst of their vain glory? |
A27047 | How many thousand of people hath it impoverished? |
A27047 | How many thousands will then perish as his utter Enemies, that verily thought themselves his friends? |
A27047 | How many, have been swallowed up like Pharaoh and his Host in their rash and malicious persuit of the godly? |
A27047 | How much of your Estates yearly is serviceable to his interest? |
A27047 | How much of your speech is for him? |
A27047 | How much of your time do you spend for him? |
A27047 | How often hath Christ warned us in the Gospel, that we be alwaies ready; because we know not the day or hour of his coming? |
A27047 | How seldom and how neglectfully didst thou think of God? |
A27047 | How then can a little misery on earth prevent it? |
A27047 | How then canst thou expect the saving of thy soul against the determinate will and Way of God? |
A27047 | How then should thy heart be affected that seeth the hand- writing of God as a summons to his barr? |
A27047 | How then will the neglecters of Christ stand before him? |
A27047 | I gave thee a family, and committed them to thy care to govern them for me, and fit them for my service: but how didst thou perform it? |
A27047 | I know thou wilt confess it; and yet wilt thou not yield him thy chiefest love and obedience? |
A27047 | I say, doth this man Believe that he is going to this Judgement? |
A27047 | I shall leave it to the trial of another day, whether all the publike actions of this Age, with their effects, have been for God, or for self? |
A27047 | I ● you say, Why can not God find out a remedy for this sin, as well as he did for the fi ● st? |
A27047 | IX THE ninth part of our work, is to shew you, What are those frivolous excuses by which the unrighteous may then indeavour their defence? |
A27047 | If Conscience should at any time ask,( Whose work are you now doing?) |
A27047 | If God ask us, we must bear witness against you and say? |
A27047 | If I shall tell you what you must do for preparation, shall I not lose my labour? |
A27047 | If a little of this wrath do but seize upon thy body what cryes and groans and lamentations doth it raise? |
A27047 | If any foolish Infidel shall say, Where shall so great a number stand? |
A27047 | If custom bid thee curse and swear, and Christ forbid thee, which dost thou obey? |
A27047 | If it be on one member, yea but a tooth, how dost thou roar with intolerable pain, and wouldst not take the world to live for ever in that condition? |
A27047 | If it seize upon the Conscience, what torments doth it cause, as if the man were already in the suburbs of Hell? |
A27047 | If we should be so foolish and unjust, what good would it do you? |
A27047 | If you are devoted to God, what do you for him? |
A27047 | If you are not your own, remember that nothing else is your own; what can be more your own then your selves? |
A27047 | If you ask me wherein his interest of Christ doth consist? |
A27047 | If you have the face to say, Lord, when did we see thee hungry? |
A27047 | If you knew not better, who was it long of but your self? |
A27047 | If you trust God, shew any word of Promise that ever he gave you to trust upon, that ever an Impenitent, Carnal ▪ Careless person shall be saved? |
A27047 | Is a true Religion enough to save you, if you be not true to that Religion? |
A27047 | Is death more terrible then Hell? |
A27047 | Is he not an exellent person that denyeth himselfe, and doth all for God? |
A27047 | Is his word thy Law which thou darest not pass? |
A27047 | Is it all one to wrong you, and to wrong the God of Heaven? |
A27047 | Is it better to be devoted to him, or to the flesh? |
A27047 | Is it his business that you mind? |
A27047 | Is it not incomparably more honourable to be Gods, then to be your own? |
A27047 | Is it your selves that gives power to your food to nourish you? |
A27047 | Is man more dreadful than God? |
A27047 | Is not all his own? |
A27047 | Is not he better and more Lovely then all these? |
A27047 | Is not he worthy to go without it that thinks so basely of it? |
A27047 | Is not that man even worse then mad, that is going to Gods Iudgement and never thinks of it? |
A27047 | Is that a friend or a servant worthy to be regarded, that will disobey you ▪ or betray you as oft as he is tempted to it? |
A27047 | Is there a man to be found in this Congregation, that will not confess that he is rightfully his Redeemers? |
A27047 | Is there no godly Scholers that want means to maintain them at the Universities, to fit them for this Work? |
A27047 | Is there no poor people that want the faithful preaching of the Gospel for want of means or other furtherance? |
A27047 | Is this a matter to be forgotten? |
A27047 | Is this the concluded Decree of Heaven? |
A27047 | Is this the thanks that God hath for his mercies? |
A27047 | It is thy sin that hurts thee, and not thy Saviour: why dost thou not rather strive against that? |
A27047 | It was God that let loose the Devil to tempt me; and he was to subtile for me to deal with; and therefore what wonder if I sinned and were overcome? |
A27047 | Look now upon all the course of thy life, and see whether thou didst live to me, or to the world and thy flesh? |
A27047 | Look upon thy own heart now, and see whether it be a holy or an unholy heart, a spiritual or a fleshly heart; a heavenly or au earthly heart? |
A27047 | Lord, what wouldst thou have me to do? |
A27047 | MY next Question is, Whether are you ready for this dreadful Judgement when it comes, or not? |
A27047 | MY next Question is, Whether you do ever soberly consider of this great day? |
A27047 | MY next Question to you, is, How are you affected with the Consideration of this day? |
A27047 | Many a time did we intreat them to try whether they were Regenerate or not? |
A27047 | May not God and Conscience witness, that it was because you cared not for knowledge, and would not be at pains to get it, that you knew no more? |
A27047 | May not I then hope to prevail with you, to devote your selves with the fruit of your Callings, and Possessions to his unquestionable service? |
A27047 | Might not he have said to his Father, What are these worms and sinners to me? |
A27047 | More particularly as to the business of the Day, what need I say more then in a word to apply this general Doctrine to your speciall Work? |
A27047 | Must God either be Ignorant of what you will do, or else be the cause of it? |
A27047 | Must I prepare thee a portion of the blood of my Son, and wilt not thou be perswaded now to drink it? |
A27047 | Must I send my Son from my bosome to suffer for thee? |
A27047 | Must the raw unexperienced Learner despise his book or Teacher, a oft as in his ignorance he thinks he meets with contradictions? |
A27047 | Nor Christ that came purposely from heaven to reveal them? |
A27047 | Nor could reconcile his own words, because you could not reconcile them? |
A27047 | O Sirs, what shift do you make to keep your souls from Continual Terrours, as you as long remain unready for Judgement? |
A27047 | O sirs, what a deal of care and labour do you lose? |
A27047 | Objection, But must we not provide for our Families? |
A27047 | Oh who among you can dwell with the devouring fire? |
A27047 | Or Paul that heard and saw them? |
A27047 | Or at least are you sure, that now you live not under the same Lord and Laws as the ungodly do? |
A27047 | Or at least, Can thy Conscience witness thy longings, thy groans, thy prayers for a Christ? |
A27047 | Or at least, did you not live near some that could Read? |
A27047 | Or didst thou not rather sin against that knowledge which thou hadst? |
A27047 | Or from a Theif or a Murderer? |
A27047 | Or have the people been greater gainers by this, then their Kings? |
A27047 | Or if you could, yet it was Gods Law, and not mens faults, that was made the Rule for you to live by: Will it excuse you that others are bad? |
A27047 | Or might you not have minded these things even when you were about your labour, if you had but a heart to them? |
A27047 | Or rathe ● have death, which is nothing, as the just eward of it? |
A27047 | Or rather think him the more unfit for mercy? |
A27047 | Or will you not? |
A27047 | Or will you now set your selves with all your might, to make preparation for so great a day? |
A27047 | See here thy own unholy soul; canst thou now say thou didst love me above all? |
A27047 | Seing then that you are Gods, and his alone, is it not the most haynous theevery to rob him of his Right? |
A27047 | Shall I say you are wiser then the People, and therefore that this Admonition is needless to you? |
A27047 | Shall I seek my se ● f, while I am preaching of the everla ● ● ing misery of Self- seekers? |
A27047 | Shall every man be false to God that hath any bait to entice him from him? |
A27047 | Should not this Question be now put home, by every rational Hearer to his own heart? |
A27047 | Should we lye, and say we did not? |
A27047 | Sin is no Being: and shall men be damned for that which is nothing? |
A27047 | Sirs, do you use when you are alone to think with your selves, how certain and how dreadful it will be? |
A27047 | Speak truth, man in the presence of thy Judge; was thy heart and mind set upon it? |
A27047 | THE next point in our method, is, to shew you, What will be the Evidence of the Cause? |
A27047 | Talents to further his search into the secrets of nature: But am I pleading that Ministers may have more maintenance? |
A27047 | Tell me, is it so, or not? |
A27047 | That without holiness none should see God? |
A27047 | The Question is only, Whether God have your hearts and lives? |
A27047 | The fourth thing I promised, is to shew you, Why no other Priviledge or Power in the world can save him that doth not kiss the Son? |
A27047 | The great, Question of the day will then be this, Whether you have bin heartily devoted to your Redeemer, and lived to him? |
A27047 | The last question is, who they be that are& may be urged to glorifie God on this ground, that the hath bought them? |
A27047 | The two and twentieth Excuse But I have not Power of myself to do any thing that is good: What can the creature do? |
A27047 | There did but one spark fall upon England, and what a combustion hath it cast this Kingdom into? |
A27047 | They that tryed them found them the very Joy and Delight of their souls; and why could not you do so? |
A27047 | They were your slaves and drudges, and you refused to be his free servants and his Sons? |
A27047 | Thou canst call it a Spirit, but knowst thou what a Spirit is? |
A27047 | V. FOR the Fifth Particular, How will the sinners be called to the Bar? |
A27047 | Was it not also prepared for wicked men? |
A27047 | Was not a reason fecht from the love of God, from the evill of sin, the blood of Christ, the Judgement to come? |
A27047 | Was there no more in Gods intention when he elected some, then the manifestation of the riches of his glorious grace? |
A27047 | We must either condemn the Sentence of Jesus Christ, or condemn you: and is not there more reason to condemn you then him? |
A27047 | Were not Ministers as earnest with you every week to repent and amend? |
A27047 | What did men entice you with? |
A27047 | What else have you to do, but to provide for everlasting? |
A27047 | What hath England got by resisting his Gospel and Government, by hating his servants,& by scorning his holy waies? |
A27047 | What have you got by it in this City? |
A27047 | What hurt had it been to him if thou hadst perished? |
A27047 | What if they threatned you with present Death? |
A27047 | What if we tell you 20 years together that you must dye, will you not believe us, because you have lived so long and seen no death comming? |
A27047 | What if you had not wages but your work? |
A27047 | What is all he world to him, but as a drop of a Bucket, as the dust of the ballance? |
A27047 | What is their power to perform it? |
A27047 | What is their task? |
A27047 | What is this Divel That hath Angels? |
A27047 | What matter can be mentioned with the Tongue of man of greater moment? |
A27047 | What say you Sirs? |
A27047 | What say you then, Sirs, in answer to my message? |
A27047 | What say you? |
A27047 | What say you? |
A27047 | What should be first sought after? |
A27047 | What then do you think are the Everlasting flames? |
A27047 | What think you then? |
A27047 | What would you have us say, if God ask us, Did you tell this sinner of the need of Christ, of the glory of the world to come, and the vanity of this? |
A27047 | What wrath is it that will thus kindle and consume them? |
A27047 | What? |
A27047 | What? |
A27047 | When was it prepared for them? |
A27047 | Where dwelleth that man, or what was his name, that did neglect Christ, and yet escape damnation? |
A27047 | Where the enquiry is made to be, whether they have fed and visited him in his members, or not? |
A27047 | Whether the Lord in v. 11. and the Son in v. 12. be both meant of Christ the second person? |
A27047 | Whether their souls were brought back to God by Sanctification? |
A27047 | Who are those? |
A27047 | Who can dwell with the everlasting burnings? |
A27047 | Who can shew such title to the Soveraignty? |
A27047 | Who hath hardned himself against him, and hath prospered? |
A27047 | Who then is he that dare say it shall not be? |
A27047 | Whom have I in heaven but thee? |
A27047 | Why can not you recover your selves from sickness? |
A27047 | Why did you not so far then agree with them? |
A27047 | Why do you not rather take wrong and suffer your selves to be defrauded, then do wrong and defraud, and that your Brethren? |
A27047 | Why doth he require this so earnestly at thy hands? |
A27047 | Why is this kissing the Son,( that is loving, depending on, and submitting to him) the only way to escape these curses? |
A27047 | Why what would you give now to know for certain how it shall then go with you? |
A27047 | Why, what are the Kings and Rulers of the Earth, but lumps of Clay, that can speake and go? |
A27047 | Will it comfort you more in the reckoning and review, to have laid out your selves for God, or for the World? |
A27047 | Will you do no more than you have done hitherto? |
A27047 | Will you kiss the Son, or will you sleight him stil? |
A27047 | Will you not believe till you see or feel? |
A27047 | Will you resolve and promise in the strength of Grace, that you will faithfully and speedily endeavour to practise it, whoever shall gainsay it? |
A27047 | Will you take this for a good Excuse from your children or servants it they abuse you? |
A27047 | Will you then wish that you had done less for heaven, or for earth? |
A27047 | Wilt thou stand to the Testimony of these Witnesses? |
A27047 | Would you have us lye to God, and say we did not? |
A27047 | Yea further, answer as in the presence of God: Didst thou obey so far as thou didst know? |
A27047 | Yea when he that dyed for you, will condemn you, shall we be more merciful then God? |
A27047 | Yea, and to do you no good, when we know that lyes will not prevail with God? |
A27047 | Yea, did not the very plain Word that you heard read ▪ tell you of these things? |
A27047 | You forget what helps he afforded you to discover the wiles of Satan, and to vanquish the Temptation? |
A27047 | You have Ministers at hand: why do you not go to them, and earnestly ask them, Sir, What must I do to be saved? |
A27047 | You see not God: will you not therefore Believe that there is a God? |
A27047 | You that Christ hath given Authority to, shall then be accomptable, whether you improved it to his advantage? |
A27047 | You that he hath given honor to, must then give account, whether you improved it to his honor? |
A27047 | You will say, This is a common Errand: do you think we never heard of hrist before? |
A27047 | You will then Remember, that to this end he both ● yed, rose, and revived, that he might be Lord both of the Dead and the Living? |
A27047 | You would be afraid now to meet him in the dark; what will you be to live with him in everlasting darkness? |
A27047 | an hours time for his worship in their families, or in secret? |
A27047 | and all within you was in a carnal peace? |
A27047 | and are you able to over reach them, and frustrate his designs? |
A27047 | and bleed when thou shouldst bleed and dye when thou shouldst dye? |
A27047 | and can he not govern it by true and righteous means? |
A27047 | and command thy self and all thou hast? |
A27047 | and could you not have procured them to read to you, or to help you? |
A27047 | and devoted all to his dispose and service? |
A27047 | and did you obey as much as you knew? |
A27047 | and did you pray daily that God would lead you into the truth? |
A27047 | and doth he not now deserve to be entertained with most affectionate respect? |
A27047 | and doth he require no harder conditions then these for my salvation? |
A27047 | and from licking up the vomit which Pagans have cast out? |
A27047 | and from what? |
A27047 | and give up their souls and lives to be governed by Christ? |
A27047 | and hated them that most carefully seek him, more then the vilest drunkard or blaspemer? |
A27047 | and his Laws that should rule us, be laid aside and be accounted too strict and precise for us to live by? |
A27047 | and how many thousand bodies hath it bereaved of their souls? |
A27047 | and is it not just with God to make these fiends their familiars in Torment, with whom they entertained such familiarity in sin? |
A27047 | and might you not have had a Bible your selves, and found them there? |
A27047 | and neglect him without whom you can not subsist? |
A27047 | and now and then bethink your selves soberly, whether these are matters for wise men to make light of? |
A27047 | and of whom? |
A27047 | and resigned thy self and all to his will? |
A27047 | and serve thy flesh and lusts, though I told thee if thou didst so thou shouldst dye? |
A27047 | and that he was fain to rule the world by a Lye? |
A27047 | and the Prince of darkness ruled in your souls? |
A27047 | and the Revelation of his will to guide that Reason? |
A27047 | and think much of all that thou didst therein? |
A27047 | and to banish all thoughts of returning to God, and to quench every motion that tendeth to their recovery? |
A27047 | and to suffer vile sinful dust to despise his mercy, and abuse his patience, and turn all his Creatures against him, without due punishment? |
A27047 | and tremble at his word? |
A27047 | and were you willing to know even those Truths that called you out to self- denyal, and that did put you on the ● ardest flesh displeasing duties? |
A27047 | and what an excellent cure to the troublesome contentions of proud or malicious men? |
A27047 | and what answer you mean to make at that day? |
A27047 | and what course do you resolve upon? |
A27047 | and what you shall do? |
A27047 | and when didst thou receive it? |
A27047 | and where was any surer ground for your confidence? |
A27047 | and whether any pains can be too great in so needfull a work? |
A27047 | and whether he that miscarrieth to save a labour, do not madly betray his soul unto perdition? |
A27047 | and whether the world will be then as sweet as now? |
A27047 | and whether time be no more worth to one that is so neer eternity, and must make so strict an account of his Hours? |
A27047 | and whether we lived to him that bought us, or to our flesh? |
A27047 | and will not promote it as far as is in their power? |
A27047 | and with what price? |
A27047 | and would you not believe Stephen that saw them? |
A27047 | and yet art thou like a stock that neither heare''s nor fee ●''s? |
A27047 | and yet canst thou over- reach the everlasting Counsels? |
A27047 | and yet wouldst thou now perswade the Judge that thou didst love God above all? |
A27047 | and your labour for that which satisfieth not? |
A27047 | are thy speeches of him thy sweetest speeches? |
A27047 | are you his, or are you not? |
A27047 | but with a few cold thoughts instead of hearty love, and with a few formal words instead of worship? |
A27047 | buy wine and milk without money or price: wherefore do you spend money for that which is not bread? |
A27047 | can he not awe them by Truth? |
A27047 | can we have any mercy on you, when he that made you will not save you, and he that formed you, will shew you no mercy? |
A27047 | canst thou deny but thou didst love this world before me? |
A27047 | dare you plead against him, that you expect should plead for you? |
A27047 | did you Redeem your selves? |
A27047 | did you know where was any better security to be had? |
A27047 | do you love him above all things in this World? |
A27047 | do you maintain and preserve your selves? |
A27047 | do you not know? |
A27047 | do you stick at your answer? |
A27047 | do your souls cleave to him, and embrace him with the strongest of your affections? |
A27047 | doth it bind thy thoughts, and rule thy tongue? |
A27047 | doth it support them, and secure them and is not his Word sufficient security for you to have trusted your souls upon? |
A27047 | for carryed a Bible? |
A27047 | from what? |
A27047 | hath God said it& wil he not do it? |
A27047 | hath he paid for thy folly, and born that wrath of God which thou must have suffered for ever? |
A27047 | have we need to spend our time and studies to perswade Christians from Bribery, Perjury and Oppresson? |
A27047 | have you cause for such Fears; is be unfaithfull, or unable to performe his Promises? |
A27047 | have you enough, or would you yet have more? |
A27047 | have you yet done with your enmity and resistance? |
A27047 | heaven or earth? |
A27047 | how carelesly didst thou serve him? |
A27047 | how coldly didst thou worship him, or make any mention of him? |
A27047 | how earnestly should he perswade? |
A27047 | how fast it is coming on? |
A27047 | how many Houses and Towns hath it consumed? |
A27047 | how many a soul that is now in heaven or hell, within a 1000 years dwelt in the places that you now dwel in, and sate in the seats you now sit in? |
A27047 | how many children hath it left fatherless? |
A27047 | how much more gainfully might your lives be improved? |
A27047 | how much was laid out for the promoting of my glory? |
A27047 | how much was laid out to further the Gospel, and to relieve the souls or the bodies of your brethren? |
A27047 | how shall I know whether I be ready or not? |
A27047 | how speedily is it come? |
A27047 | how speedily ● how certainly will he do it? |
A27047 | how unwearyedly should he bear all oppositions and ungrateful returns? |
A27047 | how would you answer it? |
A27047 | if they will cast themselves into the flames of Hell, must I go thither to fetch them out? |
A27047 | if they will needs undo themselves, what is it to me? |
A27047 | if thou didst but see what others do now suffer for neglecting him that doth now offer thee his grace; what wouldst thou then resolve to do? |
A27047 | is it for any need hat he hath of thee, or of thy service, or because thou hast need of him for thy direction or salvation? |
A27047 | is it for thy hurt, or for thy good? |
A27047 | is it not better to live to God then to man? |
A27047 | is not purity better then impurity? |
A27047 | is there any hurt to thee in all this? |
A27047 | must I be at so much cost to save thee, and wilt thou not obey that thou maist be saved? |
A27047 | must I debase my self to become man, because they would have exalted themseves to become as God? |
A27047 | must I smart for their folly? |
A27047 | must I suffer when they have sineed? |
A27047 | must he groan when thou shouldst groan? |
A27047 | must he have the naked title of thy Lord and Saviour, while thy fleshly pleasures and profits have thy heart? |
A27047 | must he so beseech thee to be happy, and follow thee with entreaties? |
A27047 | nor no enemies to Caesar, but Christ and his friends? |
A27047 | nor no troublers of Israel, but Elias? |
A27047 | or a man should pluck you by the sleeve, and say,( Sir, Whose Cause are you now pleading?) |
A27047 | or come to Church? |
A27047 | or cryed, Lord, Lord? |
A27047 | or desire judgement( as the Jews) against your Lord and Judge? |
A27047 | or did it bring upon them the destruction wich they thought to avoid? |
A27047 | or do you disclaim it? |
A27047 | or how he will use you or dispose of you? |
A27047 | or how they may be ready for their great approaching change? |
A27047 | or might have done if you would? |
A27047 | or rather only what it is not; Thou knowest not that whereby thou knowest; and how was thy body formed in the womb? |
A27047 | or to your carnal selves? |
A27047 | or triumpheth in it? |
A27047 | or who hath held this opinion? |
A27047 | or who hath said the Creed or the Lords Prayer oftnest? |
A27047 | or who have called themselves by the name of Christians? |
A27047 | or who that? |
A27047 | perhaps you have been enemies to Christ under the name of Christians: Will you be so still? |
A27047 | resolvedly, unreservedly, and constantly His? |
A27047 | shall Christ be your love, and your Lord, or not? |
A27047 | shall God, and his Ministers speak in vain? |
A27047 | shall every Murderer or Theif escape hanging, because the Devil was too cunning for him in his Temptations? |
A27047 | shall he escape by telling the Judge that his sin was Nothing? |
A27047 | should you not have served him that so liberally maintained you? |
A27047 | such right to rule thee as Christ can do? |
A27047 | that he should love you, depend on you and be subject to you? |
A27047 | that time, and study, and love and labour? |
A27047 | their time, their strength, and their interest? |
A27047 | to any that hath more right to it or better deserves it, or will better reward you then he will do? |
A27047 | to the Air, to cool and recreate your spirits? |
A27047 | to the Earth to bear you, and furnish you with necessar ● es? |
A27047 | unfeignedly His? |
A27047 | was not Gods word so plainly written, that the unlearned might understand it? |
A27047 | was not Gods word sufficient Evidence? |
A27047 | was not heaven worth your labour? |
A27047 | were you afraid of being a loser by it? |
A27047 | what an answer will it afford them against all sollicitations from carnal self or importunate friends? |
A27047 | what causeth that order and( diversity of its parts? |
A27047 | what honour to your now reproached Profession? |
A27047 | what is a little time when it is gone? |
A27047 | what is that vital heat and moisture? |
A27047 | what need God to say that which he will not do, to awe sinners? |
A27047 | what power or policy is able to reverse it? |
A27047 | what relief to the oppressed? |
A27047 | what say you? |
A27047 | what say you? |
A27047 | what should we say if he ask us, Did not you tell them the misery of their natural state; and what would become of them if they were not made new? |
A27047 | what the Accusation, and what the Defence? |
A27047 | what was it an hundred years agoe? |
A27047 | what would he have lost by it if thou hadst lain in Hell? |
A27047 | what would you do now, if it were all to do again?] |
A27047 | what would you then say to such a Question? |
A27047 | when God is against you, whose side would you have us be of? |
A27047 | when thou awakest, art thou still with him, and is he next thy heart? |
A27047 | when thou walkest abroad, dost thou take him in thy thoughts? |
A27047 | when will the most expert Anatomists and Physitians be agreed? |
A27047 | whether Christ and his Spirit were in them, or not? |
A27047 | which now do you take for the better master? |
A27047 | which part didst thou feel it first possess? |
A27047 | who bought us? |
A27047 | who maketh it his Fear and his Joy? |
A27047 | whose are they? |
A27047 | why might not that at least have been spent about Heavenly things? |
A27047 | why then did not these take as much with you as the other? |
A27047 | will God punish one sin twice? |
A27047 | will he so highly honour me, as to be his subject and his servant, and to be guided by such a blessed and perfect Law? |
A27047 | will he suffer himself to be embraced by those arms which have been defiled so oft by the embracements of sin? |
A27047 | will not that blessedness pay you to the full? |
A27047 | will nothing unite disjoyned Christians, but their own blood? |
A27047 | will you abuse him, by whom it is that you are men? |
A27047 | will you excuse your child or friend, if he would be false to you, upon as great enticements as these? |
A27047 | will you hereafter be His? |
A27047 | will you live to his dishonor who giveth you your Lives? |
A27047 | will you not hear so loud and constant calls? |
A27047 | will you not see so great a Light? |
A27047 | will you repent when you come to heaven, that you did too much to get it? |
A27047 | will you speak to his dishonor ▪ that giveth you your speech? |
A27047 | will you therefore wrong God, because you see others wrong him? |
A27047 | will you wrong him by his own creatures? |
A27047 | with a little deluding fleshly pleasure for a few daies? |
A27047 | would he draw thee as Satan doth to serve him, that he may torment thee? |
A27047 | would he make a prey of thee for his own advantage? |
A27047 | would he steal away thy heart as the world doth to delude it? |
A27047 | would not Justice have been glorified upon a disobedient wretch? |
A27047 | would you have beleived one from the dead that had told you he had seen such things? |
A27047 | would you have the Jury or the Judge to take this for a good excuse? |
A27047 | would you make as light of it as now you do? |
A27047 | would you spit in the face of your own Father, if you saw others do so? |
A27047 | would you think it a good excuse: if the rest should do the like, because of their example? |
A27047 | would you use a friend thus? |
A27047 | wouldst thou rather displease thy dearest friend, the greatest Prince, or thine own flesh, then wittingly provoke him? |
A27047 | you have the Bible,& other good books by you; why do you out read them? |
A27047 | ● are your minds taken up with these considerations? |
A27047 | ● hat was there but your own wicked hearts that should make such a life seem grievous to you? |
A26905 | & c. Dare you take all this for your portion if you had it? |
A26905 | ( O but how long will they do so?) |
A26905 | 1, 2,& c. and abundance such in the word of God: And yet are you not afraid of worldliness or sensuality? |
A26905 | 10. will you tell him that he exalteth himself against Grace? |
A26905 | 21. and to bring them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God? |
A26905 | A beast may have his sensual delight as well as you? |
A26905 | A toad abhorreth not the company of a toad; but shall not a man abhor it? |
A26905 | Also I would know, Are you certainly acquainted with their particular estates? |
A26905 | And Consider what it hath done for them all? |
A26905 | And I pray you tell me, Do you think that the works in which they differ from you are good or bad? |
A26905 | And I pray you tell me, Whether you do not your selves believe that a sober, temperate, heavenly Christian doth live as comfortable a life as you? |
A26905 | And I would desire you to tell me, if covetousness be among them, Whether you are able to charge it upon their Religion or Profession? |
A26905 | And are these men Crucified to the world? |
A26905 | And as for the improvement of their talents for God, What is to be seen? |
A26905 | And be of that mind which then you must condemn your selves? |
A26905 | And can you do this, when you love and delight in the world above him, or in opposition to him? |
A26905 | And can you expect mercy and salvation, that wilfully and knowingly do set your selves against it, and reject it? |
A26905 | And can you see no difference between a Worldly action, and a Worldly life? |
A26905 | And can your reputation be less then none? |
A26905 | And do you think it is not as bad and as dangerous to do so, as to say so? |
A26905 | And do you think that he will take this for a good account? |
A26905 | And do you think that this is a sin to be endured? |
A26905 | And dost thou think that thou art sufficient for thy self? |
A26905 | And have you performed that vow? |
A26905 | And he that could challenge them,[ which of you convinceth me of sin?] |
A26905 | And how can money be better husbanded? |
A26905 | And how then can you believe the word of God, which so often telleth you, what a hinderance Riches and Honours are to mens salvation? |
A26905 | And if man be better then a beast, do you think he is not capable of a better and higher delight then beasts? |
A26905 | And if thou hast received it, why shouldst thou glory as if thou hadst not received it? |
A26905 | And if ye salu ● e your brethren only, what do you more then others? |
A26905 | And if you be Poor, what an impatient complaining life do you live? |
A26905 | And is Christ worth no more, then to be sold with Judas for so base a price? |
A26905 | And is a state of such uncertain tenure so valuable? |
A26905 | And is it a dishonour to Christ to acknowledge him in us, and to say that we Live by him? |
A26905 | And is it not Necessary to your salvation that you be delivered from the enemies of your salvation? |
A26905 | And is it possible for a man to be a Christian indeed, that so far mistaketh the very Nature and Ends of Christianity it self? |
A26905 | And is such a man fit to live in his sight? |
A26905 | And is that all? |
A26905 | And is the case so altered think you now, as that you are bound to make such children rich, that parents then were bound to put to death? |
A26905 | And is this a benefit to rejoyce in? |
A26905 | And is this a matter of so great worth? |
A26905 | And is this thy requital of him? |
A26905 | And may we not observe and glory in that mercy, that enableth us to give God the glory of all mercies? |
A26905 | And must it not be so then to villifie or not to magnifie the works of the Sanctifyer? |
A26905 | And must not a people so holy, and peculiar, adore and hallow the Lord in his works? |
A26905 | And seeing all this is so, doth it not concern us all to make a speedy tryal of our selves in preparation to this final tryal? |
A26905 | And shall we not glory in that which is beloved of God? |
A26905 | And should you not look on that which will be, even as if it were already? |
A26905 | And then the thing that I would know of you is, Which be the Saints of God, if these be not; and where shall we find them? |
A26905 | And these sensual and covetous idolators must be asked,[ Whom will you match with God? |
A26905 | And what God will judge of you, if you so continue? |
A26905 | And what doth that man deserve that would, as to the use, destroy all the world, and frustrate all Gods works both of Creation and Redempion? |
A26905 | And what is it that hath the prevalent stream of your desires and endeavours? |
A26905 | And what the matter of your chiefest care? |
A26905 | And what then do these men do, but sell their salvation for the vanities of the world? |
A26905 | And what wonder if the house be robbed, where the doors stand alwaies open, and all is common to every passenger? |
A26905 | And what''s a Spiritual house for, but the habitation of the Lord, and the performance of his service? |
A26905 | And when Christ doth so vehemently disswade his followers from this damning sin, he doth it by setting a Law upon their Thoughts: Why take ye Thought? |
A26905 | And when Christ hath shed his blood to Absolve them, whether is it likely that he will take it well at them that vilifie them? |
A26905 | And when Iesus saw that he was sorrowful, he said, How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the Kingdom of God?] |
A26905 | And when Jesus saw that he was very sorrowful, he said, How hardly shall they that have Riches enter into the Kingdom of God? |
A26905 | And when the flesh or carnal Reason saith,[ Will you cast away your comforts, your peace, your happiness, your lives? |
A26905 | And whether this which you allow, be all that he this way requireth or expecteth? |
A26905 | And whether you are in the way to Heaven or Hell? |
A26905 | And who is it that will have the loss of this but your selves? |
A26905 | And who would now prepare such misery for themselves, and glut themselves with that which they can no better digest or bear? |
A26905 | And why are mourners blessed? |
A26905 | And why have you professed since to stand to that Covenant? |
A26905 | And will no warning serve you? |
A26905 | And will you feed and surfeit again upon the creature? |
A26905 | And will you neglect an holy life, and shut your selves out of heaven, and damn your own souls, because you think professors are bad? |
A26905 | And will you overlook him, and forget the end and use of all? |
A26905 | And will you overlook the Divine Nature, and refuse to honour it, and this on pretence, that it is a wrong to Christ? |
A26905 | And will you pretend to honour Christ without you, and deny him his honour within you, even because he is within you? |
A26905 | And will you repose your selves in the thoughts of such? |
A26905 | And will you so far lay by your reason, as to go against the Experience of all the world? |
A26905 | And will you trouble your selves, and ruine your poor souls, for such a fleeting transitory thing? |
A26905 | And wish you had more regarded the durable Riches? |
A26905 | And yet will you stick to it? |
A26905 | And you know that it is Christ that requireth you to forsake all that you have for him; and dare you say that Christ commandeth you to be fools? |
A26905 | And, Whether they have not more peace in their minds without your sinful sensual delights, then you have with them? |
A26905 | Are his precepts of Mortification and Self- denyal imprinted in your hearts, and predominant in your lives? |
A26905 | Are not those taken for your chief friends, that further your advancement or worldly Ends? |
A26905 | Are not your thoughts contriving for it, and your wit and interest all improved for it? |
A26905 | Are the dead so solicitous? |
A26905 | Are these the signs of enmity to the world? |
A26905 | Are they for Heaven or Earth? |
A26905 | Are they godly men that admire you and speak well of you? |
A26905 | Are they learned men that extoll you? |
A26905 | Are you acquainted with their bestowings? |
A26905 | Are you famous for Learning? |
A26905 | Are you publick mercies to the place where you live? |
A26905 | Are you taken up with the hopes of a more plentifull estate? |
A26905 | Are you tempted to set by the riches and full provision or possessions of the world? |
A26905 | As the churlish Israelite asked Moses( the Prophet like Christ) so must we do the flesh and world; Who made thee a Ruler over us? |
A26905 | Ask your family whether you do not ofter call them up to work then to pray? |
A26905 | Ask your neighbours whether you talk not with them many hours of worldly vanities, for one hours serious discourse about the life to come? |
A26905 | But Grace doth not make men stocks or stupid, and therefore how can we chuse but feel? |
A26905 | But consider impartially in the fear of God, whether you make an equal distribution? |
A26905 | But how few are they that will allow God such a Proportion of their estates? |
A26905 | But if thou must have a God, what God wouldst thou have? |
A26905 | But if we could teach them all to be Princes, or Lords, or Gentlemen, yea or but to get a few shillings more then they have, none would draw back? |
A26905 | But if you do purpose to Repent, I would further ask you, Do you think that is a right mind, or a wise course which must be Repented of? |
A26905 | But if you say, It is the Life you judge by, I demand, what is it in the lives of such men that proves their covetousness? |
A26905 | But if you say, you have no such intent; I further ask, Why then do you do it? |
A26905 | But knock off his fetters, and how easily will he go? |
A26905 | But may not a man go to Law to recover his own, or to right his own Reputation, if he be slandered? |
A26905 | But may we not use the creatures for Delight, as well as for Necessity? |
A26905 | But must we not honour the gifts of God? |
A26905 | But perhaps you''l say, How should I do that? |
A26905 | But what are these to him that takes the approbation and applauses of the world, but as a blast of wind? |
A26905 | But what have you to stop your ears when the world is dead? |
A26905 | But what is it then that we may not Glory in? |
A26905 | But what man living is such as you here describe? |
A26905 | But what should we do to be so habitually apprehensive that the world is our enemy? |
A26905 | But what will this move him, that looketh on it as on the dirt in the streets? |
A26905 | But when the world is Crucified to you, what hath he to entice you with? |
A26905 | But would you draw men to despise Dignities and Authority? |
A26905 | But yet I would further be informed of you; To what end is it that you make this objection? |
A26905 | By this means you may prevent a sharper tryal If you are afraid of Conscience, how much more should you be afraid of God? |
A26905 | Can God or the world do more with you? |
A26905 | Can faith save him? |
A26905 | Can it be a wrong to Christ, to rejoyce in that without which we can do nothing but wrong him? |
A26905 | Can not you tell? |
A26905 | Can you conquer, while you are conquered? |
A26905 | Can you have while at the door of Eternity to hunc after the delights of the flesh, and study after the prosperity of this world? |
A26905 | Can you keep your affections as loose from the world, when you have houses and lands and all things at your will, as you could if it were otherwise? |
A26905 | Can you not truly say that the world is Crucified to you, and that you look on it but as a Carkass; as an empty, lifeless, and unsatisfactory thing? |
A26905 | Can you say that they shall be yours this time twelve- moneth? |
A26905 | Can you tell me but what it is that you would have, if you had your wish? |
A26905 | Can you tell me what it is that is your very Business in the world? |
A26905 | Can you think to find that by it that no man ever found before you? |
A26905 | Can you tice a wise man by pins and counters, as you may do a child? |
A26905 | Can you truly say, that God hath more of your Heart then all the world, and Heaven is dearer to your thoughts then earth? |
A26905 | Canst thou live a day without God? |
A26905 | Canst thou relieve or shift for thy self at death without him? |
A26905 | Canst thou save thy self from danger without him? |
A26905 | Come nearer and consider what it is that you admire? |
A26905 | Dare you quit your hopes of the life to come for such a portion? |
A26905 | Darest thou tell him so to his face? |
A26905 | Dic mi ● i, saith Bernard, ubi sunt amatores mundi, qui ante pau ● a t ● n p ● … nobiscum fuerunt? |
A26905 | Did he not therefore die for all, that they which Live, should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him that dyed for them, and rose again? |
A26905 | Did it ever save a soul? |
A26905 | Did it hang him up among Malefactors: and will it set you on a throne, or dandle you in its lap? |
A26905 | Did it pierce his side, and will it heal your wounds? |
A26905 | Did it reach him Gall and Vinegar, and will it reach you milk and honey? |
A26905 | Did you ever hear us preach for covetousness? |
A26905 | Did you not renounce the flesh, the world and the Devil in your Baptism? |
A26905 | Do I need to perswade the humble so far as they are humble, not to be proud of their own graces or works? |
A26905 | Do not the Books which they read do so too? |
A26905 | Do not the Sermons which they hear and repeat cry it down? |
A26905 | Do others bow to you, and have you power to crush them or exalt them at your pleasure? |
A26905 | Do these men glory only in the Cross of Christ, and is the world by it crucified to them, and they to the world? |
A26905 | Do they all cry out against it as Vanity, and yet will you take no warning? |
A26905 | Do they earnestly perswade their servants to study holy things? |
A26905 | Do they not lament and bewail it as long as they live after? |
A26905 | Do they not read these passages as well as others in their Bibles? |
A26905 | Do they not witness against it as much as any people in the world? |
A26905 | Do they shew a vehement hatred of sin, and go before their families in an heavenly conversation? |
A26905 | Do you disclaim your Christianity in the open light, and yet say that you intend no such thing? |
A26905 | Do you expect that it should bring you to heaven? |
A26905 | Do you hate your salvation, that you so love the hinderers of it? |
A26905 | Do you long to have more duty, and danger, and a double account? |
A26905 | Do you look after the favour of great ones? |
A26905 | Do you love to have your salvation hindered or hazarded? |
A26905 | Do you not feel that you are Crucified to the world, and your desires after it are languid and life- less? |
A26905 | Do you not feel your selves that the world is the clog of your souls? |
A26905 | Do you not hear them all cry out of the world, as a worthless thing? |
A26905 | Do you not ordinarily confess that the world is vain, and yet will you shew your selves such Dissemblers, as to love and seek it more then God? |
A26905 | Do you not rise earlyer for your worldly business, then for prayer or any holy exercise? |
A26905 | Do you not see how little good it can then do them? |
A26905 | Do you not still Profess that heaven is best, and God is to be preferred, and yet will you not do it, but let your own Professions condemn you? |
A26905 | Do you now think it folly to renounce and forsake them all for Christ? |
A26905 | Do you think if any of them miscarry, it is because they are too much Religious; or rather, because they are too little? |
A26905 | Do you think that God doth envy you your happiness, or that he would take the world from you, because he esteemeth it too good for you? |
A26905 | Do you think that God doth not as strictly require the one as the other? |
A26905 | Do you think that this is a reasonable course to be ventured on in so great a matter? |
A26905 | Do you think verily, that it will make you truly happy? |
A26905 | Do you think you shall then extoll the world, and count them fools that will be perswaded to forsake it? |
A26905 | Do you understand what is meant by this, that, To the pure all things are pure; and that all things are sanctified to us? |
A26905 | Doth it excuse you that the world hath so lovely an aspect? |
A26905 | Doth not the Bible which they read cry it down, and threaten damnation to it? |
A26905 | Doth not this proclaim that you are wilful sinners? |
A26905 | Doth not this world take up the most of your care, and strength, and time? |
A26905 | Doth that make them no mercies: Or rather make them the greater mercies? |
A26905 | Especially when it is the end which the other do tend to, and that without which we are uncapable of sincere magnifying either Creation or Redemption? |
A26905 | For how know you mens hearts, but by their professions, or by their lives? |
A26905 | For many shall say, Lord have we not preached in thy name? |
A26905 | For the Heart is open to none but God; and will you make your selves Gods; and that when you are playing the part of the Devil? |
A26905 | Furthermore I would know; Are you sure it is not Satan within you that prompteth you to these accusations? |
A26905 | Gentlemen, do you know indeed, what it is that you make so great a stir for? |
A26905 | HOW long can you say that you shall keep the Riches and Honours which you possess? |
A26905 | Had you not rather bear a smaller measure, and taste of a cup that hath less of the ga ● ●? |
A26905 | Hath God given you but a short uncertain life, and laid your everlasting life upon it; and will you cast all away upon these transitory delights? |
A26905 | Hath it not put you to more care and sorrow then it is worth? |
A26905 | Hath not God chosen the poor of this world, rich in faith, to be heirs of the Kingdom, which he hath promised to them that love him? |
A26905 | Hath not God done more for you then ever the world did? |
A26905 | Have not the best of us as much reason as Iob to make a Covenant with our eyes? |
A26905 | Have these men Crucified the world indeed? |
A26905 | Have you Ministers, and holy Ordinances, and Christian Communion, in the purest order? |
A26905 | Have you Nobility of birth? |
A26905 | Have you abundance of earthly Riches, and provision for your flesh? |
A26905 | Have you abundant and excellent means of grace? |
A26905 | Have you comely apparel for the adorning of your bodies? |
A26905 | Have you comelyness of body? |
A26905 | Have you considered what a sad exchange you make? |
A26905 | Have you convenient habitations, for buildings, and rooms, and walks, and lands, and neighbourhood? |
A26905 | Have you dignities, and honours, and high places in the world? |
A26905 | Have you done many works of mercy to others? |
A26905 | Have you friends that love you, and are able to countenance you, and are daily tender of you and helpful to you? |
A26905 | Have you given all you have to the poor: have you converted many souls? |
A26905 | Have you health of body, and feel no sickness? |
A26905 | Have you much understanding in the Doctrine of the Gospel? |
A26905 | Have you not found, that the world is an unsatisfactory thing, and can not help you in a day of trouble? |
A26905 | Have you spiritual mercies as well as corporall? |
A26905 | Have you ten times, or an hundred times more wealth from him, then many an honest heavenly Believer; and yet will you Love and Serve him less? |
A26905 | Have you the love of your neighbours, and do all men men speak well of you? |
A26905 | Have you the pleasantest meats or drinks that your appetite desires? |
A26905 | He hath but one Trinity of enemies, the flesh, the world, and the Devil; and wilt thou turn to these, and forsake him by whom thou livest? |
A26905 | He that would kill a man deserveth death; What then deserveth he that would destroy all the world? |
A26905 | How Honourable then would our Parliaments be, and how chearfully should we flock together for their Election? |
A26905 | How can a man seek God in plowing or working in his shop, when these actions are so heterogeus? |
A26905 | How can a souldier be obliged to fight, and not to glory in the victory or good success? |
A26905 | How can we convert, or heal, or save you, without you? |
A26905 | How coldly and cursorily are family prayers and other duties slubbered over? |
A26905 | How comes it to pass that conscience then stirs not, when they know that they neglect such important duties? |
A26905 | How easily can I spare their Titles and Obeysances? |
A26905 | How formal are many in the Instructing of their families? |
A26905 | How great then is your sin, that destroy your blessings by depriving them of their Life? |
A26905 | How it sticks upon your stomacks, as if you had lost your treasure? |
A26905 | How joyfully could Paul and Silas sing in the stocks, when their bodies were sore with scourging? |
A26905 | How long then shall your vain thoughts lodge within you? |
A26905 | How many be there that spend that in unnecessary ▪ feasting of their friends that might have been far more advantagiously improved? |
A26905 | How many charitable and pious uses do call aloud for much of their estates? |
A26905 | How many have been spurned when they were dead, that were bowed to while they were alive? |
A26905 | How many men of worldly wisdom, yea how many that seemed Religious, have been thus deceived, and perished before me? |
A26905 | How many souls may be saved by the Ministry of one of these? |
A26905 | How much less will it keep your guilty souls, from the place that you have here been purchasing by your Mammon? |
A26905 | How notoriously do mens lives contradict their tongues? |
A26905 | How oft have you prayed to be saved from Temptation? |
A26905 | How peaceable, and edisying, and comfortable would our conversation be, to all about us? |
A26905 | How poor a portion is it that worldlings do possess? |
A26905 | How quickly will the heart begin to Love the creature for it self, that seemed once to Love it but for God? |
A26905 | How rare are holy Meditations in the minds of many that think themselves Religious? |
A26905 | How short a time have you for so great a work; and shall the world have all? |
A26905 | How soon can God blast and break your expectations? |
A26905 | How sweet are their thoughts of a plentiful estate? |
A26905 | How sweet are your delights in comparison of the Epicures? |
A26905 | How then can I say that I am crucified to the world? |
A26905 | How then would our Princes and Nobles be both Loved and Honoured, when their Addictedness to God did make them so Divine? |
A26905 | How unlike are you to the Antient Christians, that forsook all and followed Christ, and lived in a Community of Charity? |
A26905 | How unlike are you to your Profession and your Covenant with God? |
A26905 | How will you answer this dishonour done to the workmanship of God? |
A26905 | I beseech you consider well, Why you forsake Christ, and why you will destroy your selves, before you do it past remedy? |
A26905 | I beseech you tell me, What think you that you shall then say? |
A26905 | I can not spend it and have it too] You know what you have now; but what shall you have hereafter to all eternity? |
A26905 | I have shewed you all things, how that so Labouring ye ought to support the weak? |
A26905 | I marvail these men will not see their own faces, when the Prophets and Christ himself do hold them so clear a glass? |
A26905 | I pray you tell me what it is? |
A26905 | I pray you tell me; do you think that a sufficient Portion which the Devil himself would give you if he could, or is willing you should have? |
A26905 | I wonder when God will speak so plain, for abounding in Good works, as that hypocrites and worldlings will be able to understand him? |
A26905 | If I be a Master, where is my fear?] |
A26905 | If a man come into your family, what shall he see but worldliness? |
A26905 | If a man should deprive you but of a few pounds, you can hardly put it up; but you must go to Law for it, or you must seek revenge? |
A26905 | If a poor man, though never so wise or pious, have any business with you, how cold is his entertainment? |
A26905 | If indeed the world be Crucified to you, what meaneth your eager pursuit after it? |
A26905 | If it be not wise and right, why will you now retain it, yea and wilfully maintain it, against the perswasions of God and man? |
A26905 | If it be right and wise, what need you to Repent of it? |
A26905 | If once any of them have fallen by temptation into a miscarriage; will you judge of all their lives by that? |
A26905 | If one fall into your company, what shall he hear from you, but about this world? |
A26905 | If one man had all the money in the Land, and could secure it, and the disposal of it from violence, what might not that man do? |
A26905 | If one slander you, or dishonour you, how sensible are you of it? |
A26905 | If the Lord himself should ask both Plaintiff and Defendant, Do you follow this suit for Me, or for your selves? |
A26905 | If the Sun, and Moon, and Stars were yours, would you exchange them for a lump of clay? |
A26905 | If the breath of a thousand applaud you now, perhaps a million may reproach you when you are dead? |
A26905 | If the world be Crucified to you, How comes it to pass that you are so tenderly sensible of every loss or dishonour that doth befall you? |
A26905 | If the world be better then God in prosperity, what makes you call upon God in adversity? |
A26905 | If then there should be covetous ones among them, what''s this to Religion which teacheth them to abhor it? |
A26905 | If then you return to the world which you renounced, you forsake your Christianity: Had you rather forsake the world, or Christ? |
A26905 | If therefore you will still say, You hope you may keep both: What do you less then give God the lye? |
A26905 | If they deceive, or lie, or oppress, do not you do so: But will you therefore refuse your duty to God; and therefore destroy your own souls? |
A26905 | If they want any thing, what trouble are their minds i ● till their wants be supplyed? |
A26905 | If ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous Mammon, who will commit to your trust the true Riches? |
A26905 | If you are dead to the world, how comes it to pass that it hath so powerful an influence upon your judgements? |
A26905 | If you are wronged in your estate, what a matter do you make of it? |
A26905 | If you do not, why did you in your Baptism renounce it, and promise to fight against it? |
A26905 | If you do, you know whom to blame when you are deprived of it? |
A26905 | If you have admonished them and they repent not, why do you not tell the Pastors of the Church that they may admonish them and seek their reformation? |
A26905 | If you know some few to be such, what is that to the rest? |
A26905 | If you love those that love you, what Reward have you? |
A26905 | If you meet a man upon the way, and ask him, whether he is going? |
A26905 | If you say, What is all this to us? |
A26905 | If you see any man at work, and ask him what he is doing, and why he doth it? |
A26905 | If you think not your present condition better for you then heaven, why do you choose and prefer it? |
A26905 | If you would know whether you are Christians indeed and shall be saved, the first and great question is, What is your End? |
A26905 | In such a friend as God Almighty, that can rebuke your diseases by a word? |
A26905 | In what respects is it that the world must be Crucified to us? |
A26905 | Is Christ ever the less Christ, because he dwels in the hearts of Believers? |
A26905 | Is God or the world, Heaven or earth, thus highlyest esteemed by you? |
A26905 | Is a beast any more unlike a man, then your hearts and lives are unlike Christs Laws? |
A26905 | Is all his? |
A26905 | Is idle worldly discourse a better sign of a Saint, then keeping holy the Lords day, and labouring for salvation? |
A26905 | Is ignorance of the Scripture, or neglecting it a greater sign of a Saint, then meditating in it day and night? |
A26905 | Is it all or some of them that you thus accuse? |
A26905 | Is it fitter for God or you, to determine how many talents you shall be entrusted with? |
A26905 | Is it for God? |
A26905 | Is it for heaven or earth? |
A26905 | Is it for this world or the world to come? |
A26905 | Is it just or pious that Christ should lose the honour of his mercies, meerly because he hath bestowed them on us? |
A26905 | Is it not Greatness more then Innocency that saves abundance of you from shame and punishment? |
A26905 | Is it not Necessary then that you discern your errour, and be brought into your right way, and spend not your time and pains for nothing? |
A26905 | Is it not in your mind in the night when you awake, and in the day when you are alone? |
A26905 | Is it not pitty and shame, that you should thus turn Mercies themselves into sin, and draw your bane from that which might have been a blessing? |
A26905 | Is it not the great Deceiver of the Nations? |
A26905 | Is it not then evident, that other mens sins should move you to be the more Religious and careful of your selves, and not the less? |
A26905 | Is it not with a desire to have a life of holy diligence despised in the world, or thought evil of, or judged needless? |
A26905 | Is it popular applause that you so much regard; and doth it tickle you to hear of your own commendations? |
A26905 | Is it so, or is it not Sirs? |
A26905 | Is it the Hearts or the Outward actions of these professors that you perceive this covetousness by? |
A26905 | Is it the course of their lives that you judge by? |
A26905 | Is it your children that you set your hearts upon, in inordinate Love or Care? |
A26905 | Is not that mans belly his God, that will bestow a more costly sacrifice on his belly then he will do on God? |
A26905 | Is not that the most sinful and dangerous state, where God hath least of the heart, and the creature hath most? |
A26905 | Is not that the wisest way which he requireth? |
A26905 | Is not this the way to dry up the streams of Mercy, when the more you have, the worse you are? |
A26905 | Is our heavenly birth- right a thing so base, or the promise of our immortal Crown so uncertain, as to be parted with on Esau''s terms? |
A26905 | Is this loving their neighbours as themselves, and doing as they would be done by? |
A26905 | It is not for nothing that Christ himself hath given you so many and so terrible warnings to take heed of this sin? |
A26905 | It s God that commandeth it, and God you owe it to: And will you abuse God and rob him, because you have hard conceits of men? |
A26905 | Lastly, I would advise you to consider, Whether God that justifieth his servants, will suffer you to condemn them? |
A26905 | Look back in any credible Records, to the beginning of the world, and down to this day, and tell me where is the man that is made happy by the world? |
A26905 | Look on the corpses of your deceased friends, and think now, Whether the soul be ever the better for all the riches and pleasures of the world? |
A26905 | Look up to that Cross of Christ, and see the enmity of the world unto your Head: And will you take it for your friend? |
A26905 | MY next Question is this, Do you ever mean to Repent of your fleshly and worldly- mindedness, or not? |
A26905 | MY next Question to you is this: How do you think you shall value the world, when it is parting from you? |
A26905 | MY next ▪ Question is, What hath the world done for any other, that should perswade you to set so much by it as you do? |
A26905 | MY second Question to you is this: You that are so loath to part with the world and be Crucified to it, tell me, What hath it done for you? |
A26905 | Me thinks you should be willing; when you see the Question is as great, as Whether you are Christians indeed or not? |
A26905 | Moreover I would know of you, when you accuse men for not being more bountiful in your eyes, Do you know of all their works of charity? |
A26905 | Must God advance you highest, and will you thrust him lowest in your heart? |
A26905 | Must he feed you with the best, and cloath you with the best, and will you put him off with the worst? |
A26905 | Must we indeed give over caring? |
A26905 | Nay you do wrong, and defraud, and that your Brethren: Know you not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God?] |
A26905 | Nay, if he be not God, how should he save them, or how should he make them happy, if he be not their chiefest Good? |
A26905 | No, they have then no list to them, then they have other things to think of: And why not now as well as then? |
A26905 | None of them would ask us, By what Authority do you send for us? |
A26905 | Nothing before all things? |
A26905 | Now therefore there is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to Law one with another: Why do ye not rather take wrong? |
A26905 | O Remember, how little matter it is ▪ Whether you go poor or rich to the grave? |
A26905 | O Sirs, if the world be Crucified to you, how can it have such power over you, as to cause you to neglect your greatest Lord, and your immortal souls? |
A26905 | O how easie is it to hear your sin and danger from such a worm as I? |
A26905 | O how hard is it to have the world at will, and not to be ensnared by it and over- love it? |
A26905 | O how much better a portion might you have had, if you had not refused or neglected it when you had your choice? |
A26905 | O what a carkaise, what a shadow is it in their eyes? |
A26905 | O what work would the preaching of the Gospel make in the world, if there were not a worldly principle within, to strive against it? |
A26905 | O who would love that, and love it at so dear a rate, which can not help you in the time of your necessity? |
A26905 | O with what grief and tearing of heart do earthly minded persons part with the world? |
A26905 | Obj But is it possible that godly men can be guilty of such sins as these? |
A26905 | Oh how much more cause have you to glory in such a friend as Christ, that will save you from sin, and wrath, and Hell? |
A26905 | Oh then what a carkaise will all the glory of the world appear? |
A26905 | Oh with what ease and freedom of mind may you converse with God in holy Ordinances, when you are once dis ● entangled from this snare? |
A26905 | Or Peter did deny his Master in his fear? |
A26905 | Or eating and drinking, because men do consume by some disease? |
A26905 | Or is there any comparison to be made between them? |
A26905 | Or make them tend to the cure of your souls? |
A26905 | Or whither will you go? |
A26905 | Or will you judge of the course of their lives by one action, which they bewail and lament as long as they live? |
A26905 | Or will you reward that souldier that will withdraw from the Army into a corner, when he should be fighting? |
A26905 | Or will you say, that such as you are the Saints, that reproach holiness, and refuse to lead an holy life? |
A26905 | Perhaps the favour of some great men might bestow it on them at first without desert? |
A26905 | Quo mihi innumerabiles libros& bibliothecas, quorum Dominus vix tota vita sua indices perlegit? |
A26905 | Read over his Life, and Read your own, and judge whether any man on earth, be more unlike to Christ, then a voluptuous, worldly Gentleman? |
A26905 | Saith Augustine, Ecce mundus turbat,& amatur ▪ quid si, tranquill us esset? |
A26905 | See how it used him: and will you expect that it should deal contrarily with you? |
A26905 | Shall Christ purchase a Kingdom at the price of his blood, and offer it us freely, and shall we prefer the life of a bruit before it? |
A26905 | Shall his grace be villified, because he makes thy soul the subject of it? |
A26905 | Shall the world this day be Crucified to you, and you to it? |
A26905 | Shall your bodies have it, and your souls have none, or but a little? |
A26905 | Should you think you merit by denying merit? |
A26905 | So that most of us have need of the counsel which the Bishop of Colen gave the Emperour Sigismund that askt him, What he should do to be happy? |
A26905 | So that you want nothing, but have the world at will? |
A26905 | Some great matter sure you think it will do for you? |
A26905 | Stretch conscience for it till it tear or can stretch no further? |
A26905 | Suppose you had the most that you can expect in the world; would you be contented with this as your portion? |
A26905 | Sure you would never so much love it, and make such a stir for it, if you looked for nothing from it? |
A26905 | The Philosopher asks the Question, Why women are more addicted to look after neat attire then men? |
A26905 | The flesh will have its prey, and pleased it must be: Their conscience tells them, It will cost thee dear? |
A26905 | Then how beautiful would ▪ the feet be of them that bring you the tidings of such good things? |
A26905 | Then if you look on house, or goods, or lands, how little pleasure find you in any of them? |
A26905 | Then you would not swell against their Doctrine or Application? |
A26905 | They dream that they are rich, and honourable, and happy, and how proudly do they carry it out in this dream? |
A26905 | They see not the state of your soul? |
A26905 | They think when they hear them, These are hard sayings, who can bear them? |
A26905 | This command they make conscience of: and how then can you be meet judges of their alms? |
A26905 | This was plain dealing of an Holy Father: and is it not such as is as needful now as then? |
A26905 | To a man that is in love with money, O what a strong temptation is it, to see an opportunity of getting it by sin? |
A26905 | To a proud man that is tender of his reputation in the world, what a troublesom temptation is it to be reproached, or slighted, or slandered? |
A26905 | To what end? |
A26905 | To whom God saith,[ Thou ● ool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided?] |
A26905 | Vanity and Vexation before Felicity? |
A26905 | WHat is it that dying men do commonly think and say of the world? |
A26905 | Was it not the very end of Christs death to save his people from their sins? |
A26905 | We desire you not to joyn with them in evil? |
A26905 | Well then, Beloved Hearers, seeing you that sit here present are all of one of these two sorts, let conscience speak, which is it that you are of? |
A26905 | What I Shall we prefer a mole- hill before a Kingdom? |
A26905 | What a dung- hill do they wallow in, as if it were a bed of Roses? |
A26905 | What a noble employment have you, in comparison of the highest servants of the world? |
A26905 | What a poor low thing is it which the sons of men do tire themselves in seeking after? |
A26905 | What a stir do men make for temptation and destruction? |
A26905 | What a toylsom thing is it for a man to travail in fetters, or to run a race with a burden on his back? |
A26905 | What abundance of precious time and labour do you lose, which might and should be better spent? |
A26905 | What abundance of precious time do other men lose, in dreaming pursuits of an empty, deceiving, transitory world? |
A26905 | What answer think you they must make, if they speak the truth? |
A26905 | What art have you to extract such comforts from the creature, that never man could do till now? |
A26905 | What deformities do they dote upon, as if they were the most real beauties? |
A26905 | What do the most of the world, but prefer earth before heaven through the course of their lives? |
A26905 | What do you daily labour and live for? |
A26905 | What else do worldlings but tear and devour themselves with cares and sorrows, and scourge themselves with vexatious thoughts and troubles? |
A26905 | What excellent Precepts of Clemencie and Beneficence hath Seneca? |
A26905 | What great trouble will it be to any man to part with that which he doth not care for? |
A26905 | What hast thou which thou hast not received? |
A26905 | What honourable persons should Ministers be? |
A26905 | What if Abraham did once tell a lye or equivocate, and Isaac do the like in a fear? |
A26905 | What if David did once commit an hainous sin? |
A26905 | What if Lot be given over to a temptation? |
A26905 | What if Moses did once provoke God? |
A26905 | What if Noah were once drunk in his life: will you judge of his whole life by it, or say, that he is as bad as the rest of the world? |
A26905 | What if there was an Absalon in Davids family? |
A26905 | What if there was one Iudas among the Disciples of Christ? |
A26905 | What if you are never richer, will you never do good therefore with what you have? |
A26905 | What if you might be the Emperour of the world to day, and must be as you are again to morrow, were it desirable, or worthy to be regarded? |
A26905 | What interest is it that is predominant in you? |
A26905 | What is it that hath your Hearts? |
A26905 | What is it that is the matter of your dearest Love? |
A26905 | What is it that is the very bent and scope of your life? |
A26905 | What is it then that you expect by this world? |
A26905 | What is that you would have, and which you make such a stir for? |
A26905 | What is your care, and your chief contrivances? |
A26905 | What is your very heart set upon? |
A26905 | What know you, if you know not this? |
A26905 | What makes you drop prayers so much thicker then Alms or Distributions? |
A26905 | What profiteth it my brethren, if a man say he hath faith, and have not works? |
A26905 | What say you then, Beloved Hearers, are you willing to know your hearts, or not? |
A26905 | What self- seeking and unprofitable servants are they? |
A26905 | What shall be your portion instead of heaven?] |
A26905 | What should we say to them? |
A26905 | What take you for your portion? |
A26905 | What then doth that man do, but deny God to be God, that denyeth him his highest esteem and love? |
A26905 | What then shall I say to you? |
A26905 | What then will it do for you? |
A26905 | What will you choose, if you choose not him? |
A26905 | What will you take then for a sufficient warning? |
A26905 | What wise man would spend so precious a thing as Time is, upon that which he knows will leave him in Repentings that ever it was so spent? |
A26905 | What wonder if the Garrison surrender not where the besieged have free passage and continual supplies? |
A26905 | What would you not give in troublesom times to know certainly which will be the prevalent side? |
A26905 | What would you then say? |
A26905 | When Pilate saith,[ Shall I crucifie your King?] |
A26905 | Whether it be for Earth or Heaven? |
A26905 | Whether you are dead to the world and the world to you? |
A26905 | Which of them doth prevail, when an opposition doth arise? |
A26905 | Which of these shall I think in reason doth take the course to conquer the world? |
A26905 | Which then should be most honoured? |
A26905 | Who are like to be the fools indeed? |
A26905 | Who is it that more honoureth the Physitian? |
A26905 | Who then will fear you, or honour or regard you, further then your deserts or their interests lead them? |
A26905 | Who will look for Happiness from a known Enemy and Tormentor? |
A26905 | Who will not then cry out against it as Vanity and Vexation? |
A26905 | Who will now play so low a game, that hath an Immortal Crown propounded to him? |
A26905 | Who would fall in love with dung, or dote upon filth or dogs- meat? |
A26905 | Why do not dying men do so then? |
A26905 | Why do they not bargain, and deceive, and contrive for their lusts and worldly accommodations? |
A26905 | Why do ye not rather suffer your selves to be defrauded? |
A26905 | Why should it not be our duty to magnifie the work of Sanctification, as well as the work of Creation and Redemption? |
A26905 | Why then should you be of so differing a mind? |
A26905 | Why then should you so value that now, which all the world will vilifie at the last? |
A26905 | Why, alas, how quickly can God call them from you by death? |
A26905 | Will he be troubled for the loss of that which he disregardeth? |
A26905 | Will he part with Christ and heaven for money, who looks on money as other men do on chips or stones? |
A26905 | Will he vex himself for nothing? |
A26905 | Will not all this serve to convince you of this truth? |
A26905 | Will not his Judgement, think you, be more dreadful then your own? |
A26905 | Will you abuse him, because you think they do? |
A26905 | Will you apply this promise to all, or to some, or to none? |
A26905 | Will you be at so much cost, and labour to build an house, that before you have finished it, will be spurned down by death in a moment? |
A26905 | Will you be the worse, because God is so good to you? |
A26905 | Will you blame cloathing or fire that men are cold? |
A26905 | Will you blame the best Physitian and remedies that men are sick, when there is no cure but by those remedies? |
A26905 | Will you bring forth that Traytor that hath had your hearts and lives so long, and let him die the death? |
A26905 | Will you call your selves Men and Christians, and yet take up with the pleasures of a bruit, and there place your happiness? |
A26905 | Will you either judge of all other godly people by them? |
A26905 | Will you go to the Quakers, or to the Papists, Monks and Nuns for them? |
A26905 | Will you not sow your Masters corn, till you are certain of a plentious increase? |
A26905 | Will you obstinately cleave to it, when you know its vanity, and the mischief that such contempt of God will bring? |
A26905 | Will you reward that servant that will lock up himself in his chamber, or hide his head in a hole when he should be busie at your work? |
A26905 | Will you sin against God in one kind, if they do so in another? |
A26905 | Will you still hide it as sugar under your tongue? |
A26905 | Will you then own these Resolutions and sayings, or will you not? |
A26905 | Will you vex your brains with contrivings for the world, and weary your mind with tearing cares, and walk in sorrow because you have not your desires? |
A26905 | Will your Riches, or Pleasures, or Honours do this? |
A26905 | Will your friends deliver you, and give you a solid lasting Peace? |
A26905 | With what exceeding vigilancy then have you need to deal with such a dangerous deceiver; when all your happiness, and all your hopes is at the stake? |
A26905 | Would it bring you to your journeys end, to be of the Opinion that you should be up and going, as long as you sit still? |
A26905 | Would they not rather cry shame against him that would then entice them to any such thing? |
A26905 | Would you be free from a vain and sensual mind? |
A26905 | Would you have God to save you, and yet not to take off your affections from the world to himself? |
A26905 | Would you have larger possessions, more delightful dwellings, repute with men, the satisfying of your lusts? |
A26905 | Would you know then what you are? |
A26905 | Would you not gladly part with it for more of Christ? |
A26905 | Would you then have the boiling of your corruptions abated? |
A26905 | Wouldst not thou have a God that can preserve, and help, and save thee? |
A26905 | Wouldst thou fire the house thou dwellest in? |
A26905 | Wouldst thou pluck up thy own foundation? |
A26905 | Wouldst thou then have a God or no God? |
A26905 | YET further I demand, Whether indeed you do intend to Renounce your Christianity, and all your hopes of heaven, or not? |
A26905 | Yea and will compass Sea and Land for it? |
A26905 | Yea and will pretend that it is for the honour of Christ thus to dishonour him? |
A26905 | You are doing somewhat all; you are going somewhither every day: whither is it? |
A26905 | You dare not stand to this at Judgement: I know you dare not: And will you now insist on that which you dare not stand to? |
A26905 | You glory in your Honours, and pleasures, and possessions, and for ought you know within this week, or hour, they may be none of yours? |
A26905 | You have matters of everlasting life or death, salvation or damnation to look after; and what is riches or vain pleasures to this? |
A26905 | You know as sure as you shall live that you must die, and your corpse be laid in the common dust: And whose then shall all your pleasure be? |
A26905 | You know they will not: You can not with all the wealth in the world procure the pardon of the smallest sin? |
A26905 | You must be Nothing, that he may be All, or else you will be Nothing indeed? |
A26905 | Your Portion is almost spent already, and what will you do then? |
A26905 | Your flatterers will then forsake you, and seek them a new Master? |
A26905 | [ How hardly shall they that have Riches enter into the Kingdom of God?] |
A26905 | [ If I be a Father, saith God, where is mine honour? |
A26905 | [ Know ye not that the Friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
A26905 | [ Nunquid potes invenire urbem miseriorem quam Atheniensium fuit cum illam triginta tyranni divellerent? |
A26905 | a shadow before the substance? |
A26905 | an hour before eternity? |
A26905 | and are you eminent teachers of it to others? |
A26905 | and as great, as Whether you are in a state of salvation or not? |
A26905 | and cut off the bough on which thou standest? |
A26905 | and do it after so much warning? |
A26905 | and do they examine them about their everlasting state, and call them to account of what they learn from the publick Ministry? |
A26905 | and do you know how able they are to give? |
A26905 | and do you think I am such a fool as to be worded out of them? |
A26905 | and freed from such perilous snares? |
A26905 | and have you great parts in knowledge and utterance? |
A26905 | and how faithfully would you practise? |
A26905 | and how many friends should we have? |
A26905 | and how much more excellent work might you be employed in, if the world were but dead to you, and the stream of your souls were turned upon God? |
A26905 | and how slightly do you shake him off? |
A26905 | and how well worthy of your Tythes and more? |
A26905 | and if you grow rich or gain, how glad are you? |
A26905 | and is it not so commonly resolved? |
A26905 | and so would have the creature to be God? |
A26905 | and stand to it? |
A26905 | and take off his burden, and how lightly will he run? |
A26905 | and tell men that they deny or overlook it, because they admire him within them, as well as without them? |
A26905 | and that in a sort destroy the world to your selves, by separating it from its soul? |
A26905 | and that this is it that hindereth you from duty, and hindereth you in duty, and keepeth you from the attainment of an heavenly conversation? |
A26905 | and that you change your minds as your carnall Interest doth change? |
A26905 | and that you know you sin, and yet will do it; even against your own knowledge and conscience? |
A26905 | and think you are got into a thriving way? |
A26905 | and those for your chief enemies that hinder it most? |
A26905 | and to take comfort in that, without which we are uncapable of true comfort? |
A26905 | and to your Confessions, and Prayers to him? |
A26905 | and what a dangerous temptation is it to him, to be applauded? |
A26905 | and what a shaking would Satans Kingdom feel? |
A26905 | and what is it for? |
A26905 | and what is the Design that you are daily carrying on? |
A26905 | and what it is that is predominant in your heart? |
A26905 | and what life and sweetness there is in creatures, which the heavenly believer draweth forth, and you have no taste of? |
A26905 | and wherher we have not reason to say, Crucifie it, Crucifie it? |
A26905 | and whether you be not more deeply offended with them for crossing your commodity, then for sinning against God? |
A26905 | and whether you drive them not on harder to your own service then to Gods? |
A26905 | and whether you examine them not strictlyer about your business, then about the matters that their salvation doth depend upon? |
A26905 | and who is it that would not be on his side, except those few that have Crucified the world? |
A26905 | and why do you more carefully and laboriously seek the things of earth, then the Heavenly Glory? |
A26905 | and will you love and long for that which is an enemy to it? |
A26905 | and yet say that you are Crucified to the world? |
A26905 | and yet will you doat upon it, and neglect and lose the life everlasting for it? |
A26905 | and yet wilt thou cast him off? |
A26905 | are you descended of worshipfull or honourable Ancestors? |
A26905 | as besides their daily works of charity upon ordinary occasions, to devote also a seventh part entirely to his service? |
A26905 | as if you wanted your treasure or your God? |
A26905 | but how dreadful will it be to hear all this from the Lord of Glory? |
A26905 | do not even the Publicans so? |
A26905 | do not even the Publicans the same? |
A26905 | even the great Business that you live for, and that you study and care and labour for? |
A26905 | formoso quomodo haereres, qui sic amplecteris foedum: Flores ejus quomodo colligeres, quia spinis non revocas manum?] |
A26905 | have you beauty or strength? |
A26905 | he that magnifieth the cure, or he that villifieth it, or makes nothing of it? |
A26905 | how attentively would you hear? |
A26905 | how retentively would you remember? |
A26905 | how seldom and how coldly do they exhort their children or servants to make ready for death, and make sure of their salvation? |
A26905 | how speedily, how certainly would you prove apostates, and undo all that hath been so long a doing? |
A26905 | how strange is your deportment towards him? |
A26905 | how well should I be? |
A26905 | know you not your own minds, and thoughts, and desires? |
A26905 | or at the furthest, when you are newly parted from it? |
A26905 | or heal a soul? |
A26905 | or how should we repulse them? |
A26905 | or is a Carkaise to be so much valued? |
A26905 | or is it some one particular action? |
A26905 | or make a man truly happy at the last? |
A26905 | or set up against him, and prefer before him? |
A26905 | or should you think you have somewhat to Glory in with God, because you have denyed your selves and your own worthiness? |
A26905 | or to hear your state discovered, and your selves condemned by a Minister of Christ in a Pulpit? |
A26905 | or to morrow? |
A26905 | or your carnal selves? |
A26905 | that would pull the Sun out of the firmament, or set all the world on fire, if it were in his power? |
A26905 | that you might resolve what side to take your selves; and perhaps what Religion to be of, or to seem so to be? |
A26905 | that you should be so fond of it, and that it should seem worthy of such estimation and affection? |
A26905 | the bait of the Devil, by which he angles for souls? |
A26905 | the easiest lives? |
A26905 | the easiest lodgings? |
A26905 | the pleasantest recreations or companions? |
A26905 | those that you call so, or that God calleth so? |
A26905 | when they have a shorter time to use it? |
A26905 | which is it that can nullifie the perswasions of the other? |
A26905 | which you enjoy so delightfully? |
A26905 | which you hold so fast? |
A26905 | which you value at so high a rate? |
A26905 | will you forbear Good, because others do Evil? |
A26905 | your very Hearts? |
A27015 | & c. Why so have others as well he? |
A27015 | * Was the Pope of Rome none of those innumerable Bishops of the Church? |
A27015 | 10.26, asketh Christ[ What shall I do to inherit eternal life?] |
A27015 | 11. and not onely to the Clergy? |
A27015 | 13 I would know also whether it were by the judgment of a General Council that the first Churches believed the Scripture to be Gods word? |
A27015 | 2. where was your universality also, when there were scarce seven Bishops left that were free from the plague of Arrianisme? |
A27015 | 3 If he had proved it, are not all the Prophets and Apostles as well as Peter called the foundation? |
A27015 | 3. Who must be judge of your Sanctity and ours? |
A27015 | ? |
A27015 | A happy generation of Lyars sure? |
A27015 | All that''s doubtful is whether any other Churches or Bishops have as fair a plea for infallibility as the Romane? |
A27015 | All the foresaid absurdities unavoidably follow; whether they say that they can infallibly teach us all things( and will not) or but some? |
A27015 | And Christ useth to reprehend their strangeness to Scripture passages, as if they had not read them with such words as these[ Have ye not read,& c?] |
A27015 | And I would fain know whether these Rules of Bellarmines to know the unwritten word by, are themselves the Word of God, or not? |
A27015 | And all of them confess that either a Pope, or a Council may erre? |
A27015 | And are the Papists forced to yield us thus much? |
A27015 | And are we sure that any of ● he pretenders are true Popes? |
A27015 | And by what means doth he oblige us to Believe the Church in such determinations? |
A27015 | And can that doctrine be of God, which teacheth men to do such abominable things? |
A27015 | And can they be all silent about the onely ground of faith? |
A27015 | And did the authority of the Scripture at that time ● ll quoad nos, when the judge was turned heretick? |
A27015 | And do not those you call Lutherans, do as ● hey in this( though how rightly I say not?) |
A27015 | And doth he not in believing them, Judge them to be True, and Judge the contrary doctrine to be false? |
A27015 | And doth it not contradict the definition of a Church, to say that we must believe the Church before we can believe the doctrine of Christ? |
A27015 | And doth not this directly tend to infidelity? |
A27015 | And here it must be known whether the Cardinals have the sole power to elect? |
A27015 | And here note what a naked shameful ● ft it is that Bellarmine makes about this text? |
A27015 | And how can they know that such men are Christians, or profess that faith, before they know what that faith is? |
A27015 | And how can they know that they are to be credited as Christians, before they believe that Christianity it self is of credit? |
A27015 | And how great a sin hast thou heaped on thy self, when thou hast cut off thy self from so many flocks? |
A27015 | And how is that proved? |
A27015 | And how neer they begin to draw to the Reformed Churches in the Resolution of their Faith? |
A27015 | And how shall I know that? |
A27015 | And how shall we all know what is a General Council, and when we have one? |
A27015 | And how shall we know that ever there was such a thing as a General Council? |
A27015 | And how shall we know that this one which Bellarmine hit on, is the right? |
A27015 | And if a Pope or General Councel differ, to whom must the people hearken? |
A27015 | And if it be not onely in them, then whether are any of those true Popes that have been chosen onely by them of late ages? |
A27015 | And if others, whether it be onely some of your Church, or all? |
A27015 | And if the Pope had not then so much as the Presidency, how much less an universal jurisdiction with infallibility? |
A27015 | And if they be again asked, how they know that this unanimous assertion of the Catholike Church is free from error or infallible? |
A27015 | And if they were not written to teach the Church to what end were they written? |
A27015 | And indeed had Christ no Church till the Pope became universal Monarch? |
A27015 | And is it not a wonder that Austin never remembred to direct them to Rome, or to the Popes infallibility, if that had been the approved way? |
A27015 | And is it not plain then that all your dictates are Gods word, if you have the same seal and inspiration as the Apostles had? |
A27015 | And is not here a fine doctrine to make men perfect? |
A27015 | And is there not need of very strangely cogent evidence now to impell them to believe against the concurrent vote of Scripture, sense and reason? |
A27015 | And is your Doctrine like this? |
A27015 | And many more express passages he hath: as[ Quae in Scripturis sanctis non reperimus, ea quemadmodum usurpare possemus?] |
A27015 | And may not God have the honor of speaking as plainly as the Pope or Thomas or the Council of Trent? |
A27015 | And must men believe in the Pope before they believe in Christ? |
A27015 | And must they believe in Christ onely because the Pope bids them, or because they first believe in the Pope? |
A27015 | And must this Doctrine now be made the mother of Heresies, and kept from the eyes of the people that should learn it? |
A27015 | And now what is become of your Religion? |
A27015 | And of how much better signification think you, is the name[ Papist] or[ Romanist? |
A27015 | And seeing the Will so far Free Ethically as it is Good, Vertuous or Holy, the Question then is, Whether every mans Will be Good and Holy? |
A27015 | And seriously, would the Jesuites perswade us that these are of equal authority with the Miracles mentioned in Scripture? |
A27015 | And that a Pope may be a heretick and to be deposed in the judgement of a General Council? |
A27015 | And that the Pope and Papists are this Church, before their hearers have received or believed the word of God? |
A27015 | And then how can I tell that I or any man is sure of any thing? |
A27015 | And then how can any Papist tell that the Bread is turned into Christs body? |
A27015 | And then is the whole foundation of Divine faith extinct and lost, when there is no General Council? |
A27015 | And then it must be known upon whose credit the former ages did receive that faith and Scripture which they deliver down to us? |
A27015 | And then the Church may lye in the smaller oppressed part: and why then may not the most erre now? |
A27015 | And then why are not all the Apostles successors infallible as well as the Pope? |
A27015 | And then, w ● ● knows which of them must be succeeded by the next? |
A27015 | And therefore this may stop their mouthes that use to call out to us for a catalogue of their names? |
A27015 | And therefore what should they talk any more of a living judge, when that living judge himself can not speak so as to be understood? |
A27015 | And this is no rare matter among them? |
A27015 | And to hide from them that word of the living God, which he hath given the world to be their Directory to salvation? |
A27015 | And was not the Churches Faith resolved into the Infallibility of a Woman in Pope Joanes dayes? |
A27015 | And we must know, that the Pope onely is lawless, and under no power of Canons, or Decrees of former Popes and Councils? |
A27015 | And we wonder how they can think to be saved in a way that was not known for so long time? |
A27015 | And what could Peter do more in Feeding? |
A27015 | And what hath the Confuter to say against this? |
A27015 | And what if that were true? |
A27015 | And what is the change that is in the last years belief? |
A27015 | And what is the ground of their contrary belief? |
A27015 | And what is the infallibility that this Doctor resolveth his Faith into? |
A27015 | And what is this Believing in the Pope that must go first? |
A27015 | And what need we more then that which is here granted? |
A27015 | And what need you ask forgiveness of these sins, or be beholden to God ● or it, if the punishment to be forgiven were never due? |
A27015 | And what of this? |
A27015 | And what presumption, to prefer Humane Tradition before Divine appointment? |
A27015 | And what the better are you for your judge; when he can not or dare not decide your controversies? |
A27015 | And what was this bloody petition of this County? |
A27015 | And when Pope Pelagius and Gregory the first, and Adrian the first did all approve of the same? |
A27015 | And when it comes to the upshot, you are not agree ● what this Church is? |
A27015 | And when they make that to be essential to the Catholike Church which the first Catholike Church did never know? |
A27015 | And whether a man should commit Murder, Adultery, Theft,& c. or not? |
A27015 | And whether this be a sit ground for us to build our faith upon, or resolve it into? |
A27015 | And which partie is it that holdeth to the ancient terms of unity? |
A27015 | And why did none of the ancient Churches understand and expound it so? |
A27015 | And why do they not refer us to those writings, but to their own determinations? |
A27015 | And why doth he not write an infallible summary of all his superadded traditions? |
A27015 | And why may not another Doctor by these Rules, know the unwritten word, as well as the Pope, and another Church as well as the Romane? |
A27015 | And why then may not we take it immediately on the credit of the Apostles as well as the first ages did? |
A27015 | And why will you not allow them the like towards God and his Word? |
A27015 | And would not any unprejudiced stander by suppose that the most obvious sence of those words is[ This is the picture of Peter, Paul,& c.?] |
A27015 | And yet must we judge either their Pope to be infallible; or their Church to be at such unity in faith as they would make the ignorant vulgar believe? |
A27015 | And yet that such as the Papists shall be saved that are so far below them, because they believe in the Pope of Rome? |
A27015 | And yet the sufferings of these men prove them infallible? |
A27015 | Are all Saints infallible? |
A27015 | Are all the Preachers of the Romish faction infallible? |
A27015 | Are all these nothing? |
A27015 | Are not others as ready so to suffer as they? |
A27015 | Are not these good Catholikes, and well converted, that be of our mind, and do not know it? |
A27015 | Are not these the men that take away the Key of knowledge, and will neither enter in themselves, nor suffer others to enter? |
A27015 | Are not we as well without him as you are with him? |
A27015 | Are these Essential or Integral parts of a man? |
A27015 | Are we not as infallible as they on this account, when we conquer them? |
A27015 | Augustine, and many others? |
A27015 | But are all Bishops therefore free from error? |
A27015 | But are these priviledges therefore granted to the Pope, or to other Bishops?] |
A27015 | But did not those ages take up their faith on the same grounds as we should do now? |
A27015 | But do not these deceivers know? |
A27015 | But do not you make this Negative a part ● your Religion; that nothing but Scripture is to ● ● believed fide divinâ? |
A27015 | But do we find that this way was taken? |
A27015 | But if it be but some things that the Pope is infallible in, then how shall we be sure which be those some? |
A27015 | But if it be but some very few of you( as good as none) how will that prove the infallibility of your whole Church? |
A27015 | But if it be not from themselves that the Pope and Council believe the Scriptures, from whom then is it? |
A27015 | But if such may be Popes, then must we know why a Mahometane may not as well be a Pope? |
A27015 | But is it ever the less sin, because it is reparabile? |
A27015 | But is this man serious? |
A27015 | But is this much to the purpose? |
A27015 | But let us come to the tryal with them who laid the first Schismatical Principle? |
A27015 | But then, whether Historical faith be common or not? |
A27015 | But what is this Reparation that he speaks of? |
A27015 | But what saith he to it? |
A27015 | But when he writes in Latin, How many wayes of Resolution of Faith, that are unsound can he find among the Papists as different from his own? |
A27015 | But where is that promise? |
A27015 | But where is this testimony? |
A27015 | But wherefore should we go knock at heaven, when we have it here in the Gospel? |
A27015 | But you say, How is it that at Rome a Presbyter is ordained on the testimony of a Deacon? |
A27015 | By what means? |
A27015 | By what warrant will they distinguish, and claim power in one, which they have not in the other? |
A27015 | Can he say the like of all the Bishops, as well as Patriarchs? |
A27015 | Can no man indeed but a Papists know the Scripture to be the word of God, upon justifiable grounds? |
A27015 | Can the Pope lay by his relation when he is teaching the Church,& do it as a meer private Doctor, when he is not a meer private Doctor? |
A27015 | Can the Pope therefore believe it because he doth believe it? |
A27015 | Can they think that all the learned Heathens were such fools? |
A27015 | Can we forgive our selves? |
A27015 | Can we know before he discloseth them, or onely after? |
A27015 | Can we think that Augustine and the rest of the Bishops in these Councils did not understand what they did, and purposly restrain the Romane ambition? |
A27015 | Christ answereth him thus[ What is written in the Law? |
A27015 | Comes it from the commands and Epistles of the Apostle? |
A27015 | Common reason must needs have told men of such principles, that this was the way? |
A27015 | Concerning this Pope I would desire the impartial Reader to observe what a miserable answer Bellarmine is put to give? |
A27015 | Could he think that the Bishop of Rome had that power over the Church which he thought not any Bishop to have over the Presbyters of any one Church? |
A27015 | Did Bellarmine better know Pope Adrians understanding, then the Pope knew his own? |
A27015 | Did Julian never stick at this very principle of the faith, the Romane infallibility? |
A27015 | Did ever Christ direct the world to go to the Church of Rome to know whether he be the Christ, or whether the Scripture be his word or not? |
A27015 | Did ever Peter or Paul or any Apostle do so? |
A27015 | Did not Christ bid the rest of the Apostles Feed as well as Peter? |
A27015 | Did not Christ chide his Disciples for this contest? |
A27015 | Did not Paul write his Epistles to the Laity as well as to the Clergy? |
A27015 | Did not Pope Vigilius err judicially when he condemned the Decree of the General Council( for condemning dead Hereticks)? |
A27015 | Did the rest of the Apostles receive the Gospel on the credit of Peter, or were they sent by him? |
A27015 | Did they either submit to the judgement of the Pope as infallible, or obey him as their universal Ruler? |
A27015 | Did they first preach the Pope and Romane Church before they preach''t Christ or Scripture? |
A27015 | Did they give us such a definition of the Catholike Church? |
A27015 | Did they not learn this of the Donatists? |
A27015 | Did we not find the Greek, Ethiopian and other Churches in possession of the name of the Catholike Church as well as you? |
A27015 | Do Popes publish writings about matters of Religion, and not to teach the Church by them? |
A27015 | Do not all Laws of the Land oblige the subject upon the bare legislation and promulgation, before the Judge meddle with them? |
A27015 | Do not the poor Greek Churches and other Christians under the Turks, suffer more then the Romanists? |
A27015 | Do not your expositors differ about many hundred texts of Scripture, and neither Pope nor Council will decide the controversies? |
A27015 | Do they not make us suffer incomparably more then they? |
A27015 | Do they think in good sadness that the world was converted to Christianity by this means? |
A27015 | Do they think that none else in the world but they can tell what was the judgement of the former Church? |
A27015 | Do we not know of the multitudes of Opinions among you, mentioned by Bellarmine and other of your Writers? |
A27015 | Do you mean by Indifferency an Indifferency of Natural Power, or an indifferency of inclination or Habite? |
A27015 | Do you not know this to be true? |
A27015 | Do you not ● now that half the Protestants( those whom you ● all Lutherans) do hold universal Redemption as well as you? |
A27015 | Do you think I never read Watsons Quodlibets, and the many pretty stories of the Jesuites exploits there mentioned by him? |
A27015 | Doth Christ mean both, when he names but one? |
A27015 | Doth God give a man Authority to do that, which he hath promised him and all others that he shal never do: But he will keep him from? |
A27015 | Doth it not seem then that your Church is Apostate, in that it hath lost the gift of Miracles, which you suppose so necessary? |
A27015 | Doth that prove the insufficiency of what all are agreed on? |
A27015 | Doth the Devil make true Bishops of conjurers? |
A27015 | Doth this Text say that the Pope of Rome is infallible? |
A27015 | For if the senses of millions in perfect health may be all deceived in this, why not in other things, for ought we know? |
A27015 | For they certainly nourish him and turn into his substance: A most horrid consequent: For what communion hath Christ with Belial? |
A27015 | For what do they less when they unchurch and damne all that acknowledge not their new made universal Bishop which the Primitive Church never did? |
A27015 | For what is a Church but a society of Christians, that is, men professing the Christian Faith? |
A27015 | For what strifes and dissenssions hast thou made through the Churches of the whole world? |
A27015 | For when they are asked, how they know then Scripture to be the revealed word of God? |
A27015 | For who should more justly be angry with the other? |
A27015 | Good Lord, whether will the heat of contention carry men? |
A27015 | Hath Christ laid more on the Sex then on all these? |
A27015 | Hath God made subjects to be Judges of his Lawes by which they must live, and by which they must be judged? |
A27015 | Hath he indeed yet proved himself successor of the Jews High Priest? |
A27015 | Hath not Christ told him that no man lighteth a candle to put it under a Bushel, but where it may be seen of all? |
A27015 | Have none of the Greek Churches, nor Alexandria, Antioch,& c. had a succession till it fell into the hands of a Heretick? |
A27015 | Have not the Turkes a larger Dominion than the Pope? |
A27015 | Have the Quakers learn''t this distinction of perfection, yet? |
A27015 | Have they conquered the Great Turk, the Great Mogol, the Grand Cham of Tartary,& c? |
A27015 | Have we no Church then? |
A27015 | Have you no way to make your selves perfect, but by making the Law of God imperfect? |
A27015 | He saith[ Lord whether shall we go? |
A27015 | Here note that Bellarmine confesseth that Councils may erre; and then where is the French Religion? |
A27015 | How can the Papists for shame pretend to universality either as to the present or former ages? |
A27015 | How can there ● e venia sine merito vel debito paenae? |
A27015 | How can they believe you, if they do not by judgement discern the things you say to be true? |
A27015 | How can they tell but that their successors may make the Creed as long again as it is, and make their Religion another thing? |
A27015 | How can they tell but their Creed may fill more volumes yet before that all their Popes have done with it? |
A27015 | How can you perswade us to value such perfection? |
A27015 | How could they convert the infidels, and confirm believers without acquainting them with the grounds of their Faith? |
A27015 | How dare they condemne the far greatest part of Christians on earth to eternal torment? |
A27015 | How doth he prove, that by the Rocke is not meant Peters Faith, or that Doctrine which he confessed but Peter himself? |
A27015 | How impiously against God, and how cruelly against men, is this committed? |
A27015 | How know we their Testimony? |
A27015 | How shall men at a distance be sure that the Councils are indeed confirmed by the Pope? |
A27015 | How shall we be sure that all these, or the greater part of them are true Bishops and lawfully called? |
A27015 | How shall we know( in very many cases at least) either which is the judgement of the whole Church or of the major part? |
A27015 | How then do fallible men among you, by preaching bring men to an infallible faith( in tant ● m) and why may it not be so with us? |
A27015 | I appeal to all the Thomists ▪ Dominicans, Jansenians, whether the Pope hath facilitated their salvation by this determination? |
A27015 | I demand now whether the Popes determination have not made salvation harder to many then before? |
A27015 | I desire also to know whether it be your Pope himself that Works these Miracles, or some other persons? |
A27015 | I would fain know by what spectacles the Papists can read these words of* Cyprians, to find out their infallibility in them? |
A27015 | I would fain know where was the Churches infallibility, and power of judging of matters of faith in Nazianzens dayes? |
A27015 | I ● it enough that he step up into the chair and call himself Pope? |
A27015 | If Christ him ● elf be not a sufficient Teacher, nor the Gospel it self a ● ufficient Doctrine of Life, Then whither shall we go to seek it? |
A27015 | If God saith, It is so: May the Pope say, It is not so? |
A27015 | If Papists can turn all these, why do they suffer themselves still to be confined to so small a part of the world? |
A27015 | If a Conjurer, a common Whoremonger, a Murderer, a Simonist, a Heretick, may be the infallible judge of the faith, why may not a woman? |
A27015 | If all, then it seems he must judge whether he that Believeth shall be saved, or not? |
A27015 | If another man that is no Bishop of Rome may be Peters successor, then how shall we know who have succeeded him all this while? |
A27015 | If by the present, why can not we see them? |
A27015 | If he be, then what need of a Council, when he is infallible alone? |
A27015 | If he say, because the Church or the Scripture saith so; How knoweth he that, but by hearing or seeing? |
A27015 | If it be by their writings, Canons or Decrees, why can not other men who are much wiser and better, understand these as well as the Pope? |
A27015 | If it be on the credit of any former Church, then would I know of which age? |
A27015 | If it be the Pope himself, why then have we more murthers then Miracles charged on your Popes by your own historians? |
A27015 | If not, then it seems we may have Rules and means which are not the word of God, by which we may infallibly know which is the true word of God? |
A27015 | If past Miracles may serve without present, then what need any more than the old Miracles of the Apostles? |
A27015 | If the Jesuit had put his proofs into well formed Arguments, what stuff should we have had? |
A27015 | If the Jesuites are to be believed, what a silly sottish generation are your secular Priests? |
A27015 | If the Pope of Romes infallible authority had been the ground, would they not have told us so? |
A27015 | If the first, who must be judge of their victories, but themselves? |
A27015 | If therefore repentance and amendment be of necessity to Salvation, what Will become of these men that suppose themselves so infallible? |
A27015 | If therefore the one of them be infallible, because of this, why is not the other so too? |
A27015 | If these be not notorious enemies of the Light, who are? |
A27015 | If they are, what need there also any more proof, when they themselves confess themselves fallible? |
A27015 | If they be not to be believed, what need there any more proof? |
A27015 | If they be, are they written or unwritten, and how known to be so? |
A27015 | If they can, why have they not faln closer to work in this necessary point, when they know how much it would do to the determination of the whole? |
A27015 | If they have, then how came they by it? |
A27015 | If this Article be so necessary to salvation, Why do not we find it in any ancient Creed? |
A27015 | If you aske who may and who may not? |
A27015 | If your Priests are to be believed, what a seditious hypocritical, cheating packe are the Jesuites? |
A27015 | If your way were of God, it needed not such devices to uphold it, nor would it suit so well with works of darkness? |
A27015 | In Austines Book against Petilianus the Donatist the very question debated, is, How they may know where the true Church is? |
A27015 | Is it all, or some of Christs Doctrines that the Pope is Judge of? |
A27015 | Is it because the word of God is indeed yet unknown? |
A27015 | Is it because we must not force the Scripture, but take it in the plainest, obvious sence? |
A27015 | Is it from the Authority of the Lord and the Gospel? |
A27015 | Is it not a high advancement of the Gospel Church, above the legal Jewish Church, which the Papists do vouchsafe it? |
A27015 | Is it not absolutely necessary to the validity of the Testimony of a Miracle, that it be not controled by some greater Miracle or evidence? |
A27015 | Is it not all that he expresly commandeth to[ Examine themselves, and so to eat of this Bread and Drink of this Cup?] |
A27015 | Is it not ambition and desire of Rule that is the very cause which they contend for? |
A27015 | Is it not by Scripture, or unwritten tradition in their own judgment? |
A27015 | Is it nothing that all the Ethiopian, Greek, and Reformed Churches are not of their party, besides many a thousand more? |
A27015 | Is it onely this, that the Pope hath Power to judge, that there is a God, a Christ, a word of God? |
A27015 | Is it possible that any learned Papists can seriously believe that this was the ancient way of believing? |
A27015 | Is it that venial sin is easier conquered and forsaken then mortal? |
A27015 | Is it the Scriptures? |
A27015 | Is it the remission of the guilt and punishment? |
A27015 | Is it the removing of the blot? |
A27015 | Is no man on earth bound to believe in Christ that knows not the Popes mind in the matter? |
A27015 | Is not Faith an act of discretion? |
A27015 | Is the infallibility of sense a thing that is known by nature, or by supernatural Light? |
A27015 | Is this liker the doctrine of Papists or of Protestants? |
A27015 | Is, there then no Eucharist among the Abassines, Greeks, or any that subject not to you? |
A27015 | It is God that justifieth, who shall condemne us? |
A27015 | It is a hard strait that the Papists are in to tell us, and themselves, when the Pope teacheth as a private Doctor, and when as Pope? |
A27015 | It may be we may have no General Council of a hundred or six hundred, or a thousand years together? |
A27015 | Let it be the smallest point they will imagine; Hath God given power to the Pope to contradict him and give him the Lye? |
A27015 | May he decide these on either part? |
A27015 | May he judge that there is no Judgement, Resurrection, or life Everlasting? |
A27015 | Moreover how shall we know whether substances and accidents are separated or not? |
A27015 | Moreover, if you are All Miracle Workers, why can we never see one, nor have certain proof of one? |
A27015 | Must Christ lose for ever the most of his Church, even those that never heard of Rome; because they believe not in the Pope? |
A27015 | Must Paul be damned because he was not one of Peters subjects? |
A27015 | Must he send his own Son to preach the Gospel? |
A27015 | Must not he that believeth the Resurrection, and Everlasting Life, believe them with his own understanding? |
A27015 | Must the God of heaven send down his Spirit to dictate an illuminating Doctrine to his Prophets and Apostles for the world? |
A27015 | Must the light which God hath given the world, be blamed for all the Darkness of mens errors? |
A27015 | Must they not know or labor to know, for fear of mistaking? |
A27015 | Must they not therefore be heard? |
A27015 | Must they put out their eyes, and be led by the Pope, for fear of erring? |
A27015 | Must we believe him? |
A27015 | Must we believe him? |
A27015 | Nay can learned men tell? |
A27015 | Nay can the Cardinals ● ell that choose them? |
A27015 | Nay is it not undenyable that you are of two Churches specifically different? |
A27015 | Nay must we belive as the very foundation of our Faith, that which the Papists themselves believe not? |
A27015 | Nay thirdly, Do not these men know that the Bread and Cup were both given to the people by the Primitive Church? |
A27015 | Nay what else can any man be sure of? |
A27015 | Nay what needs it reparation if it be not a transgression? |
A27015 | Neither? |
A27015 | Next he cometh to the Lords Supper, and saith, that one party holdeth the real presence and the other not? |
A27015 | Next he shews that it must not be out of Parables, Allegories or such Scriptures that make no more for one side then the other( what then? |
A27015 | No sure: for eternal punishment he saith, it deserveth not; and internal principles do not sure forgive the punishment of sin? |
A27015 | No: properly peccatum veniale non inducit maculam, as before said? |
A27015 | Now what doth the Romane Clergy, but cry out after us as Hereticks and Schismaticks, and as ● ● us[ where was our Church before Luther?] |
A27015 | Now which way doth God give the Church this Power? |
A27015 | Nun ● quid ergo vel summo Pontifici vel caeteris Episcopis haec sunt divinitus concessa privilegia?] |
A27015 | Nunquid ergo omnes Episcopi ab errore liberi? |
A27015 | O that these men would but shew us in what history we may find the reports of this way of preaching? |
A27015 | O what an incredible thing is this? |
A27015 | Or are they all infallible? |
A27015 | Or are you sure that there is no Miracle wrought among the Grecians, Abassines or Armenians? |
A27015 | Or can no poor Christian believe the word of God, that can not take an account of this through the world? |
A27015 | Or did the Church do so for many a hundred year after them? |
A27015 | Or did they stay till they had the judgement of a General Council or of all the Churches? |
A27015 | Or if indeed it be the Pope and Romanists that is meant by[ the holy Catholike Church] why would not the composers of the Creed tell us so? |
A27015 | Or if it were, is one Latin Copy in a Cardinals hand more credible then all the rest in the world, that have c ● ● e to light? |
A27015 | Or is such doctrine to be endured among Christians? |
A27015 | Or is that like to be the cause of Christ that must be thus upheld? |
A27015 | Or it s their duty to understand the Popes Laws, and their sin to understand Gods Laws? |
A27015 | Or may not the doctrine which they preach beget a certain belief in the hearer? |
A27015 | Or must men be kept from the light, for fear least it lead them into Darkness? |
A27015 | Or no certainty of Scripture or of the faith? |
A27015 | Or refuse to go his journey, lest he miss the way? |
A27015 | Or tell us what parts of the world were converted by this argument? |
A27015 | Or that his party call him so? |
A27015 | Or that seeing the light will not forsake the darkness? |
A27015 | Or the Pope? |
A27015 | Or upon both? |
A27015 | Or what if some of them have suffered from infidels? |
A27015 | Or whether then must poor Pagans have recourse to know that Scripture is the Word of God? |
A27015 | Or will they arrogantly condemne all the rest of the Christian world as heretical, and then say that they are the whole Church? |
A27015 | Or will you bid him serve and obey him, and yet forbid him to search after the knowledge of his laws and will? |
A27015 | Or would you not rather say as the Philistine King of David, when he spit, and scraped on the Wall, Have I need of mad men? |
A27015 | Our Question in hand is for the escaping the second of these snares, by discovering which is the safe way to Salvation? |
A27015 | Q WHether the Reformed Catholike Christian Religion, commonly called Protestant, be a safe way to salvation? |
A27015 | Quaestio c ● ● te inter nos versatur, ubi sit Ecclesia? |
A27015 | Quarenti namque und ● noverint scripturam esse revelatum Dei verbum? |
A27015 | Quest Is not every Priest infallible, and every Church that hath the Eucharist, according to your doctrine? |
A27015 | Quibus si iterum fiet interrogatis, unde sciverint unanimeus hanc Ecclesiae Catholicae assertionem esse ab errore liberam seu infallibilem? |
A27015 | Quid mihi profers unius urbis consuttudinem? |
A27015 | Quid paucitatem, de qua ortum est supercilium in leges Eccesiae vindicas?] |
A27015 | Rep. And doth that cross his former charitable conclusion? |
A27015 | Saith thus[ Quid ● uim facit excepta ordinatione Episcopus, quod presbyter non faciat? |
A27015 | Sed dicis, Quomodo Romae ad testimonium Diaconi presbyter ordinatur? |
A27015 | Shall all Infidels be excused in judgement, that had the Gospel preached to them by any other Christians except the Pope or others in his name? |
A27015 | Shall every illiterate person be judge of the sence of Scripture? |
A27015 | Shall every one be the Judge of Scripture? |
A27015 | Shall none of ● hese perish for this unbelief? |
A27015 | Si tollas purgatorium, quorsum indulgentiarum opus erit? |
A27015 | So also they are disagreed among themselves whether i the Bishops in a General Council are Judges with the Pope or onely the Popes Counsellors? |
A27015 | So what if we could not prove that any before had said[ The Pope is not the Universal Governor?] |
A27015 | So what is the obvious signification of those words[ This is my body] but[ This is the Sacrament or Representation of my Body?] |
A27015 | Sure it is scarce possible that they should be so far distracted by their prejudice and faction? |
A27015 | Sure one party of these Popes erred, unless contradictoryes may be true? |
A27015 | Sure the Pope suffers but little( in this life: but in the next, let him look to himself) How then do other mens sufferings prove him infallible? |
A27015 | Sure you dare not say so? |
A27015 | That is[ For what doth a Bishop except ordination which a Presbyter may not do? |
A27015 | That its lawful; Lawful? |
A27015 | That we may not have the same liberty or means of knowledge as the very children of the Jews had? |
A27015 | That which we have to do, therefore is onely to enquire whether indeed it be bread or Christs body, a creature or the Creator which they worship? |
A27015 | The great controversie was, who had the true Church the Donatists, or the Catholikes? |
A27015 | The like also I ask of a Council: How doth that Council know it themselves from whom we must know it? |
A27015 | The next mark that he layes down is[ Victory over all sorts of enemies] But is it over their minds, or over their bodies that they mean? |
A27015 | Their error is their sin: But doth it follow that they may not see at all, for fear of missing their way? |
A27015 | They say,[ If they be not infallible in all things, how can we believe them in any thing?] |
A27015 | They tell us that, if our Church be not infallible ▪ then people have small reason to hear us or regard us? |
A27015 | This is our great sin? |
A27015 | Traditions which the Romane Bishop pretendeth to be the keeper of? |
A27015 | Was it not they that first defined the Catholike Church as equipollent with the Romane? |
A27015 | We do most confidently return on them their own demands? |
A27015 | We must believe what he promised, and who were his servants, before we believe in himself? |
A27015 | We must go to him to know whether we must be Infidels or not? |
A27015 | We read in the Acts of the Apostles of some Believers, that they daily search''t the Scriptures whether those things were so: What Scriptures? |
A27015 | We would know from any of them where their Church was for three hundred( yea for six hundred) years after Christs birth? |
A27015 | Well: but see what unity is procured by the addition of these new Articles to their Creed? |
A27015 | What a concurse would be about his Holiness doors? |
A27015 | What a difference is there between this doctrine of yours, and the very scope of Scriptures, and antient Writers, and the sense of a gracious soul? |
A27015 | What a multitude of things are de fide now, that were not so within a thousand years? |
A27015 | What a task were it to Reconcile but Bellarmine and Holden? |
A27015 | What conference do we ever manage with them which they do not misreport? |
A27015 | What if he tell as that the world was made in five days and not in six? |
A27015 | What if ten men that have been at a fight, come home and tell you, which side had the better? |
A27015 | What if the Jews High Priest had been infallible? |
A27015 | What if the Pope say that the Gospel of Mathew or Luke or John is no part of Gods word? |
A27015 | What is it then that bringeth them to this belief? |
A27015 | What is it then? |
A27015 | What is it, because that they are properly and not figuratively to be understood? |
A27015 | What is there in those words[ This is my body] that can perswade any sober Christian to their strange belief? |
A27015 | What is this but to abrogate Gods Laws, and set up the Popes above and against it? |
A27015 | What man will go to evince a whole systeme of doctrines to be true, and quite forget that medium, by which onely it is first to be proved? |
A27015 | What more evident then that the Papists have separated from all other Christians in the world? |
A27015 | What more evident to any man that hath any acquaintance with the Fathers, then that these wretches do here most palpably forswear themselves? |
A27015 | What must we do then? |
A27015 | What need I ask this? |
A27015 | What need you confess sin, that can fulfill the Law so easily? |
A27015 | What opportunity have we to take the account? |
A27015 | What part is it? |
A27015 | What reason have I to trust any Papist living? |
A27015 | What reason then can the Papists give why the Bishop of Antioch might not as well plead that he is Peters successor, as the Bishop of Rome? |
A27015 | What records or Tradition have they which all the rest of the world is ignorant of? |
A27015 | What shall we think of all those that murdered their predecessors to obtain the place, were they capable of being true Bishops? |
A27015 | What tell you me of the custome of one City? |
A27015 | What three sentences do we use to speak together without some figurative expression? |
A27015 | What will they invent at last to hide the nakedness of Pope Honorius who in two several General Councils was condemned for a Monothelite Heretick? |
A27015 | What ● eed you any pardon of that which was never ● eserved by you? |
A27015 | What''s that to the Pope of Rome any more then to another man? |
A27015 | What''s the unreconcileable quarrel so much as that all the world will not be subject to them? |
A27015 | What, do not you confess that Baptisme and the Lords Supper are Sacraments? |
A27015 | What, if the Ancient Church had intecpreted this Text as we do, against your Transubstantiation? |
A27015 | What, must the onely rule that condemneth Heresies, be made the cause of them? |
A27015 | What, no one difference, with this Popish Veridicus? |
A27015 | What? |
A27015 | When several Popes and Councils contradict one another, how shall we know which of them to believe? |
A27015 | When the Pope and Council contradict each other, how shall the people know which is infallible? |
A27015 | When was there ever one Priest in any age so impudent at Bellarmine and his faction are, to plead for or pretend an infallibility in themselves? |
A27015 | When we say, we preach in Christs name, as confidently as you say that you preach in the Popes name? |
A27015 | When you prove that the Church of Rome is the true Church, would you not have the people judge of your proof for fear of erring? |
A27015 | Where was there ever in all Antiquity found such an Argument as this to convince an unbeliever? |
A27015 | Whether Popery be a safe way to Salvation? |
A27015 | Whether Popery be a safe way to salvation? |
A27015 | Whether is it fitter for the Church or every simple fellow to be Judge? |
A27015 | Whether it belong to the Pope or Romane Church, to be the Judge of Faith and Scriptures to all the world? |
A27015 | Whether our Faith must be resolved into this infallible judgement of theirs? |
A27015 | Whether our faith must be resolved into the infallibility of the Romane( pretended) Authoritative judgement? |
A27015 | Whether th ● truest Government may not stand with great desolations, divisions of the Church and multitudes of errors? |
A27015 | Whether the Pope and his Council be judge of controversies? |
A27015 | Whether the Pope be Infallible, in this Decisive judgement which he pretendeth to? |
A27015 | Whether the Pope be infallibie in this decisive judgement which he pretendeth to? |
A27015 | Whether the Pope or his Clergy be in ● llible in judging of matters of Faith? |
A27015 | Whether the Reformed Catholike Christian Religion, commonly called Protestant, be a safe way to Salvation? |
A27015 | Whether we should love God or hate him? |
A27015 | Whether we should seek first Gods Kingdom, or worldly vanities? |
A27015 | Who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A27015 | Whose Religion then is proved new by this, ours or theirs? |
A27015 | Why are we still sent to Saint Brigit, or Saint Francis, or Saint Somebody that is long ago dead and gone? |
A27015 | Why but, how do your hearers know that; Must they take it on the preachers word, who proclaimeth himself fallible? |
A27015 | Why do so many of themselves, yea their General Councils so much contradict their Popes in many things, if he be infallible in all things? |
A27015 | Why do you boast no more of you Popes Miracles? |
A27015 | Why doth he not write an infallible commentary on all the Bible to perfect our knowledge and end all our quarrels? |
A27015 | Why doth not one Pope reveal that which they think fit to reveal; but leave it to successors one after another to do it by degrees? |
A27015 | Why must we not say[ I believe in the Pope of Rome] as well as[ I believe in God?] |
A27015 | Why not the Bishop of Alexandria, Hierusalem, Ephesus, or other place as well as the Pope? |
A27015 | Why then should it be said that God hath given Authority to decide in utramque partem, on either side? |
A27015 | Why will not these blind wretches believe the Holy Ghost, who calls it Bread at the eating after the consecration? |
A27015 | Why will you read, or preach Scripture to the people, if you would not have them receive it, by a judgment of discerning? |
A27015 | Why? |
A27015 | Why? |
A27015 | Will any Master take this well of his servant, to put out his eyes, or do nothing, for fear of doing his work amiss? |
A27015 | Will the Sanctity of one man, as Saint Francis or Saint Dominicke, prove the infallibility of the Pope that hath no Sanctity? |
A27015 | Will you beg the remission of a debt which is no debt? |
A27015 | Will you bid him desire and seek him, and when you have done lock him up in the dark? |
A27015 | Will you bid him love God, and keep him from the Knowledge of him? |
A27015 | Will you grant that we are all infallible here in England, if we can prove any Miracles done among us and by us? |
A27015 | Will you say that you preach in the name of the Pope who is infallible? |
A27015 | Will you say, It is their duty to believe the Pope, and their sin to believe God? |
A27015 | With what face can these that exclaim against novelty, introduce such a palpable novelty into the Church? |
A27015 | Would all the preachers and defenders of the faith, overlook and omit the very foundation into which all mens faith must be resolved? |
A27015 | Would it prove the Patriarch of Constantinople infallible, if any one that is under his Government should work a Miracle? |
A27015 | Would not this have found one place at least if not the chief among Eusebius his Preparations or Demonstrations? |
A27015 | Would you have serious Christians deliver up themselves to such a maze as this for the obtaining of unity? |
A27015 | Would you have us do so by you? |
A27015 | Yea and anathematize all that condemned not Theodorus, of whom Vigilius was one? |
A27015 | Yea and let it be considered whether the wiser sort of Papists begin not to change the very foundation of their Faith? |
A27015 | Yea and that they began to the Jews, and did it before them: And therefore why should the Jews act, and theirs be so much differenced? |
A27015 | Yea or that they have consented to any one of these Articles of the Romish faith, and Trent oath? |
A27015 | Yea or what a General Council is? |
A27015 | Yea thirdly, Are not all Pastors, though inferior to Apostles bound to Feed the Sheep of Christ? |
A27015 | Yea unless it were to shew the world their Power to contradict Christ and destroy his word, who can imagine what should move them to this attempt? |
A27015 | Yea when Pope Vigilius did afterward revoke his own constitution b sure he erred either in making or revoking it? |
A27015 | Yea why did this Council condemne Pope Vigilius his judicious sentence de 3 capitulis? |
A27015 | You found us in possession: where was your Church before Luther? |
A27015 | You talk much of perfection, and keeping the Law of God without sin: But how long will it be before you will shew us one of those sinless perfect men? |
A27015 | [ Quid si novella aliqua contagio non jam portiunculam tantum, sed totam pari ● er Ecclesiam commaculare conetur?] |
A27015 | [ Vnde probamus libros,& c. How do we prove that the Books of our Religion are written by Divine inspiration? |
A27015 | [ What then was the face of the holy Romane Church? |
A27015 | and cause his instruments to write it, in a language best known to those that they conversed with, or to the world that was to be converted by it? |
A27015 | and do not we do so too? |
A27015 | and first made the universal Headship of their Pope to be the center? |
A27015 | and have suffered as much as they? |
A27015 | and how can that be a safe way to salvation that locks up the door against repentance and amendment? |
A27015 | and others quite forgot to mention these among the rest of his contradictions? |
A27015 | and say, With you it shall not be so? |
A27015 | and take it in what sence he please? |
A27015 | and that it so continued for many hundred years? |
A27015 | and then what Countries or parts it must be? |
A27015 | and they that cry up the whole Churches consent, so go against the consent of the whole Church for so many Ages after the Apostles? |
A27015 | and this in a Doctrinal Point, Whether Hereticks may be condemned after death? |
A27015 | and what Church was of th ● Opinion? |
A27015 | and what a trade it is at Rome and Venice,& c. To give instance but in the sin of lying, how light do you make of it? |
A27015 | and when it is a known combination to promote their own espoused cause? |
A27015 | and whether it do not plainly give up their whole cause? |
A27015 | and whether it was certain to them that the Church failed not, when they had no certainty of the head? |
A27015 | and whether their head and so their Church were then visible or invisible, when they could so hardly be known? |
A27015 | and whether they can see or taste, or smell, or feel, any difference to give them the least cause of doubting? |
A27015 | and which are the dividers? |
A27015 | and who were of our Religion till then? |
A27015 | and why doth he not determine all the controversies about it, that among his own followers remain yet undetermined? |
A27015 | and why will not his holiness do some Miracles in charity to poor Hereticks? |
A27015 | and[ Have ye never read,& c?] |
A27015 | are they therefore excusable if they worship them? |
A27015 | because he undertakes not an alien task? |
A27015 | but hath left them undecided these fifteen hundred years? |
A27015 | but the Canonical of the Law and prophets? |
A27015 | but, In what sence we are, and in what not? |
A27015 | de Sancto Amore and many another say of your own Church? |
A27015 | doth he say, it is impossible? |
A27015 | doth he tell them that it is all such, and send them to Rome to know the sence? |
A27015 | h Yea whether it be the Clergy only, or the Laity also that are this Church? |
A27015 | he that defendeth Gods enemies or he that consenteth? |
A27015 | how exceeding filthy, when the most potent and yet most sordid Whores did Rule at Rome? |
A27015 | how readest thou?] |
A27015 | i. e.[ But what if any novel contagion, shall not onely stain a small part of the Church, but also the whole Church?] |
A27015 | is no Heathen or Infidel bound to Believe that there is a God, a Christ, a Scripture, till the Pope tell him so? |
A27015 | modo in Domino? |
A27015 | must I be a Papist on such grounds as these? |
A27015 | must he give them a perfect Law, by which Truth and Heresie must be discerned? |
A27015 | must we seek it in our words, or in the words of our Lord Jesus Christ our head? |
A27015 | or any whit like them? |
A27015 | or because it is not fit to make it known? |
A27015 | or because the Pope must pretend to the keeping of these hidden Laws, that so the world may receive them at his mouth? |
A27015 | or can not be known? |
A27015 | or did they receive their authority from him? |
A27015 | or on one only, as others may do? |
A27015 | or the delegates at least of all? |
A27015 | or what was the sence of it? |
A27015 | or where did he live? |
A27015 | or whether some Countries, or part of all may serve? |
A27015 | shall every unlearned man or woman expound it according to their own fancies? |
A27015 | they answer, By the assertion of the universal consenting Church? |
A27015 | though they are all fallible, may they not possibly give you such infallible proof of what they say, as may make it certain? |
A27015 | utrum apud nos, an apud illos? |
A27015 | we are schismaticks because we will not continue schismaticks? |
A27015 | what do you say less when you yield them a judgement of discretion as to the Pope or Church, and deny it in Respect to the Word of God? |
A27015 | where then is the difference? |
A27015 | whether it must be all the Christian Bishops in the world that must meet? |
A27015 | whether of the neerest, or the middle, or of the first and remotest age, that is, from the Apostles and the Church in their dayes? |
A27015 | who stuck at so many things in the faith it self? |
A27015 | why do you defend a few( of which superciliousness is arisen) against the Laws of the Church?] |
A27015 | with us or with them? |
A27015 | with what face can they that so cry up antiquity, gainsay all antiqiuty? |
A27015 | with whom did he converse while he seemed a Protestant? |
A27015 | would any wise man regard such expressions of love or honor? |
A27015 | would they have the names of Most of the Bishops and Churches in the whole world? |
A27015 | would you not have their judgment discern the Truth of what God hath written, or the Priest shal preach to them? |
A27015 | would you then have believed it upon the bare Authority of this Text? |
A27015 | yea and( by plain consequence, though they will not acknowledge it) the whole Church of Christ for many hundred years? |
A27015 | — How therefore should he that would know which is the true Church of Christ, come to know it, but onely by the Scriptures?] |
A27015 | — Quid ergo facturi sumus? |
A27015 | — What obstinacy is this? |
A27015 | ● ven Liberius and the Councils? |
A26701 | & c. And art thou a fit match for such an antagonist? |
A26701 | & c. quando te videbo? |
A26701 | ''T is too common and easie, to mistake education for grace; but if this were enough, who a better man than Iehoasb? |
A26701 | ( Why, thou knowest not but it may be the next night, yea the next moment) where wouldst thou be then? |
A26701 | 12. or the lifeless carcase to feel and move? |
A26701 | 12. who better perswaded of his case, than Paul, while yet he remained unconverted? |
A26701 | 13. and yet will you not hearken? |
A26701 | 13. how miserable would he think it, to be held to it to all eternity? |
A26701 | 13. or the Paradise of God, be the better choice? |
A26701 | 14, 15. who thirst for your salvation? |
A26701 | 14. and dost thou not yet think with thy self, surely it was for some noble and raised end? |
A26701 | 17. and do you thus requite them, O foolish and unwise? |
A26701 | 18. and wilt thou not yet believe, O sinner, that he is in earnest? |
A26701 | 19. and profess they know God, but in works deny him? |
A26701 | 19. why then, what hinders but that thou shouldest be happy? |
A26701 | 21. and will it not be dearly bought? |
A26701 | 22. and make thee to lie down in sorrows? |
A26701 | 23. dost thou yet think it but a small thing? |
A26701 | 24. and give all diligence to make our calling and election sure? |
A26701 | 24. what shall be done with thee, when thou fallest into the hands of the living God? |
A26701 | 3, 5, 6. and that is not converted, and begins not the world as it were anew, in a teachable, tractable newness of life, like a little child? |
A26701 | 3, 7. shall we think God will? |
A26701 | 3. and yet do you wonder, why your Ministers do so painfully travel in birth with you? |
A26701 | 4. and a lover of this World above him? |
A26701 | 4. as though the strength of Israel would lie? |
A26701 | 4. or for the potsherd of the earth to strive with his maker? |
A26701 | 6, 7. and, yet will you not come? |
A26701 | 7, 8. where were the glory of Divine Justice, since it should be given to the wicked, according to the work of the righteous? |
A26701 | 7. Who is that God, that shall deliver you out of his hands? |
A26701 | 7. and what can be said more? |
A26701 | 7. by thy unfruitfulness? |
A26701 | 7. shall not such much more expect it from Christs holiness? |
A26701 | 8. and hope that the savour of Christs ointments, and the smell of his garments will attract him? |
A26701 | 8. as if thou wert but going to wash thee or swim for thy recreation? |
A26701 | 9. or to harden your selves against his word? |
A26701 | Against whom have you exalted your voice, and lifted your eyes on high? |
A26701 | Alas, if the poor man think a Sermon long, and say of a Sabbath, What a weariness is it? |
A26701 | Alas, what shall I say? |
A26701 | Alas, what will thy sins do for thee, that thou shouldst stick at parting with them? |
A26701 | And art not thou fairly offered? |
A26701 | And canst thou get in without his leave, as thou must, if ever thou comest thither in thy natural condition, without a sound and through renovation? |
A26701 | And doth not thy soul tremble as thou readest? |
A26701 | And have I toyled all this while and caught nothing? |
A26701 | And have they sped so well, and wilt thou not go to the same door, and wait upon God in the same course? |
A26701 | And how shall I tell men, that which I do not know? |
A26701 | And if Conversion and holiness be a needless thing, what use they themselves are of? |
A26701 | And is it true indeed? |
A26701 | And is it true indeed? |
A26701 | And is this an unreasonable request? |
A26701 | And is this, that we have described, the Conversion that is of absolute necessity to salvation? |
A26701 | And shall not the most Holy God more difference between the righteous and the wicked? |
A26701 | And shall that do it? |
A26701 | And shew kindness to them that are kind to them? |
A26701 | And should we not desire the same for you? |
A26701 | And spend all your days in pampering your guts, and providing for your flesh that must lie rotting very shortly in a Grave? |
A26701 | And the drunkard still at his vomit? |
A26701 | And there came one, and kneeled to him, and asked him; Good Master, what shall I do, that I may inherit eternal life? |
A26701 | And thou dost not know, but the next night, thou maist make thy bed in hell? |
A26701 | And were it not better thou shouldst be a joy to Angels, than a laughing- stock and sport for devils? |
A26701 | And what is it that the creation groaneth for? |
A26701 | And what were these Pharisees? |
A26701 | And whether Christ save that soul that is not converted by him and saved from his sins? |
A26701 | And whether God will like men the better for lying and calling themselves Christians when they are none indeed? |
A26701 | And whether all or most men perform this vow? |
A26701 | And whether if you live after the flesh you shall not die, and be condemned? |
A26701 | And whether it be but the conceit of Hypocrites and Schismaticks, that their Carcases must be rotting in a dark- some Grave? |
A26701 | And whether seeking to abuse God by a Mock Religion, do make such false Christians better than the poor Heathens and Infidels, or much worse? |
A26701 | And whether the carnal mind is not enmity to God, and to be carnally minded is not death, and to be spiritually minded, life and peace? |
A26701 | And whither else shouldst thou go? |
A26701 | And why may not men be twice born in nature, as well as in grace? |
A26701 | And will God receive these for true converts, because turned to the Christian Religion? |
A26701 | And wilt thou run upon destruction, when God himself doth forwarn thee? |
A26701 | And wilt thou yet be in love with thy self, and tell us any longer of thy good heart? |
A26701 | And wilt thou yet believe thine own presumptuous confidence, directly against Christs word? |
A26701 | And yet wilt thou not give up such a blasphemous hope? |
A26701 | Are there not many that name the name of the Lord Jesus, that yet depart not from iniquity? |
A26701 | Are these out of the reach of humane power? |
A26701 | Are you agreed, that Chrst shall end the controversie? |
A26701 | Are you at peace? |
A26701 | Arise then, what meanest thou O sleeper? |
A26701 | Art not thou almost struck dead with the hellish damp? |
A26701 | Art not thou one of them? |
A26701 | Art thou a Convert, or art thou yet in thy Sins? |
A26701 | Art thou a man, and hast thou reason? |
A26701 | Art thou a reasonable foul, and yet so far brutified, as to forget thy self immortal, and to think thy self to be as the beasts that perish? |
A26701 | Art thou chief of all the children of pride, even that thou shouldst count his darts as stubble, and laugh at the shaking of his spear? |
A26701 | Art thou deliberately, understandingly, freely, fixedly, determined to cleave to him in all times, and conditions? |
A26701 | Art thou in league with Hell? |
A26701 | Art thou in love with thy misery? |
A26701 | Art thou like the horse, that paweth in the valley, and rejoyceth in his strength: he goeth out to meet the armed men? |
A26701 | Art thou made without fear, and contemnest his barbed irons? |
A26701 | Art thou now become a slave to sense, a servant to so base an Idol, as thy belly? |
A26701 | Art thou such a Leviathan, as that the scales of thy pride should keep thee from thy makers coming at thee? |
A26701 | Art thou turned into flesh, that thou favourest nothing but gratifying the sense, and making provision for the flesh? |
A26701 | Art thou willing to come in? |
A26701 | Art thou yet in ignorance, and not turned from darkness to light? |
A26701 | Ask them whether God should not be loved with all our heart, and soul, and might? |
A26701 | Ask them whether Kings and all men make not a great difference between man and man; the loyal and perfidious, the obedient and the disobedient? |
A26701 | Ask them whether any man have a Treasure in Heaven, whose heart is not there? |
A26701 | Ask them whether man have not an Immortal Soul, and a longer life to live when this is ended? |
A26701 | Ask them whether the name of a Christian will save any of these ungodly persons? |
A26701 | Ask them whether there be a Heaven and a Hell, or not? |
A26701 | Ask them whether they mean, Holy Adulterers, holy worldlings, holy perjured persons? |
A26701 | Ask them whether they say not themselves that Hypocrisie is a great aggravation of all other sin? |
A26701 | Ask them whether they will live on Earth for ever, and their merry hours, and Lordly looks will have no end? |
A26701 | Ask them why it was that Christ came into the World? |
A26701 | Augustine could not relish his before so much admired Cicero, because he could not find the name of Christ, How pathetically cries he? |
A26701 | Awake, O conscience: What meanest thou, O sleeper? |
A26701 | Be willing to know thy self, and to know the worst of thy case? |
A26701 | Before, the news of a Christ was a stale and sapless thing: but now how sweet is a Christ? |
A26701 | Behold Gods workmanship in thy body, and ask thy self, to what end did God rear this fabrick? |
A26701 | Behold he taketh away, who can hinder him? |
A26701 | Believest thou this? |
A26701 | But doth not thy heart condemn thee, and tell thee, there is such a sin thou livest in against thy Conscience? |
A26701 | But here the terms are most honourable and easie: O sinner, wilt thou burn with thy pardon by? |
A26701 | But how close doth this sin lurk oft- times under a fair covert of forward profession? |
A26701 | But how shall this be effected? |
A26701 | But if poor soul, thou art fully convinced, and askest, What should I do to be Converted? |
A26701 | But if these be short of Conversion, what shall I say of the prophane sinner? |
A26701 | But if they are deaed in every point save carnal interests, ask them why they are Preachers or Priests? |
A26701 | But if you will not think of these things; if you will not use the reason of men, alas what can we do to save your souls? |
A26701 | But thy Conversion is necessary, thy damnation lies upon it, and is it not needful in so important a case to look about? |
A26701 | But to what purpose is it then like to be, for the Servant of God to treat with thee about this matter? |
A26701 | But what is it that the creation groaneth under? |
A26701 | But whence shall I fetch my arguments, or how shall I choose my words? |
A26701 | But would you not have me solicitous for you? |
A26701 | By this time methinks I hear my reader crying out with the Disciples, who then shall be saved? |
A26701 | Can Kings, or Warriours? |
A26701 | Can Mammon? |
A26701 | Can an unholy soul there see and love and praise and delight in God for ever, and in the holy society and employment of the Saints? |
A26701 | Can any man be in jest with you who believeth God? |
A26701 | Can any other but Christ save thee? |
A26701 | Can the liveless carcase shake off his grave cloths, and loose the bonds of death? |
A26701 | Can the world in good earnest do that for you, that Christ can? |
A26701 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee, saith the Lord of hosts? |
A26701 | Can you evidence that you have something more than any Hypocrite in the world ever had? |
A26701 | Can you shew the distinguishing marks of a sound believer? |
A26701 | Canst thou abide the consuming fire? |
A26701 | Canst thou be content to burn? |
A26701 | Canst thou charm thy Beast with Musick? |
A26701 | Canst thou do well without his favour? |
A26701 | Canst thou dwell with everlasting burnings? |
A26701 | Canst thou escape his hands, or endure his vengeance? |
A26701 | Canst thou hope he will be forsworn for thee? |
A26701 | Canst thou think without loathing of thy trough and draugh? |
A26701 | Cast away from you all your transgressions, and make you a clean heart, and a new spirit, for why will ye die, O house of Israel? |
A26701 | Conscience wilt thou altogether hold thy peace at such a time as this? |
A26701 | Consider how the Lord hath revealed himself to you in his word: will you take him as such a God? |
A26701 | Consider the noble faculties of thy Heaven- born soul: to what end did God bestow these excellencies? |
A26701 | Couldst thou cherish it and take delight in it? |
A26701 | Couldst thou take up a toad into thy bosom? |
A26701 | Darest thou make light of this? |
A26701 | Do I speak to the trees or rocks, or to men? |
A26701 | Do not even the Publicans love those that love them? |
A26701 | Do not thine own cloaths abhor thee? |
A26701 | Do not thy tears bedew the paper, and thy heart throb in thy bosom? |
A26701 | Do not you see how Satan gulls you, by tempting you to delays? |
A26701 | Do we not know the way of Ease and Honour; of Wealth and Pleasures, as well as others? |
A26701 | Do you say, the condition is impossible, for I have not wherewith to buy? |
A26701 | Dost not thou find him a stranger to prayer, a neglecter of the word, a lover of this present world? |
A26701 | Dost not thou find his heart fermented with malice, or burning with lust, or going after his covetousness? |
A26701 | Dost not thou often catch him in a lie? |
A26701 | Dost thou believe their truth, or not? |
A26701 | Dost thou hear the creation groaning under thee, and hell groaning for thee, and yet think thy case good enough? |
A26701 | Dost thou know thine own face when thou seest it? |
A26701 | Dost thou live in strife, or envy, or malice? |
A26701 | Dost thou live in the ordinary and wilful practice of any known sin? |
A26701 | Dost thou mock at fear and art not affrighted, neither turnest back from Gods sword? |
A26701 | Dost thou not take more real delight and content in the world, than in him? |
A26701 | Dost thou not yet begin to smite on thy breast, and bethink thy self what need thou hast of a change? |
A26701 | Dost thou not yet see a change to be needful? |
A26701 | Dost thou say, yea but my mind is blinded and my heart is hardned from his fear? |
A26701 | Doth Satan put in, doth the World court thee, doth sin sue for thy heart? |
A26701 | Doth he allow himself in any way of sin, or doth he not? |
A26701 | Doth he not keep the keys of Heaven? |
A26701 | Doth he set thee on the use of means, and dost thou think he will mock thee? |
A26701 | Doth he truly love, and please, and prize and delight in God above all other things, or not? |
A26701 | Doth it not begin to bite? |
A26701 | Doth it not carry thee to thy family, and shew thee the charge of God, and the souls of thy children and servants, that be neglected there? |
A26701 | Doth it not tell thee, there is such and such a secret way of wickedness, that thou makest no bones of? |
A26701 | Doth it not twitch thee as thou goest? |
A26701 | Doth not conscience carry thee to thy closet, and tell thee how seldom prayer, and reading is performed there? |
A26701 | Doth not conscience lead thee to thy shop, thy trade, and tell thee of some mistery of iniquity there? |
A26701 | Doth not the Holy State of Heaven require Holiness in all that shall possess it? |
A26701 | Doth not this neerly concern thee? |
A26701 | Doth this suit thee best, and please thee most? |
A26701 | Doth thy mouth water after the onions and flesh- pots of Egypt? |
A26701 | Enter into thy Closet, and consider, what evil have I lived in? |
A26701 | Filth and rottenness, with glory and immortality? |
A26701 | For the great day of his wrath is come, and who shall be able to stand? |
A26701 | God himself will not save you without you; and how should we? |
A26701 | God is frowning on me from above? |
A26701 | Hast not thou taken upon him the gains of unrighteousness? |
A26701 | Hast thou experienced this? |
A26701 | Hast thou made a Covenant with death? |
A26701 | Hast thou not felt some good motions in thy mind, wherein thou hast been warned of thy danger, and told what thy careless course would end in? |
A26701 | Hast thou not felt thy heart warmed by the word, and been almost perswaded to leave off thy sins, and come in to God? |
A26701 | Hast thou not only lost all regard to God, but art without any love and pity to thy self? |
A26701 | Hast thou pondered these things in thine heart? |
A26701 | Hast thou searched the book within, to see if these things be so? |
A26701 | Hast thou taken God for thy happiness? |
A26701 | Hath the man been ever taken off from his false bottom, from the false hopes, and false peace wherein once he trusted? |
A26701 | Have I been all this while speaking in the wind? |
A26701 | Have I been charming the deaf adder, or allaying the tumbling Ocean with arguments? |
A26701 | Have I run in vain? |
A26701 | Have I used so many arguments, and spent so much time to perswade you, and yet must sit down at last in disappointment? |
A26701 | Have not you heard the same truths, from the Pulpit, by publick labours, and by private letters, by personal instructions? |
A26701 | Have you read hitherto, and are not yet resolved upon a present abandoning all your sins, and closing with Jesus Christ? |
A26701 | He is presently tired: the Sabbath ● what a weariness it it? |
A26701 | He is willing of the dominion of Christ, as well as deliverance by Christ; he saith with Paul, Lord what wilt thou have me to do? |
A26701 | He is wise in heart, and mighty in strength; who hath hardened himself against him, and prospered? |
A26701 | He will not be thought a fautor of sin, nor stain the glory of his holiness: and whither could he come lower than he hath, unless he should do this? |
A26701 | Hear O ye drunkards, How long will you be drunken? |
A26701 | Hear what the Lord saith; Fear ye not m ● saith the Lord? |
A26701 | Hearest thou the curses and the blasphemies, the weepings and the wailings, how they lament their folly, and curse their day? |
A26701 | Here I will pitch, here I will live and dye? |
A26701 | Heu miser, quid sum? |
A26701 | His heart once said, as they to the Spouse, What is thy beloved, more than another? |
A26701 | His poor beast would say, Lord, must I carry him upon his wicked designs? |
A26701 | Holiness any shall see God? |
A26701 | How affectionately doth Peter lift up his hands? |
A26701 | How black are the ● iends? |
A26701 | How blameless was Paul? |
A26701 | How can you make a shift to forget such grace, or to pass it over with a slight and seldom mention? |
A26701 | How dear is this name to him? |
A26701 | How desperately do rebels argue? |
A26701 | How do they roar and yell, and gnash their teeth? |
A26701 | How dost thou find it? |
A26701 | How doth Micah run crying after the Danites, You have taken away my Gods, and what have I more? |
A26701 | How doth he bemoan the obstinate refuser? |
A26701 | How effectually hath the God of this world blinded them? |
A26701 | How emphatically he groaneth in his travel? |
A26701 | How feelingly doth Paul magnifie the free mercy of God in it? |
A26701 | How few will be the sheep that shall be left, when all these shall be separated, and set among the Goats? |
A26701 | How furious are their torments? |
A26701 | How hot is that burning oven of the Almighty''s fury? |
A26701 | How is David taken up with the excellencies of Gods Laws? |
A26701 | How is every one of Gods commandments ready to arrest thee, and take thee by the throat for innumerable bonds that it hath upon thee? |
A26701 | How long hath he toll''d you on in the way of perdition? |
A26701 | How long have I travelled in birth with you? |
A26701 | How long shall this soul lie at uncertainties? |
A26701 | How long will you rest in idle wishes, and fruitless purposes? |
A26701 | How long wilt thou slumber, and fold thine hands to sleep? |
A26701 | How many are there to whom this is directed, who will not know, that they are the men? |
A26701 | How many professours be there, with whom the world hath more of their heart and affections than Christ? |
A26701 | How much art thou in the books of every one of Gods laws? |
A26701 | How obdurate their hearts? |
A26701 | How oft would we have gathered them, but they would not, but are ungathered still? |
A26701 | How pitiful and piercing a moan is that of Saul in his extremity; The Philistians are upon me, and God is departed from me? |
A26701 | How powerfully hath sin bewitched them? |
A26701 | How precious is its savour? |
A26701 | How punctual was Iehu? |
A26701 | How strong is their delusion? |
A26701 | How then wilt thou endure, when God shall pour out all his vials, and set himself against thee to torment thee? |
A26701 | How uncircumcised their ears? |
A26701 | How warily doth he walk, left he should tread on a snare? |
A26701 | How weak is his heart? |
A26701 | I am a Sun and Shield, all in one: will you have me for your all? |
A26701 | I deal much upon trust, will you be content to labour, and suffer, and to tarry for your returns till the Resurrection of the just? |
A26701 | I pray ask these men, whether it be a Puritan or Fanatick Opinion that men must dye? |
A26701 | I will try thee yet once again: If one were sent to thee from the dead, wouldst thou be perswaded? |
A26701 | I would reason with you, as God with them; How canst thou say I am not polluted? |
A26701 | IT may be you are ready to say, what meaneth this stir? |
A26701 | If God and you be for us, who shall be against us? |
A26701 | If God had demanded some terrible, some severe and rigorous thing of you, to escape eternal damnation, would you not have done it? |
A26701 | If he fall what a stir is there to get all clean again? |
A26701 | If not, had you not need look after somewhat that will? |
A26701 | If not, why are they pretended Christians? |
A26701 | If the Lord hath not spoken by me, regard me not, But if it be the very word of God, that all this misery lies upon thee, what a case art thou in? |
A26701 | If this Doctrine be true, we will not say any more with the Disciples, Who then shall be saved? |
A26701 | If thou dost, art thou not worse than distracted, that wilt not take possession, when the gates are flung open to thee, and thou art bid to enter? |
A26701 | If thou sayest, The Terms upon which Life is offered, are hard; consider, is it not harder to dye? |
A26701 | If thou wilt part with thy sins, God will give thee his Christ: Is not this a fair exchange? |
A26701 | In a word, wilt thou now close with these proffers? |
A26701 | Is he not liker a Mehometan than a Christian, that looketh for a sensual and unholy Heaven? |
A26701 | Is it a Scripture peace? |
A26701 | Is it a disputable case, whether the Abana and Pharphar of Damascus, be better than all the streams of Eden? |
A26701 | Is it a just matter to live in such a fearful ease? |
A26701 | Is it for one that hath his senses to live in such a condition, and not to make all possible expedition for preventing his utter ruine? |
A26701 | Is it good for thee to be here? |
A26701 | Is it good for thee to be here? |
A26701 | Is it good for thee to try whether God will be so good as his word? |
A26701 | Is it not a dreadful case, to have the Gospel it self fill its mouth with threat ● and thunder, and damnation? |
A26701 | Is it not good comfort, that he calleth thee? |
A26701 | Is it not past controversie, whether God be better than sin, and glory better than vanity? |
A26701 | Is it not pity but he should be damned, that will needs go on and perish, when all this may be had for the taking? |
A26701 | Is it not pity such a goodly fabrick should be raised in vain? |
A26701 | Is it so great a misery to lose our common labours, to ● ow ● ● in vain, and build in vain? |
A26701 | Is it that you wear Christs livery? |
A26701 | Is not all this that you may be converted and saved? |
A26701 | Is not grace worth the waiting for? |
A26701 | Is not here a fair offer? |
A26701 | Is not that mans case dreadful, whose Sacrifices are as murder, and whose prayers are a breath of abomination? |
A26701 | Is not the Church a holy Society of regenerate souls? |
A26701 | Is not the word before thee? |
A26701 | Is not thy heart broken yet? |
A26701 | Is the drift and scope of thy life altered? |
A26701 | Is the man converted or is he not? |
A26701 | Is there ever a soul here, a rational understanding soul? |
A26701 | Is this man a new man, or is he ● iot? |
A26701 | Is this thy judgement, and this thy choice, and this thy way? |
A26701 | Is this thy misery? |
A26701 | Is thy Bread necessary? |
A26701 | Is thy breath necessary? |
A26701 | It pressed the very blood( to a wonder) out of his veins, and broke all his bones: and if it did this in the green tree, what will it do in the dry? |
A26701 | It was the passage of the Eunuch to Philip: See here is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized? |
A26701 | Judge in your own selves: Is it a reasonable undertaking, for bryars and thorns, to set themselves in battel against the devouring fire? |
A26701 | Know you not, that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? |
A26701 | Know you what Heaven is, or can you tell The torments of those damned souls in Hell? |
A26701 | Leave not striving with God, and thine own soul, till it cry out under the sense of thy sins, as the enlightned Jaylor, What must I do to be saved? |
A26701 | Let me say to thee as Paul to Agrippa, Believest thou the Prophets? |
A26701 | Let me say to you, as Naaman''s servant to him; My father, if the Prophet had bid thee do some great thing, wouldest thou not have done it? |
A26701 | Let your conscience speak; what is it, that you have to plead for your selves? |
A26701 | Look backward, where was ever the place, what was ever the time, in which thou didst not sin? |
A26701 | Look in now and tell me: dost thou yet believe? |
A26701 | Look inward, what part or power canst thou find in soul or body, but it is poisoned with sin? |
A26701 | Lord, how universally am I corrupted, in all my parts, powers, performances? |
A26701 | Lord, wherewith shall I wooe them? |
A26701 | Man, doth not thine heart tremble to think of thy being an object of Gods hatred? |
A26701 | Man, is not thy conscience privy to thy tricks of deceit, to thy chamber pranks, to thy way of lying? |
A26701 | Man, is this thy case? |
A26701 | May a man be civilized and not converted, where then shall the Drunkard, and Glutton appear? |
A26701 | May a man be true and just in his dealing, and yet not be justified of God? |
A26701 | May a man keep company with the wise Virgins, and yet be shut out? |
A26701 | May not I much more reason so with thee? |
A26701 | May not we bring you to some sober thoughts of your condition, nor one hour seriously to think whither you are going? |
A26701 | Methinks I should hear thee crying out astonished, with the Bethshemites, Who shall stand before this holy Lord God? |
A26701 | Must I leave the malicious still in his venome? |
A26701 | Must I leave the tipler still at the Ale- bench? |
A26701 | Must I leave the wanton still at his dalliance? |
A26701 | Must I leave you at last where you were? |
A26701 | Must they perish at last by the hundreds, when Ministers would so fain save them? |
A26701 | No one driveth or forceth them to Hell, and will they go thither of themselves? |
A26701 | No way to acquaint t ● em what is become of their Brother, and where Lazarus is, and whither they themselves are going? |
A26701 | Nor one heart- raising thought of the everlasting Glory? |
A26701 | Not one heart- piercing thought of all your Saviours love, nor one ● ear for all your sinful lives? |
A26701 | Now all the cry is, What shall I do to be saved? |
A26701 | Now beloved, what say you to this? |
A26701 | Now if Christ, yet, bring any to Heaven unconverted, either he must get them in without his Fathers knowledge, and then where is his Omnisciency? |
A26701 | Now let all the World be set on one side, and God alone on the other? |
A26701 | Now saies the soul, Lord, whither should I go? |
A26701 | Now what cleanly nature could endure to have the filthy swine bed and board with him in his parlour, or bed chamber? |
A26701 | Now what dost thou say to this? |
A26701 | Now, would it stand with wisdom, to force pardon and life, upon them that would give him no thanks for them? |
A26701 | O Jerusalem, wilt thou not be made clean? |
A26701 | O fools, and slow of heart 〈 ◊ 〉 believe, will you court the harlot, will you seek and serve the world, and neglect the eternal glory? |
A26701 | O how many then will be found the real servants of the Devil, that take themselves for no other than the children of God? |
A26701 | O man what wilt thou do? |
A26701 | O man, art thou able to make thy party good with thy maker? |
A26701 | O man, how canst thou make so light of sin? |
A26701 | O shew your selves men, and let reason prevail with you: is it a reasonable thing for you to contend against the Lord your maker? |
A26701 | O sinner tell me what shift dost thou make to think of all the threatnings of Gods word, that stand upon record against thee? |
A26701 | O sinner, why should the Devils make merry with thee? |
A26701 | O sinners, do you make light of the wrath to come? |
A26701 | O sons of ingratitude, against whom do you sport your selves? |
A26701 | O ye Saints, how should you love the word? |
A26701 | O ye sinners, how should you ply the word? |
A26701 | O ye sons of ● olly, will ye embrace the dunghils, and refuse the Kingdom? |
A26701 | Oh how dreadfully doth it thunder? |
A26701 | Oh how great is the sum of thy debts, who hast been all thy life long running upon the hooks, and never didst, nor canst pay off one penny? |
A26701 | Oh set thine heart to think of thy case ● Is not thine everlasting misery or welfare that which doth deserve a little consideration? |
A26701 | Oh what wilt thou do when the Lord cometh forth against thee, and in his fury falleth upon thee, and thou shalt feel what thou readest? |
A26701 | Oh whither wilt thou go, where wilt thou shelter thee? |
A26701 | Oh why dost thou not bethink thee where thou shalt be for ever? |
A26701 | Oh, whither shall I fly? |
A26701 | Or art thou only a walking Ghost, a sensless lump? |
A26701 | Or canst thou not yet prove it? |
A26701 | Or dost thou not find him to this day under the power of ignorance, or in the mire of prophaneness? |
A26701 | Or else having reason to understand the eternity of thy future state, dost thou yet make light of being everlastingly miserable? |
A26701 | Or if thou canst not tell time and place, Canst thou show scripture evidence, that the work is done? |
A26701 | Or whether it be the dead Image only of a Crucified Jesus, that is all their Saviour, while they will have no more of him? |
A26701 | Or who shall descend into the deep to bring up Christ from beneath? |
A26701 | Perverse sinner, wilt thou begin where thou shouldest end? |
A26701 | READER, HOW well were it if there were no more Unconverted ones among us, than those to whom this is directed? |
A26701 | Reader doth nothing of this touch thee? |
A26701 | Reader, dost thou view this and never ask thy self, whether it be thus with thee? |
A26701 | Reader, hath conscience been at work, while thou hast been looking over these lines? |
A26701 | Reader, is this the language of thy soul? |
A26701 | Reader, shall I prevail with thee for one? |
A26701 | Saith Bildad, shall the earth be forsaken for thee? |
A26701 | Satan hath them at his beck: but how long may I call, and can get no answer? |
A26701 | Say not like Judas, what needs this waste? |
A26701 | Seest thou how the worm gnaweth, how the oven gloweth? |
A26701 | Sh ● ll I go on in my sinful ways? |
A26701 | Shall Christ put out the eye of his Fathers Omnisciency, or shorten the arm of his eternal power for thee? |
A26701 | Shall Hell be your own choice? |
A26701 | Shall I allure him with the joyful sound, and the lovely song and glad- tidings of the Gospel? |
A26701 | Shall I go and lay my mouth to the grave, and look when the dead will obey me and come forth? |
A26701 | Shall I invite the dead to arise and eat the banquet of their funerals? |
A26701 | Shall I leave you at last no farther than Agrippa, but almost perswaded? |
A26701 | Shall I set before him the feast of fat things, the wine of wisdom, the bread of God, the tree of life, the hidden Manna? |
A26701 | Shall divine justice be violated for thee? |
A26701 | Shall it be still neglect, and unthankful contempt, and turning away your ear and heart, and saying, we have somewhat else to mind? |
A26701 | Shall not a companion of fools much more be destroyed? |
A26701 | Shall the Laws of Heaven be reversed for thee? |
A26701 | Shall the everlasting foundations be overturned for thee? |
A26701 | Sinner, what sayest thou to this? |
A26701 | Sinner, wilt thou not yet give up thy vain hope of being saved in this condition? |
A26701 | Sinners what will you do in the day of your visitation? |
A26701 | So I may say to thee: see, here is Christ, here is mercy, pardon, life, what hinders but that thou shouldst be pardoned, and saved? |
A26701 | Solomon''s mad man, that casteth fire- brands, and arrows and death, and saith, am I not in jest? |
A26701 | Speak man, art thou willing of the match? |
A26701 | Speak plainly to all the forementioned particulars: canst thou acquit this man, this woman, from being any of the two and twenty sorts here described? |
A26701 | Such or such a duty, that thou makest no conscience of? |
A26701 | Surely thou maist go as far as these ● though thou hast no Grace: and how dost thou know but thou maist speed in thy suit, as they did in theirs? |
A26701 | Tell me whither art thou going? |
A26701 | The Lord hath spoken it, and who shall reverse it? |
A26701 | The thunder of his power who can understand? |
A26701 | The view of his sins, the sight of a Christ crucified, that would scarce stir him before, now how much do they affect his heart? |
A26701 | The womb of my Promise will not presently bring forth; will you have the patience to wait? |
A26701 | These are the Instruments that God useth to convert and save you: and do you spit in the face of your Physicians, and throw your Pilots overboard? |
A26701 | They were the Masters of the Iewish Church? |
A26701 | This was the converts voice; The Lord is my portion saith my soul Whom have I in Heaven but thee? |
A26701 | Thou art even crushed, and ready to wish thy self dead, under the weight of his finger: how then wilt thou bear the Weight of his loyns? |
A26701 | Thou canst not bear Gods whip: how then wilt thou endure his scorpions? |
A26701 | Thou maist pray, but what hope is there in thy praying? |
A26701 | Thou pretendest for Christ; but doth not the world sway thee? |
A26701 | Thou, even thou, art to be feared; and who shall stand in thy sight, when ● ● ce thou art angry? |
A26701 | Thy food would say, Lord, must I nourish such a wretch as this, and yield forth my strength for him, to dishonour thee withal? |
A26701 | To have the Lord to roar from Mount Sion against thee? |
A26701 | Touch his Scepter, and live: why will you die? |
A26701 | Unconverted persons how many are there, but how few Unconverted Readers especially of such Books as this before thee? |
A26701 | Was it such a lamentation to see those that did feed delicately, to sit desolate in the streets? |
A26701 | Was it such an abomination to the Jews, when An ● us set up the picture of a swine at the entrance of the Temple? |
A26701 | We need not say, who shall ascend into Heaven to bring down Christ from above? |
A26701 | Were you made for no better work than this? |
A26701 | What King would take the rebels, in open hostility, into his Court? |
A26701 | What Tongue can tell the heirs of Hell sufficiently of their misery, unless''t were Dives his that was tormented in that flame? |
A26701 | What a continual tempest and commotion is there in a discontented mind? |
A26701 | What a woful spectacle was that poor wretch possessed with the legion? |
A26701 | What an eating evil is inordinate care? |
A26701 | What answer will you send me with to my Master? |
A26701 | What are all our con ● essions, unless they be the exercises of godly sorrow and unfeigned repentance? |
A26701 | What but free grace should move God to love you, unless enmity could do it, or deformity could do it, unless vomit, or rottonness could do it? |
A26701 | What can be plainer? |
A26701 | What can there be said to this man, that''s like to b ● ing him to good? |
A26701 | What communion hath darkness with light, corruption with perfection? |
A26701 | What course shall I use with them that I have not tryed? |
A26701 | What do they espy in thee? |
A26701 | What do you intend to do? |
A26701 | What do you resolve upon? |
A26701 | What doth thine heart answer? |
A26701 | What duty dost thou ever perform into which this poyson is not shed? |
A26701 | What else do we study for, labour for, suffer for, live for? |
A26701 | What greater joy to a Minister, than to hear of souls born unto Christ by him, and that his Children walk in the truth? |
A26701 | What hast thou never a reproof in thy mouth? |
A26701 | What hath Christ done for you? |
A26701 | What hath Christ wrought in you? |
A26701 | What if God should this night require thy soul? |
A26701 | What if the thred of thy life should break? |
A26701 | What is Conversion? |
A26701 | What is Pride, but a deadly tympany? |
A26701 | What is Sin? |
A26701 | What is it that thou dost account necessary? |
A26701 | What is lust but a fire in the bones? |
A26701 | What is passion, but a very feaver in the mind? |
A26701 | What is the difference between the Church and the World? |
A26701 | What is the prayer of the lips, without grace in the heart, but the carcass without the life? |
A26701 | What is the wrath of the infinite God? |
A26701 | What is thy way and thy course? |
A26701 | What mad besotted desperado can Take prejudice against this holy man? |
A26701 | What mean you to stand wavering, to be off and on? |
A26701 | What meanest thou O my soul to go on thus? |
A26701 | What not enter into Paradise, when the flaming sword, that was once set to keep you out, is now used to drive you in? |
A26701 | What our petitions, unless animated all along with holy desires, and faith in the divine attributes and promises? |
A26701 | What our praises and thanks- givings, unless from the Love of God, and a holy gratitude, and sense of Gods mercies in the heart? |
A26701 | What place can hide me from Omnisciency? |
A26701 | What power can secure me from Omnipotency? |
A26701 | What saith conscience? |
A26701 | What saith it? |
A26701 | What sayest thou man? |
A26701 | What sayest thou to costly and hazardous and flesh displeasing duties? |
A26701 | What sayest thou to thy bosome sin, thy gainfull sin? |
A26701 | What shall I do for the daughter of my people? |
A26701 | What shall I say? |
A26701 | What shall I say? |
A26701 | What then shall I do? |
A26701 | What then, is there no help? |
A26701 | What think you should move us to undertake a calling so contrary to our fleshly ease and interests? |
A26701 | What thinkest thou of those chains of darkness, of those instruments of cruelty? |
A26701 | What thinkest thou, O man, of being a faggot in hell to all eternity? |
A26701 | What thou wilt here, so that we may have but thy faithful promise for Heaven hereafter? |
A26701 | What though God do not presently open to thee? |
A26701 | What though you are plunged into the ditch of that misery, from which you can never get out? |
A26701 | What were this but to betray Life, Kingdom, Government and all together? |
A26701 | What will their end be? |
A26701 | What will they do in the day of visitation? |
A26701 | What will you do then, I say, that have never a God to go to? |
A26701 | What will you do when the Philistines are upon you? |
A26701 | What wilt thou then do, when they shall altogether lay it in against thee? |
A26701 | What work did it make with our Saviour? |
A26701 | What wouldst thou ask? |
A26701 | What, shall I go away without my errand? |
A26701 | What, shall I leave you as I found you at last? |
A26701 | What, shall he go on still in his trespasses, and yet have peace? |
A26701 | What, shall this soul die in his careless neglect of God and eternity, and thou altogether hold thy peace? |
A26701 | What, will no body be perswaded? |
A26701 | What, wilt thou live in such a course, wherein every act is a step to perdition? |
A26701 | What, wilt thou slatter and sooth him, while he lives in his sins? |
A26701 | What, you more hardned than they? |
A26701 | When a man is savingly changed, he is not only deeply converted of the danger, but defilement of sin: and O how earnest is he with God to be purified? |
A26701 | When he did but look upon the host of the Egyptians, how terrible was the consequence? |
A26701 | When he shall gripe thee in his Iron arms, and grind and crush thee to a thousand pieces in his wrath? |
A26701 | When his quiver ratleth against thee, the glittering Spear and the shield? |
A26701 | When justice sits upon life and death, Oh what dreadful work doth it make with the wretched sinner? |
A26701 | When shall it once be? |
A26701 | When the World shall take its eternal leave of you, when you must bid your friends, houses, lands, farewell for evermore? |
A26701 | When the tree is evil, how can the fruit be good? |
A26701 | When thou shalt draw in flames for thy breath, and the horrid stench of sulphur shall be thine only perfume? |
A26701 | When was the time, where was the place, or what was the means, by which this through change of the new birth was wrought in this soul? |
A26701 | When wilt thou sh ● ke off thy sloth, and lay by thine excuses? |
A26701 | Whence doth thy choicest comfort come in? |
A26701 | Where doth the content of thy heart lie? |
A26701 | Where is the hope of the hypocrite, when God takes away his soul? |
A26701 | Where is the ready Writer, whose pen can decipher their misery, that are without God in the world? |
A26701 | Where were Gods truth, if notwithstanding all this, he should bring men to salvation without Conversion? |
A26701 | Where will they leave their glory? |
A26701 | Wherefore do you spend money for that which is not bread, and your labour for that which satisfieth not? |
A26701 | Which way shall I look? |
A26701 | Which way then shall I come at the miserable objects that I have to deal with? |
A26701 | Whither shall I go? |
A26701 | Whither will they flee for help? |
A26701 | Who dwells within the walls of this flash? |
A26701 | Who knoweth( saith Moses) the power of thine anger? |
A26701 | Who mind earthly things, and thereby are evidently after the flesh, and like to end in destruction? |
A26701 | Who more religious than the Jews, when Gods hand was upon them? |
A26701 | Who will be at the pains of repentance that concludes he hath repented? |
A26701 | Who will be perswaded to do that, which he believes is already done? |
A26701 | Who will bear the labour and the pangs of the new birth that is confident he is already passed from death to life? |
A26701 | Who will take the Counsel of the Physitian that does not think himself sick? |
A26701 | Who would serve such a master, whose work is drudgery, and whose wages is death? |
A26701 | Whom have you reproached and blasphemed? |
A26701 | Why else do we so much trouble our selves, and trouble you with all this ado, and anger them that would have had us silent? |
A26701 | Why is it nothing to thee to have all the attributes of God engaged against thee? |
A26701 | Why not as great an absurdity to be twice regenerated as to be twice generated? |
A26701 | Why should God repent that he hath made thee a Christian, as in the time of the old world, that he made them men? |
A26701 | Why should not this be the day from whence thou shouldest be able to date thine happiness? |
A26701 | Why shouldst thou forsake thine own mercy, and sin against thine own life? |
A26701 | Why would you so wilfully deceive your selves, or build your hopes upon the sand? |
A26701 | Why, but is there any remedy for such woful misery? |
A26701 | Why, were these crucified for thee? |
A26701 | Why, what shall I think you? |
A26701 | Will a man keep a murderer in his bosom? |
A26701 | Will it stand by you to eternity? |
A26701 | Will none of you arise, and follow me? |
A26701 | Will ye not tremble at my presence? |
A26701 | Will you be content to live by faith, and trust him for an unseen happiness, an unseen Heaven, an unseen Glory? |
A26701 | Will you be obstinate and choose to dye? |
A26701 | Will you bow to my Government? |
A26701 | Will you call on him, will you cry to him for help? |
A26701 | Will you come under my yoke? |
A26701 | Will you dance about the fire, till you are burnt? |
A26701 | Will you give me your hands? |
A26701 | Will you go on and die, or will you set upon a thorow and speedy conversion, and hold on eternal life? |
A26701 | Will you have this God for your God? |
A26701 | Will you lay all at my feet, and give it up to my dispose, and take me for your only portion? |
A26701 | Will you own and honour mine All- sufficiency? |
A26701 | Will you put in your names into his Covenant? |
A26701 | Will you run upon the edge of the Rock? |
A26701 | Will you set open the doors, and give the Lord Jesus the full and present possession? |
A26701 | Will you still be cheated by this deceiving World? |
A26701 | Will you submit to my discipline? |
A26701 | Will you subscribe? |
A26701 | Will you take me as your happiness and Treasure, your hope and bliss? |
A26701 | Will you turn off all my importunity? |
A26701 | Will you venture your selves upon my word,& depend on my faithfulness, and take my bond for your security? |
A26701 | Will you yet be intreated? |
A26701 | Wilt thou arise and set to thy work? |
A26701 | Wilt thou as it were fetch thy vieze, and jump into eternal flames, as the children through the bonfire? |
A26701 | Wilt thou be content to run all hazards with him? |
A26701 | Wilt thou be worse than the beast, to run on, when thou seest the Lord with a drawn sword in thy way? |
A26701 | Wilt thou deny thy self, take up thy Cross, and follow him? |
A26701 | Wilt thou embrace this for thy happiness? |
A26701 | Wilt thou esteem his arrows as straw, and the instruments of death as rotten wood? |
A26701 | Wilt thou forgo thy sinful gains, thy forbidden pleasures? |
A26701 | Wilt thou go on in such a dreadful condition, as if nothing ailed thee? |
A26701 | Wilt thou go with this man? |
A26701 | Wilt thou have Christ in all his relations to be thine; thy King, thy Priest, thy Prophet? |
A26701 | Wilt thou have him with all his inconveniences? |
A26701 | Wilt thou have the Lord for thy God? |
A26701 | Wilt thou have the merciful, the gracious, the sin- pardoning God, to be thy God? |
A26701 | Wilt thou lay all at his feet? |
A26701 | Wilt thou let all the world go, rather than this? |
A26701 | Wilt thou let go thy hold- fast of the world, and rid thy hands of thy sins, and lay hold on eternal life? |
A26701 | Wilt thou not now obey the voice of the Lord? |
A26701 | Wilt thou sit down and consider the forementioned arguments, and debate it, whether it be not best to turn? |
A26701 | Wilt thou sit still, till the tide come in upon thee? |
A26701 | Wilt thou take God at his word? |
A26701 | Wilt thou take thy lot with him, fall where it will? |
A26701 | Wilt thou trample on the worlds esteem, and spit in the harlots face, and stop thine ears at her flareries, and wrest thee out of her embraces? |
A26701 | Would it be for his honour, to have the dogs to the table? |
A26701 | Would it not have pitied thine heart to have seen him among the tombs, cutting, and wounding of himself? |
A26701 | Would you have us to despair? |
A26701 | Would you not say, O what a deceiver is the Devil that can thus lead on souls to their own damnation? |
A26701 | Wouldst thou serve thy end? |
A26701 | [ O man, Dost thou read this, and never turn in upon thy soul by self- examination?] |
A26701 | against whom make ye a wide mouth, and draw out the tongue? |
A26701 | and have we not flesh as well as others? |
A26701 | and how little hope is there that this Excellent Treatise should reach its end, with those who apprehend not themselves concern''d in it? |
A26701 | and is there no way to stop them or keep them back?] |
A26701 | and that they were Abraham''s Seed? |
A26701 | and they shall live and be saved that walk after the spirit? |
A26701 | and to harden thy self in a conceit, that all is well with thee, while thou remainest unsanctified? |
A26701 | and what all the Pomp, and Wealth, and Pleasure of the World will signifie to a departing Soul? |
A26701 | and what were Christianity better than the Religion of Antonine, Plato, Socrates, Seneca, Cicero, Plutarch, if not much worse? |
A26701 | and whether God hath not made the Hypocrites and Unbelievers to be the standards in Hell? |
A26701 | and whether he be not an Hypocrite that professeth to be a Christian, and a servant of God, when he is none, nor will be? |
A26701 | and why the Country must be troubled with them, and pay them Tythes, and owe them reverence? |
A26701 | any mercy, after such provoking iniquity? |
A26701 | art thou in none of the forementioned ranks? |
A26701 | but it is from your prison, sirs, from your chains, from the dungeon, from the darkness that he calleth you? |
A26701 | but rather who then shall not be saved? |
A26701 | deeper than hell, what can we know? |
A26701 | dost thou laugh at hell and destruction, or canst drink the envenomed cup of the Almighties fury, as if it were but a common potion? |
A26701 | for Christ, Grace, Pardon, that thou maist be justified, sanctified, renewed, and fitted to serve him? |
A26701 | go into the gardens of pleasure, and gather all the fragrant flowers from thence: would these content thee? |
A26701 | hath there passed a through and mighty change upon him, or not? |
A26701 | how deep are their groans? |
A26701 | how feeling are their moans? |
A26701 | how frequently have I made suit to you? |
A26701 | how instant have I been with you? |
A26701 | how long will you halt between two opinions? |
A26701 | how long will you linger in Sodom? |
A26701 | how long will you stick between the womb and the world? |
A26701 | how many years have you been purposing to amend what if God should have taken you off this while? |
A26701 | how much more to ● lose our pains in Religion, to pray, and hear, and fast in vain? |
A26701 | how much rather, when he saith unto thee, wash and be clean? |
A26701 | how often would I have gathered you? |
A26701 | how the fire rageth? |
A26701 | how unconceivable their miseries? |
A26701 | is life and death at thy choice? |
A26701 | no hope? |
A26701 | not to one awakened look into the World where you must be for ever? |
A26701 | one after another by the scores in cold blood? |
A26701 | or against his will, and then where were his Omnipotency? |
A26701 | or covetousness, but an unsatiabl ● and unsufferable thirst? |
A26701 | or dally with devouring wrath, as if you were at a point of indifferency, whether you did escape it, or endure it? |
A26701 | or declaim to the Mountains, and think to move them with arguments? |
A26701 | or he must change his will, and then where were his Immutability? |
A26701 | or malice and envy, but venom in the very heart? |
A26701 | or the brightness of the glory of his holiness be blemished for thee? |
A26701 | or the rocks removed out of their place? |
A26701 | or to lodge the swine with his children? |
A26701 | or whether the vile puddle of sin, be to be preferred before the water of life, clear as Crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb? |
A26701 | or wilt thou bring him to thy Organ, and expect that he should make thee melody, or keep time with the skilful Quire? |
A26701 | quando satiabor de pulcritudine tua? |
A26701 | shall I burn the brimstone of hell at his nostrils? |
A26701 | shall I give the blind to see? |
A26701 | shall I linger any longer in this wretched estate? |
A26701 | shall I make an Oration to the Rocks? |
A26701 | shouldst thou ask them thus that have felt what''t is to be damned, what answer dost thou think they would make? |
A26701 | that we have described? |
A26701 | that you are of the visible Church? |
A26701 | that you bear his name? |
A26701 | they are infinitely above our thoughts, higher than Heaven, what can we do? |
A26701 | to my word, to my rod? |
A26701 | to the tombs and monuments of the dead, or to a living auditory? |
A26701 | what a Hell of sin is in this heart of mine, which I have flattered my self to be a good heart? |
A26701 | what saist thou to that river of brimstone, that dark and horrible vault, that gulf of perdition? |
A26701 | what shall I do? |
A26701 | what shall I do? |
A26701 | what sin have I lived in against my brother? |
A26701 | when I see you ready to perish? |
A26701 | when shall it once be? |
A26701 | when will you come to a fixed, full, and firm resolve? |
A26701 | where is the place, yea where is the house almost, where these do not dwell? |
A26701 | where will you leave your glory? |
A26701 | whereby shall I win them? |
A26701 | whither will you flee for help? |
A26701 | whither wilt thou fly? |
A26701 | whither wouldst thou drop? |
A26701 | who by Faith foreseeth whither you are going, and what you lose, and where the game of sin will end? |
A26701 | who will say unto him, what dost thou? |
A26701 | why shouldest thou venture a day longer, in this dangerous and dreadful condition? |
A26701 | why shouldst thou be a morsel for that devouring Leviathan? |
A26701 | will you not be made clean? |
A26701 | will you put your hand upon the Cockatrice den? |
A26701 | wilt thou take up thine habitation here? |
A26701 | with the most sweet and inviting calls, comforts, cordials, of the divine promises, so exceeding great and precious? |
A26701 | would I stick at the pains? |
A26701 | would not pity have made you think,[ Is there no way to open these Gentlemens eyes? |
A69533 | & Whether these Pastors should not rather have gathered Churches as free as their own? |
A69533 | & an omnia mihi in eo probentur? |
A69533 | & c.] doth not the question deserve to be answered with the rod? |
A69533 | ( besides what I have granted to Apostolical Bishops in the third Dispute?) |
A69533 | 2& 3. had their warnings or threatnings for smaller faults, what would such corruptions bring us to, but even to be plagued or forsaken by the Lord? |
A69533 | All the Question is, What sort of Bishops they must be? |
A69533 | All the business therefore is to know what God hath authorized Governors to institute, and what not? |
A69533 | An ille solus? |
A69533 | And I wou ● d know whether you can prove that it is Essential to a Bishop to have more Churches or Parishes then one? |
A69533 | And are Lay- Elders as bad as Lay- Chancellors? |
A69533 | And are we not then agreed? |
A69533 | And are we schismaticks for not obeying a Bishop when we have none? |
A69533 | And are you denied your Liberty, because you are not backed by the Sword? |
A69533 | And are your few Recusants that would draw you to separation of greater Learning, authorty and regard, then all the Protestants in the world besides? |
A69533 | And by what authority then can you do it? |
A69533 | And by what note may we know what points so to receive from them, and what not? |
A69533 | And can all the Pastors travail so far to the Presbyterie so frequently without neglecting their Pastoral work? |
A69533 | And can any man think that it is best for all these Churches to be without Ministers, and Sacraments, rather then to have such? |
A69533 | And can one man undertake this for many score or hundred Churches? |
A69533 | And do you think these are likely terms for Peace? |
A69533 | And how are we proved Schismaticks? |
A69533 | And how can they convey a better title to their Heirs then they had themselves? |
A69533 | And how can they have Authority, when most of them have not Ability? |
A69533 | And how charitable and peaceable an Epistle hath he writ before D. Blondels book de Papissa Joanna? |
A69533 | And how come they to have Power to Ordain others, that are not Ordained themselves, but are admitted upon bare Election? |
A69533 | And how is it that Presbyters shall be Ruled by Diocesans, and the Diocesans by Provincials? |
A69533 | And how sad a case is it that the Reconciliation between the Lutherans and other Protestants should in any measure stick at such Ceremonies? |
A69533 | And how? |
A69533 | And if all this were but accomplished, in the Conclusion I may be bold to ask, what would the Devil himself have more, except our damnation it self? |
A69533 | And if it Please him not, it will be lost labour and worse: and we may expect to hear[ who requireth this at your hands?] |
A69533 | And if it be so, let them judge whether their doctrine subvert not Christianitie? |
A69533 | And if not in Scripture, where then? |
A69533 | And if so, then why do they vilifie Bishops under the name of Presbyters? |
A69533 | And if so, what men are you? |
A69533 | And if the last were granted, Whether these be not properly Archbishops? |
A69533 | And if they dissent, what will you do with them? |
A69533 | And if they know as much already, what need have they of our Teaching? |
A69533 | And if to any, then to which, and to how many, and where shall our consciences find rest? |
A69533 | And in good sadness, is it not more prudent for the Magistrate to keep the sword in his own hands if really it be the sword that must do the work? |
A69533 | And indeed I think the most of this cause is carried on in the dark: What Books have they written to prove our Ordination Null? |
A69533 | And indeed must we buy your Communion so deer? |
A69533 | And is it not a horrid thing to make such Laws, that the most conscionable are likest to fall under, and to perish by? |
A69533 | And is it not strange that both names of the superior Office( Bishop and Presbyter) should be commonly given to the new inferior Office, at the first? |
A69533 | And is not he that hath a County on his hands, like to do less for this Town or Parish, then if he had no more then this? |
A69533 | And is not that enough? |
A69533 | And is not that now tolerable for your Communion with us, which served then for the Communion of all the Churches on earth? |
A69533 | And is not this to be found in a Parish Bishop, as well as in a Bishop of many Parishes, or Churches? |
A69533 | And most of them are unable to give me a rational answer to either of the Questions? |
A69533 | And must men needs turn Papists because of the different Rites of Protestants, when they must find more variety among them that they turn to? |
A69533 | And must we put them to so much more labour, as to learn a Rationale or exposition of all the Ceremonies, holy dayes ▪& c? |
A69533 | And now censorious Slanderer, tell me, what thou wouldst have had me to have done more? |
A69533 | And of their own sufficiency for such a work? |
A69533 | And our Churches ruined? |
A69533 | And see you not that six parts of the world are Infidels, and much for want of Teachers to instruct them? |
A69533 | And shall every man be a Teacher and Ruler that will in the Church of Christ, as if it were the only confused contemptible Society in the world? |
A69533 | And shall the Prelatical Controversie come to this? |
A69533 | And that that Church was but one Congregation, or not very many: Else what need the Presbyters take their turns, when they might have done it at once? |
A69533 | And then will you condemn them, and justifie your selves by saying[ why should not the Church be obeyed?] |
A69533 | And was not Alexander( the Colliar) whom he Ordained at Comana, a Bishop, though but of a small Assembly? |
A69533 | And what Bish ● ps shall Antioch have at this day? |
A69533 | And what Government is it that you think we want? |
A69533 | And what a case then would this land( and others) be in? |
A69533 | And what a contempt is it of the blood of Christ, that the purchase made by it should be thus neglected? |
A69533 | And what a kind of Religion is that? |
A69533 | And what a sinful arrogant usurpation is this, for any man to be guilty of? |
A69533 | And what authority had that Council to bind all the Christian world, to all ages? |
A69533 | And what could be more to the shame and hazzard of the Church, then to have it taught and guided by such ignorant unworthy men? |
A69533 | And what fuller evidence would you have that it is not any such Episcopacy whose liberty they exclude, under the name of Prelacy? |
A69533 | And what great harm doth that to the Church? |
A69533 | And what if the Apostles have no Successors? |
A69533 | And what if you think this species best? |
A69533 | And what is it that you would have that''s better? |
A69533 | And what is that Thing? |
A69533 | And what is the Odious harm that these men do among them? |
A69533 | And what is your Office, but your Authority and Obligation to do your work? |
A69533 | And what likelihood, or proof at least, that John did institute them the year that he dyed? |
A69533 | And what number of them must go to be the true witnesses of a Divine Law? |
A69533 | And what shall we do to reconcile their contradictions? |
A69533 | And what should become of poor souls the while your young ones are a training up? |
A69533 | And what then shall we think of that sort of men, that think themselves so good and worthy, as to run on their own heads, without due approbation? |
A69533 | And what was this to true Church- Government? |
A69533 | And where you say, They should not disturb the Church; I answer, Are you so blind that you see not that it is you that disturb the Church? |
A69533 | And who knows not that they both fetcht their chief Motives from experience? |
A69533 | And who shall pay for this, or maintain me in thy service? |
A69533 | And who were these? |
A69533 | And why are we more bound then by the same authority to other Ceremonies then to this? |
A69533 | And why doth not your Laws except from punishment all those that conformed not, that were not wilfull or contemptuous? |
A69533 | And why have we not the Diocess of Paul and Iohn, and Mathew and Thomas, and the rest of the twelve, mentioned, as well of Peter and Iames? |
A69533 | And why is it that the distance must be so great? |
A69533 | And why is not that to be accounted Order in the Church, that is so in all other societies? |
A69533 | And why not all Schismaticks then that are against the Papacy, which is thought by others the best form? |
A69533 | And why plead you for Discipline, and against Toleration, if you so loath the things you plead for? |
A69533 | And why then may not another do it as well as he; or at least, the sillyest man that can read as well as the most able? |
A69533 | And will not this suffice? |
A69533 | And will you separate from us for other mens doings? |
A69533 | And with what confidence can you expect his help, if you Call your selves, and enter not by his Approbation? |
A69533 | And would you not cast them out, whom you would have forsaken? |
A69533 | And would you not have them then cast out? |
A69533 | And ye ● shall we return to the occasion of our misery, and that while we confess it to be a needless thing? |
A69533 | And yet are you afraid that there will be too many? |
A69533 | And yet dost thou reproach me that receive not a groat? |
A69533 | And yet must we have no worship, Ministry, Communion of Saints, or Salvation, because we have only a Parochial and not a Diocesan Episcopacy? |
A69533 | And yet must we have those impotent clamors, with which the writings of Mr. Pierce and other such abound? |
A69533 | And yet must you needs have more work and service, and more souls to answer for? |
A69533 | Are not others more impartial? |
A69533 | Are not the Pastors of the Church most frequently called the Presbyters, or Elders? |
A69533 | Are we not all the Children of one Father? |
A69533 | Are we not in the same Baptismal Covenant with God? |
A69533 | Are we not well without it? |
A69533 | Are we proud for seeking to be Parish Bishops, and do you take it as an empty name or shadow? |
A69533 | Are you strangers in England? |
A69533 | As the old Rimer hath it[ Christus dixit quodam lo ● o; Vos non sic, nec dixit j ● co: dixit sui ● ergo isti Cujus sunt? |
A69533 | Be ye servants of all, and seek to save all, and take on you thus the care of all the Churches, and see who will forbid such an Episcopacy as this? |
A69533 | Because Catholicism is your pretense, consider whether you be not further from it then most people in the world? |
A69533 | Bishops at the first plantation of the Gospel? |
A69533 | Both Pastors and People are Governed by the Magistrate: And what need we more? |
A69533 | But all the question is, Whether these Presidents should be only pro tempore, or durante vita, supposing that they forfeit not the trust? |
A69533 | But first I will lay together some Propositions for decision of the Controversie; How far we are bound to obey mens precepts about Religion? |
A69533 | But how came you to see into the hearts of men, that their non- conformity is wilfull and contemptuous? |
A69533 | But how can I Ioyn with a Minister in prayer, If I know not before hand what he will say, when for ought I know he may pray blasphemy or heresie? |
A69533 | But how do they prove it? |
A69533 | But how prove they the consequence? |
A69533 | But how shall they preach unless they be sent? |
A69533 | But how? |
A69533 | But if he command that we Assemble only at midnight, what should I do then? |
A69533 | But if there must be a difference of judgement in these matters of outward Policy, why should not our hearts be still one? |
A69533 | But if you are unfit, is it not better to forbear? |
A69533 | But if you take this to be your duty, who hath hindered you from it these twelve years? |
A69533 | But in case the Genus is commanded by God, and the Species are equal, may not the Governour limit us to one of the two? |
A69533 | But is it not the Law that is the Rule of Moral Good? |
A69533 | But is it therefore fit that Authority should command it? |
A69533 | But may not Bishops when they Ordain, Delegate what measure of Ministerial Power they please? |
A69533 | But should Authority therefore ensnare the Church with needless Impositions? |
A69533 | But should not men obey Authority in forms and m ● ● ters of indifferency? |
A69533 | But such is the English Episcopacy? |
A69533 | But the Apostles and Evangelists had a larger circuit then a Parish, and therefore so should their Successors have? |
A69533 | But the Church hath antient venerable fo ● ms already; and who may presume to alter them? |
A69533 | But the Consequent will be disowned by those that dispute against us? |
A69533 | But the doubt is ▪ Whether the Episcopacy in question be necessary or profitable thereto? |
A69533 | But the question is not, whether we must have Church- Order? |
A69533 | But the question is, Whether no man be sent that have not humane Ordination? |
A69533 | But there were none such, as is granted: therefore,& c. And what proof is there of Archbishops then? |
A69533 | But to Mr. Pierce; what a bloody perfidious sort of men are they, unfit to live in a Commonwealth? |
A69533 | But what doth your Arguing make against the other Episcopal Divines that are not of the opinion that there were no meer Presbyters in Scripture times? |
A69533 | But what need is there of it? |
A69533 | But what need we further witness then the sad experience of the Church of late? |
A69533 | But what need you form us a new sort of Episcopacy? |
A69533 | But what the better are we for this, if we know not, which they are that are the true Pastors, nor can not possibly come to know it? |
A69533 | But what use is there among us for such Ministers as these, when all the Nations are Converted from Infidelity already? |
A69533 | But what will you take for a Case of Necessity? |
A69533 | But what would you have men do that think there is a Necessity of their labours, and that they have Ministerial abilities? |
A69533 | But what''s this to Government? |
A69533 | But who shall be judge of this Necessity? |
A69533 | But who was it that laid these snares in their way? |
A69533 | But will you not, when it s known so openly, distinguish the Ministerial Power from the secular? |
A69533 | But you will say, What if they do overvalue it as necessary, what danger is in that? |
A69533 | But your first question should be, why you should command, and thus command unprofitable things? |
A69533 | By this the Popish case may be resolved, Whether the Intention of the Priest be necessary to the Validity and success of Sacraments? |
A69533 | Can Episcopacy be transferred by Deputation to another? |
A69533 | Can not you live up to the height of Evangelical Sanctity? |
A69533 | Can one man hear so many hundred as in a day must be before him, if this discipline be faithfully executed? |
A69533 | Can you prove in Scripture that there were any particular Churches or Assemblies for Sacraments and other worship in Villages? |
A69533 | Christ hath appointed you Baptism and the Lords Supper, which signifie the very substance of the Gospel: Can your signs do more? |
A69533 | Consider also what yielding in things lawfull the Scripture recommendeth to us? |
A69533 | Dare you say they were no Christians? |
A69533 | Did ever Cochlaeus, or Bolseck go beyond this man? |
A69533 | Did not the Churches differ till the N ● cene Council about Easter day, and one half went one way, and another half the other way? |
A69533 | Did not these men know that the Church hath alwaies allowed diversity of Rites? |
A69533 | Did the Catholick Church make the English Common- Prayer Book? |
A69533 | Did the numerous Church at Ierusalem ordinarily meet on the Lords dayes for holy communion, or not? |
A69533 | Do I change my Religion, if I read with a pair of spectacles, or if I look towards the South or West, rather then the East& c.? |
A69533 | Do not some of you confess, that Bishops in Scripture- times had no subject Presbyters, and consequently had but a single Congregation? |
A69533 | Do these men believe that there is a day of Iudgement? |
A69533 | Do they not commonly own their former impieties and persecutions? |
A69533 | Do we not know who and what men they are that you have to supply the room with? |
A69533 | Do you indeed take your Dignity and preheminence to be an Article of our Faith? |
A69533 | Do you not know what it is for a man to be driven against his Conscience? |
A69533 | Do you not see how many thousand souls lie still in ignorance, presumption and security for all the number of labourers that we have? |
A69533 | Do you pretend to antiquity, and fly from the Antient Government as none? |
A69533 | Do you set so light by mens everlasting Joy or Torment? |
A69533 | Do you thus think to honour Physitians and Schoolmasters, to the ruine of the people and the Schools? |
A69533 | Doth he regard Rome any more then Eugubium, or Alexandria more then Tanis, for their worldly splendor or priviledges? |
A69533 | Either you are fit for the Ministry, or unfit: if fit; why should you be afraid of tryal? |
A69533 | Else why may we not turn the ten commandments into twenty or a hundred? |
A69533 | Especially in case we doubt of the lawfulness of obeying them? |
A69533 | For how else shall all concur? |
A69533 | For if Episcopacy stand by Divine right, what becomes of these Churches that want it? |
A69533 | For what else is to be done till persons be converted and brought into the Church? |
A69533 | For what is an office but the state of one Obliged and Authorized to do such or such a work? |
A69533 | For what''s the office of a Minister, but[ a state of Obligation aod power to exercise the Ministe ● ial acts?] |
A69533 | For who can have encouragement to enter a calling when he knows not whether indeed he enter upon it or not? |
A69533 | Had Apollo, Titus, Timothy, Silas, Barnabas,& c. none? |
A69533 | Had all the Itinerant converting Ministers of those times none, that were not affixed as Pastors to a particular Church? |
A69533 | Had not the Church a sure Rule, and an happy order, and unity, and peace, before your Common prayer Book or Ceremonies were born? |
A69533 | Had the seventy Disciples none? |
A69533 | Hath Christ by his Spirit instituted Church- offices, and are they now at the Bishops power to transform them? |
A69533 | Hath God brought them down for their own wickedness, and shall we set them up again? |
A69533 | Hath it any that are more Ancient or more venerable then the Scripture? |
A69533 | Hath not God in his word and his works, and his Sacraments, provided sufficient means for our instruction, unless you add your Mystical signs? |
A69533 | Have we not all the same God, the same Redeemer, the same Spirit in us? |
A69533 | Have we not smarted by them late enough already? |
A69533 | Have we not the same holy Scripture for our Rule? |
A69533 | Have you not Consciences your selves? |
A69533 | Have you not liberty to do as the Apostles did? |
A69533 | Have you not sin enough already in breaking the Laws already made, but you must make more Laws and duties, that so you may make more sin? |
A69533 | Hence is the doubt resolved, Whether the Pastor, or Church be first in order of time or Nature? |
A69533 | How can man more arrogantly lift up himself, then by pretending himself to be wiser then his Maker and Redeemer? |
A69533 | How can you more plainly invite men to turn Papists, unless you would do it expresly and with open face? |
A69533 | How can you tell that he that ordained you, did not counterfeit himself to be Ordained? |
A69533 | How dangerously and obstinately do such delude themselves, and think that they are as uprightly religious as the best? |
A69533 | How did the Ancient Churches maintain th ● ir Unity, when Liturgies were in use, and the variety was so great as is commonly known? |
A69533 | How do you know that it pleaseth him to be served by Images, Exorcisms, Crossings, and many pompous Ceremonies? |
A69533 | How far yielded Pa. when he circumcised Timothy? |
A69533 | How had the Church Unity before any of your forms were known? |
A69533 | How hard doth the best man find it to keep up life and seriousness in the constant hearing or speaking of the same words? |
A69533 | How many drunkards, swearers, whoremongers, raylers, Extortioners, scorners at a godly life did swarm in almost every Town and Parish? |
A69533 | How shall we know which are they, and worthy of that name and honor? |
A69533 | I Come now to the Objections of the other side, who will be offended with me for consenting for peace, to so much as I here do? |
A69533 | I ask you then, where was it before the Mass book had a being? |
A69533 | I do not think you will deny this to be your desire, and your purpose, if ever you should have power? |
A69533 | I never pleaded for Lay- elders: If other men erre, will it justifie your error? |
A69533 | I thought you meant a Primus Presbyterorum, or at least, a Ruler of People and Presbyters? |
A69533 | I would be satisfied, whether every mans consent in the world be necessary to the Vniversality, or not? |
A69533 | I would intreat you impartially to try, whether the Primitive Apostolick Episcopacy fixed in particular Churches were not a Parochial Episcopacy? |
A69533 | I would know whether it was by this or by some former generation? |
A69533 | If I think that one man hath no more right then another to a Negative voice, why should I seem to grant it him by my practice? |
A69533 | If a man see another fall down in the streets, shall he refuse to take him up, because he is no Physician? |
A69533 | If by one, then how came that one to have Authority to impose a new Institution on the universal Church? |
A69533 | If from all, what a case are we in, as obliged to receive Contradictions and Heresies? |
A69533 | If from some only, which are they, and how known, and why they rather then the rest? |
A69533 | If he were to plead his own cause, and to speak for himself, would he not say the very same as these Learned, Reverend Disputers do? |
A69533 | If he would spew out of his mouth lukewarm Laodicea, what would he do to such degenerate societies? |
A69533 | If in One, how is it proved that they intended it in that one, and not in the rest? |
A69533 | If it must continue, tell us how long, and tell us why? |
A69533 | If it was the spiritual sword in your hands that kept out Heresies, why did you not keep them out since, as well as then? |
A69533 | If not, then is it lawful now to have any? |
A69533 | If not, then why do the adversaries call us to it? |
A69533 | If not; then how many must consent before we are obliged? |
A69533 | If the Name, is it not a term of Scripture used by the Holy Ghost? |
A69533 | If the Question be, whether such a Ministry be useful in these Dominions, or not? |
A69533 | If then a Parish or Congregational Bishop were a true Bishop, why may he not be so still? |
A69533 | If there be no communion, how is it a Church? |
A69533 | If these are not to be trusted, why should not Bishops themselves be trusted? |
A69533 | If they were Instituted by Bishops after the Scripture was written, was it by one Bishop, or by many? |
A69533 | If this be odious, why was it used by the Bishops? |
A69533 | If this be your Religion, I may ask you, where was your Religion before Luther? |
A69533 | If yea, then why may we not have Bishops in the Countreys without Scripture example, as well as Churches? |
A69533 | If you ask, What Power shall these stated Presidents have? |
A69533 | If you say in the Mass book( and what else can you say?) |
A69533 | If you say that these present Ceremonies are not burdensome; I aske, why then were those of Gods institution burdensome? |
A69533 | If you say, why should we not be obeyed in ind ● fferent things? |
A69533 | If you say, why then do the Bishops desire it, if flesh and blood be against it? |
A69533 | If you see the enemy at the Walls, will you not give the City warning, because you are not a Watch- man, or on the Guard? |
A69533 | If you see the poor naked, may no one make them cloaths but a Taylor? |
A69533 | If you will needs suspect the Protestant Ministers of partiality: what ground of suspicion have you of them that were no Ministers? |
A69533 | If your Episcopal Power be of Divine appointment, why may you not trust to a Divine assistance as well as others, that you think are not of God? |
A69533 | In the Bibliotheca Patrum how many Liturgies have they given us? |
A69533 | Is any sick among you? |
A69533 | Is it Possible then for him to watch over them, or to understand the quality of the person and fact? |
A69533 | Is it a design beseeming an humble man, a Christian, a sober man, to find out a new way of making Ministers now in the end of the world? |
A69533 | Is it a great abomination to exhort and direct men to preach, and pray, and praise God,&? |
A69533 | Is it any wonder th ● n if many of them be lost? |
A69533 | Is it because they do not Preach? |
A69533 | Is it because you have no confidence in any Arm but flesh? |
A69533 | Is it by bare commanding? |
A69533 | Is it from all or some only? |
A69533 | Is it good in them, and bad in others? |
A69533 | Is it honour that you contend for, or labour and service to the Church? |
A69533 | Is it not bad enough to equalize your selves with him, unless you exalt your selves above him? |
A69533 | Is it not known that the Presbyterian Government hath been exercised in London, in Lancashire, and in many Counties, these many years? |
A69533 | Is it not possible for the succeeding Bishops to err and mistake the Apostles Intentions? |
A69533 | Is it not the felicity and glory of the Church which you object as an inconvenience or reproach? |
A69533 | Is it the Name or the Thing, which they so abhor? |
A69533 | Is it to Rule the Presbyters only? |
A69533 | Is it to Teach or Rule the people of the particular Churches? |
A69533 | Is not this the controversie? |
A69533 | Is the Catholike Church confined to this party? |
A69533 | Is the Power desirable to us, if the Ordinance were not desirable to the Church? |
A69533 | Is the Primitive pattern of purity and simplicity become so vile in your eyes, as to be inconsistent with Christian Communion? |
A69533 | Is there nothing Positive odious in Presbyterie? |
A69533 | Is this Humility? |
A69533 | Is this a sign of a son of God, that is tender of his honour and interest? |
A69533 | It is Christ that hath given his Ministers their Power, and that for Edification: and who is he that may presume to take it from them? |
A69533 | It is as if you set a Schoolmaster to teach ten or twenty thousand Schollars? |
A69533 | It is not in your Power to shut us out; And will you not be there, if we be there? |
A69533 | It is schism that we detest, and would draw you from, or else what need we say so much for Concord and Communion? |
A69533 | It is the desire of our souls, that no able useful man may be laid by, however differing in smaller matters, or controversies of policy? |
A69533 | It s one thing to ask whether it be necessary, profitable, or lawfull to Impose them? |
A69533 | It seems man did not Institute them; for why may they not alter their own institutions? |
A69533 | May an Apostle Excommunicate the very Pastor of the place, and deprive him? |
A69533 | May an Apostle charge the people where he comes to avoid this or that seducer or heretick? |
A69533 | May not a man disuse them without separating from the Church? |
A69533 | Moreover, how do they prove that ever the Apostles gave power to the Bishops to institute the order of Presbyterie? |
A69533 | Must a Physitian be bound to give all his Patients one kind of dyet? |
A69533 | Must the Churches have no Peace but on your imposed terms? |
A69533 | Must they be tyed to a Parish now, because they were Bishops only of a Parish in Scripture- times? |
A69533 | Must they have one way, and we another? |
A69533 | Must they not be needs untaught? |
A69533 | Must we be unchristened, unchurcht and damned, for not obeying, when we have none to obey, or none that calls for our obedience? |
A69533 | Nay do they not destroy the work, wh ● le they quarrel for the doing of it, for the honor sake? |
A69533 | Nay more, if you will give this President a Negative vote, in Ordination and Iurisdiction, who will hinder you? |
A69533 | No man of this age doth know the Apostles hearts but by some sign: what then is the revelation that Proveth this Intention? |
A69533 | No nor once so much as name them? |
A69533 | No one I am confident; Tell us whoever suffered for so doing? |
A69533 | Nor how far( as to the Matter of their work and power) their office shall extend, and of what Species it shall be? |
A69533 | Nor whether it shall be the duty of such qualified persons to seek the office? |
A69533 | Nor whether the Scripture shall be their constant universal Canon? |
A69533 | Nor whether there shall be a Ministry or no Ministry? |
A69533 | Nor whether we must have Discipline, but whether it must be only theirs? |
A69533 | Now the Question between us is, Whether this was well done or not? |
A69533 | O what a burden do they take upon them ▪ and what a dreadful danger do they run into? |
A69533 | O wonderful, that ever this should become a Controversie among men, that vilifie others as unlearned and unwise in comparison of them? |
A69533 | Or at least that he was not ordained by an unordained man? |
A69533 | Or can all these people be perswaded without the Magistrates sword to travail so far to answer for their impiety? |
A69533 | Or did ever any General Council authorize it? |
A69533 | Or do you not know what abundance we have that in one Parish are every week scandalous, by drunkenness, cursing, swearing, railing, or such like? |
A69533 | Or do you think there will be any Discord where Love is Perfected, and we are One in God? |
A69533 | Or hath God left any imperfection in his institutions for your Ceremonies to supply? |
A69533 | Or how could you gratifie Papists more? |
A69533 | Or if every School had a Schoolmaster in your Forefathers dayes, will you say, there shall be but one in your dayes, in a whole County? |
A69533 | Or if they had indeed done this, would none regard it, nor remember i ●, so much as to resist the sin? |
A69533 | Or is a greater number more desirable? |
A69533 | Or is it a desirable thing? |
A69533 | Or rather, whether it be tyed to the Bishop of many Churches( as you would have it:) that is, Whether Ordination belong to Archbishops only? |
A69533 | Or whether all men are discharged from this labour and service on whom such Prelates do not Impose it? |
A69533 | Or will you be partiall? |
A69533 | Or will you not exercise the Primitive Episcopacy on Consenters ▪ because you have not the sword to force Dissenters? |
A69533 | Put the controversie truly as it is, Whether it be lawful for the Bishop of one Church with his Prebytery to Ordain? |
A69533 | Quam eandem sententiam Medina vester Patribus pariter omnibus tribuit — Quid ex his, inquies? |
A69533 | Quid dicam? |
A69533 | Shall it still continue, or would you have it healed? |
A69533 | Should Rome be so much gratified? |
A69533 | Should we laugh or weep at such a man as this? |
A69533 | So also when some have been hotly condemning us as being against Bishops, I ask them what a Bishop is? |
A69533 | Some tell me that Presbyterie is the Government of the Church without Bishops: And is it only the Negation of your Prelacy that is the odious thing? |
A69533 | THat Government which unavoidably causeth separations and divisions in the Church, is not ● o be restored under any pretence of its Order and Peace? |
A69533 | Tell us plainly what you mean by a Bishop? |
A69533 | The Fifth DISPUTATION: Of Humane CEREMONIES: Whether they are necessary, or profitable to the Church, and how far they may be imposed or observed? |
A69533 | The Papists that differ among themselves about these points, can yet hold Communion in one Church: and can not you with us? |
A69533 | The good man hearing these scornful words, it struck into his mind to know who that Alexander the Collier was? |
A69533 | They had men enough to make Deacons of, even s ● ven in a 〈 ◊ 〉: And who will believe then that they could find none to make such Elders of? |
A69533 | They take it to be intolerable confusion to have diversity in these things: what say they? |
A69533 | Thus also it is that they put off family prayer, and ask,[ Where are they bound to pray in their family Morning and Evening?] |
A69533 | To this I have given him an Answer in my Key for Catholicks, where he shall see whether Papists or Protestants are for King- killing? |
A69533 | Try whether I have not proved it before? |
A69533 | V. Whether Humane Ceremonies be Necessary or Profitable to the Church? |
A69533 | WHether a stinted Liturgy or Form of worship be a desirable means for the peace of these Churches? |
A69533 | WHether humane Ceremonies be Necessary or Profitable to the Church? |
A69533 | WHether it be Necessary or Profitable to the right Order or the Peace of the Churches of England, that we restore the extruded Episcopacy? |
A69533 | Was it in one degree of subordination of Officers only, or in all, that the Apostles suited the Ecclesiasticall Government to the Civil? |
A69533 | Was not Stephen or Philip sufficiently qualified to have been a subject Elder? |
A69533 | Was not great Gregory of Naocesarea a Bishop with his seventeen souls? |
A69533 | Was there no Church- Government before the dayes of Constantine the Emperour? |
A69533 | Was there such a Ministry, or such love and concord, or such a godly people under them in the Prelates reign? |
A69533 | We are all now at Liberty what Gesture we will use in singing Psalms,& c. and is here any discord hence arising? |
A69533 | Were there in the Territories persons enough to make many Assemblies, or only so few as might travel to, and joyn with the City Assembly? |
A69533 | Were they given only to Apostles for themselves, or to convey to others? |
A69533 | What Magistrate forceth men to obey the Presbyteries now in England, Scotland, or many other places? |
A69533 | What Persecution do they suffer that are known( above others of their way?) |
A69533 | What Power have Bishops, and whence did they receive it, to change the Office of Christs institution, or his Apostles? |
A69533 | What a number of Bishops would you have, if every Parish- Priest were a Bishop? |
A69533 | What a perverse preposterous Reverence is this? |
A69533 | What abominable thing is imposed by the Directory? |
A69533 | What abundance of observations do the Iesuites, Franciscans, Dominicans, Benedictines, Carth ● sians, and others differ in? |
A69533 | What bitter quarrels are there between the most eminent of all the Fathers and Bishops of the Church? |
A69533 | What confusion will be brought into the Church if Pastors be not obeyed in things lawfull? |
A69533 | What could the enemy of the Church say worse? |
A69533 | What could the most Schismatical Papist say more? |
A69533 | What excellent things doth Thuanus speak of the Presbyterians or Calvinists? |
A69533 | What form and proportion the Temple where we meet shall have, is left to men: whether we shall preach in a Pulpit? |
A69533 | What if all the Churches that have no Prelates were unchurched? |
A69533 | What if he read his prayers, and I say mine without book; or what if he pray in white, and I in black? |
A69533 | What if it be wholesome? |
A69533 | What if these things had all been commanded by a General Council? |
A69533 | What is a City to God any more then a Village, that for it he should make so partial an institution? |
A69533 | What is a Papist if this be none? |
A69533 | What is a Pastor, but the guide of a Congregation in the worship of God? |
A69533 | What man of honour and wit among you, will give every man leave to be your Steward, that hath but folly and pride enough to think himself fit for it? |
A69533 | What need we any more ado? |
A69533 | What personal communion can they have that know not nor see not one aonther? |
A69533 | What power shall such have? |
A69533 | What proportion is there in this way of Government, that an hundred or fifty men shall have as many Governours as a Million? |
A69533 | What then are we arrived at, that have forsaken the whole Church herein? |
A69533 | What want you for the exciting of dull affections, that God hath not provided you already? |
A69533 | What want you in order to the Teaching of our understandings? |
A69533 | What work can you Name that these Elders are appointed to, that by your Confession is not to be done? |
A69533 | What''s Pride and arrogancy, if this be not? |
A69533 | What''s wanting here to make a Sacrament? |
A69533 | What, say they, shall we not keep a Day for Christs Nativity? |
A69533 | Whence had you your Power? |
A69533 | Where hath God set you on such a work, or given you any such commission? |
A69533 | Whether Humane Ceremonies be Necessary or Profitable to the Church? |
A69533 | Whether a stinted Liturgie or Form of Worship be a desireable means for the Peace of these Churches? |
A69533 | Whether a stinted Liturgy, or form of Worship, be a desirable means for the Peace of these Churches? |
A69533 | Whether and how far Church Government is jure Divino?] |
A69533 | Whether bound, or in a Role? |
A69533 | Whether humane ceremonies be necessary or profitable to the church? |
A69533 | Whether it be Necessary or Profitable to the right Order or Peace of the Churches of England, that we Restore the extruded Episcopacy? |
A69533 | Whether it be Necessary or Profitable to the right order or the Peace of the Churches of England that we restore the extruded Episcopacy? |
A69533 | Whether it be necessary or profitable to the right order or peace of the churches of England, that we restore the extruded episcopacy? |
A69533 | Whether only Episcopi gregis, or also Episcopi Episcoporum gregis? |
A69533 | Whether the Gospel shall be preached or no, whether Churches shall be Congregate or no, whether they shall be taught or governed or no? |
A69533 | Which is it that is called by them the Catholick Church? |
A69533 | Who can doubt of this? |
A69533 | Who laid the Churches peace upon your inventions? |
A69533 | Who more ignorant of the Sacraments, then they that rail at them that fit in the act of receiving? |
A69533 | Who more ignorant of the doctrine of the Gospel? |
A69533 | Who were they that rose up against the Bishops, and pulled them down, if there were Unity under them, as you pretend? |
A69533 | Who would have attended your Courts, or submitted to your censures, had it not been for fear of the Secular power? |
A69533 | Who would have thought that those that seemed to disown Recusancy, and persecuted Separatists, should have come to this? |
A69533 | Whoever among us did either swear to, or disobey such Bishops as Bishop Usher there assureth us were the Bishops of the antient Churches? |
A69533 | Why blame you Lay- chancellors, Registers, Proctors,& c. when you set up Lay- elders? |
A69533 | Why did you pull down that which was well planted, and now pretend to commend a better to us? |
A69533 | Why how can there be too many, when people will imploy no more then they need? |
A69533 | Why may not a few of Christs institution, full and clear, that have a promise of his blessing, serve turn without the additions of mens froathy wits? |
A69533 | Why must the Church have no peace but upon such terms? |
A69533 | Why then do you make your selves more work? |
A69533 | Why then do you pretend to follow the Church of England, which Mr. Hickman hath shewed you plainly that you desert? |
A69533 | Why then is there such a distance? |
A69533 | Why then was it never in the Creed? |
A69533 | Why was this, but because they had not many places to celeb ● ate in? |
A69533 | Why what will that do on dissenters that disobey? |
A69533 | Will it not content you that you have freedom your selves to do that which seemeth best in your own eyes, unless all others be of your opinion? |
A69533 | Will they ever be yielded to by so many Churches? |
A69533 | Will they not tell us, we have somewhat else to do? |
A69533 | Will they turn Schismaticks that have spoken against Schismaticks so much? |
A69533 | Will you be fiercer against us then the Iesuites against the Dominicans? |
A69533 | Will you not be confounded before God, when these Questions must be answered? |
A69533 | Will you say, If that will not down with him, he shall have none: let him die? |
A69533 | Will you see the field lost for a point of Order, because you will not do the work of a Commander? |
A69533 | Will your Ceremonies come after and teach us better then all these Means of God will do? |
A69533 | Would no Chu ● ch hold their own, and bear witness against the corruption and innovations of the rest? |
A69533 | Would no Church or no persons in the world, contend for the retention of the Apostolical institutions? |
A69533 | Would they not ruine the Church and do as they have done, if they had power? |
A69533 | Would you have a Directory for Prayer, Confession and Thanksgiving? |
A69533 | Would you have a stated day for Gospel- worship in Commemoration of the work of our Redemption? |
A69533 | Would you have denyed Communion to the Apostles and all the Primitive Church for some hundreds of years, that never used your Book of Common Prayer? |
A69533 | Would you have exciting mystical instituted signs? |
A69533 | Would you have forms of Words for Prayer and Praise? |
A69533 | Would you have it go with us to Eternity? |
A69533 | Would you have men forced to acknowledge and submit to your Episcopacy? |
A69533 | Would you have men taught by a Form of words? |
A69533 | Would you have plain Teaching in season and out of season? |
A69533 | Would you know the difference? |
A69533 | Would you not have a chief Schoolmaster in every School, or Town, for fear the Land should be pestered or overwhelmed with School- masters? |
A69533 | Yea in the s ● me Nation, why may not several congregations have the liberty of differing in a few indifferent ceremonies? |
A69533 | Yea or give them leave to do it, without his commission? |
A69533 | Yea or whether many such Associated may Ordain? |
A69533 | You do all this for Peace with Episcopal Divines: and where is there any of them that is worthy so studious a Pacification? |
A69533 | You would have Liberty your selves now to use a Liturgy: And why should not others have Liberty to disuse it? |
A69533 | You would not so contemptuously cast away mens lives: and will you so contemptuously cast away their souls? |
A69533 | [ Vis ergo me exerte dicere quid sentiam de postremo Grotii libro? |
A69533 | [ Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, why as though living in the world are ye subject to Ordinances? |
A69533 | [ Whether the Order of subject Presbyters might lawfully be created by Bishops or any humane Power? |
A69533 | and Ireneus pleads this against Victors temerity in excommunicating the Asian Churches? |
A69533 | and Sacraments administred or no? |
A69533 | and Salvation to this Chunch? |
A69533 | and another whether it be necessary or lawfull to use them when commanded? |
A69533 | and are not their Laws to us as the word of God, and that word insufficient? |
A69533 | and are we not in the same universal Church, and of the same Religion? |
A69533 | and be delivered in? |
A69533 | and but Customary Christians that come thither? |
A69533 | and by what Scripture Reasons do they prove it? |
A69533 | and consequently nothing Good or Evill, but as Conform or Disconform to the Law? |
A69533 | and for thousands that he never sees or hears of? |
A69533 | and how highly doth he extol the most of their Leaders or Teachers whom he mentioneth? |
A69533 | and if so, Whether they must be Bishops of single Churches, as our Parishes are, or a multitude of Churches, as Diocess ● s are? |
A69533 | and if you never received more, why should you use it?] |
A69533 | and is it them, or is it the Presbyters? |
A69533 | and long to be reconciled to them, with whom you must there so harmoniously accord? |
A69533 | and maintain brotherly Charity, and such a correspondency, as may conduce to our mutual preservation and edification? |
A69533 | and might have had him so many years more if death had not cut him off? |
A69533 | and so can not obey them in faith? |
A69533 | and so that assisting Ruled Presbyters were then needless? |
A69533 | and take each other for the Churches of Christ? |
A69533 | and that a Bishop and an Altar are made correlatives? |
A69533 | and that is, whether we shall give up our Countries to the Dev ● l or no? |
A69533 | and the souls of millions cast away, and sacrificed to your opinions, or Peace? |
A69533 | and to force them to that which will not down with them? |
A69533 | and unless this were so, whence came it else, that a Schismatical Bishop was said constituere or collocare aliud Altare? |
A69533 | and what a case would you bring this Nation in? |
A69533 | and what grape the wine shall be made of? |
A69533 | and what shall be its shape? |
A69533 | and what sort of Bishops it is that they mean? |
A69533 | and what vessell it shall stand in? |
A69533 | and when all this was done at the first plantation of the Gospel? |
A69533 | and whether he be the fittest person( or fit at least) for the particular charge to which he is called? |
A69533 | and whether he engage not himself in a course of sin, and be not guilty as Vzza of medling with the Ark unlawfully? |
A69533 | and whether the Order of Bishops might lawfully be created for the avoiding of Schism by the consent of Presbyters? |
A69533 | and which of them are you hence obliged to honour for their works sake? |
A69533 | and who required this at your hands? |
A69533 | and why should men trouble the peace of the Church? |
A69533 | and will not rather choose your Stewards your selves? |
A69533 | and will you not be reconciled, nor dwell with us in Heaven? |
A69533 | and yet Polycarp and the B ● shop of Rome held communion for all their differences? |
A69533 | as if all the Ministers from the Apostles dayes till now, had come in at a wrong door, and wanted a true Calling? |
A69533 | before King Edwards daies? |
A69533 | but whether it must be theirs, and none but theirs? |
A69533 | is a Parish Bishoprick so great a prize for our Ambition, and yet is it so contemptible to yours? |
A69533 | may we not yet give each other the right hand of fellowship? |
A69533 | must I needs exercise or press a Gesture, vesture or such Ceremonie, when I see it tendeth to the destruction of my flock? |
A69533 | must I therefore be guilty of his death by denying him my necessary help, because the Magistrate forbiddeth me? |
A69533 | must all think so, or else be Schismaticks? |
A69533 | nay how is his Law perfect else that doth omit it? |
A69533 | no communion of Saints, but with the separating party of the Prelates? |
A69533 | or Metropolitans by Bishops?] |
A69533 | or how many of you have they admonished? |
A69533 | or of Magistrates to promote such and put them on? |
A69533 | or of a Holy Gracious soul? |
A69533 | or only, no Divine Sacrament? |
A69533 | or that his Predecessors were not so? |
A69533 | or the Duty of the People to seek and choose such, or of Pastors to ordain such? |
A69533 | or to be examined by him in order to a baptism or Lords supper? |
A69533 | or was it nothing but Ceremonial which Coppinger,& c. designed against the lives of the whole privy Council, and against the person of the Queen? |
A69533 | or was prohibited, or any way hindered from it by any force? |
A69533 | or what if he kneel in receiving the Eucharist, and I sit or stand? |
A69533 | or whether the Bishops of single Churches may not suffice, at least as to the Being of our office? |
A69533 | or yet that Christian Religion was one thing then, and another thing now? |
A69533 | shall one use one gesture, and another use another? |
A69533 | shall they depose the Bishops or Presbyters that disobey them? |
A69533 | shall we be so unreverent as not to kneel when we receive,& c? |
A69533 | shall we so soon be turning back to Aegypt? |
A69533 | that live not together, nor worship God together? |
A69533 | to the Reformed Pastor, that the Power of Discipline was given them?] |
A69533 | were not Bishop Usher, Andrews, Davenant, Hall, and others of their mind, as learned pious men as any whose Authority you can urge against them? |
A69533 | were not Cartwright, and Travers, and Wentworth, and Egerton, and other Presbyterian Ministers privy to the plot?] |
A69533 | were the then Bishops in England that consented in that work, the whole Church of Christ on earth? |
A69533 | were we not well enough before? |
A69533 | what confusion will this be? |
A69533 | what vessel the Bread shall be put in? |
A69533 | what will not be a Controversie among learned men? |
A69533 | when all that all of us can do is too little, what would be done if so many and such were laid aside? |
A69533 | where we shall read? |
A69533 | whether a cup, or other like vessel? |
A69533 | whether it shall be round, or long, or square? |
A69533 | whether it shall have rails, or no rails? |
A69533 | whether it shall stand in the East or West end of the Temple, or the middle? |
A69533 | whether many Churches shall use one and the same form of words, or various? |
A69533 | whether of silver, wood, or pewter,& c? |
A69533 | whether our Sermons, and Catechisms, and Confessions of faith, shall be a studied or prescribed form of words, or the matter and method only studied? |
A69533 | whether our premeditated prayers shall be expressed in our own words, or such as are prescribed us by others? |
A69533 | whether such forms shall be expressed in Scripture words or not? |
A69533 | whether the Bread be of wheat or other convenient grain? |
A69533 | whether we shall receive the Lords supper at a Table, or in our seats, and whether the Table shall be of wood or stone? |
A69533 | whether we shall sing the Psalms of David, or compose any Evangelical Hymns our selves? |
A69533 | which you will except? |
A69533 | why else do all the most obstina ● ely wicked maligne us as their enemies, though we never did them wrong? |
A69533 | why should such a diversity be of Power to endanger the dissolving of the bond of brotherhood? |
A69533 | why what is that but to perswade the people, and Authoritatively require them, to avoid ▪ and withdraw from such a Pastor, if the Cause be manifest? |
A69533 | why would you disturb our peace, to please the adversaries? |
A69533 | will you still make things indifferent, necessary? |
A69533 | will you therefore uncharitably refuse communion with them? |
A69533 | would you have denyed the Apostles their liberty herein? |
A69533 | yea and the most ungodly too? |
A69533 | yea because we work not in possibilities? |
A69533 | yea who can? |
A69533 | 〈 ◊ 〉 they not meer formalists and enemies to practical Godliness? |
A26919 | & c. what caused thee to venture upon the consuming fire? |
A26919 | & c.[ Who is this that darkeneth Counsel by words without knowledge? |
A26919 | 1. Who was it that deprived you of your friend? |
A26919 | 12, 15, 17. Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand? |
A26919 | 19. and Uzzah but for touching it? |
A26919 | 22 ▪ Are thy straits too great? |
A26919 | 25 ▪] O what hath Almightiness done in the world? |
A26919 | 27. and is he absent from thee? |
A26919 | 28. and what would we have more? |
A26919 | 30] He answereth them[ Do ye now believe? |
A26919 | 38. should it not be our resolution, whose wills are so misguided and corrupt? |
A26919 | 7. Who makes thee to differ? |
A26919 | A Dog will follow him that feedeth him: his eye will be upon his Master: And shall we live upon God, and yet forget and disregard him? |
A26919 | Ah foolish Heart, that hast thought of it[ Where is that place, that Cave or Desert, where I might soonest find thee, and fullest enjoy thee? |
A26919 | Ah my God, how justly mayest thou withhold that Love which I thus undervalue; and refuse that converse which I have first refused? |
A26919 | Alas what silly things are these, in comparison of what your souls are capable of? |
A26919 | All Creatures are but our provision in the way to this Eternity: And therefore if there were no Eternity, what should we do with them? |
A26919 | Am I in Gods stead that hath withheld thy desire from thee? |
A26919 | And are these the wise and wholsome methods of our great Physician? |
A26919 | And can God do any thing injuriously or amiss? |
A26919 | And can all this signifie no more but a common bare proposal of truth and good to the intellect and will; even such as ignorant and wicked men have? |
A26919 | And can he be otherwise to thee, when thou lovest not his converse or company, and carest not how long thou art from him in the world? |
A26919 | And can man teach like God? |
A26919 | And can we know another better then our selves? |
A26919 | And consequently doth it not tend to the vilifying of the Attribute of Holiness in God, when the Image and effect of it is so extenuated? |
A26919 | And did you not renounce it upon sufficient cause? |
A26919 | And do you draw back, as if you repented of your Covenant? |
A26919 | And do you think that any of them all, is as wise as God? |
A26919 | And dost thou see a Creature do so much, and wilt thou not believe as much of the Creator? |
A26919 | And doth it not amaze you to see whither it is that you are going? |
A26919 | And doth it not tend to the contempt of Heaven it self, whose state of felicity consisteth much in perfect Holiness? |
A26919 | And fearest thou not the face of the Almighty? |
A26919 | And have I not yet found so much Love and Goodness in thee my dear and blessed God, as to be willing to converse alone with thee? |
A26919 | And have you fixed on those Hopes with so great reason and deliberation, and will you now draw back and be slack in the prosecution of them? |
A26919 | And he denyeth all the Graces of the Spirit: For what use is there for Faith, if the object of it be a falshood? |
A26919 | And how apt to give occasion of such mistakes and cutting censures? |
A26919 | And how apt to give occasion of such offence? |
A26919 | And how is that but by our thoughts? |
A26919 | And how little Reason then have Christians, to shun such sufferings, by unlawful means, which turn to their so great advantage? |
A26919 | And how much better you found your Fathers house, than ever you had found your sinful state? |
A26919 | And how much sweeter his service was than you did before believe? |
A26919 | And how much you rejoyced in his Love and entertainment? |
A26919 | And how should he( properly and Antecedently) be indebted to and for his Own? |
A26919 | And if some perplex themselves by their errour, doth it follow that therefore the Truth is not comfortable? |
A26919 | And if you will obey your Physition before your Appetite, for your health or life, should you not obey God before it for your Salvation? |
A26919 | And is it likely that we that are enemies to holiness should do more to our own Sanctification, then the Holy Ghost? |
A26919 | And is it not just that God and Heaven should shut out you? |
A26919 | And is it possible for worse then this to be found in man? |
A26919 | And is not eternity long enough for you to enjoy your friends in? |
A26919 | And is this the difference between the Love of man and of God? |
A26919 | And is this the worst that Death can do? |
A26919 | And shall I be afraid of this? |
A26919 | And shall I not trust the Blessed God, that is Love it self and Infinitely good? |
A26919 | And shall any be so ungrateful as to say therefore that God doth cause their sin? |
A26919 | And shall this disturb us in Divinity, or be imputed to it? |
A26919 | And shall transitory vanity be minded by you above Eternity? |
A26919 | And shall we delight more to converse with brutes and incarnate devils, than with God? |
A26919 | And shall we not rather be ruled by him, than by our brutish appetites? |
A26919 | And shall we now look back? |
A26919 | And should all mankind without exception, tast of the punishment of sin, if they had no participation of the guilt? |
A26919 | And should not the soul adhere to him, where it is sure to find nothing but simple, pure and unmixed good? |
A26919 | And that all goes well with you while you can do thus, however the world doth esteem or use you? |
A26919 | And that he would deny us all those hurtful pleasures which hinder us from pleasing him, or from making him and his waies our chiefest pleasure? |
A26919 | And that he would permit us no such creature- converse, as hinderth our converse with him? |
A26919 | And therefore that passively all the Creatures have more respect to him by far then to one another? |
A26919 | And thinkest thou to comprehend God, that perfectly comprehendest nothing? |
A26919 | And were they not presented to Christ as a Saviour, when he took them in his arms and blessed them, and said, Of such is the Kingdom of God? |
A26919 | And what of that? |
A26919 | And which is more injurious to God? |
A26919 | And which of these do you follow? |
A26919 | And which of us see not reason to be distrustful of our selves? |
A26919 | And who knoweth the will of God like God? |
A26919 | And who might not find that would use his Reason, that all things below are vanity and vexation? |
A26919 | And who will travel to a place that is not, or a City that is nowhere but in his brains, besides a mad man? |
A26919 | And who would feed on such poor delights that hath tasted the graciousness of the Lord? |
A26919 | And who would have a God that can neither please us, nor be pleased? |
A26919 | And whom should Children dwell with, but with their Father? |
A26919 | And why doth it seem to thee improbable? |
A26919 | And why should you think he will be careless of his own? |
A26919 | And will you grow again neglective of him? |
A26919 | And will you now live as strangely and neglectfully towards him, as if those daies were quite forgotten? |
A26919 | And will you say of any man that he is wiser than God? |
A26919 | And will you venture on the advice of a brutish appetite, and refuse the counsel of the all knowing God? |
A26919 | And wilt thou be cold and careless in the sight of God? |
A26919 | And wilt thou feed on lustful, or covetous, or malicious, or unbelieving Thoughts, in the eye of God? |
A26919 | And wilt thou more restrain the Infinite God that is the Maker, Light, and Life of all? |
A26919 | And would not sound Humiliation do more then Arguments to cure this great mistake? |
A26919 | And would you have them under these again? |
A26919 | And would you have your friends to be as far from Rest as you? |
A26919 | And yet am I so loth to die? |
A26919 | And yet is the dung and dotage of the world enough? |
A26919 | And yet will you not come that may be welcome? |
A26919 | Are they better then God? |
A26919 | Are they not men, and sinners? |
A26919 | Are we ever in such straits, that God knows not how to bring us out? |
A26919 | Are you afraid of Goodness? |
A26919 | Are you better here, then you shall be with God? |
A26919 | Are you better than David that had an Achitophel? |
A26919 | Are you better than God? |
A26919 | Are you better then Job, or David, or Christ? |
A26919 | Are you not groaning from day to day your selves? |
A26919 | Are you not prone to overvalue and overlove your friends? |
A26919 | Are you walking with God when you are hating him in his Holiness, his Justice, his Word and Waies, and hating all that seriously love and seek him? |
A26919 | Are your houses, or lands, or friends, or pleasures, or any thing better then Infinite Goodness? |
A26919 | Art thou weary of Labours, either of the mind or body? |
A26919 | As Christ said to his Disciples here in the case of Believing, we may say to our selves in that and other cases: Do we now Believe? |
A26919 | But can you say you are alone while you are with God? |
A26919 | But doth not God Will that sin Eventually shall not be? |
A26919 | But how can God be fit for mortals to converse with, when they see him not, and are infinitely below him? |
A26919 | But how can sin Eventually be, if God decree it not, seeing all Events are from his Will? |
A26919 | But how comfortable is it when the soul can say[ I know whom I have believed? |
A26919 | But how is he with us? |
A26919 | But if it belong not to the soundness and integrity of humane Nature to be Holy, then why did God give him Grace to make him so? |
A26919 | But if they be foolish, ungodly and dishonest, how loathsome is their conversation? |
A26919 | But is he esteemed as your God, if he have not the Command, and if he have not the precedency of his creatures? |
A26919 | But perhaps you will say, that this is not easily attained: How shall we know that he is our friend? |
A26919 | But the most desirable society is no solitude: saith Hierome[ Infinita eremi vastitas te terret? |
A26919 | But what Master loveth to see his servant sit down and Think when he should be at work? |
A26919 | But what is the Impress that the Being of God must make upon the Soul? |
A26919 | But what need we further proof when we have the common experience of all the world? |
A26919 | But where is thy sting when sin is gone? |
A26919 | But will the hypocrite delight himself in the Almighty, or will he alwaies call upon God? |
A26919 | But you will say, Is there any that hold such odious doctrines? |
A26919 | But, you''l say, If God had rather men did not sin, why doth he not hinder it? |
A26919 | CHristians, expect to be conformed to your Lord in this part of his Humiliation also: Are your friends yet fast and friendly to you? |
A26919 | Can I draw near to judgement? |
A26919 | Can I think of dying? |
A26919 | Can I think of everlasting joyes in Heaven? |
A26919 | Can any thing be more sure, then that God is the Righteous Governour of the world? |
A26919 | Can any thing give that which it hath not? |
A26919 | Can he give Bread also? |
A26919 | Can he provide Flesh?] |
A26919 | Can he that is most neerly present with thy thoughts, be regardless of them? |
A26919 | Can not we be content to take up short in this life, when we believe Eternity? |
A26919 | Can not you see that which all the world revealeth? |
A26919 | Can the side that God is on be conquered? |
A26919 | Can two walk together except they be agreed? |
A26919 | Can two walk tother unless they be agreed? |
A26919 | Can we be ignorant of him, when the whole Creation is our Teacher? |
A26919 | Can we forget him, when all the world are our remembrancers? |
A26919 | Can we pass him by that is everywhere present, and by every Creature represented to us? |
A26919 | Can we stop our ears against the voice of Heaven and Earth? |
A26919 | Can you so much miss them for one day, that must live with them to all eternity? |
A26919 | Can you take pleasure in dwelling with the consuming fire? |
A26919 | Can you think your Children and Friends that are with Christ, are not safer and better than those that yet remain with you? |
A26919 | Canst thou not afford to work out the day light of this life, when thou must Rest with Christ to all Eternity? |
A26919 | Canst thou not run with patience so short a race, when thou lookest to so long a Rest? |
A26919 | Canst thou not watch one hour with Christ, that must Reign with him to all Eternity? |
A26919 | Could I not Love, or Think, or Feel at all, methinks I were less dead than now? |
A26919 | Could you then aggravate it so many waies( and justly) and now do you justifie or extenuate it? |
A26919 | Dare you contend against the Holy Ghost for the integrity of your natures, or the honour of your cure? |
A26919 | Dare you think that there was wanting either wisdom or goodness, justice or mercy in Gods disposal of your friend? |
A26919 | Did not God, and Heaven deserve more of your serious thoughts then any thing else that ever they were employed on? |
A26919 | Did not he that gave him you take him from you? |
A26919 | Did not that[ Now] c ● me ● ● me enough which was the entrance of Eternity? |
A26919 | Did you ever meet with any man of them, that durst say he was wiser than God himself? |
A26919 | Did you improve your friends while you had them? |
A26919 | Did you not often joyn in prayer with them, for deliverance from malice, calamities, troubles, imperfections, temptations and sin? |
A26919 | Did you not shut heaven it self out of your thoughts, when you shut out God? |
A26919 | Didst thou not know that as he is Merciful, so he is Jealous, Holy, Just and Terrible? |
A26919 | Didst thou not know who it was thou hadst to do with? |
A26919 | Do not all his mercies require your acknowledgement? |
A26919 | Do not the constant Prayers of all that have but a shew of godliness contradict the doctrine which I am contradicting? |
A26919 | Do we now pray with ferveur, and pour out our souls enlargedly to God? |
A26919 | Do we now rejoyce in the perswasions of the Love of God? |
A26919 | Do you begin to think that the world is fitter to be your God or Happiness? |
A26919 | Do you converse with Father or Mother? |
A26919 | Do you deal worthily with God? |
A26919 | Do you delight in his Word, and meditate on it? |
A26919 | Do you love the Communion of Saints? |
A26919 | Do you love to be employed in thanking him for his Mercies, and in praising him, and declaring the glory of his attributes and works? |
A26919 | Do you mou ● n that they are taken hence? |
A26919 | Do you not know that there is an enmity in every unrenewed heart against sanctification till God remove it? |
A26919 | Do you not remember how glad you were, when you first believed that he pardoned and accepted you? |
A26919 | Do you not seem to forget both where you are your selves, and where you must shortly and for ever live? |
A26919 | Do you now grow familiar with a life so like to that whirh was once your state of death? |
A26919 | Do you really live as in his presence? |
A26919 | Do you so highly value your friends for God, or for them, or for your selves, in the final consideration? |
A26919 | Do you study and observe him in his works? |
A26919 | Do you take more pleasure, with the Prodigal, to feed swine, and to feed with swine, then to dwell at home with your heavenly Father? |
A26919 | Do you think it is for the Hurt or the Good of your friend, that he is removed hence? |
A26919 | Do you think that earth is better than heaven for you your self? |
A26919 | Do you think that the Will of ignorant, fleshly, sinful man, is fitter to be the Rule of Goodness, then the Will of God? |
A26919 | Do you trust upon his Word as your security for your everlasting hopes and happiness? |
A26919 | Do you understand your selves in this? |
A26919 | Dost thou begin to shrinke at sufferings for Christ, when thou must be in Glory with him for ever? |
A26919 | Dost thou begin to think hatdly of the dealing of the Lord, because his people are here afflicted, and made the scorn and by- word of the world? |
A26919 | Dost thou begin to 〈 … 〉 of Christ, o ● the truth of his promises, because he doth 〈 … 〉? |
A26919 | Dost thou stagger at the length or strength of thy temptations? |
A26919 | Dost thou think it improbable that ever all thy sins should be conquered? |
A26919 | Doth God do as much to illuminate, teach, and sanctifie them that never are illuminated, or taught, and sanctified, as them that are? |
A26919 | Doth God therefore absolve him? |
A26919 | Doth he not say, that[ the Toughts of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord? |
A26919 | Doth it not imply that all have need of a Sanctifier, and must be engaged to that end in Covenant with the Sanctifier? |
A26919 | Doth it not signifie more then the company of all men in the world? |
A26919 | Doth it withhold its light from any Creature that can see, and say, I will not shine on things so base? |
A26919 | Doth not the sun enlighten the smallest bird, and crawling vermine, as well as the greatest prince on earth? |
A26919 | Doth the world use your selves so well and kindly, as that you should be sorry that your friends partake not of the feast? |
A26919 | Draw neer to God, and have no low undervaluing thoughts of his Infinite Goodness; For[ How great is his Goodness and how great is his Beauty? |
A26919 | For of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall he be thought worthy that hath trodden under foot the Son of God?] |
A26919 | For to what end should he mediate for them? |
A26919 | For what can we render to him but his Own? |
A26919 | For what hath he to seek but the pleasing of his flesh, that thinks he hath no God to seek or please, or no future reward or punishment to expect? |
A26919 | For who hath known the mind of the Lord without his Revelation? |
A26919 | For who maketh thee to differ? |
A26919 | For whom should they all be used but for him from whom we have them? |
A26919 | For ● s he wise, that knoweth not whether Heaven or Earth be better? |
A26919 | Gird up thy loins like a man, for I will demand of thee, and answer thou me,& c.] alas, how soon would he non- plus and confound us? |
A26919 | Had we Davids heart, what songs of Praise would Mercy teach us to indite? |
A26919 | Hast thou cast thy self into a sleepy senseless disease, and wilt thou argue thence against Eternity? |
A26919 | Hath my Night no Day? |
A26919 | Have any of them, or all, already failed you? |
A26919 | Have you any hopes of living with God for ever, or not? |
A26919 | Have you done that for your nearest friend, which God hath done for him and you, and all men? |
A26919 | Have you gone so far in the way to Heaven, and do you now begin to look behind you, as if you were about to change your mind? |
A26919 | Have you laid them out on any thing that more concerned you? |
A26919 | Have you not perceived that this is the design and meaning of his afflicting and disappointing providences? |
A26919 | Have you such business as this with any other? |
A26919 | He can easily take away the meat, and drink, and riches, and health, and life which thou abusest; And wouldst thou have him do it? |
A26919 | He doth beset thee before and behind, and layeth his hand upon thee; Whither wilt thou go from his spirit, or whither wilt thou fly from his presence? |
A26919 | He feeds you, he cloatheth you, he maintaineth you, he gives you life and breath, and all things; and yet can you overlook him or forget him? |
A26919 | He that Loveth a Christian as a Christian; or he that Loveth him but as one of his party or opinion? |
A26919 | He that is One in the Catholike Body; Or he that disowneth Communion with the far greatest part of the body? |
A26919 | How affectionately doth thy Maker call himself the Husband of his people? |
A26919 | How affectionately should we recount the mercies of our youth and riper age? |
A26919 | How apt are we to censure one another, and to misinterpret the words and actions of our friends? |
A26919 | How came your Fathers presence to be so grievous to you? |
A26919 | How can any of them perish, when the Almighty is engaged for their salvation? |
A26919 | How can you have room for so many thoughts on fading things, when you have an Eternity to think on? |
A26919 | How certainly would they have come to Heaven, if this had been the ▪ way? |
A26919 | How closely and delightfully would you converse with such a blessed friend, if you rightly valued him? |
A26919 | How dreadful is this place? |
A26919 | How easily can Satan set fire on the tinder which he findeth in the best and gentlest natures, if God permit him? |
A26919 | How excellent a man was Gregory Nazianzene, and highly valued in the Church? |
A26919 | How far are you above the worldlings happiness, when you are nigh to God? |
A26919 | How glad should we be that we may employ our thoughts on so high and excellent an object? |
A26919 | How glad should we be to find him willing and ready to entertain us? |
A26919 | How glad would men be in the beginning of a war to know which side will prove the stronger, that they may joyn with that? |
A26919 | How highly was Athanasius esteemed? |
A26919 | How is our Faith, and Love, and Desire, and Trust, and Joy, and Hope to be exercised but by our cogitations? |
A26919 | How know you what great calamity might have bifallen your friend, if he had lived as long as you desired? |
A26919 | How know you what sin your friend might have fallen into, if he had lived as long as you would have him? |
A26919 | How know you what unkindness to your self, your dearest friend might have been guilty of? |
A26919 | How little cause then have all the Churches enemies to triumph, that can never shut up a true believer from the presence of his God? |
A26919 | How long will you think with pleasure on such fading transitory things? |
A26919 | How odious then should that be to us, that is so bad as not to come from God? |
A26919 | How patiently hath he born with me, since I thought he would never have put up more? |
A26919 | How short is the suffering? |
A26919 | How then can you say that there is no such thing, or that we are not capable of it, when it is the case of so many before your eyes? |
A26919 | How then is the Prayer of the Spirit within us distinguished from our Prayer? |
A26919 | I deny not but this happily necessitated Holiness is best in it self, and therefore will be our state in Heaven; but what is there of Tryal in it? |
A26919 | I had almost said[ Lord, let me never Love more till I can Love thee? |
A26919 | If God be God to thee, he is All in all to thee; and then should not his presence be instead of all? |
A26919 | If God can not content me, and be not enough for me, how is he then my God? |
A26919 | If Heaven be no more worth to thee, art thou not as bad as Judas, that for thirty pieces of silver would sell his Lord? |
A26919 | If Passion arise and begin to discompose us, how powerfully will the presence of God rebuke it? |
A26919 | If all men in the world were dead save one, would the Sun any more illuminate that one then now it doth? |
A26919 | If cunning Serpents are too subtle for us, do we think that they can overwit the Lord? |
A26919 | If he be a Father, where is his Love and Trust? |
A26919 | If it was for God, what reason of trouble have you, that God hath disposed of them, according to his wisdome and unerring will? |
A26919 | If less, or worse, how could it make them Greater or Better then it self? |
A26919 | If so, is not this the meetest remedy for your disease? |
A26919 | If there be no other life and happiness Everlasting, what are souls good for? |
A26919 | If these had been Godliness, how Godly would they have been? |
A26919 | If worldly love or carnal lust should stir ● n such a one, how powerfully would the terrours of the Lord repress it? |
A26919 | If you are not, look over what I have here said, and tell your consciences, Do you walk with God? |
A26919 | If you are tempted to Lust, will you ask the flesh that tempteth you whether you should yield? |
A26919 | If you ask me, How then you should conceive of God, if not in any Bodily shape? |
A26919 | If you ask me, in what cases then this Dominion is exercised? |
A26919 | If you be asked, who you are now speaking for, or spending your time for, or for whom you do expend your wealth?] |
A26919 | If you dare not say so, how dare you hear them and believe them against the Word of God? |
A26919 | If you go downward, and say that men are made to govern brutes, then what are brutes made for, unless to dung the earth? |
A26919 | If you say, But how is the pleasure of Gods will attained from the wicked that break his Laws, and displease his will? |
A26919 | In a word, do you not daily pray for effectual grace, that shall infallibly procure your desired ends? |
A26919 | In what? |
A26919 | Is God so low, so little, so undeserving, to be so oft and easily forgotten, and so hardly and so sleightly remembred? |
A26919 | Is he grown modest, or moderate, or holy, or just? |
A26919 | Is he not as sufficient for thee, and as really present with thee, as if he had no other creature else? |
A26919 | Is he reconciled to Christ, to Scripture, to Godliness, or to the Godly? |
A26919 | Is he the ultimate End of the main intentions, design, and industry of your lives? |
A26919 | Is his presence nothing to you? |
A26919 | Is it a matter to be so much lamented that God hath prevented their greater miseries and wo? |
A26919 | Is it in eating and drinking and sleeping? |
A26919 | Is it not a contradiction to be happy in the fruition of God, and yet not to mind him, desire him, or seek him? |
A26919 | Is it not as easie to God as to cause the earth to stand on nothing, and the ● un to run its daily course? |
A26919 | Is it not some unchild- like carriage? |
A26919 | Is it the goodness of God in himself and unto you, that draweth up your hearts to him in Love? |
A26919 | Is it to be Happy here? |
A26919 | Is not Eternity long enough for thy Rest? |
A26919 | Is not God Great enough to command and take up your chiefest cogitations? |
A26919 | Is not God and Glory worthy of thy thoughts, and all thy service? |
A26919 | Is not Heaven enough to find them work, and afford them satisfaction and delight? |
A26919 | Is not a Fathers presence consolatory, because some children are afraid of their Fathers, that know them not because of some disguise? |
A26919 | Is not the glory of it answerable to those high expressions? |
A26919 | Is the world a place of Rest or trouble to you? |
A26919 | Is there any strictness amiable or desirable, except a strict Conformity to God? |
A26919 | Is there any thing else that is finally worthy of the highest actions of our souls? |
A26919 | Is there any thing so false, or foul, or wicked, that Satan will not teach his followers? |
A26919 | Is there not enough in that word to drive back all the cares and pleasures, that importune your minds to forget your God? |
A26919 | Is there not enough in that word to quicken you up in your greatest dulness? |
A26919 | Is this your case? |
A26919 | Is thy sinful lust, and gain, and mirth, and gluttony and excess of drink, a price to set upon Eternity? |
A26919 | Is your dependence on him as your great benefactor, and do you receive your mercies as his gifts? |
A26919 | Is your honour and wealth, and fleshly delights aed sports enough? |
A26919 | It had been better for thee that all the world had been offended with thee, even men and Angels, great and small, than the most Dreadful God? |
A26919 | It were a shame to them to be so plain as Pharaoh, and to say, Who is the Lord? |
A26919 | Less dead, if dead, than now I am alive? |
A26919 | Maist thou not see as well by the light of it now, as if it had never another to enlighten? |
A26919 | Mark what you are minding all the day, while you are neglecting God: Is it not something that you have renounced? |
A26919 | May not God do with his own, as he list? |
A26919 | Must he be taken to be a partaker in thy sin, because he doth not strike thee dead, or lame, or speechless, or disable thee from sinning? |
A26919 | Must it needs therefore follow that he made not all things for himself, but for the creature finally? |
A26919 | Must unfaithfulness to you be made more hainous, than that unfaithfulness to him, which yet you daily see and sleight? |
A26919 | My tears have been my meat day and night while they continually say unto me, Where is thy God?] |
A26919 | Nay, did it not cost you the smart of some afflictions, before you would be made so wise? |
A26919 | Nay, may you not remember also what sorrow you had in the day of your Repentance, for your forsaking and neglecting God so long? |
A26919 | Nay, shall he be neglected that is alwaies with you? |
A26919 | Nor think more on any thing till I can more willingly think of thee?] |
A26919 | O Blessed people that have the Almighty on their side, and engaged with them against their enemies, and to do their works, and answer their desires? |
A26919 | O how plainly hath he declared that he loveth me, in the strange condescention, the sufferings, death, and intercession of his Son? |
A26919 | O how unspeakable is the Love of God, that 〈 … 〉 eet a life for his servants, even in their warfare 〈 … 〉 ge in this world? |
A26919 | O what a change was it that Sanctification made? |
A26919 | O why should sense so much affect us, and faith, and Knowledge work no more? |
A26919 | Oh what a Power is that which made the world of nothing? |
A26919 | Oh what a match have the miserable Enemies of the Church? |
A26919 | One thing more I will propound yet to the contrary- minded; Can they say that any Infants are saved or not? |
A26919 | Or can I expect the translation of Henoch or the Chariot of Elias? |
A26919 | Or fitter to supply thy wants? |
A26919 | Or have you faln again in love with fleshly pleasures, and some vanity of the world? |
A26919 | Or have you had enough of God and Godliness? |
A26919 | Or how can he be a Physicion to them that never were sick? |
A26919 | Or how can he wash them that were never unclean? |
A26919 | Or is his Kingdom of darkness at an end? |
A26919 | Or is their deliverance become your grief? |
A26919 | Or more obliged to me? |
A26919 | Or rather, are you not apter to see and aggravate the wrong that others do to you, than that which you have done to others? |
A26919 | Or shall he thus be saved? |
A26919 | Or shall we know all that is to be known in Heaven, before we enjoy all that is to be enjoyed in Heaven? |
A26919 | Or to use his Thoughts only to grieve and vex himself for his faults, but not to mend them? |
A26919 | Or what is it now, or like to be hereafter to your selves? |
A26919 | Or will you ask the Flesh, by what means you may subdue it and become spiritual? |
A26919 | Or will you ask the blind ungodly world, what course you should take to please the Lord? |
A26919 | Or will you ever have Rest, if you can not have Rest in the will of God? |
A26919 | Or wisely for your selves? |
A26919 | Remember whilst you live, the Love of your espousals: Was God so good to you at the first, and holiness so desirable? |
A26919 | Seneca could say[ Quid prodest totius regionis silentium, si affectus fremunt? |
A26919 | Shall I have any more comfort in present friends than in others? |
A26919 | Shall any man be accounted w ● le, that is not wise for Eternal happiness? |
A26919 | Shall dust and ashes judge the Lord? |
A26919 | Shall he not see that made and illuminateth the eye? |
A26919 | Shall we be ignorant of the members of our Body? |
A26919 | Shall we distrust a Father? |
A26919 | Shall we flag or shrink that have Omnipotency on our side? |
A26919 | Shall we now grow weary of walking with God, and begin to look to the things behind us? |
A26919 | Should not all the worms on earth stand by, while the Glorious God doth call you to him, and offer you the honour and happiness of his converse? |
A26919 | Should not every gracious humble soul, be more enclined to magnifie God then himself? |
A26919 | Sinners, be awakened by the Call of God; Do you know where you are, and what you do? |
A26919 | Some will forsake God: what wonder then if they forsake you? |
A26919 | That every mouth may be stopped; and why doth not the Law of works exclude boasting but only the Law of faith? |
A26919 | The heart of the Ungodly saith to God, Depart from us: for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes; what is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
A26919 | Then what hath God to do in governing the world, if he be pleased and displeased with nothing that men do, or with good and evil actions equally? |
A26919 | These are the things behind us, which we turned our back on when we consented to the Covenant; and are they now grown better? |
A26919 | Thy Father loveth thy very moans and tears: but how much more doth he love thy Thanks and Praise? |
A26919 | To day that house, that land is thine; but canst thou say, it shall be thine to morrow? |
A26919 | To what end should men obey or suffer, for any such end that''s not attainable? |
A26919 | To what purpose should men study, or read, or hear, or pray, or use either Sacraments or any other means, for an End that is not to be had? |
A26919 | To whom are you most subject? |
A26919 | To whom then in reason should you so much apply your selves as unto him? |
A26919 | To whom were they ever so constant as not to fail them? |
A26919 | To whom will you liken God? |
A26919 | Trust also in God as one that is assured, that no Enemy is too strong for the Almighty ▪ Alas, what is an Army of Dust to Omnipotency? |
A26919 | Was Christ forsaken in his extremity by his own Disciples, to teach us what to expect, or bear? |
A26919 | Was any friend so near to me as my self? |
A26919 | Was it not a work of your most serious deliberation? |
A26919 | Was it not his Lord and owner that call''d him home? |
A26919 | Was it not the weak Christian that was the stricter, in point of meats and drinks and dayes? |
A26919 | Was it then so hainous a sin in your eyes? |
A26919 | We have seen and do testifie that the Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world] And from what doth he save them? |
A26919 | Were you then ready to sink under the burden of it? |
A26919 | What Love appeareth in his precious promises, and the glorious provisions he hath made for me with himself to all eternity? |
A26919 | What Love hath he declared in in the course of his providences? |
A26919 | What Love hath he declared in the communications of his Spirit, and the operations of his Grace, and the near relations into which he brought me? |
A26919 | What are those things that take thee up? |
A26919 | What can be more agreeable to the nature of man, then to be rational and wise, and to live in the purest exercise of Reason? |
A26919 | What comfort can you think such friends if they had survived, would have found on earth? |
A26919 | What do those wretches do with their lives, that think they have no God to serve and seek, or future happiness to attain? |
A26919 | What good will Reading a Chapter in the Bible do to any one that never Thinketh on it? |
A26919 | What if your thoughts were employed for preferment, wealth and honour in the world? |
A26919 | What madness caused thee to make a mock at sin and hell, and to play with the vengeance of the Almighty? |
A26919 | What mean those texts, if they consute not this unthankful opinion? |
A26919 | What motive hath any man to exalt himself, and sin again the Holy Ghost by such an extenuation of his saving grace? |
A26919 | What now would the Atheist have it to be? |
A26919 | What person more generally esteemed and honoured for learning, piety and peaceableness then Melanchthon? |
A26919 | What pleasure is it to see the bussles of a Bedlam world? |
A26919 | What shall restrain men from killing Kings, or any villany, if once the bond of oatht be nullified? |
A26919 | What should I do with my Books, but to learn the way to this Eternity? |
A26919 | What should I do with my Reason ▪ if I had no higher an end then beasts? |
A26919 | What should a people so Redeemed esteem too much or too dear for God? |
A26919 | What stinking breath is in their profane and filthy language? |
A26919 | What sweet thoughts would Mercy breed and feed in our minds when we are alone? |
A26919 | What then are the Heavens? |
A26919 | What was the glory that God shewed unto Moses, and the tast of Heaven that he gave him upon Earth? |
A26919 | What was the world to your friends while they did enjoy it? |
A26919 | What will draw the heart of man if Goodness and infinite Goodness will not? |
A26919 | What wouldst thou do in want or pain if God stood by? |
A26919 | What? |
A26919 | When Christ called his Disciples to come and follow him, was there no prevailing inward power that made them leave all and follow him? |
A26919 | When as it is the pleasantness of the Creature that is your danger, and which detaineth your thoughts and affections from himself? |
A26919 | When we are saying with Nicodemus, How can these things be? |
A26919 | Whence is it that such Multitudes are still ungodly under all the Teachings and warnings of the Lord? |
A26919 | Where can we be safe, if not in the Love, the Covenant, the hands of the Almighty God? |
A26919 | Where should my goods be but in my own house? |
A26919 | Where would you have your friends, but where you must be your selves? |
A26919 | Whether he Decree not or will not ut evenit peccatum? |
A26919 | Whether he will de eventu that all obey him? |
A26919 | Whether he will de eventu that sin shall not come to pass, when it doth? |
A26919 | Which then is the stricter servant of the Lord? |
A26919 | While you seem but to wrangle against the Duty of believers, do you not plead against the comfort and happiness of believers? |
A26919 | Who have more tender affections then Mothers to their children? |
A26919 | Who will not pray that God would deny us those contents, which keep us from seeking our content in him? |
A26919 | Who will once turn an eye to the gold and glory of the world that is offered him to allure him to sin, if he see God stand by? |
A26919 | Who would go seek the advice of a fool, when he may have Infallible wisdom to direct him? |
A26919 | Who would not justifie them, if they can but prove, that God requireth them, and Religion obligeth them to forsake you for your faults? |
A26919 | Who would stoop so low as earth, that may converse with God? |
A26919 | Why do our poor deluded people so boldly live in an unconverted state, but because they Know not where they are? |
A26919 | Why is it that Divine Consolations are so strange to us, but because Dive Goodnes ● is so lightly thought upon? |
A26919 | Why is it that the Scripture speaks so much to take men off from boasting or ascribing any thing to themselves? |
A26919 | Why is it think you that all must be Baptized into the Name of the Son and Holy Ghost as well as of the Father? |
A26919 | Why is it think you that the Holy Ghost and this renewing work, are so much magnified in the Scripture? |
A26919 | Why then dost thou question it when thou knowest that he is with thee? |
A26919 | Why then should I so much regard, a converse of so short continuance? |
A26919 | Why, if they had staid here a thousand years, how little of that time should you have had their company? |
A26919 | Will he be your joy when you forget him? |
A26919 | Will not the testimony of God satisfie you? |
A26919 | Will you ask the Devil how you may be saved? |
A26919 | Will you sin away, will you loyter away, will you sell- for nothing, an Eternal Glory? |
A26919 | Wilt thou do that when he knoweth it, that thou wouldst not do if man did know? |
A26919 | With how much labour and difficulty must you clime, if you will see the top of one of these mountains? |
A26919 | With whom should I so desirously converse, as with him whom I must Live with for ever? |
A26919 | With whom then should we so delightfully converse on Earth? |
A26919 | Would any of you support your enemy, as God doth you? |
A26919 | Would every man that is born of a woman without exception, so early manifest sin in the life, if there were no corrupt disposition at the heart? |
A26919 | Would you conquer the Love of Riches, or Honour, or any thing else that corrupteth your affections? |
A26919 | Would you curse the holy Angels? |
A26919 | Would you have that which is evil for you? |
A26919 | Would you have us believe that you know better then God himself what pleaseth him, or on what terms he will give his benefits, and save mens souls? |
A26919 | Would you not come down, and give place to him that is to follow you, when your part is played, and his is to begin? |
A26919 | Would you not have said ▪ he was a forgetful and unthankful wretch, and worthy never more to be received? |
A26919 | Would you not know what is Best, that you may choose and seek it? |
A26919 | Would you revile the stars? |
A26919 | Would you spit at the Sun? |
A26919 | Would you wish God to make that condition pleasant to you, which he seeth you take too much pleasure in already( or seek and desire it, at least?) |
A26919 | Wouldst thou doubt of Gods particular providence, whether he regard thy heart, and talke and practice, if thou didst see him with thee? |
A26919 | Wouldst 〈 … 〉 their time? |
A26919 | Yea other things affect us when we see them not; and shall not God? |
A26919 | Yea, you have not been innocent towards men your selves: Did you never wrong or fail another? |
A26919 | Yee are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
A26919 | Yet are you keeping up your worldly hopes, that the world will again prove better to you, and that you shall have happy daies hereafter? |
A26919 | Yet is not the world unjust enough, or cruel or vexatious enough to you, to teach you to come home, and take up your content and rest in God? |
A26919 | Yet is not your condition empty enough of carnal delusory pleasures, to we ● n you from the world, and make you look to surer things? |
A26919 | You are alwaies in his presence; and can you then forget him, and hold no voluntary converse with him, when you stand before him? |
A26919 | You are every man of you stepping into Eternity? |
A26919 | [ Behold we have forsaken all and followed thee; What shall we have?] |
A26919 | [ Can God furnish a Table in the wildernest? |
A26919 | [ Look down from Heaven ▪ and behold from the habitation of thy holiness and of thy glory: Where is thy zeal and thy strength? |
A26919 | [ Mine enemies speak evil of me: when shall he dye, and his name perish? |
A26919 | [ O how great is the goodness that he hath laid up for them that fear him? |
A26919 | and Children but with their Father? |
A26919 | and a Wife but with her Husband? |
A26919 | and are you grieved that your friends are taken from your griefs? |
A26919 | and are your friends more firm and unchangeable then theirs? |
A26919 | and art thou ready to draw back and venture upon sin? |
A26919 | and as if you had never been so convinced, or resolved? |
A26919 | and as if you had never felt such things? |
A26919 | and bear that easily that once was the breaking of your heart? |
A26919 | and come and own thy gasping worm? |
A26919 | and do you begin to look that way again? |
A26919 | and hath he lost the earth? |
A26919 | and his Love and Goodness overcome it? |
A26919 | and his Majesty rebuke it? |
A26919 | and in whom, and with whom do you place and expect your happiness? |
A26919 | and is it not now grown less? |
A26919 | and is it not so still? |
A26919 | and not be concerned in their felicity with whom we are so nearly one? |
A26919 | and now do you make so small a matter of it? |
A26919 | and of as great wisdome, as any that ever you performed? |
A26919 | and of everlasting pains in Hell, and yet not feel that my greatest business is with God? |
A26919 | and shall he not hear that made both tongue and ears? |
A26919 | and shall he not know that giveth us understanding, and by whom we know? |
A26919 | and should not that be now the most noble and pleasant employment for your minds, which is nearest to that which you hope to be exercised in for ever? |
A26919 | and that ever thy Body that must first be dust, should shine as the stars in the firmament of God? |
A26919 | and that ever thy soul should live with Christ among the holy Saints and Angels? |
A26919 | and that he Governeth man as a rational creature, by Laws and Judgement? |
A26919 | and the priviledges of his family to seem so vile? |
A26919 | and think better of his counsels, than of the blind concupiscence of the flesh? |
A26919 | and till we can reach that sweet delightful converse, whom should we seek with more ambition, or observe with greater devotedness and respect? |
A26919 | and to be most frequent and familiar with them that are most frequent and familiar with Christ? |
A26919 | and to do that which thou knewest he forbad and condemned in his Word? |
A26919 | and to give so dear as the hazard of their souls by wilful sin, to escape the honour, and safety, and commodity of Martyrdome? |
A26919 | and to walk before him, and serve him in the world? |
A26919 | and were not only weary of the Duty, but of the Priviledges and Benefits of your Relation? |
A26919 | and were so hardly perswaded that it would be forgiven you? |
A26919 | and what for the Church? |
A26919 | and what for thee? |
A26919 | and what profit shall we have if we pray unto him? |
A26919 | and where is thy strength when Christ hath conquered thee? |
A26919 | and whether the Rider or the Horse should have the rule? |
A26919 | and whose commands have the most effectual authority with you? |
A26919 | and whose displeasure do you principally avoid? |
A26919 | and will not all obey the rebukes of the Almighty? |
A26919 | and with so little pleasure, seriousness, or regard? |
A26919 | and with whom hath he advised for the making, redeeming or governing of the world? |
A26919 | and worst of all, a place of sin? |
A26919 | and yet will you be so foolish and unthankful, as to run out of your Fathers presence, and choose to be without, among the Dogs? |
A26919 | and yet wilt thou distrust him? |
A26919 | are they restrained? |
A26919 | but if I continue thus to wait, wilt thou never find the time of Love? |
A26919 | can he be regardless of thy words and wayes that is with thee and seeth and heareth all? |
A26919 | can the silly shallow creature comprehend his infinite Creatour? |
A26919 | can you expect to find the comforts of his family, among his enemies, out of doors? |
A26919 | canst thou save by the match, if thou win the world and lose thy soul? |
A26919 | do you never use to rub your eyes, and look before you towards Eternity? |
A26919 | especially if it had been long of him? |
A26919 | even of your Father, of your Happiness it self? |
A26919 | even to leave you no comfortable entertainment or converse but with himself, and with his servants, and with those means that lead you to himself? |
A26919 | expect the time when they can not help you: Are they your comforters and delight, and is their company much of your solace upon earth? |
A26919 | for a prophane person to jest at the Spirits work, or for a Christian or Minister deliberately to extennate it? |
A26919 | from whom is it that you expect your greaetest reward? |
A26919 | he that Loveth all Christians, or he that Loveth but a few, with the special Love? |
A26919 | he that Loveth much, or he that Loveth little? |
A26919 | how long is the Reward? |
A26919 | in many and wonderful preservations and deliverances? |
A26919 | in the conduct of his wisdome, and in a life of mercies? |
A26919 | in their lies and slanders of the just? |
A26919 | in their sottish jears and scorns of those that Walk with God? |
A26919 | is it in the wilderness that thou walkest, or in the croud: in the Closet, or in the Church? |
A26919 | nor banish him into such a place where he can not have his conversation in Heaven? |
A26919 | nor hear that which all the world proclaimeth? |
A26919 | of successive cares and fears and griefs? |
A26919 | or conversing with the most dreadful enemy? |
A26919 | or did you only Love them, while you made but little use of them for your souls? |
A26919 | or eyes if there were no light to see by? |
A26919 | or how can he Redeem them that need not a Redemption? |
A26919 | or how shall he be my Heaven and everlasting Happiness? |
A26919 | or how should he reconcile them to God that never were at enmity with him? |
A26919 | or is God grown worse, that we turn our hearts from him to them? |
A26919 | or on any thing more excellent, more honourable, more durable, or that could claim precedency upon any just account? |
A26919 | or promise more concerning him? |
A26919 | or than Christ that had a Judas? |
A26919 | or than Paul that had a Demas? |
A26919 | or that is fully adequate to them, and fit to be our happiness? |
A26919 | or to make us loth by death to leave it? |
A26919 | or what likeness will ye compare unto him? |
A26919 | or who knoweth the certain means of salvation like him that is 〈 … 〉 ver of salvation? |
A26919 | or who shall condemn us when it is he that justifieth us? |
A26919 | shall a Beggar grudge that you give not all that he desireth, when you are not bound to give him any thing? |
A26919 | shall any man be counted Happy that must be most miserable to Eternity? |
A26919 | shall the Lord of Heaven and Earth stand by, and be shut out, while you are chatting or trifling with his creatures? |
A26919 | should you not then be more pleased that God hath them, and employeth them in his highest service, than displeased that you want them? |
A26919 | the guilt of some disobedience or contempt that hath first caused this? |
A26919 | the sounding of thy bowels, and of thy mercies towards me? |
A26919 | the will of God that is infinitely good, or the will of man that is miserably evil? |
A26919 | thy work too hard? |
A26919 | till you begin to grow aweary of him? |
A26919 | to strive against Heaven, and overcome Omnipotency? |
A26919 | was it not God? |
A26919 | was it not to them a place of toil and trouble, of envy and vexation, of enmity and poison? |
A26919 | was it so good and kind to them, as that you should lament their separation from it? |
A26919 | what a desperate attempt do they enterprise? |
A26919 | what a stir they make to prove or make themselves unhappy? |
A26919 | what a work do they undertake? |
A26919 | what could hire thee to offend him by thy willful sin? |
A26919 | what gain did hire thee to cast thy soul into the danger of damnation? |
A26919 | what had become of us long ago, if God had not known what ever is plotted at Rome, or Spain, or Hell against us? |
A26919 | what hast thou done to make God thine enemy? |
A26919 | what if the Priest absolve this man from all his sins? |
A26919 | what is a Watch good for but to tell the hour of the day? |
A26919 | what is the Reasonable creature good for? |
A26919 | what light can you see in the Candles or Glow- worms of this world, in the Sunshine of Eternity? |
A26919 | what shall I answer thee? |
A26919 | what should I do with my Tongue, my Hands, my Time, my Life, my Self, or any thing, if there were no Eternity? |
A26919 | what should hinder the revengeful man from poisoning or secret murdering his enemy, or setting his house on fire in the night? |
A26919 | what then should I do with my time and life? |
A26919 | what use for Hope, if there be no life to be Hoped for? |
A26919 | what use for holy desires and love, if God be not to be enjoyed? |
A26919 | what wonder? |
A26919 | when we see no way for our deliverance, doth it follow that he sees none? |
A26919 | when you are almost leaving the world your selves, would you not send your treasure before you to the place where you must abide? |
A26919 | where is it that I might soonest meet with God?] |
A26919 | whether God or his Flesh should be obeyed? |
A26919 | whether everlasting joyes, or the transitory pleasures of sin, should be preferred? |
A26919 | whether the Rational or Sensitive Powers be superiour and proper to the nature of a man? |
A26919 | which he hath wrought for them that Trust in him before the sons of men? |
A26919 | which is it that prescribeth you the better course? |
A26919 | which upholdeth the earth without any foundation but his Will? |
A26919 | who ever scorneth thee, hateth thee, threatneth thee, imprisoneth thee, is not the Almighty enough to set against them all for thy encouragement? |
A26919 | who hath been his Counseller? |
A26919 | who is it that you submit your selves willingly to be disposed of by? |
A26919 | who is the Chief Governour of your hearts and lives? |
A26919 | who would be tempted to lust or any sinful pleasure, if he observe the presence of the Lord? |
A26919 | whom do you most fear? |
A26919 | whom is it that you principally desire to please? |
A26919 | whose work is it that you do, as the greatest business of your lives? |
A26919 | why could not you have yeilded in so small a matter?] |
A26919 | why have I a heart that so desireth him, in fuller vision and fruition, if I be capable of no such thing? |
A26919 | why is not Eternity long enough for God to shew his Love and bounty to his people in? |
A26919 | why is not God in all your thoughts? |
A26919 | why what Temptation can there be, that should not be lighter then a feather, if Eternity be put against it in the scales? |
A26919 | will he delight your souls with his goodness and amiableness, while you are taken up with other matters, and think not of him? |
A26919 | will not the experience of the world for so many thousand years together satisfie you? |
A26919 | will not the ill success of all the damned satisfie you? |
A26919 | will nothing but your own experience convince you? |
A26919 | will they pose Omniscience? |
A26919 | will you not give him leave to do as he list with his own? |
A26919 | wilt thou never dissipate these clouds, and shine upon this dead and darkened soul? |
A26919 | with Pastors and Teachers? |
A26919 | with Wives or Children? |
A26919 | with whom should a Servant dwell but with his Master? |
A26919 | would you know whether it 〈 … 〉 a ● ortified holy life? |
A26919 | wouldst thou not Pray and Trust him if thou sawest him? |
A26919 | yet am I no more desirous of the blessed day, when I shall be unclothed of flesh and sin? |
A26919 | you dare not say so with your tongues? |
A26919 | — Will the Lord cast off for ever? |
A26919 | ▪ O Christians, shall we hear carelesly or speak carelesly of Eternity? |
A26919 | ▪ What good doth the silence of all the Country do thee, if thou have the noise of raging affections within?] |
A26898 | & c.) null a General Council as well as the Popes? |
A26898 | & c.) setteth up the Priest above the Prince, as Gods Laws are above mans: As if Kings were were not to Govern by Gods Laws? |
A26898 | ( A wicked Decree for Perjury:)( As if in materia licita, a Man that sweareth for Fear, were not bound? |
A26898 | ( Alas, good Bishops, did you think the Papists would have Hereticated you as Monothelites, and nullified all Marriages with you by this Canon? |
A26898 | ( And Door- keepers, and Clerks, and Readers, were then Clergy- men: Was not this a great priviledge to the Church?) |
A26898 | ( And could the Pope blame him, that would be Bishop at the Antipodes, and have all the World?) |
A26898 | ( And how little doth it concern us?) |
A26898 | ( Are these no intercessions of the Succession?) |
A26898 | ( But O, Father Epiphanius, why took you not warning by this, when you un- Bishop- like and un- Canonically set your self against holy Chrysostome?) |
A26898 | ( But why did they give no such answer?) |
A26898 | ( But why must Men be compelled to do it, or else be Hereticks? |
A26898 | ( But why then are not Ephesus, Corinth, Philippi,& c. Patriarchates?) |
A26898 | ( Doth not this prove that the City Churches then met all in one place, and so were but one Assembly at those times? |
A26898 | ( Had the Church power to free Murderers from death, as they long did, Was this holy Reformation?) |
A26898 | ( How false is a Devil- worshipping- Pope, a Murderer, and common Adulterer, and incestuous Villainies, in comparison of all his Neighbor- Bishops?) |
A26898 | ( How many Parishes or hundred Parishes had the Bishop then to hear? |
A26898 | ( Is it not strange what brought them to Milan? |
A26898 | ( Quaere, Whether Rome was the Catholick Church when it was Excommunicate?) |
A26898 | ( This is not hanging them in Chains: But who shall answer for that Blood, and for the next that this man killeth?) |
A26898 | ( Was all the Christian world now( till Luther) subject to the Pope?) |
A26898 | ( What Concord did the Pope keep in the World?) |
A26898 | ( What would become of the Church, if there were not a Judge of such Controversies, and an infallible Determiner of such Questions?) |
A26898 | ( Where was the holy Church of Rome now, and its Succession, if the Canons for nullifying Simoniacal ordinations hold good?) |
A26898 | ( Who knoweth what a man holdeth, better than himself?) |
A26898 | ( k) Was this keeping the fifth Commandement, and Honouring the King? |
A26898 | (* And if one religious man find it so great a work to keep his own soul, how great a labour belongeth to Princes, for so many thousand souls? |
A26898 | (*) And if the judgment of holy Church so bind a man for killing one; what will become of them that for this worlds honour murder many thousands? |
A26898 | (*) Are the bodies of all Saints already risen? |
A26898 | (*) Was it a mark of a reprobate to obey the King against the Pope? |
A26898 | * Were not Monks holy men then? |
A26898 | 139 Bishops came, ex Vrbe Româ vel non longè ab illâ, Out of the City of Rome, or not far from it:( How big were their Diocesses?) |
A26898 | 2. Who taught you to feign the State and Necessity of such a Church, as must have another Universal Head besides Christ? |
A26898 | 3. p. 529,& c? |
A26898 | 3. to put away his evil counsellors, and hearken in all things to the Popes Legate, Richard? |
A26898 | A great Controversie it is, Who is the Author? |
A26898 | Aeticus said, Dost thou curse Eytiches as the Synod doth or not? |
A26898 | All Churches in the World made only by Rome? |
A26898 | And I pray you consider what it is that these men would have? |
A26898 | And are all these Sects that oppose us better agreed among themselves? |
A26898 | And are not Princes Judges of Divine appointment and authority as well as Prelates? |
A26898 | And are not these men perfectly free from Errour themselves, that have so great a zeal against it? |
A26898 | And as if, Man had not Free- will, when he is under Fear?) |
A26898 | And can you not hear the Devil in these words of highest Pride and Arrogancy? |
A26898 | And dare you now stand up in their room and make your selves the heirs of their sin, and punishment, and justifie them in all their Malignity? |
A26898 | And did godly Lewis cherish Christian Bishops so zealously, for this use, so basely and trayterously to depose him? |
A26898 | And did not the Council at Constant, nor the Bishops in the Reign of the three former Emperors know what Tradition was? |
A26898 | And do not these words here translated out of Binnius, p. 92. and 106. agree too well with Nazianzen''s Character of Bishops and Councils? |
A26898 | And do you know which were the more inexcusable, for silencing and persecuting the preachers of the Gospel? |
A26898 | And do you reproach us with our mercies, if we be out of the Furnace but a little while, in one corner of the world? |
A26898 | And have they no Innovations? |
A26898 | And he, and others, that Cyril was high and turbulent? |
A26898 | And how apt are great Bishops to be too violent against Dissenters, instead of healing them with Love and clear convincing Evidence? |
A26898 | And how bad was Theophilus to the Historians that write his actions? |
A26898 | And how came that to pass, if thou didst not promise some wicked deed or other to the Persecutors, or do some? |
A26898 | And how can any Man drink five pound of any ordinary Wine, and not be drunk, or dead? |
A26898 | And how contemptible is their Censure of good or evil Men, which hath no better Measures? |
A26898 | And how do they do it? |
A26898 | And how dreadfully do they condemn themselves? |
A26898 | And how many superiors then hath every Popish King? |
A26898 | And how much nearer was Epiphanius in time and place, than Baronius and Petavius? |
A26898 | And how ordinary is it with such, to call their betters, not what they are, but what they would have them thought, if not what they are themselves? |
A26898 | And how shall we know what Council is to be believed, unless the Pope make all the difference? |
A26898 | And how shall we know which of them to believe? |
A26898 | And how small a parcel of Time, or Men, or Actions are present or in our daies? |
A26898 | And if Children be Kings by inheritance, what a snare is here laid to undo them? |
A26898 | And if all the Bishops on earth be present, or represented in a General Council, what a Case then was the Church in? |
A26898 | And if all the Kingdom be Christians, are they not all the Church? |
A26898 | And if so, Whether other various Electors may do it as validly? |
A26898 | And if the Latines did so, what did the Germans, French,& c? |
A26898 | And if the exorcist excel so much, how much more the Priests? |
A26898 | And if these men uncalled were true Popes, why might not the Turk be one, or any man that can get the place or Title? |
A26898 | And if they have no Power, Why or how should they signify their Consent or Dissent? |
A26898 | And if they have none in Choosing him, What Power have they to examine the Choice, and Depose him? |
A26898 | And if this be true, were they not all of a mind and knew it not? |
A26898 | And if this was no punishment( voluntarily accepted by his Sponsion) how was Christ our Surety, bearing our Transgressions? |
A26898 | And if we be not persecuted, what means the reproaches of you and all the Drunkards and Malignants about us? |
A26898 | And is he not for all that, Above his Master? |
A26898 | And is it not a doleful Thought that the worthy Bishops of the Church, even in a General Council, should no better know the way of peace? |
A26898 | And is not their Concession more than twenty later Mens denial? |
A26898 | And is there enow that are wiser and better then we to fill up our rooms, if we were out? |
A26898 | And know you not that the primitive Christians gave not only the tenths, but all that they had, and laid it at the Apostoles feet? |
A26898 | And may they be so deposed? |
A26898 | And must Princes rule only Infidels? |
A26898 | And must we also nullifie the Papacie of them that have had such frauds? |
A26898 | And no Presbyter shall be condemned but in 44 Testimonies; no Cardinal Deacon but in 36,& c. And what may they not then do or be? |
A26898 | And no doubt the Natures are One; But One what? |
A26898 | And should we not have many Dreamers and Swearers, if they could get as much by it as Egwin did? |
A26898 | And so it came to the question, Whether the King or the Pope was King of France, or had more power over the bodies of the Subjects? |
A26898 | And that he that''s one of your Sheep in one respect, may be your Ruler in another? |
A26898 | And that none were the Church but his Subjects? |
A26898 | And then one asketh, Whether this Heresie( against Images) was greater or less than all those? |
A26898 | And was your Church a true Church, when an Essential part was Null? |
A26898 | And were Men therefore disobliged from obeying them, when they were setled, by submissive implicite consent? |
A26898 | And were not the Bishops of the place so near the time competent Judges of the matters of so notorious Fact? |
A26898 | And what absurdity is it, that every soul be subject to the higher power? |
A26898 | And what cause have Kings and States to look to themselves, that are under such Priests, where every Clergy man is their Master? |
A26898 | And what do they endure all this for but Gods honour, and your salvation? |
A26898 | And what else do Quakers and all these sects that are the enemies of the Ministry? |
A26898 | And what have they got by it, or ever endeavoured? |
A26898 | And what was really the Controversie between them? |
A26898 | And what were they that would thus follow him? |
A26898 | And when they excommunicated and silenced those that affirmed it? |
A26898 | And where was their Church then? |
A26898 | And whether Christ did not( foreseeing such things) far otherwise decide this question, Who shall be greatest? |
A26898 | And whether Popes or Prelates may commit preaching or Sacraments to Lay- men? |
A26898 | And why had the rest of the Apostles no Successors? |
A26898 | And why so? |
A26898 | And why then have so many thousand been cursed from Christ by Councils for unskilfulness in words? |
A26898 | And will you throw stones at their heads for endeavouring to save your souls? |
A26898 | And would any dispute whether e. g. Westminster were under the Government of the King, or of the Lord Mayor of London? |
A26898 | And would not fear have made them own a Heresy, as well as other sin? |
A26898 | And would not this Canon depose Photius also? |
A26898 | And would not this much used to all other, have healed all the Churches? |
A26898 | And would not you do the like by them if you had Power in your hands? |
A26898 | And would these men make all the people thieves and covetous, to take or desire that which never was their own? |
A26898 | And yet must Hard ambiguous words confound and divide the Churches still? |
A26898 | And yet will the Bishops say, that this Emperor was not humble and merciful? |
A26898 | And( which is the greatest thing in the Christian Religion) can with his own mouth make Christs body and blood? |
A26898 | And, Could these forgive Sins, and deliver Souls out of Purgatory? |
A26898 | And, Doth God give it contrary to his Word? |
A26898 | Anne aliquam sibi assumebant è palatio dignitatem, hymnum Deo in carcere inter catenas& post flagella cantantes? |
A26898 | Another Canon is, If a Man be often in quarrels, and easie( or forward) to accuse, let no Man receive his Accusation without great Examination? |
A26898 | Answ: And how prove you that we have not the Spirit? |
A26898 | Are Priests above Kings, or are they lawless? |
A26898 | Are Rebellions of Sons, the Fathers fault? |
A26898 | Are Subjects Judges when a King''s Sins make him unworthy of the Crown? |
A26898 | Are not Christ''s words plainly to be understood, of Superiority and Inferiority in eodem genere? |
A26898 | Are not Prelates Earthly Iudges as well as Princes, in that they are men that judge on Earth? |
A26898 | Are not Presbyter''s Ordinations better than a Lay- mans? |
A26898 | Are not as many Souls in a Town that''s no City as capable of being a Church as Citizens? |
A26898 | Are not the chief Christian Kings now that are Papists( especially the King of France) of that which is called, The Henrician Heresie? |
A26898 | Are these men worthy to be talkt with? |
A26898 | Are they ordained with Fasting, Prayer, and Imposition of Hands? |
A26898 | As his Legates may mistake, so may he himself: Is it null then till he rectifie his Error? |
A26898 | Besides the Question( Which now was the Church?) |
A26898 | But Sir may you use contrary assertions, as Articles of Faith? |
A26898 | But another Decree is better, against Bishops that fall out and desire to hurt their Brethren: But, alas, to how little effect? |
A26898 | But another alledgeth the Apostles and Prophets Tradition: But what''s the proof? |
A26898 | But be the Man Heretick or not, what justice was in these pitiful Prelates that condemned him, and durst not hear him speak? |
A26898 | But did not Bellarmine know how much more sharp and virulent Accusations Popes have laid on one another? |
A26898 | But did the Emperor nothing to prevent all this? |
A26898 | But did the Popes yet amend? |
A26898 | But had this Pope been infallible, had he been in a Council? |
A26898 | But how came this Presbyter to be so honest and so rich? |
A26898 | But how can we know mens wisdome, and piety, and honesty, and impartiality, when we never knew the men? |
A26898 | But how false is it that the Greek and Latine Fathers all agree in this? |
A26898 | But how few Emperors have not found Councils of Bishops ready to do their Will? |
A26898 | But if in such famous Histories, we must read him with such suspicion and allowance, how much more in the many little ones that were more obscure? |
A26898 | But if you grant this, is not your Succession interrupted? |
A26898 | But is all your foundation of Faith come to this? |
A26898 | But is not this a vindication of Nestorius by a Council? |
A26898 | But is there either Priest or Lay- man that when he is dying begs help of the King for the saving of his soul? |
A26898 | But is this good Law, or Divinity? |
A26898 | But may not one that believeth not in God, or Christ, or the Life to come, say all this, that he desireth and endeavoureth to know the truth? |
A26898 | But must they follow Bishops without using their own judgments about the Case? |
A26898 | But really Sirs, do you think that these men would teach you better? |
A26898 | But seriously, do you not know my Judgment? |
A26898 | But the question was, Whose Government they were now fallen under? |
A26898 | But they must not do it by their own judgment: By whose then? |
A26898 | But they put the case themselves to the Council at Constantinople, Whether they were to be under the Bishop of Rome, or of Constantinople? |
A26898 | But were all the Bishops ignorant of it also? |
A26898 | But what are Oaths to a dispensing Pope? |
A26898 | But what became of the Synod of Bishops that had joyned herein with Pope Stephen? |
A26898 | But what did Rome all this while? |
A26898 | But when Riches, Reputation and Dominion were the Baits, who knoweth not what sort of Appetites would be the keenest? |
A26898 | But when he hath Possession, they must know that he hath Possession: And, What can they do to help it? |
A26898 | But where will the reader find that Transubstantiation was yet named, or by any consent received? |
A26898 | But who gave them power to abrogate the very Specices of the first Instituted Churches? |
A26898 | But why have we not the, Acts of this great Council, as well as of the rest? |
A26898 | But why must this priviledge extend to the Clergy only? |
A26898 | But will they allow us equally to suspect such Records as have been kept at Rome? |
A26898 | But, Did that After- consent make him a true Bishop? |
A26898 | By the Bishops no doubt; What Bishops? |
A26898 | By this rule both Princes and People should be free from the Bishops judgment: For are not these Bishops Men as well as Princes? |
A26898 | By which it is implyed, that Errour tendeth unto Death: But what Errour is it? |
A26898 | Cajetan angerly said,[ Dost thou call the Pope an Heretick here, and in our hearing? |
A26898 | Can such Mens Consent make a Pope of an uncapable person? |
A26898 | Can they be so blind as to think a painful Minister doth make it his design to seek himself, or to look after great matters in the world? |
A26898 | Constantius being dead, Iulian the Apostate is made Emperour( would not this end the Quarrel of Christian Bishops?) |
A26898 | Did Christ come to set up a Ministry instead of a Magistracy? |
A26898 | Did Christ mean to pray only, that St. Peter might have such a Faith, as will stand with Wickedness and Damnation? |
A26898 | Did Christ say any thing of Rome? |
A26898 | Did God authorize the Clergy, to consent to such a Man? |
A26898 | Did God make Popes to be the Governors of the Antipodes, for so many hundred years, before they knew that there was any Antipodes? |
A26898 | Did God make this Law? |
A26898 | Did Peter ever think that his name would have thus subdued Emperors and Kings? |
A26898 | Did Rome then govern all the World? |
A26898 | Did he not take upon him the form of a servant? |
A26898 | Did not Christ himself and Peter pay Tribute? |
A26898 | Did not Pelagius and Gregory know that Iohn did no more intend to put down all other Patriarchs or Bishops by this Title, than the Pope doth? |
A26898 | Did not Peter build other Churches before Rome? |
A26898 | Did not Pope Innocent excommunicate Arcadius the Emperor? |
A26898 | Did not Solomon judge Abiathar? |
A26898 | Did not many, if not most of the Emperors, Heathen and Christian, come in by Murder, or Invasion, and Usurpation? |
A26898 | Did not other Apostles build Churches by the same Apostolick Commission as Peter had? |
A26898 | Did not others build the Church of Rome before Peter did it? |
A26898 | Did not the Apostles and ancient Christians obey Heathens, and command it? |
A26898 | Did not the Patriark of Constantinople then write himself, the Vniversal Patriark? |
A26898 | Did not the Pope rise thus by serving the turns of Conspirators, and of Princes in their quarrels with one another? |
A26898 | Did not the Popes know the worthiest men? |
A26898 | Did not thy tyranical ejection of him satiate the implacable fury of thy mind,& c? |
A26898 | Did the Bishops of that age think that they were bound to obey the judgment of the Pope, who thus opposed him? |
A26898 | Did the Bishops then believe that the Pope''s Universal Government was essential to the Catholick Church? |
A26898 | Did the same so often change, and prove first true, and then false, and then true again? |
A26898 | Did their Love, Honesty, and Chastity fail; and yet, Were they secured against the Failing of their Faith? |
A26898 | Did these 385 Bishops do so? |
A26898 | Did they not tempt Infidels to curse or deride them all, while they thus cursed one another, even their Councils? |
A26898 | Did they think that the Humanity existed before the Union? |
A26898 | Did those Doctors presume, that their Readers were such Fools, as not to know, that Forma non recipitur nisi in materiam dispositam? |
A26898 | Did thy daily meditation and night- watches, and innumerable Books teach thee this? |
A26898 | Did thy frequent reading and disputation, and striving for the praise of learning teach it thee? |
A26898 | Diocesar- Quae igitur necessitas ipsum pati in propriâ naturâ, si post unionem dicatur una verbi Natura incarnati? |
A26898 | Do I need to prove this, which is so much of the substance of the Old Testament, and the New? |
A26898 | Do I not leave you all rich? |
A26898 | Do not Lawyers, Physitians,& c. live a far easier, and in the world a more honourable plentiful life? |
A26898 | Do not all preach one Gospel, and the same Essentials of the Christian Faith? |
A26898 | Do not you feel these fly in your faces when you oppose the Ministers of Christ? |
A26898 | Do we not see here what some Councils were, and did in those times? |
A26898 | Do we not see what Heresie signified at Rome, and how little heed there was to be taken of their outcry against some Heresies? |
A26898 | Do you accuse all the Synodical Books? |
A26898 | Do you not understand the meaning of these words, against Christs Ministers? |
A26898 | Do you think he was not a good judge and lover of Saints? |
A26898 | Do you think so many souls would be converted if the Ministry were down? |
A26898 | Do you wonder at this? |
A26898 | Doth a Thief or Murderer sin against plainer light than you? |
A26898 | Doth every word in a Letter that you can distort, forfeit a Crown? |
A26898 | Doth he not describe this damned Usurpation, to be a subjecting all Christ''s members to himself? |
A26898 | Doth not Socrates, that knew Nestorius, say, that he was not Learned? |
A26898 | Doth not the Holy Ghost say, Let every Soul be subject; and were not Peter and the Apostles some of these Souls? |
A26898 | Doth not the Pope now claim that as by Divine Right, which Iohn claimed but as of Humane? |
A26898 | Doth not the Pope now use both the name and thing as far as he can attain it? |
A26898 | Doth not this allow us to separate from them that usurp it? |
A26898 | Doth not this shew that they all agreed in Distinction of Natures? |
A26898 | Even about the Nature of Man, it is disputed, whether he consist not of many natures? |
A26898 | For how few are they that can accurately enough perceive the force of things so weighty, and so involved in obscurity? |
A26898 | For how shall we believe on him of whom we have not heard? |
A26898 | For supposed Heresie and Errour: What did the Heathens cast them to wild Beasts and Torments for? |
A26898 | For what have they racked, tormented, burnt to ashes, and slain by the Sword so many thousand, and hundred thousands? |
A26898 | For what have they silenced hundreds and thousands of faithful Ministers of Christ? |
A26898 | For whom do we watch, but for them and others? |
A26898 | God gave not all the gift of Miracles, that were employed in his work even in the Apostles daies: Are all workers of Miracles? |
A26898 | God is known only in the Image of his Works: Why then may we not make Images of the Saints? |
A26898 | God will be Judge between you and us, whether this be not inhumane ingratitude; and whether we deserve it at your hands? |
A26898 | Had it not been a Nullity, and prophane Mockery? |
A26898 | Had not Cyril''s name better hap than Dioscorus and Eutyches, that followed him as far as they could understand him, and spake the same words as he? |
A26898 | Had not Kings need to look to their manners, for their Crowns sake, as well as their Souls, if Lust, Sensuality and Dulness forfeit their Kingdoms? |
A26898 | Had not Kings need to take heed of making any one man too great, if greatness and exercise of Government, give him so much right to the Kingdom? |
A26898 | Had they no Churches? |
A26898 | Have not other Christians as much holy love, and spirituality, as most of them? |
A26898 | Have not they as much power as he? |
A26898 | Have you already forgotten how the persecutors of a godly Ministry have sped within these sixteen years in England and Ireland? |
A26898 | Have you forgotten what God hath done here against the Papal Enemies of the Gospel and Ministry, in 88. and the Powder- plot, and many other times? |
A26898 | He added, That if ignorant wilful fellows will forsake the Church, what loss is it? |
A26898 | He is blind that sees not what would become of the Church, were it not for the Ministry? |
A26898 | He tells the Spaniards also that their Kingdom was St. Peter''s property: But why did he trouble himself to lay claim to particular Kingdoms? |
A26898 | He was very like to have their votes when he had gotten such power and advantage: But where was the Roman Church that while? |
A26898 | Here I would call the Reader to consider, whether the Pope''s Universal Government was in those days believed? |
A26898 | His being with them, is to support and help them in his work: And will you feign Christ to promise them help on condition they do it without? |
A26898 | How came it now known then? |
A26898 | How come his Consecrations to be valid? |
A26898 | How common? |
A26898 | How could the Iconoclast Emperours be Hereticks, unless the use of such Images were an Article of Faith? |
A26898 | How else could all the Citizens be with the Bishop at one time?) |
A26898 | How far their Government, even of Bishops( whom they Assembled in this Council) was Canonical or valid? |
A26898 | How foul and many are their Errours that kill, and burn, and damn others as erroneous? |
A26898 | How good and pleasant is it for Brethren to dwel together in Unity? |
A26898 | How little is a domineering Prelates accusation of such men as Chrysostome to be credited? |
A26898 | How little knoweth he that knoweth no more than he hath lived to see? |
A26898 | How little trust Papists lay on that part of Tradition which dependeth on Councils? |
A26898 | How many Heresies then have most Councils, and Fathers, and all Authors? |
A26898 | How many Princes and Prelates now Papists, are guilty of the Henrician Heresie? |
A26898 | How many millions of souls would these wretches sweep away to Hell, if they had their will? |
A26898 | How much less can they depose him for any fault? |
A26898 | How much more might the Pope then command all mens purses? |
A26898 | How prove you that she is superior to the highest Angels? |
A26898 | How prove you that? |
A26898 | How shall we be sure, for Cadolus''s five years, who was the Pope? |
A26898 | How shall we know then which was the true Pope? |
A26898 | How shall we know when your Popes have used it lawfully, and when not; and so what is true among you, and what false? |
A26898 | How then doth the Roman sect cry down Innovation and boast of Antiquity? |
A26898 | How then shall we derive their succession? |
A26898 | Howver, was it the Holy Church when an essential Part was such a Villain? |
A26898 | If none, you may see what they are doing: If any, Who, and where are they? |
A26898 | If not, Could their Consent make him a Bishop? |
A26898 | If not, What pretence have you for it? |
A26898 | If not, Where is their Succession? |
A26898 | If not, Where was the Catholick Church this while, if a Pope was a constitutive head or part? |
A26898 | If so, Whether Presbyters may not ordain Presbyters? |
A26898 | If so, Why tell you the Protestants that they want it? |
A26898 | If the King of France had his Kingdom by the Pope''s gift, what wonder if he had the power of nominating Bishops also by his gift? |
A26898 | If they leave your own Matters to your selves, What is that to the Consent of the Catholick- Church? |
A26898 | If they say, that we must believe that all mens senses are deceived when God telleth us so? |
A26898 | If they would deliberately forge so heinous a thing on a Queen, what Heathens could be worse than such Bishops? |
A26898 | If yea, he that is strongest, though a Heretick may choose the Pope? |
A26898 | If you know not who they be, or where, then how know you that there are any such? |
A26898 | If you suspect the Greeks, why may we not also suspect the Romans; especially in the days of wicked Popes? |
A26898 | Is deposing Kings the Papists freedom from Rebellion, and is our opposing it a character of Rebels? |
A26898 | Is every Princes Crown and Life at the Pope''s mercy, because he may judge him to be an Heretick? |
A26898 | Is every offender condemned, ipso jure, before his personal guilt is Judged? |
A26898 | Is it a Note that Protestants love Rebellion, because they are against Popes deposing Kings? |
A26898 | Is it a good Reason that a King is justly deposed, because Good Men and Holy Bishops are the Desirers and Promoters of it? |
A26898 | Is it all? |
A26898 | Is it any thing but what they had before? |
A26898 | Is it any wonder that the Pope made these Bishops Saints? |
A26898 | Is it lawful to take the same thing for true and false, good and bad de Personis, as our interest requireth? |
A26898 | Is it not a General Council if the Popes Legates consent till he personally confirm it? |
A26898 | Is it not horrible Pride if all these silly souls do think that they can do it better themselves? |
A26898 | Is it not impudent after this, for them to use the Title of Universal? |
A26898 | Is it not malice or sacrilegious covetousness that frameth this accusation? |
A26898 | Is it not one thing to Fine, and Beat, and Banish, and Kill a Man, and another to sentence him unmeet for Church- Communion? |
A26898 | Is it not written, Iudge not that ye be not judged? |
A26898 | Is it therefore absurd that he be King over these Masters? |
A26898 | Is not a plain Sentence here expressed? |
A26898 | Is not all Power of God? |
A26898 | Is not here a new Article of Faith, and a new Commandment necessary to Salvation? |
A26898 | Is not suffering for sin, even of others, penal? |
A26898 | Is not the Christian World beholden to such Tyrants and proud pretenders for its distractions and calamities? |
A26898 | Is not the Church built on the foundation of Prophets and Apostles, Christ being the Head- corner Stone? |
A26898 | Is not the Church the Church, if the Pope be not there? |
A26898 | Is not the denial of Christ''s penal Service and Suffering, a denial of his Satisfaction and our Redemption? |
A26898 | Is not this a doleful description of the Bishops so soon after their wonderful deliverance and exaltation? |
A26898 | Is not this of the same kind? |
A26898 | Is not this the loud language of their actions? |
A26898 | Is such Hereticating much regardable? |
A26898 | Is that necessary to the being of the Sentence? |
A26898 | Is that their wages that you owe them? |
A26898 | Is the King above no Master that teacheth him in any Art or Science? |
A26898 | Is there no remedy? |
A26898 | Is this the constancy of Bishops, and the certainty of their Tradition? |
A26898 | Is this the constancy of the Church and Bishops Faith? |
A26898 | Is this the honour of Prelacy, and their stability in governing the Church? |
A26898 | Is this the smooth Current of Tradition? |
A26898 | It hath been ordinary for Deacons to be made Popes: And is not that per saltum? |
A26898 | It is in the Princes power to make and unmake Cities: May he accordingly make or unmake Churches? |
A26898 | It is then but saying, when ever your Pope and Church Erreth, that they did not use their Power lawfully: And what relief is that to the deceived? |
A26898 | It seems the rest were not bound to be Christians? |
A26898 | It was of three hundred Bishops( how big were their Diocesses think you above our Parishes?) |
A26898 | May a Prince save his crown from such? |
A26898 | May a man save his Wife from such, or a woman refuse their copulation, or defend her Chastity against them? |
A26898 | May he not command that Physician for the common peace? |
A26898 | May he not rule them for all that? |
A26898 | May not one man judge who is fit or unfit for Church Communion, and another judge who is punishable by the sword? |
A26898 | May not one rule and punish by the Sword, and another by the Word, by Teaching, and the Church Keys? |
A26898 | Moreover to what Kings or Emperors names d are Churches or Altars dedicated? |
A26898 | Must all be Separatists from the Bishops in England, France,& c? |
A26898 | Must it be by one of a Superiour Order? |
A26898 | Must no Parents teach their Children to know Christ, but such as can work Miracles? |
A26898 | Must the Bishop needs know all the Reasons that every Man hath for Fasting, and be Judge of them? |
A26898 | Must the Princes of the world act as Brutes, or Idiots, or Lictors? |
A26898 | Must we needs understand God''s Adoption, just in the measure as mans? |
A26898 | Nay would they have them rob God, to whom for his service the Tithes were devoted? |
A26898 | Non Causa Pietas( Bilis hoc excogitat, Ad mentiendum prona,) sed Lis ob Thronos: Quidnam hoc vocârim? |
A26898 | O but say to the Egyptian Bishops, If you are all of this mind, Why did you communicate with Eutyches, and condemn Flavianus? |
A26898 | O ye sons of men, how long will ye turn my glory into shame? |
A26898 | Oh, saith Nicetas, What stupidity, what pravity of a perverse mind was this? |
A26898 | On the other side, who can believe such palpable Railers as Tympius, Cochleus, Genebrard, and many such, that lye contrary to certain evidence? |
A26898 | One is,[ After how long time Lard may be eaten? |
A26898 | Or if the last were false Knaves, how shall we be sure that these were honest Men? |
A26898 | Or is there any heed to be taken of the words of impudent Revilers, that dare speak before God and Man at this rate? |
A26898 | Or that the Pope was then as high as since? |
A26898 | Or that the same Men were suddenly become wise and honest? |
A26898 | Or to ruine his Kingdome, then to reject his officers? |
A26898 | Or to wrong the body, then to cut off the hand, and pull out the eyes, or to destroy the principal parts? |
A26898 | Or what did they think the Earth stood upon? |
A26898 | Or which of them can bind and loose in Heaven and earth? |
A26898 | Or who is there, that in the curious search of such Questions, is not in danger of a fall? |
A26898 | Or who told it this Council, when the last knew it not? |
A26898 | Or, Had they a Sincere Faith, that had no other Grace? |
A26898 | Or, What was it to them, how he was called, or what he was? |
A26898 | Or, Whether his utter Incapacity, many express Canons, and the Bishops and Councils Consent, did not Eject him, and Authorize Leo? |
A26898 | Oro vos, Episcopi, qui hoc vos esse creditis: quibusnam suffragiis ad praedicandum Evangelium Apostoli usi sunt? |
A26898 | Pepin maketh a Deed of Gift of all the foresaid Cities to the Church of Rome,( Was this Constantine''s Gift?) |
A26898 | Perhaps you will ask, How could any but Idiots be so ignorant? |
A26898 | Photius Bishop of Tyre said, How endeavour they to ordain( their Arch- Bishop) who are not of the same mind with the Synod? |
A26898 | Praedestinationem electorum ad vitam,& praedestinationem impiorum ad mortem fidenter fatemur? |
A26898 | Praesules? |
A26898 | Proximi anni fides quid immutationis habet? |
A26898 | Quibus adjuti potestatibus Christum praedicaverunt, gentesque ferè omnes ex idolis ad Deum transtulerunt? |
A26898 | Quomodo Christum unum& individuum dicis esse duplicem natura? |
A26898 | Reader, Had not the abuse of Humane Patriarchal Power, and of Excommunications got up very high, when this bold Pope made this Decree? |
A26898 | Reader, How hard is it to know what History to believe, when it comes to the characterizing of adversaries? |
A26898 | Reader, Is Rome constant in their Religion? |
A26898 | Reader, how shall a man know what History to believe that characterizeth Adversaries? |
A26898 | Secondly, Is it not here plain that they were all of a mind, and did not, or through faction would not know it? |
A26898 | Should not their bones also be burnt if you durst? |
A26898 | Suffridus( saith Binius) saith that he was writing an heretical perverse book, when the room fell, and cryed out after, O, what is become of my book? |
A26898 | Suppose he did not speed: What went he thither for? |
A26898 | Sure no Roman Presided; for there was then an Inter- regnum: But was it then a good Council? |
A26898 | That an Earthly judge may take and punish the servants of the highest judge, and consecrated men: who will not say that this is most absurd? |
A26898 | That the Pope himself may have a Master in Philosophy, Physick,& c.? |
A26898 | The 12th is to plead with the Emperor, to forgive and restore Modelgerus a Murderer; and will you hear the motive? |
A26898 | The Bishops cryed out, Why do they not curse the opinion of Eutiches? |
A26898 | The Elders that rule well are worthy of double honour,& c.] with abundance more such passages as these? |
A26898 | The Emperor first asked, Why Pope John was not there? |
A26898 | The Eutychians thought, How can that be called Vnity which maketh not one of two? |
A26898 | The Greeks rejected that as signifying no real distinction,( and are the Schoolmen for a real distinction yet?) |
A26898 | The Judges said, Why then did ye depose him? |
A26898 | The Lay Judges asked him, If he spake so well, why did he condemn Flavianus? |
A26898 | The Papists say, General Councils may err in matter of Fact: How much more then in matter of Faith, which is more obscure? |
A26898 | The People cryed out here, Quid manemus in communicati? |
A26898 | The Pope put it to the Oath of Egwin, whether ever he saw such a Vision or not? |
A26898 | The Question now is, What concord did these late Councils procure to the Churches? |
A26898 | The Subscribers were 284 Bishops( what did the other 57?) |
A26898 | The hardness of these words seeming a prophane Novelty, provoked the Bishop of Soissons to say,[ What say you, That the Being of God is nothing?] |
A26898 | The monstrous Beast Pope Iohn got up again, call''d a Synod of Bishops: And what will not Bishops do? |
A26898 | Then they might damn themselves without disturbance, and go quietly to hell, and no body stop them, and say,[ Why do you so? |
A26898 | Therefore both of you, forgiving one another, approve of that which your fellow- servant doth not without cause exhort you to: And what is that? |
A26898 | These Objections seem to confess that the difference was but denomine; and is the unapt use of such a word, an Heresie? |
A26898 | They asked, Did Dioscorus use violence with you? |
A26898 | They will say that it was only questioned, whose Diocess or Patriarchate they were under? |
A26898 | This is soon said too: but where''s the proof? |
A26898 | Thus Cyril to Atticus: How oft have I heard just such language? |
A26898 | To the Case: Who are Patriarchs? |
A26898 | VVho gave your Pope that Priviledge? |
A26898 | Was all the world then subject to the Pope when his Italian neighbours were not? |
A26898 | Was either of them in the right? |
A26898 | Was it not Cromwel''s Plea? |
A26898 | Was it not Ministers that planted the Churches, and converted the world and have ever born off the assaults of enemies? |
A26898 | Was it not enough for the Pope, to usurp such power, to be over Kings, and dispose of Crowns, but ordinary Bishops must do the like? |
A26898 | Was it such a cursing Clergy, to make a cursed Church, that Christ ordained?) |
A26898 | Was it the Friends or Enemies of all the Prophets, Apostles and Ministers of Christ, that Scripture and all good Writers do commend? |
A26898 | Was it to the Pope that he forfeited his Crown? |
A26898 | Was it unknown till now? |
A26898 | Was not Ierusalem, Antioch, and many another made before it? |
A26898 | Was not Solomon Ruler of Abiathar when he displaced him? |
A26898 | Was not an ambitious Pope a fit Tool for Pepin and his Confederates to work by, to put a pious gloss on their Conspiracy? |
A26898 | Was not such a cursing sort of Bishops a great Curse, Shame and Calamity to the Church? |
A26898 | Was not their Church Universal, as it stood before all or most here cursed? |
A26898 | Was not this a profitable Dream or Vision? |
A26898 | Was that Divine Law? |
A26898 | Was the old Spanish Liturgy, heresie? |
A26898 | Was this a true Reconciliation of the ● reek Church? |
A26898 | Was this man truly the Bishop of Rome, that had no more of the Citizens consent so much as to dwell among them? |
A26898 | Was this the old Doctrine, Let every Soul be subject to the higher Power,& c? |
A26898 | We challenge the Adversary to name us the true Church and Ministry; if these be none of them, where be they, and who are they? |
A26898 | Were Hereticks or Hereticaters the great Dividers? |
A26898 | Were all former Councils null, till the Popes personal confirmation? |
A26898 | Were not these Men high enough in Creature- worship, to escape the Curse of Hereticks? |
A26898 | Were not these two Bishops judicious Casuists? |
A26898 | Were not those Clergy- Men wicked themselves, that would do so? |
A26898 | Were not thou and I in Prison together in time of Persecution, and when I lost an Eye for the Truth, thou camest out unmaimed? |
A26898 | Were such Villaines as Infallible as others? |
A26898 | Were these Apostolic Doctrines,( that Priests may have Wives, as Peter had,& c.) a falling from the Faith? |
A26898 | Were these Councils Hereticks? |
A26898 | Were these Popes and Bishops Men of such wisdom, as were fit to hereticate Dissenters as they did? |
A26898 | Were these mortified Monks? |
A26898 | Were those Bishopricks any bigger than our Parishes of Market- Towns with the Chappelleries? |
A26898 | What Power have the Ethiopians, Armenians, Syrians, or other Nations of the Earth, in choosing the Pope of Rome? |
A26898 | What a case was the Church in when Popery grew ripe? |
A26898 | What a shameless Dream do you impose on us, under the Name of, Totus orbis Terrarum? |
A26898 | What a thing is Popish Faith? |
A26898 | What did the Jews persecute the Christians for? |
A26898 | What difference between the Calling, Doctrine and lives of those Martyred Ministers, and these that are now alive? |
A26898 | What else signify all the Canons, that nullify Ordinations for less Faults? |
A26898 | What excess of Envy? |
A26898 | What greater service could all the world do for the Devils, then to cast out the Ministers of Christ? |
A26898 | What had the Ethiopians, the Armenians, yea, or the Greek- Church, to do with Pope Iohn? |
A26898 | What heed to take of these Mens words, when they seem zealous against Sin and Error? |
A26898 | What if a King will have but one City in his Kingdom, must there be no more Churches or Bishops? |
A26898 | What if such are drunk in the Pulpit, are the People bound to be silently submissive? |
A26898 | What if the King will disfranchize most of the Cities, and another will make every Market Town a City; must Churches be altered accordingly? |
A26898 | What if the Ministers were all cast out? |
A26898 | What if there be no Cities( as in many American and Arabian Countries) must there be no Churches? |
A26898 | What if they had made a Bishop of a Turk, an Infidel, a Corps,& c? |
A26898 | What is not just with such Historians, that maketh for their Interest? |
A26898 | What one is here that is not false? |
A26898 | What power hath Pope Nicholas to bind his successors? |
A26898 | What readyer way to ruine the Schools of Christ, then by casting out the Teachers that he hath appointed under him? |
A26898 | What study of ambitious Dishonesty? |
A26898 | What the better is any Man of a wicked Heart and Life, for a dead Opinion call''d Faith, that will damn him the more deeply for sinning against it? |
A26898 | What then are Bishops for? |
A26898 | What though he can not do that which a Physician, a Musician& c. can do? |
A26898 | What though he must obey his Physician for his life? |
A26898 | What though the King be a Scholar to a Grammarian, a Musician, a Physician? |
A26898 | What would become of the Church and Gospel, if this malignant Spirit should prevail to extirpate even the best of all the Ministry? |
A26898 | What would you have more then is granted you? |
A26898 | What, as their meer Executioners? |
A26898 | What? |
A26898 | Whatever Doctrine we are preaching, the Opposers work is to call us Deceivers, and ask, How we prove our selves true Ministers? |
A26898 | When General Councils curse each other, is the whole Church cursed? |
A26898 | When Scripture hath left out the shaving of mens Beards, and we had never had such a Law, if such power as the Papal had not made it? |
A26898 | When he would not be found? |
A26898 | Where and when did Christ give Peter the Imperial Power of Earth and Heaven? |
A26898 | Where is your Proof of this Universal Concession? |
A26898 | Where shall we find room to hold them? |
A26898 | Where shall we have Money to pay them? |
A26898 | Where shall we have Painters enow? |
A26898 | Where then is their uninterrupted Succession? |
A26898 | Where was there ever Church on earth that continued without a Ministry? |
A26898 | Where? |
A26898 | Whether Iustinian''s Election of a Pope was valid? |
A26898 | Whether a Bishops Diocess then was any bigger than one of our Corporations with the Neighbour Villages? |
A26898 | Whether a Presbyter''s Ordination of a Bishop or Pope was valid? |
A26898 | Whether a great part of the Church of Rome, and their last named Councils, be not Hereticks in the judgment of this Council? |
A26898 | Whether any of them came from Abassia, Egypt, Armenia, Greece, or the Antipodes, and were the Representatives of all the Christian World? |
A26898 | Whether he be a Martyr that suffers for oppugning such Peace? |
A26898 | Whether he that hath power to give, hath not power to take away, and be not Judge when the Cause is just? |
A26898 | Whether it be lawful for any King( or in his authority) so to destroy his Kingdom, or to make all( or the generality of) his subjects dead men in Law? |
A26898 | Whether the Roman Power was then understood by Princes or People? |
A26898 | Whether this Council did not prove, that the Church did not consent to Iohn? |
A26898 | Whether this Pope was truly Head of the Catholick Church, when his Bishops obeyed him not? |
A26898 | Whether this was not as good Authority as Alexander''s greater number of the Cardinals?) |
A26898 | Whether was all the World, or all the West bound to avoid Communion after with Virgilius? |
A26898 | Which of them can ordain one Clerk in the holy Church? |
A26898 | Which way did the whole Catholick- Church( or the Tenth or Hundredth Part of it) signify their Consent? |
A26898 | Which were they, and how came they so soon to be forgotten and unknown? |
A26898 | Whither did they think the Setting- Sun went? |
A26898 | Who doth not desire that all the Lords people were Prophets? |
A26898 | Who doubteth but that the Priests of Christ are the Fathers and Masters of Kings and Princes, and of all the faithful? |
A26898 | Who fights against Christs Officers and Army, but the General of the contrary Army? |
A26898 | Who should teach the ignorant, or rebuke the obstinate, explain the word of truth, and stop the mouths of proud gain sayers? |
A26898 | Who then can be saved? |
A26898 | Who then shall Ordain or Consecrate the Pope? |
A26898 | Who therefore would not admire? |
A26898 | Who were the Schismaticks then? |
A26898 | Who will finish it? |
A26898 | Who would not count it a happiness to see so great a People met together in one place? |
A26898 | Who wrote truly, and who falsly, how should we now know? |
A26898 | Whose are the Tithes? |
A26898 | Why are the Persons condemned but on supposition that their Faith was condemnable? |
A26898 | Why did Pope Nicholas decree that none should hear Mass from a Priest that liveth in fornication? |
A26898 | Why doth Bellarmine purposely revile, and particularly confute this Book? |
A26898 | Why else do they so commonly condemn this Book and Council of Ludovicus Pius, that forbiddeth both the breaking and the worshiping of them? |
A26898 | Why may not the King be the Ruler of him that is his Physician or his Tutor? |
A26898 | Why not many score also? |
A26898 | Why should that be imputed to them which they deny? |
A26898 | Why then is it a Heresie, to say, that Christ was Generated, and yet Adopted? |
A26898 | Why were not all the 4 or 5 or 6 at once true Popes? |
A26898 | Will no Wickedness incapacitate? |
A26898 | Will not your Argument as well prove every Bishop, Priest, or man Infallible? |
A26898 | Will you spit in their faces for seeking with all their might to keep you from Hell? |
A26898 | With what face do Papists at once make these claims, and yet profess Loyalty to Kings? |
A26898 | Would not his claim to all the world serve turn for the particulars? |
A26898 | Would not the time, and labour, and cost that they are at in the Schools and Universities, have fitted them for a more gainful trade? |
A26898 | Would not this Reason have served Maximus against Gratian? |
A26898 | Would the Devil and the Churches Enemies desire any more? |
A26898 | Would these Popes have been Martyrs, or were they Christians or Gnosticks, that would sin, if they were but put in fear? |
A26898 | Would we be Ministers for any lower ends? |
A26898 | Yea even the exorcists have power over Devils: How much more over those that are Subject to the Devils, and are his members? |
A26898 | Yea, Binnius makes this Council to be Monothelites: And were the same Men Orthodox in the 5th or 6th Council ten years before, and Hereticks in this? |
A26898 | Yea, and their power more past all dispute? |
A26898 | Yea, is the Pope Judge, and hath he power to depose Kings, if he judge them such Sinners, and unfit for Government? |
A26898 | [ Shall evil be recompenced for good? |
A26898 | a what upon suspicion? |
A26898 | and Epiphanius? |
A26898 | and drawing so many hundred Bishops into Faction, Schism, Perjury, and shameful mutations with them? |
A26898 | and hew shall they preach unless they be sent? |
A26898 | and his Successors him and many more? |
A26898 | and how all their Bodies came to be known? |
A26898 | and how easie was it then for him to have true notice of such publick things? |
A26898 | and how little is the judgment and applause of man to be regarded, or their condemnation of us to be feared? |
A26898 | and how many of them are horridly arrogant? |
A26898 | and how shall we hear without a Preacher? |
A26898 | and how they came all to dye there together? |
A26898 | and if you judge the Angels that rule over all Proud Princes, what can you do with their servants? |
A26898 | and may we know by it what our Fathers held? |
A26898 | and oppose the same sort of Ministers that the Papists burned? |
A26898 | and so to undo it all again? |
A26898 | and what is become of your Succession? |
A26898 | and what more would the Devil himself desire, to set up his Kingdom and suppress the Church? |
A26898 | and what was his rare merit? |
A26898 | and why must they be worshipped?) |
A26898 | are they ours or theirs? |
A26898 | as much flatter a worse Man and Murderer, Phocas? |
A26898 | b And are there more Popes saved? |
A26898 | b By what Authority? |
A26898 | b Whom should they have feared more than God and their King? |
A26898 | but falsly so called, for obeying the Emperour, in dealing gently with some Eutychians; were not this Council and Pope Novatians? |
A26898 | c How few Popes ever wrought miracles? |
A26898 | c Is this the use of Reliques? |
A26898 | c Who made you the Governors of the Empire,& Judges of such matters? |
A26898 | cleanse the Lepers? |
A26898 | d Must the King answer to a Court of Bishops, all the evils that he permitteth the Bishops and such others to do? |
A26898 | did he not decide the Controversie who should be the chief or greatest, with a prohibition of all Imperial Power,( With you it shall not be so?) |
A26898 | do you not know that these Apostles, Fathers, and other Ministers did suffer in their time from such as you, as we now do, and more? |
A26898 | how long will ye love vanity, and seek after lying? |
A26898 | how suffered he for our sins? |
A26898 | how then can I help it? |
A26898 | if not, how can they commit the Keys of Church- Government to them, or to any as little authorized by Christ? |
A26898 | if our Delators, Calumniators and Informers were thus used now, what abundance would have suffered for wronging some one Man? |
A26898 | illuminate the Blind? |
A26898 | must Gods Ministers above all others be grudged food and rayment, and that of the Lords portion, which none of you pay for? |
A26898 | must all the ministers in England be deposed that communicate with any Bishop that gets a Church by the secular power? |
A26898 | of Iulius Bishop of Rome, of Prothogenes, and others, whom they excommunicate as if they had been the very plagues of the earth? |
A26898 | or did the former whom they condemned do so? |
A26898 | or hath the Holy Church appointed Masses to be celebrated? |
A26898 | say others What certainty is here? |
A26898 | superior to Christ''s Humanity? |
A26898 | to whom the Sun it self is as darkness, and all the world as dust and nothing? |
A26898 | was it not the makers and imposers of such laws and terms? |
A26898 | what Emperor or King did raise the dead? |
A26898 | what are his Legates for then? |
A26898 | what excellent persons did God use for the beyond- sea Reformation? |
A26898 | what would you have more? |
A26898 | who would take this for the words of a sober man? |
A26898 | why doth not that interrupt and nullifie the Papaci ●? |
A26898 | will any possession jure vel injuriâ serve for a Succession? |
A26898 | will not about 80 Books inform you? |
A26898 | would they have any to do Gods work in their stead, or none? |
A26898 | ☜ ☜ ☜* What a Council would those make? |
A26898 | ☞ ☞ ☜ ☞* And would not Papists have Princes do so? |
A26898 | ☞ ☞ ☞ ☞ ☜ ☜ ☞ ☞ How many Canons did John and his perjured Adherents violate? |
A26898 | ☞ ☞ ☞* Did the Church then hold that the Pope was the Supreme Ruler and Judge? |
A26921 | & is not that Life good, which attaineth its End? |
A26921 | ( And is that World then more worthy of any love than Heaven?) |
A26921 | 16. and after with Cursing and Swearing denied him: And all his Disciples forsook him and fled: And what then from others could be expected? |
A26921 | 3, 4,& c. Indeed he Elected thee also to bear the Cross, and to manifold sufferings here: But is it that which thou preferrest before the Crown? |
A26921 | 75. and shall not I trust thee then to save me? |
A26921 | 8, 9. was he unlearned and imperfect before? |
A26921 | 8. and conclude, What shall separate us from the Love of God? |
A26921 | A multitude of thy Friends have loved thee so entirely, that thou canst not doubt of it? |
A26921 | Alas, how many Hours of my precious time, have been spent to maintain it, please it, or repair it? |
A26921 | Alas, my Soul, thou feelest thy defect, and knowest the hinderance, but what hope is there of remedy? |
A26921 | Am I at the highest 〈 ◊ 〉 Man on Earth can reach? |
A26921 | Am I capable of pleasing God no better, than by such a sinful life as this? |
A26921 | Analogically, as it tendeth to the Perfection of the Universe and the Church? |
A26921 | And God maketh all Natures suitable to their proper ends and use: How can it be that a Spirit should not incline to be with Spirits? |
A26921 | And I shall know how God''s Spirit operateth on Souls: And how it is sent from Christ''s humane Nature to work on Man? |
A26921 | And O how great was the mercy which he shewed me, in a teachable tractable, peaceable, humble, unanimous People? |
A26921 | And O how many a danger, fear and pain hath he delivered this frail and languishing Body from? |
A26921 | And Souls that have the Divine Nature in holy Love, desire to be with the God of Love? |
A26921 | And after such a life of Love, shall I doubt whether the same God do love me? |
A26921 | And are not all Creatures so? |
A26921 | And are there none in the other World? |
A26921 | And art thou loth that they should have an end? |
A26921 | And as Christ, when the Jews said he did all by Beelzebub, when he cast out devils, askt them[ By whom do your Children cast them out?] |
A26921 | And can a Soul miscarry and be deceived, that departeth hence in a hope of God''s own causing and encouraging? |
A26921 | And can not I trust God and my Redeemer, without all this care, and fear, and trouble, and all these particular enquiries? |
A26921 | And couldst thou not shew it me in a moment? |
A26921 | And did any of them signifie their love with the convincing evidence that God hath done? |
A26921 | And do we not willingly interrupt and lay by these Pleasures, every Night when we betake our selves to sleep? |
A26921 | And do you not know the next and better Habitation? |
A26921 | And dost thou doubt, canst thou doubt, O my Soul, whether thou art going to a God that loveth thee? |
A26921 | And doth God cause Saints to grow up unto ripeness, only to perish and drop down unto useless rottenness? |
A26921 | And doth he not love me in my Age, and Pain, and Sickness; Did he love all the Faithful better in their life than at their Death? |
A26921 | And doth not God make a greater difference than Man? |
A26921 | And doth not death creep on thee by a gradual dissolution? |
A26921 | And former Mercies should not be forgotten: And should not such men patiently endure? |
A26921 | And hath God ever shewed himself either unfaithful or unmerciful to me? |
A26921 | And hath this troublesome Flesh been so comfortable a companion to thee, that thou shouldst be so loth to leave it? |
A26921 | And have I not reason to believe it? |
A26921 | And have not all Saints that Title in their degrees? |
A26921 | And hear not the loudest Calls of God? |
A26921 | And how a Soul acting or habited differeth from itself not acting or habited? |
A26921 | And how are they separated but by mutual love, and our forsaking all that alienateth or is contrary? |
A26921 | And how differ they from the Resurrection state? |
A26921 | And how easy and sweet then will all my obedience be, when I shall perfectly will it, without any reluctancy or aversness? |
A26921 | And how forms are multiplied? |
A26921 | And how great a number i ● there to trouble you? |
A26921 | And how great is the number of them that expect unrighteous things? |
A26921 | And how hardly known by those that need them? |
A26921 | And how his production by Emanation or Creation, doth consist with Generation? |
A26921 | And how is Christ offered to us but as a Saviour to bring us by Grace to Glory? |
A26921 | And how little doth the knowledge of Learned Doctors differ from the thoughts of a silly Child? |
A26921 | And how many Thousand painful weary Nights have had a comfortable Morning? |
A26921 | And how many hours of comfort have I there had? |
A26921 | And how much in eating, drinking, dressing, physick? |
A26921 | And how much in labouring or using means to procure these and other necessaries? |
A26921 | And how much infirmity and painfulness to my Flesh, increase of painful Diseases, and loss of Bodily ease and health? |
A26921 | And if God had wicked and tormented parts on Earth, why may he not have such, and I be one of them hereafter? |
A26921 | And if God will so try me, why should I repine? |
A26921 | And if Heaven dwell in my Heart, shall I not desire to dwell in Heaven? |
A26921 | And if I be a holy and happy part of God, or of an universal Soul on Earth, why may not I hope to be such hereafter? |
A26921 | And if Societies on Earth, more holy and wise than others, though imperfectly, are very amiable, what then will the heavenly Society be? |
A26921 | And if animated, what becomes of the anima seminis perditi? |
A26921 | And if bad Souls can do it, why not good ones when God will have it? |
A26921 | And if created Love be so necessary, so active, so communicative, how much more will the infinite Love of the Creator be? |
A26921 | And if other mens Words and Writings are ble mished with so much imperfection, why should think that my own are blameless? |
A26921 | And if this could be proved, what would it tend to the unbelievers ends, or to the disadvantage of our hopes and comforts? |
A26921 | And is it Heaven that cost so dear a price for me, and is the End of so wonderful a design of Grace, and shall I be unwilling now to receive the gift? |
A26921 | And is it not Mercy from God to make me weary of it? |
A26921 | And is it not better in the Hand of my Redeemer, and of the God of Love, and Father of Spirits? |
A26921 | And is not a Day with them better than a Thousand here? |
A26921 | And is not all good and amiable better than a little good with so troublesome a mixture of noisome Evils? |
A26921 | And is not my passage secured by the Love of my Father, and the Resurrection and Intercession of my Lord? |
A26921 | And is not that a more holy and glorious place and state, than this below? |
A26921 | And is not the rest that turneth into Blood and Flesh, of the same general kind with that which is turned into loathsom filth? |
A26921 | And is not their sensual pleasure of the same Nature as ours? |
A26921 | And is not this according to thy Word and Will? |
A26921 | And is not this much of the end of life? |
A26921 | And is not this to be partly a God to my self? |
A26921 | And is the Joy of Angels and the heavenly Host as nothing to me? |
A26921 | And is this a dwelling fit for thy delight? |
A26921 | And is this renouncing the World, and trusting Christ for Life everlasting? |
A26921 | And is this tumultuous, militant, yea, malignant World, a place that I should be loth to leave? |
A26921 | And it is my certain duty to seek Heaven with all the fervour of my Soul, and diligence of my life: And is it not Best to find it? |
A26921 | And may I not trust him to save me who hath already saved Millions in this way? |
A26921 | And more familiarly with my old Acquaintance, Pupils, and dear Friends? |
A26921 | And now Lord, what wait I for? |
A26921 | And now should a Man be loth to die, for fears of leaving such troublesome costly Learning and Knowledge, as the wisest men can here attain? |
A26921 | And now, O my Soul, consider how mercifully God hath dealt with thee, that thy streight should be between two conditions so desirable? |
A26921 | And of all things surely a departing Soul hath least cause to fear, the losing of its notice of the Affairs of the World? |
A26921 | And of greater Patience than m ● ● r Nature gave thee? |
A26921 | And shall I be towards my self, so much of Satans mind: He would not have me come to Heaven: And shall I also be unwilling? |
A26921 | And shall I know less of Earth from Heaven than I do now? |
A26921 | And shall I not follow him through Death, and trust such a Guide and Captain of my Salvation? |
A26921 | And shall I now distrust him at the last? |
A26921 | And shall I think with cold or little Love, of such a God, and such a Saviour? |
A26921 | And shall I yet doubt of the Celestial Society and Glory? |
A26921 | And shall Peter say more confidently,[ Thou knowest that I love thee] than[ I know that thou lovest me?] |
A26921 | And shall a worldly backward Heart overcome the teachings of Nature, Scripture, the Spirit of Grace, and all Experience? |
A26921 | And shall accidental love make me desire the company of a frail and mutable Friend? |
A26921 | And shall my foolish Soul thus wildly fly from the Face of God? |
A26921 | And shall not the Thoughts of the heavenly Mansions, Society and Delights, much more allure and draw up my desires? |
A26921 | And shall not the love of such a Father be trusted, and the presence and pleasing of such a Father be desired? |
A26921 | And shall not this ingrafted inseparable love, make me long to be with Christ? |
A26921 | And shall we now let the Tempter shake it or discourage it? |
A26921 | And shall we unman our selves? |
A26921 | And should I not think of it more pleasedly because my God and Father, my Saviour, and my Comforter is there? |
A26921 | And should not my suffering be God''s School; should I not learn obedience by it? |
A26921 | And that ruled me by so Holy and Just a Law? |
A26921 | And then were I forsaken of the sober and peaceable, as I am in part of some quarrelsom Dividers, how tolerable a tryal would it be? |
A26921 | And therefore what wonder if in Apoplexies,& c. such Operations are intercepted? |
A26921 | And though I am naturally loth to be absent from the Body, let me be by his Spirit more unwilling to be absent from the Lord? |
A26921 | And to hear the Sentence of my departure to my God? |
A26921 | And what Causality the Parents Soul hath to the production of the Childs? |
A26921 | And what a benefactor would the Sun be to the World? |
A26921 | And what a torment must it be to a considering mind, to be uncertain what to Intend and Do in all the tenour and actions of his life? |
A26921 | And what am I better than my fore- Fathers? |
A26921 | And what each Object is to the Constitution or production of the act? |
A26921 | And what good is it but that which seemeth good for the Body? |
A26921 | And what have I that I have not received? |
A26921 | And what if its profound Vitality, Self perception, and Self- love be by a kind of Sensation and Intuition, rather than by Discursive Reason? |
A26921 | And what maketh the Society of Saints so sweet as holy Love? |
A26921 | And what reason have I now to be unwilling either to live or die? |
A26921 | And what should I do with a Horse when I shall need to ride or travel no more, or with a Pen when I must write no more? |
A26921 | And what the Causa finalis doth to it? |
A26921 | And what they promised and vowed to do? |
A26921 | And what though Bruits have Sense and Affection, doth it follow therefore that we have none now? |
A26921 | And what though God give not to all men an overcoming measure, nor to the best so much as they desire? |
A26921 | And what though I know not now fully what service it is that I must do? |
A26921 | And what though it must be so? |
A26921 | And what we know not, Christ, that prepareth and promiseth it, doth know: And is that nothing to us, if really we Trust our Souls to him? |
A26921 | And what wonder if it Operate no further than Objects are admitted? |
A26921 | And what would I not suffer for such a fight? |
A26921 | And when God will call me to a more glorious Vision, and Fruition in Heaven, shall I draw back and be unwilling to go? |
A26921 | And when this Learning is got, how uncertain are we whether the words have no ambiguity? |
A26921 | And whence should all this be in man and not in Beasts, if man had no further reason of hopes and fears then they? |
A26921 | And whether separated from the Body, they operate in and by any other Vehicle, or without, and how? |
A26921 | And whether the Body be animated as Vegetative or Sensitive before the entrance of the rational Soul? |
A26921 | And whither should I look for Rest but home to my heavenly Father and to Thee? |
A26921 | And who is fittest to do it? |
A26921 | And who knows what Perfect Sight, Knowledg, Love, and Joy are, but by perfect Seeing, Knowing, Loving, and Rejoicing? |
A26921 | And who will let go his present welfare, without some hope of better as a reward? |
A26921 | And whom should we hear so willingly, so obediently as Christ? |
A26921 | And why doth my Soul imprisoned in Flesh no more desire it? |
A26921 | And why fear we that which endeth all our pains and fears? |
A26921 | And why may I not accordingly put my self as into the case of them, who saw all Christ''s Miracles and saw him risen and ascend towards Heaven? |
A26921 | And why not hereafter as well as now? |
A26921 | And why should I strive by the fears of Death, against the common course of Nature, and against my only hopes of Happiness? |
A26921 | And why then should they think whither soever Souls go, that they cease their individuation) When they go among individuals? |
A26921 | And will Christ love me better than I love my Body? |
A26921 | And will he forsake the Habitation which his love hath chosen? |
A26921 | And will he not shew it? |
A26921 | And will it be a comfort to a man in such torment to tell him, that he is God? |
A26921 | And will it not be better with Christ than here? |
A26921 | And will it not entertain my separated Soul? |
A26921 | And will not his will and choice be best? |
A26921 | And wilt thou forsake a sinner in his extremity, who consenteth to thy Covenant, and would not forsake thee? |
A26921 | And wilt thou not willingly go, when infinite fatherly Love doth call thee? |
A26921 | And would I not have my Prayers heard, and my desires granted? |
A26921 | And would I now undo all, or Cross and frustrate all his Operations? |
A26921 | And would mens Thoughts of the Churches needs detain them? |
A26921 | And would thou not see the Sun? |
A26921 | And wouldst thou not see it, where it shineth forth in fullest Glory? |
A26921 | And yet, alas, how cold are our desires to the time and place where we shall have much more? |
A26921 | And, alas, how ordinarily doth some carnal a ● fection corrupt the appetite of the Soul? |
A26921 | Are such as these meet for his work, his Love, his Acceptance, or his Kingdom? |
A26921 | Are the Stars which I see less substantial than a Carkass in a darksom Grave? |
A26921 | Are we vile dirty Sinners in Flesh now fit for heavenly sights or joys? |
A26921 | Art thou a Lover of Holiness, and of Love itself, and wouldst thou not be united to the Holy who are made of Love? |
A26921 | Art thou a Lover of Wisdom, and wouldst thou not be united to the Wise? |
A26921 | Art thou a hater of enmity, discord and divisions, and a Lover of Unity here on Earth, and wouldst thou not be where all the just are One? |
A26921 | Art thou afraid to go to him who is the only cure of thy fears? |
A26921 | Art thou not desirous of his presence? |
A26921 | As I said before, what a penury, and yet redundancy of words have we? |
A26921 | As if itself, and all the Creatures, and God were nothing, or no fit Objects for a Soul? |
A26921 | As this World hath used thee, it would use thee still, and it will use others? |
A26921 | At how cheap a rate to my Flesh could I have got the Applause of factious men, if that had been my end and business? |
A26921 | Away, away, the vindictive Flames are ready to consume this sinful World? |
A26921 | Aweary of exciting Divine Love, and exercising it in Divine Praise, which are the works of Angels, and all the heavenly Host? |
A26921 | Aweary of speaking to my heavenly Father, for endless Blessedness, upon such joyful terms of Hope as he hath given me? |
A26921 | Aweary of the Thoughts of the City of God, the heavenly Society and Work? |
A26921 | Be not so unthankful, O my Soul, as to question doubtingly whether thy heavenly Father, and thy Lord doth love thee? |
A26921 | Be not then foolishly distrustful and inquisitive? |
A26921 | Bruits have Life: And must we therefore have no Life hereafter, because it is a thing that''s common ● oBruits? |
A26921 | But alas, how deaf is Flesh to Reason? |
A26921 | But are they in Heaven such visible and shaped Bodies as they appeared on the Mount? |
A26921 | But are they not a cause that Mercy can forgive? |
A26921 | But are we not always so? |
A26921 | But can not God cause as a Creator, by making that which is not himself? |
A26921 | But doth not this laying so much on Tradition favour Popery? |
A26921 | But hast thou not mercy also to give me, even that Fitness, and that Faith? |
A26921 | But how are we sure that these three men tell us nothing but the Truth? |
A26921 | But how are we sure who our selves never saw the Person, Miracles, Resurrection, Ascension of Christ, that the History of them is true? |
A26921 | But how came Moses to have a Body on the Mount, who is said to have been buried, and therefore took none with him into Heaven? |
A26921 | But how did Peter know Moses and Elias, whom he had never seen before? |
A26921 | But how is it that Christ is said, to learn obedience by the things that he suffered, and so to be made perfect? |
A26921 | But how then cometh my Soul to be yet so low, so dark, so fond of this wretched Flesh and World, and so backward to go home, and dwell with Christ? |
A26921 | But if the Soul existed not till its incorporation, what wonder if it Operate but ut forma, when it is united to the Body for that use? |
A26921 | But is such Patience a better and sweeter life, than rest and joy? |
A26921 | But it is not incongruous to say, What would I not do? |
A26921 | But this would equalize the Good and Bad, or at least those that were good in several degrees; And where then were the Reward and Punishment? |
A26921 | But was there any doubt to be made between Christ''s interest and his own? |
A26921 | But what is there so desirable in this Life? |
A26921 | But what was it that they talkt about? |
A26921 | But what was the Introduction to this Apparition and Transfiguration? |
A26921 | But who can see cause to dream of such a partition, never threatened by God? |
A26921 | But why depart we from things certain, by such presumptions as these? |
A26921 | But with how many allays are such comforts here mixed? |
A26921 | But, O my Soul, what need''st thou be troubled in this kind of streight? |
A26921 | But, Why did Christ shew this Vision but it Three of his Disciples? |
A26921 | But, Why did not these Three Apostles tell any of this Vision till after Christ''s Resurrection? |
A26921 | But, alas, what power hath selfishness in most? |
A26921 | Can Faith live in the Dark? |
A26921 | Can I see the Light of heavenly Glory, in this darksome shell and womb of Flesh? |
A26921 | Can not we lie in Bed without Boots and Spurs? |
A26921 | Can not we sit at home without a Horse or Coach? |
A26921 | Can the Plants for Life, or the Eye for Light, go up unto the Sun? |
A26921 | Canst thou forget the sealed Testimonies of it? |
A26921 | Changed by Custom, or Arbitrary design? |
A26921 | Conscience hath replied, that This is my infirmity? |
A26921 | Could they forget all this? |
A26921 | Did Christ tell them of it, as not knowing it before? |
A26921 | Did God love none from the beginning of the World, but Henoch and Elias? |
A26921 | Did I not even now repeat so many as should shame thy doubts? |
A26921 | Did he live and die to make me Rich or advanced in the World? |
A26921 | Did he love me in my youth and health? |
A26921 | Did he need their comfort, as Angels in his trials ministred to him and strengthned him? |
A26921 | Did they hear what they said, or did Christ after tell them? |
A26921 | Didst thou not find a need of patience to undergo them? |
A26921 | Do not my fellow Creatures die for my daily Food? |
A26921 | Do we not know what Knowledge is? |
A26921 | Dost thou not judge thy self unworthy of Eternal Life, when thou no more desirest to enjoy it? |
A26921 | Doth God in great Mercy make pain and feebleness the Harbingers of Death, and wilt thou not understand their business? |
A26921 | Doth God or I know better what he hath yet to do? |
A26921 | Doth he want either Shill, or Will, or Power? |
A26921 | Doth not the Spirit of Adoption incline us to love our Fathers presence, and to be loth to be long from home? |
A26921 | Doth the Soul cease its increase in vigorous Perception, when the Body ceaseth its increase or vigor of sensation? |
A26921 | Doubtless it will be a living, perceiving, sensible Recipient, of the felicitating Love of God and my Redeemer? |
A26921 | Even of thy sinful Neighbours, who in the midst of Light still live in darkness? |
A26921 | For if the Soul cease to be, it can not pass into another Body, nor can it re- enter into this? |
A26921 | For one that will indeed comfort you? |
A26921 | For what conceptions can we have of a Spiritual Body? |
A26921 | Had I a Friend now that did for me but the hundredth part of what God doth, how dearly should I love him? |
A26921 | Had it no other individual to illuminate or to terminate its beams or action, were it nothing to illuminate the common Air? |
A26921 | Hast thou been seeking, and praying, and labouring, and suffering so many Years, for that which now thou seemest scarce willing to obtain? |
A26921 | Hast thou not the Witness in thy self? |
A26921 | Hast thou so oft groaned for the general blindness and wickedness of the World, and art thou loth to leave it for a better? |
A26921 | Hath Christ done so much to purchase the heavenly Glory for thee, and now art thou unwilling to go into the possession of it? |
A26921 | Hath Grace been so long preparing me for Glory, and shall I be loath to take possession of it? |
A26921 | Have I lived in the experience of it, and shall I die in the doubts of it? |
A26921 | Have they done for thee what he hath done: Are they Love itself; Is their love so full, so firm and so unchangeable as his? |
A26921 | Have thy pains, thy weariness, thy languishings, thy labours, thy cares and fears about this Body, been pleasing to thee? |
A26921 | He hath given me his Son as the great Pledge of his Love: And what then will he think too dear for me? |
A26921 | He hath made me a Member of his Son, and so far already united me to him: And will he not take care of the Members of his Son? |
A26921 | He is Essential Infinite Perfection, Power, Wisdom and Love? |
A26921 | He is my Father and special Benefactor; and hath taken me into his Family as his Child: And shall I not trust my heavenly Father? |
A26921 | He is not bound to tell us why: But we may know that a sight of heavenly Glory is not to be ordinarily expected on Earth? |
A26921 | He is there to prepare a place for me, and will take me to himself? |
A26921 | Here are Sound and Orthodox Ministers of Christ: But how few that most need them know which are they, and how to value them or use them? |
A26921 | Here is much historical Truth, and some Civil and Ecclesiastick Justice; but, alas, with how much odious falsehood, and injustice is it mixed? |
A26921 | How Holy a Doctrin doth Peter himself deliver as confirmed by this Apparition? |
A26921 | How can the will of Man have greater honour, than to be the same with the will of God? |
A26921 | How come the Stars therein to be so numerous, which are of the same Element? |
A26921 | How congruously did he choose every place of my Ministration, and Habitation to this day, without my own forecast or seeking? |
A26921 | How delightful will it be to see their Perfection in Wisdom, Holiness, Love and Concord? |
A26921 | How easily shall I then confute the cavils of all our present Unbelievers? |
A26921 | How else knew they what Satan said and did to him in his Temptations in the Wilderness, and on the Pinacle of the Temple? |
A26921 | How evident and clear then will every thing appear to me? |
A26921 | How far beyond my expectation hath Divine Mercy encouraged me in his Sacred work? |
A26921 | How great a deliverance will it be, to be freed from the temptations, and the inordinate love, and cares, and fears for this corruptible Flesh? |
A26921 | How great a difference was there between Mount Sinai and this Mount? |
A26921 | How joyfully shall I bless him that by that immortal Seed did regenerate me to the hopes of Glory? |
A26921 | How knew they what his Prayer was in his Agony? |
A26921 | How little clearer is my sight, and little quicker are my perceptions, of unseen things, than long ago? |
A26921 | How many Thousand bitter or contemning Thoughts have I had of all the glory and pleasures of this World? |
A26921 | How many Thousand love tokens from God have called me to believe and taste his Goodness? |
A26921 | How many Thousand strong and healthful Persons have been taken away by Death, whilst I have been upheld under all this weakness? |
A26921 | How many comfortable Hours have I had in the Society of living Saints, and in the love of faithful Friends? |
A26921 | How many days in publick and private we spent in preparation and in some prospect of the Blessedness which now they enjoy? |
A26921 | How many hundred studious Days and Weeks, and how many hard and tearing Thoughts, hath my little, very little knowledg cost me? |
A26921 | How many weaning experiences? |
A26921 | How much doth Love in the affairs of men? |
A26921 | How oft hast thou commanded 〈 ◊ 〉 to Rejoice? |
A26921 | How oft hath he succoured me, when Flesh, and Heart, and Art have failed? |
A26921 | How oft hath it looked up, and gasped after him, and said, O when shall I be nearer and better acquianted with my God? |
A26921 | How oft have I said, Whom have I in Heaven but Thee, and there is none on Earth I desire besides Thee? |
A26921 | How oft wouldst thou have rejoyced to have seen but the dawning of a Day of Universal Peace and Reformation? |
A26921 | How profitable have their Writings, their Conference, and their Prayers been? |
A26921 | How should it lose its formal Power? |
A26921 | How small is our knowledg in comparison of our Ignorance? |
A26921 | How suitable to his Love, and to the Nature of our Souls, and to the operations of every Grace? |
A26921 | How sure is the Promise of God? |
A26921 | How sweet hath one wise and holy( though weak and blemished) companion been to me here on Earth? |
A26921 | How sweet hath the Neighbourhood of the godly been? |
A26921 | How sweet have the holy Assemblies? |
A26921 | How sweet is the remembrance of the communion which I had with many of them in Shrewsbury and other parts of Shropshire? |
A26921 | How vain a Creature then were Man; and how little were the difference between waking and sleeping? |
A26921 | How various and numerous are they in the Sea, and on the Land, and in the Air? |
A26921 | I have had Forty years added to my Daies, since I would have been full glad of Hezekiah''s promise of Fifteen? |
A26921 | I have nothing to do with my Tongue and Pe ●, but to speak to thee, and for thee, and to publish thy Glory and thy Will? |
A26921 | I have prayed in hope: I have laboured, suffered and waited in hope: And by thy Grace I will die in hope? |
A26921 | I have too much loved it, and am too loth to leave it? |
A26921 | I shall know how God produceth Souls? |
A26921 | I shall know how far the Soul is receptive? |
A26921 | I shall know how far the semen in generation is animated: And how the animated semina of two make one? |
A26921 | I shall know how the Soul doth act upon it self, and what acts it hath that are not felt, in sleep in Apoplexies, and in the Womb? |
A26921 | I should have nothing to care for, but to please God and to be pleased in him, were it not for the care of this Bodily life? |
A26921 | If Christ must have men from Heaven to talk with him of his Cross, what cause have we to study the Cross? |
A26921 | If God will justifie, who shall condemn? |
A26921 | If Heaven be not better for me than Earth, God''s Word and Ordinances have been all in vain? |
A26921 | If I am not willing I am not yet sufficiently prepared? |
A26921 | If I be ● ● eve not this, how do I take him for my God? |
A26921 | If I desire any thing more than God, what sinfulness is in those desires, and how sad is their signification? |
A26921 | If a man be but uncertain what he should make the End of his Life, or what he should live for, how can he pitch upon an uncertain End? |
A26921 | If he be for me, who shall be against me? |
A26921 | If his, is it not he that must tell me what, and when, and how long? |
A26921 | If not, why should it now in its painful languor, seem to thee a more pleasant habitation than the glorious presence of thy Lord? |
A26921 | If the Divine Nature and Image, and the Love of God shed abroad on the Heart, be not our Excellency, Health, and Beauty, what is? |
A26921 | If the Jews discerned the great love of Christ to Lazarus by his Tears, canst not thou discern his Love to thee in his Blood? |
A26921 | If thou Lord shouldst mark Iniquity, O Lord, who should stand? |
A26921 | If thou hadst been but one Year kept in absolute darkness, wouldst thou have no desiring thoughts of light? |
A26921 | If you are convoying your Child in a Boat, or Coach, by Water, or by Land, and at every turn he be crying out[ O Father, whither do we go? |
A26921 | In all places where I have lived, how many excellent Souls( though here they were not perfect) are gone to Christ? |
A26921 | In the Grave it will be at rest, and not tormented as now it is, nor wish at Night, O that it were Morning; nor say at Morning, when will it be Night? |
A26921 | In the will of men, or Angels, or in our own wills? |
A26921 | Is Faith no knowledge? |
A26921 | Is any love comparable to his? |
A26921 | Is he not fitter to know and choose, and dispose of me, than I am? |
A26921 | Is he the God of the Mountains and not of the Valleys? |
A26921 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
A26921 | Is it Christ''s Godhead, or his Humane Soul, or his Humane Body, that we shall be Present with, and united to, or All? |
A26921 | Is it any strange thing for Fire to ascend? |
A26921 | Is it because that Death stands in the way? |
A26921 | Is it better than the dwelling place of perfect Spirits? |
A26921 | Is it my own, or his? |
A26921 | Is it not God himself that hath caused me to hope; was not Nature, Promise, and Grace from him? |
A26921 | Is it not appointed for all men once to die? |
A26921 | Is it not certain that one Man is not another? |
A26921 | Is it not certain, that some men are in torment of body and mind? |
A26921 | Is it not certain, that there are baser creatures in the World, than Men or Angels? |
A26921 | Is it not far better to dwell with GOD in Glory, than with sinful men in such a World as this? |
A26921 | Is it strange that Rivers should hasten to the Sea? |
A26921 | Is it unsuitable or hard to the Eye to see the Sun and Light? |
A26921 | Is it we or God that must choose his Servants, and cut out their work? |
A26921 | Is not Christ now to be there seen in greater Glory? |
A26921 | Is not Faith a seeing Grace? |
A26921 | Is not God the Living God? |
A26921 | Is not God''s Will Infinitely better than mine? |
A26921 | Is not a competent time of great Mercy on Earth, in order to the unseen felicity all that the best of men can hope for? |
A26921 | Is not all this Evidence true and sure? |
A26921 | Is not the heavenly communion then desirable, where every Man shall have his Own, and yet his Own be common to all others? |
A26921 | Is not the way of Life, through the Valley of Death, made safe by him that conquered Death? |
A26921 | Is not thy Body, while the parts by a uniting Soul are kept together and make One, in a better state than when it is crumbled into lifeless dust? |
A26921 | Is not thy Foundation firm? |
A26921 | Is the Jerusalem above, the Glorious Company of Saints and Angels, no better and more desirable a sight, than Moses and Elias were on the Mount? |
A26921 | Is there no growth of these apprehensions more to be expected? |
A26921 | Is there no more acquaintance above to be here expected? |
A26921 | Is there no remedy? |
A26921 | Is there such a dissimilitude of Saints in Heaven? |
A26921 | It is incongruous to say, What would I not give for such a sight? |
A26921 | It is that which all lower grace doth tend to, as Childhood doth to Manhood: And what is a world of Infants comparatively good for? |
A26921 | It will not there by tyed to a body of cross interests and inclinations, which is now the greatest snare and enemy to my Soul? |
A26921 | It''s worse than madness to be surprized with Sufferings and Death, before it''s seriously forethought of? |
A26921 | Lord, I have lived in hope? |
A26921 | Many a time have I cryed to the Lord in my trouble and he hath delivered me out of my distress? |
A26921 | Many a weary Night and Day: What cares, what fears, what griefs, what groans hath this Body cost me? |
A26921 | Must I desire to please him no better than I do in this imperfect state, in which I have, and do so much which is displeasing to him? |
A26921 | Must I sit down in so low a measure, while I am drawing nearer to the things believed? |
A26921 | My Faith hath oft been helpt by such experiences, and shall I forget them? |
A26921 | No Man loveth evil, as evil, but as some way a real or seeming good? |
A26921 | No sweeter foretast? |
A26921 | Nor fuller silencing of doubts and fears? |
A26921 | Nothing ever lay so heavy on my Heart as the sin and misery of Mankind, and to think how much of the World lyeth in folly and wickedness? |
A26921 | Now the Question is, Is it certainly the very same Fact and Doctrine which they received, and which we receive? |
A26921 | O blessed be God for Commands and Holy Duty: For they are equal to Promises: Who can fear that he shall lose by seeking God? |
A26921 | O how frail, how uncertain, how bad a thing is depraved Man? |
A26921 | O how great a part of Christianity is it, to understand and rightly bear the Cross? |
A26921 | O may I not be put to that dreadfull case, to cry out, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
A26921 | O pitty them who are left a while under the temptations, dangers and fears which have so long been thy own affliction? |
A26921 | O that I had no worse causes of my unwillingness yet to die, than my desire to do the work of life for my own and other mens Salvation? |
A26921 | O then let me long to be with him? |
A26921 | O then, for what should my Soul more pray, than for a clearer and a stronger Faith? |
A26921 | O what a blessed World would it be? |
A26921 | O what a sight, what a joyful sight will Death shew me by drawing aside the vail? |
A26921 | O what an unruly froward thing is the corrupted Soul of Man? |
A26921 | O what are my groans and all my cold and faint Petitions, and my dull Thanksgiving, to their harmonious joyful Praise? |
A26921 | O what hath God done in the Wonders of Redemption to make us sure? |
A26921 | O what holy, glorious, joyful Company shall we have above? |
A26921 | O where is the seeing, the longing, the rejoicing and triumphing Faith? |
A26921 | Of how little use is it to know what is contained in many Hundred of the Volumes that fill our Libraries? |
A26921 | Of how various and uncertain signification? |
A26921 | Oh how unexcusable am I for every weary Prayer or Meditation of such a Glory? |
A26921 | Or any Friend so boldly to be trusted? |
A26921 | Or as if that which in our compounded state, doth Operate on and by its Organs, had no other way of Operation without them? |
A26921 | Or at least of all those ordinary Christians who saw all the wonders done by the Reporters of these things? |
A26921 | Or by it to see the beautified World? |
A26921 | Or could they doubt whether he or his Persecutors were the stronger, and liker to prevail at last? |
A26921 | Or for a Man to love his Life or Health; his Father or his Friend? |
A26921 | Or is the means of our good to be accused? |
A26921 | Or is this World a place for building Tabernacles, where we may see the Lord, and take up our rest? |
A26921 | Or like a guilty Cain? |
A26921 | Or like an unbelieving Sadduce, that either believeth not, or hopeth not for, the forgiveness of sin, and the life Everlasting? |
A26921 | Or set them by at our Journeys end? |
A26921 | Or that we shall have none hereafter? |
A26921 | Or what Love, and Joy are but by loving and rejoicing? |
A26921 | Or what shall I do? |
A26921 | Or who can live with displeased men, and not feel some of the fruits of their displeasure? |
A26921 | Our Artes loquendi, dicendi,& disserendi? |
A26921 | Our Friends are our helpers and comforters; but how oft also are they our hinderers, troubles and grief? |
A26921 | Patience in it while God will so try thee, is thy duty? |
A26921 | Peter was not weary with the sight of this heavenly Apparition: Why should I be weary of the believing contemplation of greater things? |
A26921 | Seeing then Love hath ripened me for itself, shall I not willingly drop into its hand? |
A26921 | Shall I have no more of the heavenly Life, and Light, and Love? |
A26921 | Shall I love the Name of Heaven, better than Heaven itself? |
A26921 | Shall I not Trust, and quietly Trust, that Infinite Wisdom, Love, and Power, whom I have so long trusted, and found so good? |
A26921 | Shall I not come more willingly to the Celestial Feast? |
A26921 | Shall his Children be like the fearful Hare? |
A26921 | Shall my Soul be sensless? |
A26921 | Shall pain or dying make me doubt? |
A26921 | Shall that which is now the form of be then more Lifeless, Sensless, or uncapable than the form of Bruits is now? |
A26921 | Shall the imagination of House, Gardens, Walks, Libraries, Prospects, Meadows, Orchards, Hills, and Rivers, allure the desires of deceived Minds? |
A26921 | Shall we say that he liveth not because Bruits live? |
A26921 | Shall we so often grieve the Spirit of God, and not be grieved? |
A26921 | Should I fear a darksom passage into a World of perfect LIGHT? |
A26921 | Should I fear to go to LOVE itself? |
A26921 | Should I not love a Lovely and a Loving World much better than a World where there is comparatively 〈 ◊ 〉 little Loveliness or Love? |
A26921 | So much knowledge of good and evil in lower matters, as came to us by sin, is unworthy of our fond tenaciousness, and fear of losing it? |
A26921 | So that if such a nature Act not, it must be because its natural Inclination is hindred by a stronger; And who shall hinder it? |
A26921 | Spirits are Essentially Active, Intellective, and Volitive: And will God continue such Essential Powers in vain? |
A26921 | Sure it is not true that the Souls of the Fathers before Christ''s coming did not enter into Heaven, but lay in some inferiour Limbus? |
A26921 | That Henoch and Elias at their entrance into those Regions laid by their Bodies, and became such as Abraham, and other holy Souls? |
A26921 | The Holy Scriptures are precious, because I have there the Promise of Glory; but is not the Possession better than the Promise? |
A26921 | The Sun doth not decay by its wonderful Motion, Light and Heat: And why should Spirits? |
A26921 | The eye of my Understanding, and all its Thoughts will be useless or vexatious to me, without thine illuminating Beams? |
A26921 | The insensible Creatures are but Beautified by the Suns communication of its Light and Heat; but the sensitives, have also the Pleasure of it? |
A26921 | The particular uses of this speech we know not? |
A26921 | The poor Heathen, Infidel, Mahometane Nations have no Preachers of the Gospel? |
A26921 | The same difficulty poseth us about the risen Body of Christ: He would not have Mary touch him because he had not yet ascended to his Father? |
A26921 | Then I shall know clearly why( or to what use) God prospered the wicked, and tryed the Righteous by so many afflictions? |
A26921 | There are Worthy and Religious Families which honour God, and are honoured by him: But, alas, how few? |
A26921 | There are the heavenly Hosts whose holy Love and Joyful Praises I would fain be a partaker of? |
A26921 | These stand up against all that is said; and words will not overcome them: what then must be done? |
A26921 | Think, O my Soul, what the Suns quickening Light and Heat is to this lower corporeal World? |
A26921 | This is the Fruit of Sin, and Nature would not have it so: I mean the Nature of this compound MAN: But what though it be so? |
A26921 | This proveth infallibly the Tradition of the same Faith in the Essentials: But how prove you that the same Holy Scripture is delivered as uncorrupted? |
A26921 | This was not to make it known to Christ, who came into the World to die for sin: What then was it for? |
A26921 | This would make it much easier to me to believe that there is certainly a future blessed life for Souls; while I even tasted how God loveth them? |
A26921 | Thou describest the kindness of the Dogs to a Lazarus that lay at a rich Man''s Doors in Sores? |
A26921 | Thou hast joyfully lived with many of them here; and is it not better be with them there? |
A26921 | Though the three Disciples were admitted to this glorious Society, how different was their case from that of Christ, and Moses, and Elias? |
A26921 | Though these delights are far above those of sensual S ● ● ners, yet alas, how low and little are they? |
A26921 | Thy desires to be nearer to his glory? |
A26921 | To Love him more? |
A26921 | To know him better? |
A26921 | To my inferiours God hath made me in my low capacity somwhat helpful? |
A26921 | To seek his Prerogative to thy self is vain usurping arrogance? |
A26921 | To thee, O my Saviour I commit my Soul; it is thine own by Redemption; it is thine own by Covenant? |
A26921 | Union will make his pleasure to be much mine? |
A26921 | Unwilling to be with Saints and Angels, who are all Life,& Light, and Love? |
A26921 | Unwilling to see the Glory of Jehovah? |
A26921 | Was not Lazarus in the Bosom of God himself? |
A26921 | Was not the Feast of of Grace, as a Sacrament of the Feast of Glory: Did I not take it in remembrance of my Lord until he come? |
A26921 | Was that Mount a better place than Heaven? |
A26921 | Were it not for Bodily Interest, and its Temptations, how much more innocently and holily might I live? |
A26921 | What Pleasures be they that steal away mens Hearts from the heavenly Pleasures of Faith, Hope, and Love, but the Pleasures of this Flesh? |
A26921 | What Soul then on Earth can possibly conceive how great a pleasure it will be for a glorified Soul to see the Lord? |
A26921 | What a Dungeon is this Flesh? |
A26921 | What a mixture, what a discord would there be in my expressions? |
A26921 | What abundant experience have I had of God''s fidelity and love? |
A26921 | What am I to those more excellent Persons whom in all Ages he hath taken out of the World? |
A26921 | What are two or three in such a Society? |
A26921 | What blessed preparations are made for our Hope? |
A26921 | What but the Body and its Life, and Pleasure is the chief Objective alluring cause of all this sin and misery? |
A26921 | What can we conceive of more certainly, than of Life, and Light, and Love; of a Region, and of Persons essentiated of these? |
A26921 | What cost too great for one Hours talk with such a Messenger? |
A26921 | What day goeth over my Head in which abundance desire not or expect not impossibilities from me? |
A26921 | What else do the prophane sell their heavenly Inheritance for, as Esau his Birthright? |
A26921 | What else is the summ of lawful Prayers, but God himself? |
A26921 | What else signifieth their Mark and Name, HOLINESS TO THE LORD? |
A26921 | What excellent help, and sweet illumination? |
A26921 | What great experience do command me to Trust him? |
A26921 | What have I to do with all my Reputation, and Interest in my Friends, but to increase thy Church, and propagate thy holy Truth and Service? |
A26921 | What have I to do with my remaining Time, even these last and languishing hours, but to look up unto thee, and wait for thy Grace, and thy Salvation? |
A26921 | What have I to rejoice in, if this hoped Glory, be not my joy? |
A26921 | What if he will continue my life no longer, who ever pray for it, and how earnestly soever? |
A26921 | What is done in the World that is good, but by LOVE? |
A26921 | What is in me that I should expect exemption from the common lot of all Mankind? |
A26921 | What is it but our separation to God as his peculiar beloved People? |
A26921 | What is it but the Interest of this Body, that standeth in competition against the Interest of our Souls and God? |
A26921 | What is our Hope but the Hope of Glory? |
A26921 | What is sin but a willful forsaking of God? |
A26921 | What less can the Promise of being with him signifie? |
A26921 | What need we to preach, hear, read, pray, to bring us to Heaven when we are there? |
A26921 | What pleasant retirements and quietness in the Countrey have been the fruits of persecuting Wrath? |
A26921 | What shall we say to these things? |
A26921 | What shall we think then? |
A26921 | What should support and comfort me under my bodily languishings and pains? |
A26921 | What sounding Brass and tinkling Cymbals, a lifeless Voice, are they that preach of God, and Christ and heavenly Glory without Love? |
A26921 | What taketh up the Thoughts, and Care which we should lay out upon things Spiritual and Heavenly, but this Body and its Life? |
A26921 | What then is to be expected from Strangers and from Enemies? |
A26921 | What then will it be to live in the union of perfect Love with perfect Saints in Heaven for ever, and with them concordantly to love the God of Love? |
A26921 | What travel should I think too far? |
A26921 | What was it but this Glory to which he did( finally) Elect thee? |
A26921 | What was the end and use of all the Good that ever I saw, or that ever God did for my Soul or Body, but to teach me to Love him, and to long for more? |
A26921 | What was thy Grace for, but to make me willing of Glory, and the way to it? |
A26921 | What wonder if its initial Operations like a spark of Fire in Tinder, or the first lighting of a Candle, be weak and scarce by us perceptible? |
A26921 | When and where since he first sent me forth, did I labour in vain? |
A26921 | When he asked, Can ye drink of the Cup that I drink of, and be Baptized with the Baptism, that I am Baptized with? |
A26921 | Whence came all the pleasure thou hast had in his Sacred Truth, and Ways, and Service? |
A26921 | Whence else are thy groanings after God? |
A26921 | Whence is it that men are so addicted to talkativeness, but that Nature would make all our Thoughts and passions as common a ● it can? |
A26921 | Where dost thou read that he Elected thee to the Riches and Honours of this World: or to the pleasures of the Flesh? |
A26921 | Where else is it that we should rest? |
A26921 | Whether by communication of substance, or only by disposing the recipient matter? |
A26921 | Whether it be best believing it without consideration of the difficulties or proofs? |
A26921 | Whether it be to our Intellection, as the Sun is to our sight? |
A26921 | Whether they give us the true notice of the Speakers 〈 ◊ 〉, and of the Matter spoken of? |
A26921 | Which by destroying our love to God, doth make us unmeer to believe and sweetly perceive his Love? |
A26921 | Which should be the Season of Triumphant Faith, and Hope, and Joy, if not when I am entering on the World of Joy? |
A26921 | Whither should Spirits go but to the Region, or World of Spirits? |
A26921 | Who breathed in thee all those Requests that thou hast sent up to God? |
A26921 | Who can ever have low Thoughts of God''s love and Mercy who believeth this? |
A26921 | Who can think that all believing holy Souls, that have passed hence from the beginning of the World, have been deceived in their Faith and Hope? |
A26921 | Who could stand dallying as most men do, at the Door of Eternity, that did verily believe his Immortal Soul must be shortly there? |
A26921 | Who else overcame thy Folly, and Pride, and vain desires, so far as they are overcome? |
A26921 | Who knoweth what Light or Sight is, but by Seeing; or what Knowledge is but by knowing? |
A26921 | Who made me to differ? |
A26921 | Whose work am I doing? |
A26921 | Why are they taken up to be so laid by? |
A26921 | Why did God shew the back parts of his Glory to none but Moses, no not to his Brother Aaron? |
A26921 | Why did he save but Noah and Seven with him in the Ark? |
A26921 | Why did he speak to him only in the Bush and in the Mount? |
A26921 | Why did he translate none to Heaven without dying but Henoch and Elias? |
A26921 | Why doth the Scripture ascribe Love and Joy to God and Angels if there were not some reason for it? |
A26921 | Why else did the Martyrs so patiently suffer? |
A26921 | Why should it be hard to believe that God will glorifie the Souls whom he loveth? |
A26921 | Why shouldst thou draw back, as if the case were yet left doubtful? |
A26921 | Why then may I not with distinct conceptions and joyful desires look after the Souls of my departed Friends, that are now in the Celestial Kingdom? |
A26921 | Why then should I doubt of my Fathers Love? |
A26921 | Why then should the Trinity seem incredidible? |
A26921 | Will Almighty LOVE ever hurt me or forsake me? |
A26921 | Will God ever raise so low, so dull, so guilty a Heart, to such a foretast of Glory, as is this effusion of his Love by the Holy Ghost? |
A26921 | Will he be lother to lose me than I am to lose a Member or to die? |
A26921 | Will he lose those that are given him? |
A26921 | Will he not take incomparably greater pleasure in animating and actuating me for ever, than my Soul doth in animating and actuating this Body? |
A26921 | Will not Love and Union make their Joy to be my own: if Love here must make all my Friends and Neighbours comforts to become my own? |
A26921 | Will the Lord cast off for ever? |
A26921 | Will you not believe that the Laws of the Land are genuine, or that ever there were such Kings as made them unless he that tells it you work Miracles? |
A26921 | Wilt thou take Strang ● ● ● into Heaven,& know them as thine that do no better know thee here? |
A26921 | Woe to me, if I did dissemble: If not, Why should my Soul draw back? |
A26921 | Would I be again among Dogs and Swine? |
A26921 | Would I be here again in the prospect of a Grave, with fear of dying; as strange as now to the heavenly Felicity? |
A26921 | Would I have God to alter this determinate Course, and make sinful Man immortal upon Earth? |
A26921 | Would a light at Midnight have pleased thee so well: Hast thou prayed and laboured for it so hard? |
A26921 | Would not a sight, a glimpse of Heaven, have transported any Holy Soul? |
A26921 | Wouldst thou be a God and Saviour to thy self? |
A26921 | Wouldst thou dwell with thy beloved Body in the Grave, where it will rot and stink in loathsome darkness? |
A26921 | Yea and what an Act is, and what a Habit? |
A26921 | Yea every wise and godly Man doth cast them off with detestation: You must be against Holiness on that account as well as against Death? |
A26921 | Yea while it is within me, were it not covered from my sight, what a loathsom mass would my Intestines appear? |
A26921 | Yea, Devils in Flesh, who hate and persecute the Regenerate Seed, and all that will not receive their mark, and be as mad& bad as they? |
A26921 | Yea, doth he give the Bruits, Life, Sense, Delight and Beauty, and hath he not better things for men? |
A26921 | Yea, even those that now lie in tears and fears, and are overwhelmed with doubts and troubles? |
A26921 | Yea, it is not so much I that live, as Christ Liveth in me? |
A26921 | Yea, to rejoice with exceeding and unspeakable joy: And how fain would I in this obey thee? |
A26921 | after they had seen the Kingdom of God come in Power, and Christ''s Face shine as the Sun in its brightness? |
A26921 | and after all this shall I not trust him? |
A26921 | and am almost there where belief must pass into sight and love? |
A26921 | and animate some Bodies; and so that all in Heaven have some Bodies: If so, what Bodies are they? |
A26921 | and feel what Life and Love are? |
A26921 | and of an Abortive? |
A26921 | and see what Light is? |
A26921 | and that when I am so dark and low? |
A26921 | and whether they take with them any of the fiery Nature as a Vehicle or as a constitutive part? |
A26921 | and whither should Christ''s Members, and holy Spirits go, but to himself, and the heavenly Society? |
A26921 | and will he be favourable no more? |
A26921 | doth his Promise fail to Generations? |
A26921 | for Saints? |
A26921 | hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
A26921 | hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies? |
A26921 | how are they unible? |
A26921 | how should I bear with comfort the sufferings of this wretched life, without the hopes of a life with Christ? |
A26921 | how thankfully should I have thought of the work of Redemption and Sanctification? |
A26921 | my weary hours, and my daily experience of the Vanity and Vexation of all things under the Sun, had I not a prospect of a comfortable end of all? |
A26921 | not by Nature; for its Nature hath nothing that tendeth to deterioration, or decay, or self- destruction? |
A26921 | or must I take up with the passive silence and inactivity, which some Fryars persuade us is nearer to Perfection? |
A26921 | or question them without cause at last? |
A26921 | or that he is part of an universal Soul? |
A26921 | raised a report that the beloved Disciple should not die, why should not plain Promises assure me that I shall live with him that loveth me for ever? |
A26921 | saith the same Seneca, unless he lift up himself above humane things? |
A26921 | unwilling to be with my glorified Lord? |
A26921 | will it be a Clod or Stone? |
A26921 | without it, who shall plead thy Cause against the Devil, World and Flesh? |
A26921 | yea or the fiery Principle of Vegetation in a Tree, to carry up the earthy matter to a great procerity? |
A26921 | yea, against him to his Enemies, even when I knew that all was lost, and worse than lost, which was not his? |
A26921 | 〈 ◊ 〉 how wonderfully he hath helped both me and others? |
A27069 | & c. Is it no matter who it be, so we think him to be the right? |
A27069 | ''s own definition, judge whether it be not the Papal Sect? |
A27069 | ( 2d) If Presbyters may have Votes in National and Provincial Councils, why not in General ones? |
A27069 | ( But do they think so themselves?) |
A27069 | ( Was that all the World then?) |
A27069 | * But the Bishop of Scythopolis may be found in some Councils: And where is that? |
A27069 | * Where was it then? |
A27069 | 1. Who can tell that Peter did preach his own Supremacy? |
A27069 | 1. Who could conjecture that by an act of the Will, you meant not an act in the Will, but from it? |
A27069 | 1. Who is it( ad esse) that must call, convene and confirm it? |
A27069 | 16. and other places, address''d their Speech first to him: But doth it follow that therefore he was Governour of all the Apostles? |
A27069 | 2, Constance and Basil may be deceived in your very Fundamentals of Authority, in matter of fact so near at hand? |
A27069 | 2. Who is the maker of this Canon Law? |
A27069 | 2. receive faith on the authority of the Catholick Church? |
A27069 | 2. was, What mean you by sufficient proposal? |
A27069 | 3. tell us why the same People may not take Protestant, Armenian, Abassine Bishops, or Presbyters for true Pastors, by the same Proof? |
A27069 | 66, 67. he asks[ Whether Christ performed immediately any visible Action in relation to the Church?] |
A27069 | Afterward Maximus got both Peter and the Egyptian bishops to make him bishop of Constantinople( where was the Pope all this while?) |
A27069 | Alas, how few in England, Ireland, or any Countrey know what the Council of Chalcedon did, or ever heard it? |
A27069 | Alas, who can be saved on these Mens terms? |
A27069 | All are free from believing in the Pope; we believe in God, but not in the Pope: who of us ever charged you to do so? |
A27069 | All hard words: Had I put him but to have told us the meaning of these also, what work should I have made him? |
A27069 | All things were to be done decently, and in order: And yet, who ever said, but you, that all this is essential to the Church? |
A27069 | And I believe your second: but do not you see that you desert your Cause? |
A27069 | And Oportet discentem credere fide humanâ, that is, he must suppose his Teacher wiser than himself, or else how can he judge him fit to Teach him? |
A27069 | And Pope and Council dare not, or can not, or will not determinate what maketh a Christian or member of their Church? |
A27069 | And after all this what is it that he denyeth? |
A27069 | And also that Tradition not written in the Bible be believed? |
A27069 | And are all these now absolved from heresie? |
A27069 | And are not these Audible and Visible to the World? |
A27069 | And are we indeed agreed? |
A27069 | And are we not yet so far right and reconciled? |
A27069 | And by them a Speech of the Pope''s Legates goeth for proof of the Judgment of the Council: But what was that Speech it self? |
A27069 | And can we find the Church by them then? |
A27069 | And did I not adde, the constitutive parts are Christ and Christians, as the pars imperans& subdita: are there more notifying words in use? |
A27069 | And did they mean that this belonged ever to Constantinople, and that of Divine Right? |
A27069 | And do all their Historians erroneously number their Schisms? |
A27069 | And do not Heathens do the same? |
A27069 | And do not Protestant Libraries contain such professions, and their Pulpits ring of them every Lords Day? |
A27069 | And doth not Gods Veracity give Veracity to the Speaker, and use it? |
A27069 | And doth not every novice in Logick know this? |
A27069 | And doth not this great Disputer know that the Arch- Bishop of Bostra was in the Empire, though it were in Arabia Petraea? |
A27069 | And have not I professed it in sixty Volumns and more? |
A27069 | And how can we dispute intelligibly, when you can no better explain your terms? |
A27069 | And how can we expect contradiction of an action done a thousand miles off, which none near knew of? |
A27069 | And how come Words spoken, to be more intelligible than words written? |
A27069 | And how comes importing to be put instead of necessity to salvation? |
A27069 | And how long after this was it that all History tells us the Muscovites and Russians( that were not Gothes) were converted to Christianity? |
A27069 | And how the Hereticaters can know the sufficiency of the proposals to others? |
A27069 | And how then shall we believe the Popes own authority? |
A27069 | And how will he know who they are? |
A27069 | And if Ieremias had a mind to Rule further than the Empire, now the Empire is Mahome ● … an, and Subjects Voluntary and free, what wonder is it? |
A27069 | And if any little part of it were visible, what''s that to the rest? |
A27069 | And if any were, how inconsiderable their number was, ● … nd on what occasion it was like that they were voluntarily there? |
A27069 | And if his Consecration be not necessary to Episcopacy, how will you prove Ordination necessary to the Priesthood? |
A27069 | And if so, what is proper to the office? |
A27069 | And if these prove not an universal Sovereignty of the Patriarch of Constantinople, whether the like or less will prove it for Rome? |
A27069 | And if they were obliged, what''s that to notifie the, Tradition of all the absent Churches? |
A27069 | And is all the rest come now to be no Heresie? |
A27069 | And is he therefore out of the Empire because in Coelosyria? |
A27069 | And is here any notice how to know a member of their Church any more than in the former? |
A27069 | And is it lawful for a Subject to subtract himself from the obedience of a lawful Pastor because he is a scandalous Offender? |
A27069 | And is it my hard fate to become a Heretick more than all the rest of my neighbours, because I have read your Councils when they have not? |
A27069 | And is not the Gospel then made uncertain by you, which must be believed on the authority of an uncertain Ministry? |
A27069 | And is that an office properly Ecclesiastical and Sacred, which may be exercised by others not of that office? |
A27069 | And may not Parish- priests have so also over the people? |
A27069 | And may not one of us, or any Christian perswade a Man to be Subject to the Church of Christ? |
A27069 | And may not ordained Presbyters ordain much more? |
A27069 | And may they not be credible Witnesses against him till he consent? |
A27069 | And must I suspend my reception of the Pope till the Abassines, Armenians, Greeks, yea or Mexicans, and the Antipodes signifie their satisfaction? |
A27069 | And must men know all that distinctly, which they Believe not distinctly but in their general? |
A27069 | And must poor mens Faith and Consciences be thus laid upon a game at Cheating Words? |
A27069 | And must subjection come in for heresie? |
A27069 | And must we therefore have as many symbols of Christianity as there are various degrees of Understandings? |
A27069 | And now see how he talketh? |
A27069 | And now, Reader, I leave it to thy reason whether this man have given us any regardable notice at all, what is Heresie? |
A27069 | And of the Prophets and Apostles? |
A27069 | And of those that Honour their Names how few know what they held? |
A27069 | And seeing Cardinals are the newest way of Election, is not the newest likest to be the abuse? |
A27069 | And still the question recurreth, what is it that must be particularly believed to essentiate the Church? |
A27069 | And then what notice had men in the long Schisms, which was the true Pope? |
A27069 | And then( suppose it were to Avignion, or to Constantinople) where is St. Peter''s Successor? |
A27069 | And they that followed Dioscorus at Alexandria( being Orthodox), as they that adhered to Proterius? |
A27069 | And till you have proved it, what need they, or I care for yoùr words? |
A27069 | And to end all doubts, the Subscriptions shew that they were not there; shall we not believe your own Books, and our own Eyes? |
A27069 | And to know that this Universal Tribunal is infallible, before they believe in Christ himself, who is supposed to give them their Infallibility? |
A27069 | And was Palestine without the Empire? |
A27069 | And was he Pope or no before this acquiescing? |
A27069 | And was he not concerned to do it? |
A27069 | And was not Thebais in the Empire? |
A27069 | And were not your Popes so ordinarily, till Hildebrand got the better of the Emperor? |
A27069 | And what Indian, or Armenian, or Persian Bishops were imposed or deposed by the Pope of Rome? |
A27069 | And what a Society is that where the reception of the Pars Imperans is not necessary to every subject? |
A27069 | And what a priviledg hath the Pope or a Patriarch above an inferiour Christian? |
A27069 | And what an useless thing to they make Gods Word, that they may set up their own Expositions in its stead? |
A27069 | And what are those? |
A27069 | And what but the sword doth make your cause to be better than theirs? |
A27069 | And what is Implicite belief of Popish Traditions in particular, but the explicite belief that all Popish Traditions in general are true? |
A27069 | And what is Mission besides those three, which is also so necessary? |
A27069 | And what is Sufficiency? |
A27069 | And what is that? |
A27069 | And what is the foundation of this faith? |
A27069 | And what meaneth he by Iurisdiction that was wanting? |
A27069 | And what need I more? |
A27069 | And what of that? |
A27069 | And what then? |
A27069 | And what then? |
A27069 | And what way must the Churches satisfaction be notified to me? |
A27069 | And what wonder while they are so imperfect in knowledg, and all grace? |
A27069 | And what''s this but the same again? |
A27069 | And when every Bishop used what Liturgy he pleased in his own Congregation, Was there then no Communion between the Churches? |
A27069 | And when no Man can resolve us, whether[ properly so called] must be expounded by Etymology, or by the Canou; and by what Canon? |
A27069 | And when was Ethiopia and Persia subject to you? |
A27069 | And whence is this strange difference? |
A27069 | And whether she might not as well read what is written already? |
A27069 | And whether she would stay till we had done our writings, which might possibly be some years? |
A27069 | And whether this faith do not go to essentiate a Christian and a member of the Church? |
A27069 | And which way, or by what Revelation did God confer this Infallibility on the Church? |
A27069 | And who knoweth not, that the word Diocess signified then a part of the Empire? |
A27069 | And who knoweth other mens hearts better, You or They? |
A27069 | And who knoweth when that first act was in being, seeing the will doth still will its own future action? |
A27069 | And who knoweth which of these parts was the Church? |
A27069 | And who knows by this what your All is? |
A27069 | And why do not Hierome, Chrysostome, Augustine,& c. Exhort Me ● … and Women to read the Councils as much as the Scriptures? |
A27069 | And why do you make such a stir in the world to affright poor people to believe and be subject to your Pope? |
A27069 | And why is not He as much the Greek Church as Ieremias?) |
A27069 | And why? |
A27069 | And yet can not Protestants be saved for want of the right belief? |
A27069 | And yet do they writeso many Volumes to the contrary? |
A27069 | And yet how few Priests or Prelates are they whose authority fame publisheth without contradiction? |
A27069 | Any extra- Imperial Bishops put in or out, or suspended by them? |
A27069 | Are not Men as Men, and governable by the Sword, as visible as Men as Christians, and governable by the Word and Keys? |
A27069 | Are they therefore no competent witnesses of a matter of fact? |
A27069 | Are we not agreed there is such a thing? |
A27069 | Are we not all of that Faith which believeth somewhat in General( even that all Gods Word is true) and somewhat in Particular? |
A27069 | Armenians are now subject to you? |
A27069 | As if, when the Question is, Whether Canis, properly so called, do generate, or do give suck? |
A27069 | As in the case of the Popes Soveraignty, when two or three parts are against it, and the rest for it: Doth salvation lye on this? |
A27069 | But 1. when I talk but of two faiths conjunct, what if I called the former divine faith, only the Christian faith? |
A27069 | But I enquired of the causes or evidences by which a Bishop may be known from a Usurper, what it is that maketh him a Bishop? |
A27069 | But Protestants profess,& c. Here 1. he wanteth form also;[ All] is wanting: as if a definition, were not Universal or equipollent? |
A27069 | But Reader, hath God left us so much in the dark? |
A27069 | But Sir, are these[ some things] essential to Christianity and Church- membership, or not? |
A27069 | But all the doubt is, by whom it must be delivered, by the Pastors or people, or both? |
A27069 | But are these Priests capable persons or not? |
A27069 | But are your matters of order and discipline no matters of faith? |
A27069 | But can customs be known as well over all the world? |
A27069 | But can we know that Christ instituted them before we know that there is a Christ, or that he is true Christ? |
A27069 | But did he make them any Lawes himself? |
A27069 | But do Bishops become such by their birthright and hereditary Title? |
A27069 | But do not they judg of them, that burn them, and depose Princes for not exterminating them? |
A27069 | But do you Papists agree in all points of Faith? |
A27069 | But do you think that he meaneth as he seemeth to mean? |
A27069 | But do you think that no part of Arabia was in the Empire? |
A27069 | But had these Ancients Tradition for their opinion or not? |
A27069 | But hath the Pope gone no further than this? |
A27069 | But he saith, Is it possible for two Persons to be Papists, and one to destroy his Christianity and the other not? |
A27069 | But how came Cyprian then so much mistaken, that said, Plebs maximam ● … abet potestatem — sacerdotes indignos recusandi? |
A27069 | But how should a man know to whom it doth belong to judg who is fit to be an Elector? |
A27069 | But how should we joyn with Men many hundred or thousand miles off us in Word and Sacraments, otherwise than by useing those of the same species? |
A27069 | But how unhappy a thing is Knowledge then; and how blessed a thing is Invincible Ignorance, which may prevent so many Mens Damnation? |
A27069 | But if Writing will serve, why not God''s writing as well as theirs? |
A27069 | But if any particular belief be necessary, can not it be known what it is? |
A27069 | But if my Parish- priest be but one of twenty or an hundred thousand, doth my culpable ignorance of his authority cut me off from all the Church? |
A27069 | But is any man ever the nearer the knowledg of their minds by this? |
A27069 | But is it certain or uncertain? |
A27069 | But is it not incumbent on you to prove it? |
A27069 | But is that enough? |
A27069 | But is there any man that hath no error? |
A27069 | But is this enough for you? |
A27069 | But it is, what is the faith which is essential to a member of the Christian Church? |
A27069 | But may the Church Universal erre in Excommunicating, or not? |
A27069 | But such are they in question,& c. Do you so oft say, that less than all the Creed is necessitate medii to be believed? |
A27069 | But tell us, if you can, when the Greek Church, or Patriarch of Constantinople did presume to Excommunicate us? |
A27069 | But the question is, How shall I know what makes a true Bishop according to the Laws of God? |
A27069 | But the question is, What they are? |
A27069 | But we are never the nearer knowing their Church by this, while we are not told who the subjects are, and what maketh a visible subject? |
A27069 | But what good will well- doing do to such a one as you, where the better it is, the worse you like it? |
A27069 | But what if I believed in my conscience that most of the Church is unsatisfied in the Election? |
A27069 | But what if you had told us how to know those men that are certain or eminent members of your Church? |
A27069 | But what is Teaching, but Teaching the Learner to know the same things that the Teacher doth, by the same Evidence? |
A27069 | But what is that he meaneth? |
A27069 | But what is the Church that must be satisfied? |
A27069 | But what is the proof of this assertion? |
A27069 | But what mean you by common consent of the people? |
A27069 | But what meaneth that hard word The true Church? |
A27069 | But what need there then so many Ambages and large Volumes, to bring out such a short and crude Assertion? |
A27069 | But what of that? |
A27069 | But what''s all this to our Controversie? |
A27069 | But what''s this to those many hundred years before, when the Empire was not so dismembered? |
A27069 | But when did the Universal Church constitute your Cardinals to be the Electors? |
A27069 | But where''s his Proof? |
A27069 | But where''s your proof? |
A27069 | But who made such a Law for all the world? |
A27069 | But who shall be Judge? |
A27069 | But who will believe the latter, and when will he prove either? |
A27069 | But why must[ immediate] come in? |
A27069 | But why pretend you then the peoples consent, when you plead it unnecessary? |
A27069 | But will these wavering men long stand to this, and confess their Sect to be but a fourth or third part of the Church? |
A27069 | But would one ever have expected this from a Jesuit or Roman Priest? |
A27069 | But, Reader, is Perpetuity any proof of an Essential? |
A27069 | By what Authority can you require me, if you name Men by an hundred Nick- names, to tell you all over which of these I account Christians? |
A27069 | Can I speak plainer? |
A27069 | Can any Man doubt of this? |
A27069 | Can any Man want an Implicite belief, that wanteth no Explicite belief? |
A27069 | Can not you judge by their Baptism, Creeds, and Profession of Christianity, till you are told their Opinions in controverted things? |
A27069 | Can the Unity be perfect while all our uniting Graces are imperfect? |
A27069 | Can they of Abassia tell what are the true Traditions of all the Christian world, that have Traditions in their own Countrey so different from ours? |
A27069 | Can we know as easily what are the Traditions of Abassia, Armenia, Syria, Egypt,& c. as of England? |
A27069 | Can you also prove that all accidents, that is, Relation, may be separable from Families, Schools, Kingdoms, without destroying them? |
A27069 | Can you be true Pastors without derivation from, and dependance on the Pope; or be so known by the People? |
A27069 | Can you know their minds and customs, by saying that they were obliged by the Decrees? |
A27069 | Canus tells us, that most of the Churches and the Armes of Emperors have fought against the Roman privileges? |
A27069 | Contempt of most of the body of Christ, is one of the great proofs that you are all the Church: And did not the Donatists say the same before you? |
A27069 | Could not an Angel from Heaven have called them? |
A27069 | Dare any man deny it? |
A27069 | Dare you say that this is not our Duty? |
A27069 | Did he make Alexandria, Antioch Patriarchates, and divide to all other Bishops their Seats and Provinces? |
A27069 | Did not the Arrian Goths live out of the Empire in Power? |
A27069 | Did not the Primitive Persons, who begun your breach and party, owe subjection to their respective Ecclesiastical Superiors, Diocesans and Pastors? |
A27069 | Did not the sanctifying work of the Holy Ghost, and divine inspiration joined to it, make the Apostles and Prophets credible persons? |
A27069 | Did not the union of the Divine nature with the humane, make Christ as man to be credible? |
A27069 | Did not your first Protestants in Germany separate as much from the Armenians, Ethiopians, Greeks, as they did from the Romans? |
A27069 | Did the Christian Church use to baptize men that believed neither in Jesus Christ nor the Holy Ghost, if they did but believe a God and a Rewarder? |
A27069 | Did the Councils of Constance and Basil meet to heal their Schismes, upon mistake when there was no such thing? |
A27069 | Did the Pope of Rome call to the Councils at Nice, Constantinople, Ephesus, Calcedon ▪& c. all the Bishops of all the extra- Imperial Churches? |
A27069 | Did they ever profess that a Pope or a General Council can not erre de fide? |
A27069 | Did they take the prescription of their Liturgies, Discipline or Hierarchy from them? |
A27069 | Did they upon occasion joyn in Prayer, Sacraments or Sacrifice with them? |
A27069 | Did those Councils signifie no dissatisfaction of the Church? |
A27069 | Did you ever read the subscriptions of that Council when you say that the Acts declare that some of the Ethiopian Church were there? |
A27069 | Did you well to abuse the people so long? |
A27069 | Did your Ministers first take either Mission or Iurisdiction to preach, from any of their Bishops or Patriarchs? |
A27069 | Do not I profess it while I write these words? |
A27069 | Do not Protestants contradict the authority of your Priests, and most of the Christian World the authority of your Pope? |
A27069 | Do not the Greeks once a year excommunicate or curse you? |
A27069 | Do not these believe somewhat in general, and somewhat in particular? |
A27069 | Do not we profess to preferre that which is most ancient, before that which is novel? |
A27069 | Do not your Writers now ordinarily quit them of such Heresie? |
A27069 | Do the Quartodecimani, the Luciferians, the Iovinians deny Truthes as sufficiently proposed, as that there is a God, or a Christ? |
A27069 | Do they not hold it also necessary, that men must take their Church to be the declarer of this Scripture- truth? |
A27069 | Do they not lament their Schisms? |
A27069 | Do they not number the Schisms that fell out in 40 or 50 years time and continued? |
A27069 | Do they that disown the Councils of Constance or Basil, own all the Errors or Schismes which They condemned? |
A27069 | Do we hold Communion with none that we take not Mission and Iurisdiction from? |
A27069 | Do you baptize such in your Church? |
A27069 | Do you conquer by such disputing as this? |
A27069 | Do you err in any thing that is revealed by Scripture or Tradition, or not? |
A27069 | Do you not bow towards him on the Altar? |
A27069 | Do you not carry him in procession about the Streets? |
A27069 | Do you not hereby deny all proper accidents which agree as omni& soli, ita& semper? |
A27069 | Do you see what all our dispute is come to at last? |
A27069 | Do you think that there were not more than a thousand Bishops in the Empire? |
A27069 | Doth God speak by Prophets and Christs Humanity, as through an inanimate Pipe or Whistle, or as by Balaam''s asse? |
A27069 | Doth any History mention that ever the Emperors did so? |
A27069 | Doth clothing make Kings, or the species of the Consecrated Bread make Christ to become invisible? |
A27069 | Doth he also believe, that he is Christs Vicar- General, because he believeth that the Bible is true? |
A27069 | Doth he make no use of the reason and honesty of the speaker? |
A27069 | Doth he not obstinately( but necessarily) refuse to tell what is the substance of Election? |
A27069 | Doth he rule all his Church immediately or by others? |
A27069 | Doth it belong to the World or to Rome? |
A27069 | Doth it follow that an Arrian doth not separate from the Church as Christian, because they say they do not? |
A27069 | Doth it follow that because he saith that this only is the cause of the division of your Churches, therefore there are no other disagreements? |
A27069 | Doth it follow that if I know my own meaning, I therefore know yours? |
A27069 | Doth it follow that therefore you and such others do not so? |
A27069 | Doth it follow, that the Bishop of Rome is any more essential to it than the Bishop of Ierusalem or Antioch? |
A27069 | Doth not every man know that there may be many efficient causes conjoined in producing one effect? |
A27069 | Doth not my hand write visibly unless I do it without a Pen? |
A27069 | Doth not your definition agree to a Provincial or the smallest Council? |
A27069 | Doth this Proposition, Omne animal vivit, include that there is such a Wight in being, as W. I. or N. N? |
A27069 | Doth this prove that he believeth not Gods Veracity? |
A27069 | Doth writing make them unintelligible? |
A27069 | Easie Disputing: Can not a Quaker say so too, by us and you? |
A27069 | Either the Election is valid or invalid before: If valid, will the Churches dissatisfaction invalidate it? |
A27069 | Every servant, of his Master? |
A27069 | Every subject, of the King; and be burnt for a heretick, for communicating with one that was never accused or condemned? |
A27069 | Every woman, of her husband? |
A27069 | Good Sir, was the Church satisfied with such men? |
A27069 | Had Leo any power out of the Empire? |
A27069 | Had the Church at Neocesaria no Communion with that at Caesarea, because they had so different Liturgies, as their quarrel against Basil intimateth? |
A27069 | Had the Churches no Communion for the first 400 years when no Liturgies were imposed? |
A27069 | Had the Emperors( who certainly called them) any power to call any of other Princes Dominions? |
A27069 | Had those that were chosen by people, Presbyters, Bishops, Emperours, and Cardinals, all the substance? |
A27069 | Hath he not put whole Nations under Interdicts? |
A27069 | Have there not been abundance of such at Alexandria, Antioch, Constantinople? |
A27069 | Have these Recentiors antiquity to boast of? |
A27069 | Have those that were brought in by Whores, Poyson and Murders, the substance? |
A27069 | Have you therefore no Communion with them? |
A27069 | He addeth, What would you say to an Arrian, a Turk, or Jew, that would urge the like knowledge or feeling? |
A27069 | He addeth: A Christian that hath forgotten some sin, yet at death is sorrowful for all his sins; Hath he no actual sorrow for that forgotten sin? |
A27069 | He addeth[ Had not the Emperours power to signifie to those extra- imperials that a Council was to be celebrated, and to invite them at least?] |
A27069 | He adds, One that forgiveth all injuries, and hath forgotten some; doth he not forgive those forgotten? |
A27069 | He ask''d me whether Subordination and Obedience to the same State and Government, is not as well required to our Church as to our Common- wealth? |
A27069 | He asketh me, Know you not that Divines are divided? |
A27069 | He denyeth none of my proof, as to explicite belief: And do we need any more? |
A27069 | He is a strange Priest that hath no Cure of Souls, what then is his office? |
A27069 | He saith that the choosers must be such as by custom are esteemed fit by these; But what custom doth the man mean? |
A27069 | He saith, Prove that there were such Popes? |
A27069 | He saith, that the Electors must be so esteemed( fit for the charge) by those to whom it doth belong, To whom what doth belong? |
A27069 | He that believeth all that he should believe is a Christian; But is there any such? |
A27069 | Here I desired to know of him, whether he meant a power given by God or by men? |
A27069 | Here is no mention of what extent it must be at all, whether these Prelates must be sent from all the Christian world? |
A27069 | How ambiguously and fraudulently do you answer? |
A27069 | How came Phaebamnon, Bishop of the Copti, to subscribe to the first Council of Ephesus? |
A27069 | How can I prove such Negatives of millions in the remote parts of the Earth? |
A27069 | How can I tell the Opinions of Men un- named and unknown, but by their Professions? |
A27069 | How can we tell when to trust them? |
A27069 | How cometh it to pass that no one yet learned to call himself the Universal King of the Earth? |
A27069 | How could we take Ordination, Mission and Jurisdiction, from Men on the other side of the World? |
A27069 | How easie is it for any Sect to say, We are the only Church of Christ; and though most of the Christian world be against us, we regard them not? |
A27069 | How else came the Bishop of Constantinople to pretend to Universal Primacy? |
A27069 | How excellently would this power have fitted the turn of Abab and Iezebel, and the murderers of Christ? |
A27069 | How few will he be able to prove to be Christians? |
A27069 | How ill it would have been taken to have summoned, or called the Subjects, before he had requested their Princes to send them? |
A27069 | How know you that there were no more in the Countrey adjacent? |
A27069 | How know you whom to admit to your Sacramental Communion, or to use as a Christian? |
A27069 | How little Government do great Emperours exercise immediately in all their Empire? |
A27069 | How little know we now of the case of Nubia and Tend ● … while they were great Christian Kingdoms? |
A27069 | How little know we of the old Christians, of St. Thomas, and those parts? |
A27069 | How little of the Bible have General Councils expounded? |
A27069 | How long will that be their security, if the burning and exterminating Religion should prevail? |
A27069 | How many Millions then that seem to be of the Church of Rome are not so; because they contemn the authority of their Parish- priest? |
A27069 | How must he be chosen? |
A27069 | How oft doth Nazianzene complain, that the Bishops and Councils had distracted and divided the whole World? |
A27069 | How oft must I repeat them? |
A27069 | How ridiculo ● … s hath this Aristarchus made himself in his Logick? |
A27069 | How shall I be sure that this Church doth not deceive me, in saying that this and not that is Gods Word? |
A27069 | How shall we ever know the Church this way? |
A27069 | How shall we know that a culpable neglect of a sufficient proposal( through prejudice or temptation) may never stand with Faith? |
A27069 | How should I make a Man know that is unwilling? |
A27069 | How should we then know by Fathers, Bishops and Councils, what was their concordant Commentary of the Scripture? |
A27069 | How then can a Christian be known by himself or others from all the unbelieving world? |
A27069 | How then doth their rejection signifie that we are not of the same Church? |
A27069 | I added, Is it necessary for every Christian to be able to weigh the credit of contradicting- parties? |
A27069 | I asked her, Whether that way was most suitable to her understanding and patience? |
A27069 | I asked, How shall we know who hath this Episcopal power? |
A27069 | I asked, What if we be ignorant whether the ordainer had intentionem ordinandi, how shall we be sure of the authority of the Ordained? |
A27069 | I came next to Answer a question of his own, Whether I take the Church of Rome and the Protestants to be one Church? |
A27069 | I demanded his Proof that ever there was a Papist, or almost, one Church of Papists in the World for 400 years after Christ? |
A27069 | I hope we shall find out the Controversie at last; though it seems as hard almost as to resolve it: How oft must I repeat the same Proof? |
A27069 | I now prove Popery a Novelty; and doth not that then fully prove my Consequence, that the Christian Church was Visible without it? |
A27069 | I thought you must have proved, that it was out of the Empire; who undertook to prove it as you affirm it? |
A27069 | I. and all particulars, VVhether they exist or not? |
A27069 | If Abbots that are no Bishops have Votes in Councils, why not Priests? |
A27069 | If All, alas, when and where shall we find their agreement in any more than we hold with them? |
A27069 | If God command them, doth God command any thing which he binds us not to believe to be our duty? |
A27069 | If God did, shew it to us ▪ if man, who? |
A27069 | If God say, Thou shalt Love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart: Are not these words intelligible till a Pope Expound them? |
A27069 | If a Man be licensed a Physitian, must he have also Mission and Iurisdiction given him after, before he may practice? |
A27069 | If a man say, I repent of all my sin, but I think I have no sin, but my hearing, praying, being a Christian,& c. doth he actually repent of any? |
A27069 | If by Word only, when and where shall every Man and Woman come to be Catechized by the Universal Church? |
A27069 | If certain, again tell us by what ascertaining evidence? |
A27069 | If damned, what a happiness befell one Kingdom, and what a misery the other, by the Title or No- Title of the Popes? |
A27069 | If he know this Priest to be a common whoremonger and lyar, may he not suspect him without denying God? |
A27069 | If he say that it is the people that must choose the Choosers, what people be they? |
A27069 | If invalid, will the Churches satisfaction make it valid, or make him Pope that was none before? |
A27069 | If it be by Election, the Electors must have just power to elect? |
A27069 | If it be not desired that they come, why are they called? |
A27069 | If man only command them, how cometh our Christianity and Salvation to be laid on them? |
A27069 | If most, do we not know that the most( two parts to one) are against the Popes Sovereignty; which is Essential to your Church? |
A27069 | If not General Councils, how shall we know their authority? |
A27069 | If not, how can a Bishops deputation make them capable? |
A27069 | If not, what an insufficient thing is your Tradition, that hath not told you what a Christian or Church- member is? |
A27069 | If not, why must we have it from them? |
A27069 | If of faith, then I must believe God before I can believe him? |
A27069 | If of knowledg, what evidences prove it? |
A27069 | If one Article may be believed without that motive( and sure it is not believed before it is believed) why not others as well as that? |
A27069 | If our general Faith and theirs be the same, what maketh them accuse us herein as they do? |
A27069 | If saved, then men that reject the Pope may be saved: And then why ask you us where was a Church that rejected the Pope before Luther? |
A27069 | If so( which is undeniable,) Why is the Christian World any more a Monster without a Monarch Bishop, than the Humane World without a Monarch King? |
A27069 | If so, is there any man living that is not an Infidel or Heretick? |
A27069 | If so, must we know it by Word, or Writing? |
A27069 | If so, then why is not this Canon produced for the regulating of all other Churches? |
A27069 | If so, what made him so? |
A27069 | If so, why may not twenty have the substance at once, or four or five at least? |
A27069 | If so, why should we not believe him? |
A27069 | If so, why should we not believe them? |
A27069 | If something, hath it not an essence which may be defined? |
A27069 | If that will serve, what if none come when all are called? |
A27069 | If the Apostles Successors must rule the Churches as such, tell us which be the other eleven, and which be their Diocesses, and of what extent? |
A27069 | If the Pope and Cardinals, how shall we know whether those of e. g. Stephen, Sergius, or Formosus, be the authentick ones? |
A27069 | If the belief of all the Creeds, and all the Scriptures, be not a Faith big enough to save him? |
A27069 | If the belief of the Popes Supremacy be essential to some, and only to some, how many must they be that so believe? |
A27069 | If the latter what is it to us whether Rome be a true Church, any more than whether Ephesus, Thessalonica, or such other be so? |
A27069 | If the question be, whether there be there fire, water, air, earth, gold, silver, or men or divels, created by God? |
A27069 | If the question were, Who is the true Husband of such a woman? |
A27069 | If there are, tell''them me if you can: or, was not this a cavil that had more of Will and Interest, than of Conscience? |
A27069 | If there be other Schisms besides separating from the whole Church, why should you not here understand it? |
A27069 | If they had, how come the Recentiors to forsake it? |
A27069 | If this be enough for Christianity or Concord, why do they call us Hereticks? |
A27069 | If you be to prove that Cephas was Peter, or Peter was an Apostle of the first place, must you have an universal proposition? |
A27069 | If you had any better Proof, Why did you not produce it? |
A27069 | If your Learned Men can not distinguish between Egypt, an imperial Province, and the vast and distant Kingdoms of Ethiopia; What''s that to me? |
A27069 | Indeed the obstinacy is in both, but radically in the Will; but did Intellectual opposition notifie this? |
A27069 | Is Christianity any thing or nothing? |
A27069 | Is consecration necessary, and by whom ad esse? |
A27069 | Is every man a Heretick that erreth about the sense of any one plain Text of Scripture, or not? |
A27069 | Is he no Nere ● … ick that denieth the matter revealed, without opposing obstinately the authority revealing? |
A27069 | Is he not driven up to the Wall, even to another denyal of all Mens Eyes and Ears? |
A27069 | Is here any word that saith that the Pope was Soveraign of all the Earth? |
A27069 | Is it any doubt what the orbis universus was? |
A27069 | Is it by some note of approbation, or by silence? |
A27069 | Is it come to that, and yet the way of Election all this while made so indifferent? |
A27069 | Is it enough to confute any evident truth, that there was found some Man that was against it? |
A27069 | Is it faith, and yet a belief of nothing in particular? |
A27069 | Is it no Schism to separate from a particular Church, unless from the whole? |
A27069 | Is it no Schism unless wilful? |
A27069 | Is it not enough if it were proved a true Church? |
A27069 | Is it not known that the Quarrel and Breach began long before, about the Title of universal Bishop, though the Greeks did not then excommunicate you? |
A27069 | Is it not said, that they were of the Province of Scythia? |
A27069 | Is it nothing to you to leave all the world besides, almost, uncertain whether they be in the Church or not? |
A27069 | Is it only to know what the Teacher holdeth? |
A27069 | Is it that Boys have made all our usual Logicks, and now these two Logick Doctors have Reformed them? |
A27069 | Is it the belief of all that God hath revealed to be believed? |
A27069 | Is not Risibilis an accident of man and yet inseparable? |
A27069 | Is not all that which he calleth explicite belief, the meer denomination of the Explicite, from the particulars implyed in it? |
A27069 | Is not every honest man credible according to the measure of his skill and honesty? |
A27069 | Is not here difference enough? |
A27069 | Is not quantity inseparable from a Body or natural substance? |
A27069 | Is not the Bible a publick testimony and record, and being universally received is an universal tradition? |
A27069 | Is not the Succession of the Church, as Christian, granted by him? |
A27069 | Is not the same in all elective Princes, where the extent of their Dominions is exceeding large? |
A27069 | Is not the same word used of the giving of equal priviledges to Constantinople, as ● … is of giving or deferring it to Rome? |
A27069 | Is not then the consequence clear, which W. I. is so angry at? |
A27069 | Is not this Man hard put to it? |
A27069 | Is not this a confident Man? |
A27069 | Is not this a false intimation, that I did not cite them? |
A27069 | Is not this a modest Parenthesis? |
A27069 | Is not this a notable way to save Parish- priests much labour? |
A27069 | Is not this a pitiful Proof, that Pisanus''s Canons are authentick and ancient, because Dr. Heylin and Rosse regard them? |
A27069 | Is not this an accurate reformer of Syllogisms; that amendeth termes that were not written, and talketh like a dreamer of he knoweth not what? |
A27069 | Is one Man the Greek Church? |
A27069 | Is the obstinacy that maketh Heresie, in the Intellect or the will? |
A27069 | Is there any dealing with these false hereticaters? |
A27069 | Is there no material difference at all between a Christian and a Sadducee, Infidel, Mahometan, or Heathen? |
A27069 | Is this Roman Divinity? |
A27069 | Is this a satisfactory answering? |
A27069 | Is this antiquity and tradition? |
A27069 | Is this by an act of knowledg, or of divine faith? |
A27069 | Is this moral certainty, true certaints, or uncertainty? |
A27069 | Is this necessary to know a Papist? |
A27069 | Is this no Communion? |
A27069 | Is your Papacy therefore null? |
A27069 | It is no Schism if men make a division in the Church, and not from the Church? |
A27069 | It is probable, though not altogether so certain as the former, that such as believe explicitely the Deity, and that he is a rewarder of our works? |
A27069 | It may be I believe Pope Nicolas Decrees, that a man must not hear Mass of a Priest that hath a Concubine? |
A27069 | It''s a dispute among the Papists Divines what a Christian is, or what Christianity is? |
A27069 | It''s true: But did Anatolias and his Complices, that is, the Council, speak sincerely and truly here, or falsly? |
A27069 | It''s well we are now quite rid of the old cavil of the Nags- head Consecration: Why was not this confest sooner? |
A27069 | Judge now whether here be a word of summoning any one Bishop out of the Empire? |
A27069 | Know you not that he was sent to multiply Christians, and make himself a competent Diocess? |
A27069 | May none but Bishops and chief Prelates be members( as you say?) |
A27069 | May not I see you asleep, and think that you are dead? |
A27069 | May not a humane yet be conjunct with the Christian? |
A27069 | May not a man firmly believe the Major, that taketh the Minor for a lie? |
A27069 | May not faith now be wrought by the Preachers word and Spirit? |
A27069 | May not the world see now what is the foundation of your faith, and the validity of your Authority and Tradition? |
A27069 | Might not the consent of the neighbour Egyptian Bishops put them out of conceit with that Council, though they owned no Heresie? |
A27069 | Must I take that man to be no Pope? |
A27069 | Must I tell you what By Opinions they all hold, that you may judge whether they are Christians or not? |
A27069 | Must all Men pass for no Christian, that a Priest or Jesuit will say are none? |
A27069 | Must all the people here take the words of their present Teacher? |
A27069 | Must every private man be the judge of hi ● … neighbour? |
A27069 | Must it needs be the formal object of faith? |
A27069 | Must it not represent all the Catholick Church? |
A27069 | Must not both these make up their Implicite Faith? |
A27069 | Must the Greeks and Armenians have Mission,& c, from us? |
A27069 | Must the word[ Gen ● … s Sarra ● … orum] prove that he was out of the Empire, when part of Arabia † was in it? |
A27069 | My fourth Question about his definition of the Church was, Why exclude you the chief Pastors that depend on none? |
A27069 | My next Question was, If I culpably were ignorant but of some few Priests authority among thousands, am I cut off from all the rest, and the Church? |
A27069 | My third Question about his definition of the Church was, Is it[ any] lawful Pastors, or[ all] that must necessarily be depended on by every member? |
A27069 | Nay, is a meer general repentance, any actual repentance at all, if it extend to no particulars? |
A27069 | Nestorius,& c. And doth not Hesichius say as much of Andrew,( cited by me elsewhere?) |
A27069 | No man can tell by this whether you unbishop all that had but one Parish or Congregation; or only all that had not Presbyters under them? |
A27069 | No nor when Gregory''s and Ambrose''s Liturgies were striving for pre- eminence? |
A27069 | Nor the Infallibility of those General Councils, who are accused by Popes and by other Councils of Error, Heresie or Schism? |
A27069 | Not as whether the heart or head, but a Scab or Cancer, be essential to the body? |
A27069 | Note Reader, that such a contradiction of any truth revealed by God, doth make a man an Heretick; O then what abundance of Hereticks be in the world? |
A27069 | Note here whether the Roman Religion be mutable or not? |
A27069 | Now to answer your Question, what it is whereby our Church- members are known? |
A27069 | O but saith he, What horrid Doctrine would this be? |
A27069 | O rare triumphant disputer, why should I not make the praedicate of the Minor the subject of the conclusion? |
A27069 | Of what Christians? |
A27069 | Or am I, and all Men, disobliged from loving all those as Christians, whom such as you will affirm to be no Christians? |
A27069 | Or by the Fathers Catalogues, and by which Fathers( Epiphanius, Philastrius, Augustine,& c.) or by common custom, or by the Pope? |
A27069 | Or do we read that the Apostles did use that argument, The authority of the Catholick Church, to convert their hearers? |
A27069 | Or hath this Man pretended to be a Champion in that Art, in which he is below the Novices? |
A27069 | Or how many will this Leven extend to? |
A27069 | Or if he had, What''s that to the Pope? |
A27069 | Or if it be whether the Laws or Canons of a small or Provincial Council, may oblige some men, though it were not general? |
A27069 | Or is every Priest the Universal Church? |
A27069 | Or is he Infallible? |
A27069 | Or is it not fallacious in him that can shew us never a one of them? |
A27069 | Or that the word of a Jesuite is a sufficient notice to us, what is in the Councils? |
A27069 | Or the Indians when converted by Frumentius and Edesus? |
A27069 | Or was he only to convert and gather them to the Church? |
A27069 | Or what other points of faith are contained in our belief of this Church and its authority? |
A27069 | Or which of the Cardinals are chosen by the Universal Church, or any other than the Pope himself? |
A27069 | Or will you say, that he that believes not all that God hath revealed is a good Christian? |
A27069 | Otherwise every act of the will which is willed by a former act should be called imperate, and so none but the first should be elicite? |
A27069 | Our Question here was only of the matter of Fact: Whether, de facto, most of the Bishops and Churches have not been against the Papacy? |
A27069 | Our Question is, Who must choose the Governour of all the world? |
A27069 | Our question being, What constitut ● … a General Council? |
A27069 | Q 3. Who are the Pastors whose rejection unchurcheth men? |
A27069 | R. B. Alas, poor men ▪ are you driven to that? |
A27069 | Reader is not here an excellent Disputer? |
A27069 | Reader, if one of us had charged such doctrine on the Papists as this their Champion doth, should we not have been thought to slander them? |
A27069 | Reader, if these Writers must not be ashamed of their tergiversation, what sort of Disputants should blush? |
A27069 | Reader, is this any answer to any of the foresaid Objections? |
A27069 | Reader, see here what an Issue our Dispute is brought to: Can you wish a plainer? |
A27069 | Reader, what doth this man deserve for thus murdering the Papal cause? |
A27069 | Reader, wouldst thou have yet more unchristened and damned than all these? |
A27069 | Remember, Reader, that our question is not what mercy God sheweth to the rest of the world, nor whether any out of the Christian Church be saved? |
A27069 | Saith he, Doth not this Proposition, Omne animal vivit, contain the substance of these truths, Equus vivit, Leo vivit, Aquila vivit,& c? |
A27069 | Saith he, Is not an express knowledg of the Genus, a confused knowledg of species under it: and so the species of the individua? |
A27069 | Say you so? |
A27069 | Say you so? |
A27069 | See you not how fair a thred you have spun? |
A27069 | See, Reader, what the Papacy is come to, if it had not the sword, or ignorance to uphold it? |
A27069 | Seeing this is not a matter of Revelation, it can be no matter of Divine faith; and if so, how is all other faith resolved into it? |
A27069 | Shall I prove it to those that have read the Histories of the Councils, or to them that have not? |
A27069 | Should not Constantinople, and Vienna, and Paris, be preferred before Rome? |
A27069 | So that the Question, How I must believe the Churches Veracity herein? |
A27069 | Speak out: Was he the bishop of the Infidels? |
A27069 | Suppose they had: you say no particular Electors act is necessary ad esse; and why theirs? |
A27069 | TO his Question, Why we separated from them? |
A27069 | That at Constance, and Basil, and Pisa, or that at Florence, or the Later ● … ne that de fide contradict them? |
A27069 | That it is such a belief of all particulars, as is no real actual belief of some of them; and it is an actual belief of other some? |
A27069 | That men that know all that God hath reveal''d, and believe it, are Christians? |
A27069 | That out of the Empire the Pope restored Bishops,( and did he depose any?) |
A27069 | The first and second at Ephesus, or that of Calcedon which contradicteth the first indeed, and the second professedly? |
A27069 | The man seemeth in good sadness in all this Childish Play; And must Rome be thus upheld? |
A27069 | The marvellous Logician it seems is but for one mood or figure, but by what authority or Reason? |
A27069 | The rest should have as fair play, if your interest were but as much for it? |
A27069 | The true searcher of Hearts? |
A27069 | The whole Christian World, as Headed only BY CHRIST,( Of which the Reformed are the soundest part) OR, THE POPE of ROME And his SUBJECTS as such? |
A27069 | There is one Law- giver who is able to save and to destroy; who are you that make Laws for another''s Servants and judge them? |
A27069 | These are generalities: What Popes? |
A27069 | This is the man that would not dispute but in meer Syllogism, what need I an universal proposition? |
A27069 | This was my question to you, Is not your Church then invisible, when no man can know what makes a member of it? |
A27069 | To be a Member of a Council that hath the Sovereignty, is not to have the Sovereignty: Did you not know this? |
A27069 | To my Instance of those converted by the English and Dutch in the Indies, he bids me prove them to be instructed in the true Faith? |
A27069 | To the people, Presbyters, Bishops, Emperours or Cardinals? |
A27069 | To this he saith, who ever called a King and his Viceroy, a Captain and Lieutenant two Heads? |
A27069 | To this he saith,[ Why so? |
A27069 | To this he saith[ Called they them alone? |
A27069 | To what purpose should I do it? |
A27069 | Ut suprà, what was said of it before? |
A27069 | W. J. A ● … d did they profess the same Faith in all points of Faith, and those the very same wherein they dissented from the Church of Rome? |
A27069 | WHAT mean you by the Catholick Church? |
A27069 | Was France or Germany the Church? |
A27069 | Was he not a Bishop there( before he had converted any one) to those seventeen alone? |
A27069 | Was it all France and that Party, or Germany and that Party that were damned all those times? |
A27069 | Was it for nothing else that they were judged Hereticks? |
A27069 | Was it not by Innovation? |
A27069 | Was it satisfied with those that the foresaid Council condemned as Heretical, wicked, and one of them a Devil incarnate? |
A27069 | Was there no more in it? |
A27069 | We beseech you, Vice Christi in Christs stead to be reconciled to God? |
A27069 | We have heard some things, some things so oft, that we would fain know what things at last, are necessary ut media? |
A27069 | Were any Concilia ● … Decrees executed on them? |
A27069 | Were any called, or wrote to under the Name of Provinces, but the Roman Provinces? |
A27069 | Were it not an impudent thing for any man to call together all the Bishops in the world? |
A27069 | Were not the Councils of Constance, Basil, Pisa,& c. called to heal them? |
A27069 | Were the businesses there agitated, any of theirs? |
A27069 | Were these then Proper Schisms or not? |
A27069 | Were they his Church? |
A27069 | Were they no points of Faith, nor the denyal Heresie, for 300 years before the first General Council? |
A27069 | What Absurdities do you thrust upon us? |
A27069 | What Councils in particular? |
A27069 | What Extraimperial Nations mean you, that owned Condemned Heresie? |
A27069 | What Indian or Armenian Bishops were at any General Council before Constantine''s days, and where that Council was and when? |
A27069 | What Law or Reason is against it, when i ● … is the subject of the question? |
A27069 | What a stranger doth this Disputer make himself to the Fathers, if he know not that they frequently use the word Schism in another sense than his? |
A27069 | What abundance of Heresies must I charge on such Men, if I judged them according to their terms and rigour of judging? |
A27069 | What can not the Iesuits Morals make good? |
A27069 | What disgraceful ignorance are you forced to pretend? |
A27069 | What doth he but cheat us by his distinction of the substance and circumstances of Election? |
A27069 | What election or consecration is necessary to it? |
A27069 | What if it be but in particulor Assemblies? |
A27069 | What if it were not an Accident, must it therefore needs be Essential? |
A27069 | What if only a Provincial Council had Condemned any Heresie? |
A27069 | What is Confirmation without which Qualifications, Election and Ordination make not a true Minister or Bishop? |
A27069 | What is Episcop ● … l Election? |
A27069 | What is Vocation besides the three aforesaid, and which is necessary ad esse? |
A27069 | What is a Profession; but Words and Writings? |
A27069 | What is it that some will not pretend? |
A27069 | What is my Implicite belief of Scripture- Particles, but my General belief that all the Scripture is Gods Word, and true? |
A27069 | What is not equivocal to a Jesuite? |
A27069 | What is that Error in Logick that is called a Syntax? |
A27069 | What is that Faith in unity whereof all members of the Catholick Church do live? |
A27069 | What is their Jurisdiction? |
A27069 | What mean you by TRADITION? |
A27069 | What mean you by a GENERAL COUNCIL? |
A27069 | What mean you by the Word POPE? |
A27069 | What mean you by the word Bishop? |
A27069 | What multiplied self- destroying answers are you driven to? |
A27069 | What need I go over your Schisms? |
A27069 | What need we go so far for it when the Gospel is near us, which telleth us how God would have Ministers more easily called than so? |
A27069 | What notice or proof is necessary to the Subjects? |
A27069 | What one man can say, that he doth not contradict some truth revealed by God, by nature or Scripture, or both? |
A27069 | What personal qualification is necessary ad esse? |
A27069 | What proof or notice must satisfie as in particulars, what is true tradition? |
A27069 | What then? |
A27069 | What''s all this, but to say, that I believe this proposition, All things, of which many are unknown to ● … e, are created by God? |
A27069 | What''s this to the Government of all the World? |
A27069 | What, not that we Love God, and are willing to understand and obey his Word? |
A27069 | When I heard the word Evident, I lookt for something: But I had nothing but[ you can not deny it: and what true Christian ever yet denyed it?] |
A27069 | When I know and feelmy Love, shall I believe a Pope that never saw me, that tells me, I do not know or feel it? |
A27069 | When I next questioned, Whether the vulgar that know not Councils, resolve not their faith into the belief of the Parish- priest? |
A27069 | When I said It is the whole company of Believers subject to Christ their head, are not the words significative enough of a governing Head? |
A27069 | When Zeno carryed on his Henoticon and Anastasius his Reconciliation, how little did he, or any of the Eastern Churches stick at the Popes dissent? |
A27069 | When did the Universal Church write a Commentary on the Bible? |
A27069 | When every Member is imperfect in Knowledge, Faith, Love,( Holiness) Obedience, Iustice, Patience,& c. how can the Union be perfect? |
A27069 | Where and how must this Institution of Christ( of the Papacy) be found? |
A27069 | Where are those Seats, or where ever were they? |
A27069 | Where did I say that such as err only in some Accidents, are properly called Hereticks? |
A27069 | Where is that Canon of St. Peter''s to be found and proved? |
A27069 | Where is your Proof that they so confess? |
A27069 | Where said I that Election was jure humano? |
A27069 | Whether all the Catholick Church did still submit to it? |
A27069 | Whether the Papacy, that is, their Universal Papal Government over ▪ all the Earth, hath so long continued? |
A27069 | Whether these or the rest of the Kingdom were the more and better united? |
A27069 | Whether they were no Bishops till they had made those Presbyters? |
A27069 | Which is the true church? |
A27069 | Which was the Church then, and who were the members, when Millions received one, and Millions rejected him? |
A27069 | Who that ever read the Councils and Church- history doubted of it? |
A27069 | Who would have thought that a Pope had been a wight so utterly unintelligible? |
A27069 | Who would not turn Papist, and run into a Nunnery that is but charmed with such Philosophy? |
A27069 | Why did he never tell us what that Heresie is? |
A27069 | Why did you not name them? |
A27069 | Why do you speak in such a manner as any ordinary Reader would think that you speak de jure& de facto, and yet mean de facto only? |
A27069 | Why do you, contrary to St. Peter''s mind, pretend to the highest Ecclesiastical Authority, since Rome ceased to have the highest Civil Power? |
A27069 | Why doth Canterbury take place of London, contrary to St. Peter''s Judgment? |
A27069 | Why have you no Bishops no Regiment in Abassia and Armenia? |
A27069 | Why is there no mention that ever any General Council did any of this? |
A27069 | Why might they not corrupt Church- Government( where Ambition had a thousand times greater baits) as well as Church- Offices? |
A27069 | Why speak you of so great a sin as Rebellion against the Vice- Christ, and Schism from the Universal Church, without any note of reprehension? |
A27069 | Why speak you so as an ordinary Reader would think that you spake d ● … statu statuto, when you mean but de praeente& statu inordinato? |
A27069 | Why the Baptism of Hereticks( that change not the form) is counted valid, and Cyprian accounted Erroneous for denying it? |
A27069 | Why then are their Councils and Commentaries written? |
A27069 | Why then do the Apostles so oft protest that they speak the truth and lye not, even of that which they had seen and heard? |
A27069 | Why then do you deny our English Clergy, when we judg them to have the true authority? |
A27069 | Why then said you, that you call not for their Names? |
A27069 | Will any Diocess suffice ad esse? |
A27069 | Will any ones Election prove him to be Pope? |
A27069 | Will not Cyril as much prove the contrary? |
A27069 | Will one serve, or one thousand, to make all the rest Church- Members that believe it not? |
A27069 | Will this distinguish their Church from Hereticks or Mahometans? |
A27069 | Will you joyn in Sin with every Sinful Church for fear of Schism? |
A27069 | Will you say that you meant in Voto? |
A27069 | Would any man have understood that by[ Visible Assemblies] the man had not meant only[ Churches] but also Families, Schools, Cities,& c? |
A27069 | Would he not, if he could? |
A27069 | Would the Countries that are in War with those that send them, give them a free passage? |
A27069 | Would the Gospel have been equally credible to us, if all the witnesses had in other matters been knaves and lyars? |
A27069 | Yea, and can matter of faith and doctrine be as easily known as practised customs? |
A27069 | Yea, if it be done causelessly upon a quarrel? |
A27069 | Yet Innovation, in giving power to Patriarchs, is no wonder in Councils: How else came Constantinople and Ierusalem to be Patriarchs? |
A27069 | Yet doth he back these absurdities with advising me to a little more heed to what I write? |
A27069 | Yet doth the Man absurdly say to me, We are not agreed what the Universal Visible Church is: What of that? |
A27069 | You are a Learned Man, who take Thracia to have been without the Empire; and must I therefore be of the same mind? |
A27069 | You call the Luciferians, the Novatians,& c. Hereticks; and who can see reason to doubt but they might believe that all that God saith is true? |
A27069 | You dare not say that God gave them that power; and if man did it, what men were they? |
A27069 | You say, No Man may change his institution; but doth it follow that no man doth change it? |
A27069 | [ How came the Bishops of Persia, of both the Armenia''s, and Gothia( which were all out of the Empire) to subscribe to the first Council of Nice? |
A27069 | and at their beginning could they plead custom? |
A27069 | and by what power? |
A27069 | and contradict your self? |
A27069 | and do you not constrain all that meet you to kneel down and adore? |
A27069 | and how is the belief of this( which is no belief) called our implicite belief of all the word of God? |
A27069 | and how shall we know them? |
A27069 | and if by God, whether mediately or immediately? |
A27069 | and many neither received nor rejected, but remained in suspense? |
A27069 | and many of you, not so much as Christ himself; and yet is not all that Protestants teach the true Faith? |
A27069 | and of what part? |
A27069 | and so of many other contradictory ones? |
A27069 | and so whether it be General, because those should come that do not? |
A27069 | and that many of the barbareus, so called then, were within the Empire? |
A27069 | and what is that all? |
A27069 | and whether Papists make it not uncertain? |
A27069 | and whether constancy be a note of their verity? |
A27069 | and which? |
A27069 | as well as the Scriptures? |
A27069 | but if it be Councils you mean, which of them is it that we must believe, and why? |
A27069 | but if they are capable, why may they not be there by their own right? |
A27069 | but what is the[ All] that the man would have had? |
A27069 | by the Pope, or Councils, or Bishops disjunct? |
A27069 | by the major part of the Church, Bishops or Presbyters? |
A27069 | by what divine revelation( before I can believe any other revelation)? |
A27069 | can no man be saved that can not unriddle all these contradictions? |
A27069 | did they not call many of those Councils General, though violent and erroneous which they cursed? |
A27069 | even of this, and of their words to Leo? |
A27069 | even your own wills? |
A27069 | had they not the Authority of the Roman Bishop joyned with them, or rather presupposed to theirs? |
A27069 | how many are deceived and deceivers, that call themselves infallible? |
A27069 | how prove you that this man is no Christian, nor shall be saved? |
A27069 | if you mean not them what mean you? |
A27069 | in the name of the Council, to be directed to all Bishops, and in particular to the Churches throughout all Persia, and the great India? |
A27069 | is it[ all those bodies of Christians] when we are all agreed that Christ hath but one political body? |
A27069 | nor make them more knowing, and more honest, true and careful, that they may be the fitter to be believed? |
A27069 | nothing essential to Christian faith in particular? |
A27069 | of what consequence is Obedience to an Ambitious Pope or Priest, in comparison of Obedience to all the written Laws of God? |
A27069 | or a Bishop depute a Priest or Deacon only to ordain? |
A27069 | or a word of the Pope''s summoning them, but the contrary? |
A27069 | or any certainty that any ● … ut of the Empire were there? |
A27069 | or but one, or two? |
A27069 | or by how many? |
A27069 | or do they look that it should satisfie us? |
A27069 | or how but by naming them by their Country and Profession? |
A27069 | or how shall his power above others be known, when all the old pretensions faile? |
A27069 | or of France? |
A27069 | or of all Europe? |
A27069 | or of all the World? |
A27069 | or of part? |
A27069 | or should believe by the bare reading of a Bible? |
A27069 | or such as believe five Articles,& caetera? |
A27069 | or that he is now alive? |
A27069 | or that it is really a Man and not a Horse that is so called, any more than that Bucephalus was a Man? |
A27069 | or that they always first told them of the authority of such a Church? |
A27069 | or the Abassian Empire that till lately knew nothing of the Pope and his pretensions? |
A27069 | or the Universal Iudg, Physician, School- master,& c. as well as the Universal Priest and Teacher of Religion? |
A27069 | or they of Germany? |
A27069 | or they of all Italy? |
A27069 | or to that visibility of particular members? |
A27069 | or when the first Law made hereabout was, but that no one should use a Form of Prayer till he had shewed it to the Synod? |
A27069 | or whence? |
A27069 | or who must elect him ad esse? |
A27069 | or your Church from other men? |
A27069 | saith, God made no Law for) where are their Commentaries? |
A27069 | saving the Popes will, what makes the difference? |
A27069 | saying, What should I say more of this Holy Man? |
A27069 | such as you and your associates are? |
A27069 | sufficient? |
A27069 | sure you do not think him to be out of sight, or hearing, or far off, to whom you pray, and whom you so honour as present? |
A27069 | tell you when Scythia( that is part of it) was conquered by Constantine? |
A27069 | that the Heretick denieth also the material object( and what''s that to the case in hand?) |
A27069 | that there be some? |
A27069 | the whole Christian world, as headed only by Christ... or, the Pope of Rome and his subjects as such? |
A27069 | the whole Christian world, as headed only by Christ... or, the Pope of Rome and his subjects as such? |
A27069 | they of Rome? |
A27069 | unless understanding things as they are will hurt your Cause? |
A27069 | was it by such that you had your boasted printed victory over such great Logicians as Bishop Gunning and Bishop Pierson? |
A27069 | was there no Division in the Church of Rome, when part cleaved to one Pope, and part to another for above forty years? |
A27069 | what Church? |
A27069 | what if a Priest depute a Lay- man to consecrate the Eucharist? |
A27069 | what if none were lawful Councils that displease the Pope? |
A27069 | what is it that is the substance? |
A27069 | what satisfaction? |
A27069 | when half Europe was for one, and the rest for another for forty years and more, with which of them was the Church satisfied? |
A27069 | when he doubteth himself whether any such are to be found? |
A27069 | when part of the Church was divided, and the greater part abhor''d them all? |
A27069 | when the flock consenteth to the change,& c. else what seat is there that hath not had their succession interrupted and corrupted? |
A27069 | when there have been four or five ways or sorts of Election, had not every one of them a beginning? |
A27069 | when was it, and where? |
A27069 | where is your Universal Commentary: if you had such a work; will your talk make us ignorant that Papists are not a third part of the Christian world? |
A27069 | where shall we find their exposition of it? |
A27069 | who are those Pastors? |
A27069 | who hath asserted that? |
A27069 | who knoweth not that the bishops and the people did always chuse the Presbyters, and not the Chapters? |
A27069 | who would have expected such an answer, That it is a general belief of all things revealed, and a particular belief of some things? |
A27069 | why then may not a Lay- man be deputed to preach, baptize, pray, consecrate and administer the Eucharist, excommunicate, absolve,& c. if deputed? |
A27069 | will the deputation make them capable? |
A27069 | without knowing why? |
A27069 | would you think after all this, what his answer is? |
A27069 | yea, and are not Councils uncertain which consist of such a Ministry? |
A27069 | — Know you not that neither the Electors nor Consecrators of him, give him Papal jurisdiction, but Christ? |
A26924 | & c. Do you think that all will consent in all the Mysteries of Divinity, while knowledge is so low and rare? |
A26924 | & c. Doth it follow that all rapists are rebels? |
A26924 | & c. and you may hear how many others come near to the same Case: And must so famous a City as L ● ndon be Paganized or made so Atheistical? |
A26924 | ( And little know we of What Religion their Successors will be, or who will have the choosing of them? |
A26924 | 23. that all their Forefathers persecutions should be punished on that Generation? |
A26924 | 3. Who be they that have caused and continued it after 27 Years Experience of the effects? |
A26924 | 4. Who is it troubles the Land with their things Indifferent? |
A26924 | 47. Who is it that was, or is able to cure all these our divisions? |
A26924 | ARe we not on all sides agreed that we are Mortals posting to the Grave? |
A26924 | Ad hominem I need not dispute it? |
A26924 | All power may be abused; shall we have no King, no Judge, or Justice, or Bishops, because they may abuse their power? |
A26924 | And I ask such Doctors what baptism doth for the Infants at present and on what account? |
A26924 | And I pray you tell us where and when it is that men must obey this rule? |
A26924 | And are not most of your hearers such as you think have least need? |
A26924 | And are not the Church- wardens bound to present all these Thousands, that have no Room? |
A26924 | And are not these to pay to the Church, that can not come in it; and the Weak that can not stand and can get no Seats? |
A26924 | And are not those over- subject to Prelacy that will Swear Obedience in this, any more than against Preaching the Gospel? |
A26924 | And are our Bishops Books more faultless? |
A26924 | And are our Convocation more infallible than General Councils? |
A26924 | And are they not all then hereby bound? |
A26924 | And are you willing to renounce Justice, Humanity and Christianity, and openly to profess Diabolism? |
A26924 | And at what age must this perfect knowledge begin, which must extend to the most minute things that men will command? |
A26924 | And can Ten thousand Ministers then be certain by Scripture that baptized Infants are saved? |
A26924 | And can any Minister be supposed to have more interest in, or influence on his Hearers, than a Father hath on his Son? |
A26924 | And did not the Papists always know that our Love and Concord would be our strength, and their terrour? |
A26924 | And do all understand and keep this Vow? |
A26924 | And do not all the Idolatrous Heathens, and the Mahometans, offer their God some publick Worship? |
A26924 | And do you think that Christ will stand to such an Excommunication? |
A26924 | And do you think that for such fear, and not acting against them we deserve to be cast out as heinous uncapable delinquents? |
A26924 | And do you think that one Lord- Keeper is fitter to be trusted with the Safety of the Kingdom, than a Parliament and all the Courts of Justice? |
A26924 | And do you think that the Mass is no Conventicle, or more lawful than the forbidden assemblies of Protestants? |
A26924 | And do you think that the effect of Spanish and Italian Tyranny and Concord, doth answer the cost? |
A26924 | And do you think then that to deprive the Church of this is a lawful part of Conformity? |
A26924 | And doth not this contain a Fear of sinning? |
A26924 | And for the people to be put to question whether they may chuse them for Parliament men? |
A26924 | And for what? |
A26924 | And for what? |
A26924 | And for what? |
A26924 | And for what? |
A26924 | And for what? |
A26924 | And hath a Christian Prince any more power to hinder the Gospel and Worship of Christ, and the saving of Souls, than Heathens had? |
A26924 | And have you done well to judge before you heard and tryed? |
A26924 | And how can it be expected that he who thinks not Holiness desireable to himself, should think it any excellency in others? |
A26924 | And how can these admonish the Offenders, or the Minister exercise this discipline upon unknown Persons? |
A26924 | And how is Christ''s discipline here possible? |
A26924 | And how oft have a great part of the Greek Churches been guilty of it? |
A26924 | And if Meeting- Chapels be wanting, why do not the great and rich Conformists build them? |
A26924 | And if any of them have a scrupulous errour about a Pastor, must they therefore be Ruined, Excommunicated or Forsaken? |
A26924 | And if my Service be at an end, why not my Life also? |
A26924 | And if we prove Ionasses, may we not expect to meet with Storms more terrible than Jails? |
A26924 | And if you would not say to such, You shall have the Physician which the Patron chooseth or none; Why should you say so of the Pastor? |
A26924 | And is it any wonder then if they scorn both Him and us? |
A26924 | And is it just to wish it had been all undone, and the like of many hundred others? |
A26924 | And is it lawful to Assent and Consent to such orders of Baptism as cherish this? |
A26924 | And is it no sinful omission think you for all the rest to forbear all this? |
A26924 | And is it not a calling fixed during life and ability, not to be cast off at pleasure? |
A26924 | And is it not all one, as to say, if any good be done by Church- Government, it is by the Magistrate''s Sword, and not by ours by the Keys? |
A26924 | And is neither our Preaching, nor the Concord of the Churches here Necessary? |
A26924 | And is not God''s Word a sufficient Rule of Religion? |
A26924 | And is not all this yet enough? |
A26924 | And is not every Chancellor, or Archdeacon, or Bishop now made as immutable necessary a part of the Kingdom as the King? |
A26924 | And is not the King''s life and welfare the interest of the Kingdom? |
A26924 | And is not the perfidious Violation of it, a most damning Sin? |
A26924 | And is not the scrupling of a thing called by others Indifferent, a mote in the eye of many truly godly persons? |
A26924 | And is not this commendable, and to be cherished? |
A26924 | And is not this enough? |
A26924 | And is not this to shut all, or almost all men out of Heaven? |
A26924 | And is striving or mutual Love and Quietness, a fitter Passage to the dust? |
A26924 | And is there not a Concord in their way among the enslaved ignorant Muscovites, and among the Turks, and many Heathens? |
A26924 | And is this power more concerned in any thing than in the saving of our Souls? |
A26924 | And know you not that few men then living wrote and spake more plainly against the Usurpation than he did? |
A26924 | And may I not hope that the Bishops will be for it? |
A26924 | And may not these come to the Altar when they please? |
A26924 | And may they be resisted till they shew their Commissions? |
A26924 | And may we say that King and Parliament do what these do? |
A26924 | And must I tell them all that none of them is bound to keep it in that sound sence? |
A26924 | And must all p ● or Souls have no other Pastors than these men will chuse? |
A26924 | And must love God above all, our neighbours as our selves, and must do as we would be done by? |
A26924 | And must not Christians publickly worship Christ? |
A26924 | And must we all confederate to maintain this Church Corruption; and all agree to renounce Reformation, or any Conviction tending to Repentance? |
A26924 | And must we damn, and cut off men for that which the very Papists leave at liberty? |
A26924 | And must we renounce communion with them all? |
A26924 | And no Wiser Law and Gospel that He hath left us? |
A26924 | And now what mean you by saying that every Man must not be left to chuse what Religion he list? |
A26924 | And of Preaching, Fasting and Praying? |
A26924 | And on what sort of Men? |
A26924 | And quo jure? |
A26924 | And shall all the Lords, Gentlemen and People be therefore punished as Conventiclers? |
A26924 | And shall all the World be driven therefore from worshipping God? |
A26924 | And shall all these suffer as Recusants, while the Rich that can pay for Seats, escape? |
A26924 | And since policy hath setled it of late in Peace, what a Peace is it, and of what effect? |
A26924 | And the Parents- Government of his Children, in order to personal and family wellfare? |
A26924 | And the sense and experience of their Souls tells them how great the change of their condition is? |
A26924 | And this in those that are called by men? |
A26924 | And was it not formed according to this Canon? |
A26924 | And were all these fools, and you only the wise men? |
A26924 | And what a Priest is that who must be forbidden to teach the people in the Church: or there to tell Children the meaning of the Catechism? |
A26924 | And what are other mens actions to them? |
A26924 | And what are we better than Turks and Heathens? |
A26924 | And what have you against this? |
A26924 | And what if the Clergy in one Land say it is, and in another, say it is not: Must both be believed? |
A26924 | And what if they say that we are Turks or Heathens, or have Horns and are Brutes, what remedy have we? |
A26924 | And what is it that the unconscionable will not do, for worldly interest? |
A26924 | And what is it that would satisfy you?] |
A26924 | And what is that Vice? |
A26924 | And what yet can I do worse? |
A26924 | And when Thousands of full Age are yet to learn what Baptism is, and what they Vowed, Have they not great need to be plainly taught it? |
A26924 | And when it''s known that they can not have it in most or many Parishes, how are they bound to live and die without the benefit of it? |
A26924 | And where do you see any great division about any such things as these; except in cases of accidental scandal? |
A26924 | And whether if the whole Church Government as fixed, must thus be Sworn to as Monarchy is, it alter not our Constitution? |
A26924 | And whether no man may endeavour it in his place and calling? |
A26924 | And who knoweth not that indifferent things are numberless, as well as small; no mortal man knoweth them all? |
A26924 | And why are the rest that were Boys at School, accused for other Mens opinions or actions? |
A26924 | And why call you it arrogant and dividing? |
A26924 | And why may not an Article of Faith be newly declared? |
A26924 | And why must that Neighbour Minister repel him? |
A26924 | And why then are Judges Sworn not to be moved from Justice by the Great or Little Seal? |
A26924 | And will this prove them such indeed? |
A26924 | And will you join with none? |
A26924 | And would they have us shut Infants from Salvation for nothing? |
A26924 | And would you have all the Christian World, forbid one another to Worship God, till they all agree? |
A26924 | And would you have all these Thousands turn Atheists, or live more impiously than Mahometans? |
A26924 | And would you have us so unthankful to God, who hath blest us, as to cast away our Callings? |
A26924 | And yet must we have more, even as necessary to Ministry? |
A26924 | And you know that till of late years the Press was shut up to us: But have you seriously read and studyed what is written by us? |
A26924 | And you see that the Oxford Convocation condemn the writings and principles of the Doctors of the Church of England as well as others? |
A26924 | And, Why doth the Article of the Church of England condemn those that hold, That all may be saved in their several Religions? |
A26924 | Are not all Men on Earth bound solemnly to worship the God that made them? |
A26924 | Are not all those sad effects of turning a Church into a Prison, and forcing men to seem to take that which Christ professeth he doth not give them? |
A26924 | Are not most of them in the Parishes where there is room? |
A26924 | Are not these two very contrary? |
A26924 | Are not they obliged to get Godfathers and Godmothers for them? |
A26924 | Are not those unworthy Ministers that be not fit to be trusted to Fast and Pray with their People, while the Law is open to punish all abuses of it? |
A26924 | Are there no other? |
A26924 | Are these the patterns that you would have us imitate? |
A26924 | Are they not more miserable that are content to stay at home? |
A26924 | Are we not all Vowed to God in our Baptism, renouncing the Seduction of the World, the Flesh and the Devil? |
A26924 | Are we not of the same Religion with the Magistrates and Bishops? |
A26924 | Are you not bound in order to peace, to Assent and Consent to all things in the Books? |
A26924 | Are you such your selves? |
A26924 | Art they therefore Schismaticks indeed? |
A26924 | As if he had said, As ever you loved me, feed those whom I loved to the Death: Would you unmercifully wish us to renounce our love to Christ? |
A26924 | Baptising is Christening, and dare I causelessly deprive a Soul of visible Christianity? |
A26924 | Be such things imposed as Indifferent? |
A26924 | But I further ask you, Do you think the Law of Man, or a Commission can abrogate the Law of Nature? |
A26924 | But I next ask, whether the Body of a Kingdom have by Gods Law of Nature a self- defending power against its notorious assaulting Foes? |
A26924 | But If you limit this Rule to Christians, is it to all Christians? |
A26924 | But can that be true? |
A26924 | But do you not thus make Examination by Ministers necessary to the Sacrament? |
A26924 | But do you think that endeavours to alter Church Government is any of your lawful or necessary Matter? |
A26924 | But here is no difficulty? |
A26924 | But how easy were it with others, without sin, or cost to cure all? |
A26924 | But if they grant this, and yet will not grant it, but seek to ruine them that seek it, are they not unexcuseable? |
A26924 | But it is the Parent that is compelled? |
A26924 | But mu ● ● you needs own every petition in the Assembly? |
A26924 | But must we trust every Man that shews a Seal, that he did not counterfeit it? |
A26924 | But what are these easy intelligible Circumstances to all the Ceremonies unnecessary even in genere? |
A26924 | But what is your other reason against our sort of Godfathers? |
A26924 | But what''s that to us? |
A26924 | But when he heard from Heaven, Why persecutest thou me? |
A26924 | But where hath he said, I will save all Infidels Children, if any Priest or Christian will but Baptize them? |
A26924 | But who giveth this exposition? |
A26924 | But why do you refuse to renounce all the Obligation of the Covenant, if you are not disloyal? |
A26924 | But will you use Sobriety a little further? |
A26924 | But, Sir, Who be they that were thus deceived? |
A26924 | By what Obligation? |
A26924 | Cain was of that wicked one, and slew his Brother; And why slew he him? |
A26924 | Can men believe what others list because they bid us? |
A26924 | Can the medicine be laudable that so many miscarry in the use of it? |
A26924 | Can those Canons and Orders be blameless that without any more opposition, let such perfidiousness go to our Christening? |
A26924 | Can we touch Pitch and not be defiled? |
A26924 | Can you do it? |
A26924 | Can you force men to Repent, or rather Lye? |
A26924 | Chillingworth would not Subscribe without a limitting Profession: Was he therefore none of the Church? |
A26924 | Dare you give it under your hands that you will bear the punishment if we be condemned for obeying you and ceasing our work? |
A26924 | Dare you undertake to justify at the Bar of God, the many hundred Ministers forbidden to Preach, if they obey you and cease their Ministery? |
A26924 | Did Christ or his Apostles ever do or perswade such a thing? |
A26924 | Did God ever give it them? |
A26924 | Did I not before tell you why? |
A26924 | Did none that are for separation from the Church of England take the Corporation- Oath and Declaration? |
A26924 | Did not the Church for 300 years, worship God against the will of Princes, and afterward, when Arrian, or other erroneous Princes forbid them? |
A26924 | Did the Church do so for 300 years? |
A26924 | Did the King of Portugal''s Brother and Lords answer the trust reposed in them, when they Deposed and imprisoned him? |
A26924 | Did the Primitive- Churches for 300 years use any Sword but Spiritual? |
A26924 | Did these go back from Covenant Reformation or Duty, when they could have no better? |
A26924 | Did we devise them? |
A26924 | Did we use any such Argument in our Dispute with the Bishops? |
A26924 | Did you think I had pleaded that Men may without punishment do what they list, and live in wickedness? |
A26924 | Divers of the Nobility are accused: Must all Noble- men be therefore reproached? |
A26924 | Do none of these bind you but the first? |
A26924 | Do not Papists call them Schismaticks and Hereticks too, as long and as loud as they call us so? |
A26924 | Do not all Christians believe, That the Knowledge of God, our Creator and Redeemer, and a holy Heart, and Life are of necessity to our Salvation? |
A26924 | Do not all Men, constrained by natural Conscience, at a dying Hour, repent of hurting others, and ask Forgiveness of all the World? |
A26924 | Do not all our Ministers Preach for Obedience and Godliness? |
A26924 | Do not the Martyrs freely lay down their lives? |
A26924 | Do these Men know what Souls are worth? |
A26924 | Do they de facto keep them out? |
A26924 | Do they ever since avoid Communion with all those men? |
A26924 | Do they know us better than we our selves? |
A26924 | Do they not kneel after and longer to God in Prayers publickly, and in their Families and Chambers, than most that blame them? |
A26924 | Do they not know that the argument that hath brought us all into the case that we are in, was thus given us 1664. and oft since in Print? |
A26924 | Do they not then here shew Partiality, and themselves justify our Communion with the Conformists? |
A26924 | Do those that watch, accuse and ruin us, want will to find out our false or ill Doctrine? |
A26924 | Do we impose them on any, and say, Vse our things indifferent, or we will Silence you, or Excommunicate you, and lay you in Iayl with Rogues? |
A26924 | Do we not see, That Children are not born with Knowledge, nor free from fleshly and worldly Inclinations? |
A26924 | Do you believe our Church Articles and yet deny original sin? |
A26924 | Do you believe that he is the Author of the Christian Baptism? |
A26924 | Do you believe that the great Parish Ministers need no help? |
A26924 | Do you know how God maketh Marriages? |
A26924 | Do you know how many, and what sort of men the Patrons in England are that chuse them? |
A26924 | Do you know the case of our Parishes or not? |
A26924 | Do you know who giveth the Lord Mayor and Sheriffs of London their Power? |
A26924 | Do you mean that I may except them in words or writing, or only mentally? |
A26924 | Do you not believe that it is his Prerogative to institute Sacraments of the covenant of Grace? |
A26924 | Do you not seem hereby to intimate unjustly that all this is denied you? |
A26924 | Do you that think it is necessary to Christianity and Salvation know that this Federal Crossing is lawful? |
A26924 | Do you think Men that believe not a God and a Life to come are fit for Church Communion, and may be forced to it? |
A26924 | Do you think all is Evil that is there Vowed? |
A26924 | Do you think any Church on Earth to be faultless? |
A26924 | Do you think it is lawful to omit all Duty that is not essential to the Church? |
A26924 | Do you think it not contrary to our Baptismal Vow, in which we promise Obedience to Christ to our lives end? |
A26924 | Do you think that the case hath not difficulty enough to excuse a man for fear of sinning? |
A26924 | Do you think that you are guilty of all the faults of the Church that you join with? |
A26924 | Do you think that your Priests and your Worship are without Fault; yea, or the Constitution of your Churches? |
A26924 | Do you think there is any such sin as Sacrilege in the world? |
A26924 | Do you undertake to own every petition that your own Preacher will put up, before you know what he will say? |
A26924 | Doth any Man think he shall not die? |
A26924 | Doth helping them freely deserve our destruction? |
A26924 | Doth it put them in a present right to Salvation? |
A26924 | Doth not our Liturgy pray that the rest of our lives hereafter may be pure and holy, that we may attain Eternal Life? |
A26924 | Doth not this one thing tell you what the English Diocesan Episcopacy is, that giveth one man the Disciplining of many hundred Parishes? |
A26924 | Doth this common belief deserve honour and preferment, and our unbelief of such things deserve silencing and ruine? |
A26924 | Doth this prove that all are born again of the Spirit that are baptized? |
A26924 | Else what a case was the Roman Church in, that for many hundred years was kept up by Rebellion against their Lawful Emperors and Princes? |
A26924 | Ergo, It was not done] What is so false, absurd or impious that man may not do? |
A26924 | Faith and Repentance and Dedication to Christ by covenant consent: And do you think that Infants pardon and salvation hath no condition? |
A26924 | Formerly many Judges have been guilty: Are Judges therefore to be dishonoured? |
A26924 | French- men come hither from their own pleasant Land, in Raggs and Bodily Distress: And who expelleth them? |
A26924 | Had not those been the revolters that would rather have had none? |
A26924 | Hath God laid our Salvation on Princes, and Patrons choice, or on our own? |
A26924 | Hath God made the King of France, Spain, Portugal,& c. the chooser of a Pastor for all their Subjects? |
A26924 | Hath he set up an useless mock- power in the Church? |
A26924 | Hath man any Power but what God hath given him, and hath God given any against himself, or his own Laws, or for destruction of his Fear? |
A26924 | Hath not every Parish one? |
A26924 | Have I here and elsewhere given no Reasons for our Dissent? |
A26924 | Have not the Bishops power to silence and degrade, as well as to ordain; or the Parliament at least? |
A26924 | Have we given them no reasons of our dissent? |
A26924 | Have we not Ministers 〈 ◊ 〉 without you? |
A26924 | Have wise Bishops no fitter penalty to enforce their usurping Canons by, than denying Christendom and Salvation? |
A26924 | Have you not all these years, continued guilty of false judging and uncharitableness, and that against a great number of the innocent? |
A26924 | He said, No; but he heard him whistle Treason: And being ask''d, How whistling could be Treason? |
A26924 | How are we to know the King''s Commission? |
A26924 | How gross a contradiction is this? |
A26924 | How happy are we if we all agree in great, plain, necessary things? |
A26924 | How like is this to the Moscovy State? |
A26924 | How long have you so judged? |
A26924 | How many years study, and reading might this Art save them? |
A26924 | How prove you that the Parents may not be prime covenanters, or Sponsors for their own Children? |
A26924 | How shall they know before hand in what Churches to find it? |
A26924 | How slender a means will serve to deceive the wicked? |
A26924 | How stands this with our Oath of Allegiance to the King? |
A26924 | How strong Sin is, and how blind and bad the Heart of Man? |
A26924 | How then can you make good your charge of falsehood? |
A26924 | How vast a difference is there between an ignorant Prater, and a skilful Lawyer or Physician? |
A26924 | How? |
A26924 | I ask you, Did the Parliament bind themselves against altering Monarchy, or the Succession? |
A26924 | I ask you, what is meant by the King''s Authority? |
A26924 | I heard of one that said he woulp Swear Treason against a Nonconformist: and being ask''d, What he said, and whether ever he heard him speak? |
A26924 | I never yet knew one Parent that expected any such thing from them, or that ever seriously asked them, Do you understand what you are to promise? |
A26924 | I say, if in justifying them I should be mistaken, what a guilt should I incur? |
A26924 | I thought our Church had rather too sharp Discipline? |
A26924 | If Christian Knowledge and Practice be not necessary, Why pray we for Conversion of Heathens and Infidels? |
A26924 | If Conscience towards God be once driven away, is any man to be trusted? |
A26924 | If I have made it past all modest denial, then what a dreadful thing is this Renunciation of Repentance? |
A26924 | If I refuse his Service, I invite God to cut off my Life: And what Service else can I now do? |
A26924 | If Infants have no guilt and sin what need have they of Baptism, or of a Saviour? |
A26924 | If Preaching, and that soundly and skilfully, be as needless as such men pretend, why did Christ Preach, and send out Preachers? |
A26924 | If Some- body, who must it be? |
A26924 | If all this be agreeable to God''s Word, what is contrary to it? |
A26924 | If all, what if men doubt whether Polygamy, Lying, Fornication,& c. be lawful? |
A26924 | If anothers, whose should it be so likely as the parents from whom the Children have their essence? |
A26924 | If every Subject be Judge, it is as easie to Rebel, and say the King''s Commission is illegal, as it is to deny all the Authority of his Commissions? |
A26924 | If he had, it''s not credible that three persons should all intend to educate one child of another man''s, and perform it? |
A26924 | If it be only those that dwell and communicate there, how small a part of your great Parishes are of the Church? |
A26924 | If it be, if Popery be against Scripture, it''s here renounced: If not, why should we be against it? |
A26924 | If men love that Diet, let them use it: But must none live that can not love the same? |
A26924 | If men were Married in time of Popery, with unlawful Words and Clauses, or lately in England by Justices in new terms, was such marriage null? |
A26924 | If none, than all Infants are saved; if any condition, what is it? |
A26924 | If not, what have we Parish- Priests for, and why pay we Tythes to them? |
A26924 | If not, where yet their differences are so great, why must they be forbidden it, who differ not in points of Faith from the Churches Articles at all? |
A26924 | If not, why is all this stir made about it, and all the Church Lands and Tythes to maintain it? |
A26924 | If our fear come from ignorance, do the Churches suffer none more ignorant than we? |
A26924 | If the Subject have not a judgment of discretion to know which is his rightful Sovereign, the King must be forsaken? |
A26924 | If they have need of both, sure it is for no actual sin done by them, was not the World lost for Adam''s sin? |
A26924 | If this power extend not to Infidels, Heathens, Papists, Hereticks,& c. how shall the Subjects know to whom it extendeth? |
A26924 | If we miscarry by their choice, will they be damned for us, and not we? |
A26924 | If yea, by what Law or Power? |
A26924 | If you are no more exact and just in matters of Law, your Clients must pay for it? |
A26924 | If you say it is the Faith of the Church( as some) that giveth the Child Title, what Church mean you? |
A26924 | If you say, It''s no Commission that is contrary to Law, who shall be Judge when it is contrary to Law? |
A26924 | If you would, were that man well in his Wits, who should trust his Soul on your undertaking, who are so unable to save your selves? |
A26924 | If your purse be not quite full of Gold, will you fill it up with dung or stones? |
A26924 | In not coming to their Churches? |
A26924 | Is Athanasius''s Creed a real part of the Common- Prayer Book, contain''d in it, or not? |
A26924 | Is a Baptized Infidel, or ungodly Person, any better or safer than the Turks or the Salvages in America? |
A26924 | Is all this done by mere Reading that which a Woman or a Boy of 12 years old can read as well as they? |
A26924 | Is he an honourer of the King that dare affirm this?) |
A26924 | Is it a duty now in France, Spain, Italy, Bavaria, Austria,& c. or in the Dominion of the Turks, Persians, Tartarians, China,& c? |
A26924 | Is it in any other Vice? |
A26924 | Is it lest I should suffer by them? |
A26924 | Is it meerly because another undertaketh to teach him hereafter? |
A26924 | Is it not God''s great Mercy to our Land, that we have had twenty years peace, while other Lands have been miserable by Wars? |
A26924 | Is it not an ability to teach men, at least the Essentials of Christianity, Essential to a Minister? |
A26924 | Is it not by his Laws that are the highest Acts of his Authority? |
A26924 | Is it not enough peaceable to use them, and to profess that all the word of God is infallible Truth? |
A26924 | Is it not our own Salvation that lieth on our actions? |
A26924 | Is it not the time for sinful Practices, or Idleness at the best? |
A26924 | Is it not their design to banish Conscience and absolute Obedience to God? |
A26924 | Is it not treachery to draw men into all these Vows, and then to command them never to Preach nor Expound any Doctrine or matter any where? |
A26924 | Is it possible for the Law and a Commission to be contrary? |
A26924 | Is it through despair that Rulers and Clergymen will not regard Reason, or will not bear it, but answer it with Contempt or Prisons? |
A26924 | Is it unlawful to join with such? |
A26924 | Is it we? |
A26924 | Is it worse than Drunkenness or Fornication? |
A26924 | Is not God above man, and first to be obeyed, and most feared? |
A26924 | Is not History full of such Examples? |
A26924 | Is not a Prison as near a Way to Heaven as my own House? |
A26924 | Is not every man fitter to profess his own Faith than his Adversary is? |
A26924 | Is not the Damnatory part a part of the Book of Common- Prayer, and contained in it? |
A26924 | Is not the Fear of God the beginning of Wisdom? |
A26924 | Is not the silencing of faithful Ministers, a far greater loss& hurt to the people that need their Ministery than to them? |
A26924 | Is not this Puritanism, Pharisaical, and Justification of Works? |
A26924 | Is not this more arrogancy, than to judge who is fit to be my Pastor or Physician? |
A26924 | Is not this to alter the terms of Christ''s Covenant and Sacrament, and directly to contradict his very fundamental Law of Christianity? |
A26924 | Is that the meaning of the Act of Ob ● ivion? |
A26924 | Is the Conformists Ministery necessary or not? |
A26924 | Is the meaning, that all these are the guilty Rebels to be destroyed, or which of them is it? |
A26924 | Is there any Body doubts whether there be such? |
A26924 | Is there any Relation nearer than that of Father and Son? |
A26924 | Is there any limitation in the words? |
A26924 | Is there any one such a man on earth? |
A26924 | Is there any such thing in above 100 Books that I have written? |
A26924 | Is there nothing that you or they would refuse if it be but commanded you? |
A26924 | Is this fair dealing then to silence what at large he owneth, and name only a writing 29 years ago, which he never was heard about? |
A26924 | Is this to give us proof of undoubted certainty? |
A26924 | It is against the interest of Christ and the Church? |
A26924 | It is not a Forgery? |
A26924 | It is not actual faith in that Infant, that understands not? |
A26924 | It is not mens false sayings that make or prove such Obligation? |
A26924 | It must then be some others act or nothing? |
A26924 | King Iames writeth, that a King may not make War against his whole Kingdom? |
A26924 | L But why should you not give over Preaching when you are silenced? |
A26924 | L ▪ How doth this make you a Voucher for their Souls? |
A26924 | L. ARE not the Epistles and Gospels used according to the last Translation? |
A26924 | L. And how do you answer them? |
A26924 | L. And so you will suppose that God''s Law of Nature bindeth you in some Cases to resist: And will not all Rebels plead that Law? |
A26924 | L. And what harm is there in being twice Ordained? |
A26924 | L. And what have you against Assenting to this? |
A26924 | L. And what have you against it? |
A26924 | L. And what have you against obeying according to the Canon? |
A26924 | L. And what have you against the practice of it? |
A26924 | L. And what have you against this? |
A26924 | L. And what have you to say to the contrary? |
A26924 | L. And why should any scruple so small a matter? |
A26924 | L. And why should not men be forced to their Duty, and to their own good, if they are backward to it? |
A26924 | L. And why will you not Swear never to endeavour any alteration, if you be required so to do? |
A26924 | L. And will you have Infants and Idiots judge of their Parents commands? |
A26924 | L. Are not the old words of the former Book to the same sense? |
A26924 | L. But I doubt all these hard Questions are but raised as dust to hide some Principles of Rebellion? |
A26924 | L. But I pray you who shall be judge whether the profession be Understanding which must be made by the Adult, or by the Parent? |
A26924 | L. But any Beggars Child hath right to be taken into your house, if you are so Charitable as to do it? |
A26924 | L. But as long as you may have Licenses, how doth this put you on any sin of omission or commission? |
A26924 | L. But can you think that the Bishops will ever abate Re- ordination of thsoe ordained by Presbyters? |
A26924 | L. But do not you know who wrote the Political Aphorisms, or Holy Common- wealth, condemned lately by the Oxford Convocation? |
A26924 | L. But hath not the King more power over your Family than you have? |
A26924 | L. But how can you do either of these without guilt, when they are as bad as you have described? |
A26924 | L. But how do you prove it to be new? |
A26924 | L. But if every man have leave to accuse the Orders of the Church, what Order can be maintained? |
A26924 | L. But if there be no cause, how come you to be so odious to others? |
A26924 | L. But is it no ● as injurious, to force men against their Consciences to Hear as to Communicate? |
A26924 | L. But shall Ministers make no profession but what a Papist or a Heretick will make? |
A26924 | L. But shall every Priest have power to put men from the Sacrament? |
A26924 | L. But should they not distinctly renounce Transubstantiation, P ● rgatory, Image- Worship, Merit, and the rest of their Errours? |
A26924 | L. But some say, that by[ Excommunicate] is meant[ Excommunicable] or such as ought to be Excommunicate, and then what more can you desire? |
A26924 | L. But these three may differ, and it''s like will do so; how then shall ever the Churches be provided? |
A26924 | L. But this is the Parents or Godfathers fault: what''s this to the Minister, or to your Assent and Consent? |
A26924 | L. But what Sin fear you by ceasing your ministry? |
A26924 | L. But what danger is it to judge too charitably? |
A26924 | L. But what great supply of this defect do your Meetings make? |
A26924 | L. But what is amiss in the Book of Ordination? |
A26924 | L. But what is four Parishes to all the rest, and the Common Case? |
A26924 | L. But what need is there of your Preaching? |
A26924 | L. But what pretence have any against Kneeling? |
A26924 | L. But what''s all this to your Conformity? |
A26924 | L. But what''s this to the common Case of Country Parishes? |
A26924 | L. But whence is it that Clergy- men of the same Profession so much disagree? |
A26924 | L. But why could not you Conform to the Law as well as they? |
A26924 | L. But why do you mention no more solemn Excommunication, but this Declarative one and Suspension? |
A26924 | L. But why go you to the Parish- Churches when you might have better? |
A26924 | L. But why may you not keep away five miles from Corporations and places where you have Preached? |
A26924 | L. But why must they make their profession before others? |
A26924 | L. But why say you the Ordainers do not give you the Power, but as Investing Ministers? |
A26924 | L. But will God save children for their Parents Faith? |
A26924 | L. But you are bound before by other Obligations to all that is good in it, and not by the Covenant? |
A26924 | L. But, 1. what makes you put in so much that no body denieth? |
A26924 | L. Did not you say before that the King may settle Teachers in all the Parishes, and force Men to hear them? |
A26924 | L. Do you not before complain of too much exercise of Discipline by Excommunications? |
A26924 | L. Do you think Men are bound to separate from all Churches that have not this Discipline? |
A26924 | L. Do you think any man doubts of that? |
A26924 | L. Do you think the ignorant vulgar are fit to choose themselves a Pastor? |
A26924 | L. Experience resolveth that; what Man will not defend his Life that can? |
A26924 | L. HOw are you bound to publish their Excommunications? |
A26924 | L. HOw are you bound to this by Conformity? |
A26924 | L. How comes your Case to be so little understood if you have done so much to open and justifie it? |
A26924 | L. How cometh there to be so many faults in the old Translation? |
A26924 | L. How doth Christ give Ministers their Office? |
A26924 | L. How prove you that it''s their Duty to have any such Communion with Nonconformists Conventicles? |
A26924 | L. How prove you that the Laity is deprived of it? |
A26924 | L. I Have one thing more to desire of you, That you will so far answer the common question, What would you have? |
A26924 | L. I Hear that you receive the Eucharist Kneeling your self, and take it for lawful: what then have you against the Canon or Liturgy for this? |
A26924 | L. Is none of all that such which you have described? |
A26924 | L. Is not the Patron as fit to chuse a Teacher or Pastor for your Wives, Children and Servants as you are? |
A26924 | L. Is there any one doubts of that? |
A26924 | L. It seems then you would not subscribe to the Bible, that there is nothing in it contrary to the Word of God? |
A26924 | L. Let us try, What is your Argument? |
A26924 | L. Shall every man be a judge of the Law, whether it be just and good? |
A26924 | L. Some body must be trusted; and if they be Traitors, who can help it? |
A26924 | L. Sure the cry would never be for Extirpating the Dissenters, for this Plot and their disloyalty, if they were not guilty? |
A26924 | L. THis is now ceased at the end of twenty years; what need you mention this? |
A26924 | L. Tell me first where it is that your Controversie lyeth? |
A26924 | L. The meaning is not, against expounding to their children or wives at home, but in the Church? |
A26924 | L. Then it had no Christian Magistrates? |
A26924 | L. To deny that is Treason: How else should we defend the King? |
A26924 | L. VVHY may not this be obeyed? |
A26924 | L. VVHat are the words of that Canon? |
A26924 | L. VVHat have you against this? |
A26924 | L. VVHat is the 57th Canon, and its Execution? |
A26924 | L. VVHat is the Eighth Canon and its Excommunication? |
A26924 | L. VVHy can not you Approve of, and Consent to this? |
A26924 | L. WHat are the Agreements which you presuppose? |
A26924 | L. WHat are the words hear that you dislike? |
A26924 | L. WHat harm is there in reading the Apocrypha? |
A26924 | L. WHat is it that you have against Conformity in this? |
A26924 | L. WHat is the Fifth Canon, and its Excommunication? |
A26924 | L. WHat is the Sixth Canons Excommuication? |
A26924 | L. Well: What is there in these Books contrary to Gods Word, or which you may not Assent and Consent to? |
A26924 | L. What Communion is it then that you hold with them? |
A26924 | L. What Reasons can you give for the necessity of such a sort of Discipline, and why it may not be f ● rborn? |
A26924 | L. What are those? |
A26924 | L. What are your other Reasons for it? |
A26924 | L. What be those Opinions about it? |
A26924 | L. What can make Godly Persons scruple it as sinful? |
A26924 | L. What confusion will this bring in? |
A26924 | L. What fault can you find with this? |
A26924 | L. What great mistranslations are there? |
A26924 | L. What have you against the Execution of this? |
A26924 | L. What have you against this Approbation of the Liturgy? |
A26924 | L. What have you against this? |
A26924 | L. What is the 140th Canon? |
A26924 | L. What is the last Canon? |
A26924 | L. What is therein the Articles that any good Man can scruple? |
A26924 | L. What is your Controversie against any of this? |
A26924 | L. What is your fourth Objection against our way of Baptism? |
A26924 | L. What mean you by that Discipline? |
A26924 | L. What mean you by the ancient sort? |
A26924 | L. What mislike you in the English way of Confirmation? |
A26924 | L. What part of it was good as to the matter? |
A26924 | L. What should I think but that he is a Monster and miserable Wretch? |
A26924 | L. What sin can you find in Re- Ordination? |
A26924 | L. What ● e the three last? |
A26924 | L. Where then is the danger or sin that you fear? |
A26924 | L. Wherein lyeth the sin of such a Declaration? |
A26924 | L. Wherein lyeth the sinfulness of Conformity here? |
A26924 | L. Who doth discourage them? |
A26924 | L. Why begin you with the qualifications requisite to Baptism, as if you spake to Infidels? |
A26924 | L. Why call you a Rubrick an Article of Faith? |
A26924 | L. Why do you impose the Registring of Communicants? |
A26924 | L. Why have you not in Writing given the World just satisfaction if you are guiltless? |
A26924 | L. Why name you Parents and Pro- parents instead of God- fathers and God- mothers? |
A26924 | L. Why, what hinders if all sides desire it? |
A26924 | L. Would you have Patrons turned out of their right? |
A26924 | L. You make our Articles of Religion a doubtful thing; what certainty then is there of the Protestant Religion? |
A26924 | Lyers will claim belief: Must we therefore believe no body? |
A26924 | M. And all Churches will let in Heart- Papists that renounce Popery: Who knows the heart? |
A26924 | M. And are not they as much so to us? |
A26924 | M. And do you think that we should all Swear to that which they never meant to bind us to? |
A26924 | M. And do you think this doth? |
A26924 | M. And doth not sinning against God''s Law, In neither Consenting to nor Obeying it, deserve as bad? |
A26924 | M. And may they not defend themselves, against Usurpers and Rebels, and Traytors at home, as well as against Forreign Foes? |
A26924 | M. And must we Ignorant Men swear that all these aforesaid were deceived, and knew less than we? |
A26924 | M. And yet dare you become our Judge? |
A26924 | M. Are they no part of that which is contained in the Book, and prescribed by it? |
A26924 | M. But his former Officers are not himself, and if they must resign to new Commissioners, how know they but it is the King''s Will? |
A26924 | M. But if you are of so many Minds, how are Doubters resolved, what to Swear and what to do? |
A26924 | M. DO you know what it is that we are required to conform to? |
A26924 | M. Dare you say that there is no such Case? |
A26924 | M. Did not Christ institute an Office for it, and give them this Power of the Keyes? |
A26924 | M. Did you get your skill in Law by so easie and so short a Study? |
A26924 | M. Did you not say even now, That small Countrey Parishes have no need of us? |
A26924 | M. Do I need to tell you? |
A26924 | M. Do you mean as to the ends and things desired of us or a form of Words to be the containing means? |
A26924 | M. Do you think it is for want of humble Reverence? |
A26924 | M. Do you think there is any Church on Earth that hath no open Faults? |
A26924 | M. Doth not the Chancellor keep the Seal? |
A26924 | M. Have Christian Magistrates more right to silence the Preaching of the Gospel, destroy Souls, and oppose Christ''s Work, than Heathens have? |
A26924 | M. Have I pleaded with you any such Impulses or Inspirations, as the Reasons of our Dissent? |
A26924 | M. How would you have these dangers and inconveniences be avoided? |
A26924 | M. I can not help that: Must I not tell men what is Right, because they will do Wrong? |
A26924 | M. I never heard of many of the Parliaments Army that ever saw any sealed Commission of those they fought against: and would that excuse them? |
A26924 | M. I pray which way go our late Protestant Lawyers, such as Cook, and Littleton, and the like? |
A26924 | M. I pray which way go the Canonists? |
A26924 | M. I pray which way go the famous Civilians herein, such as Gothofred, Hottoman, Cujacius, Wesenbcchius, Pacius, Duarenus, and such others? |
A26924 | M. If he destroy Infants for Adam''s sin, do you think that Justice is so much more extensive then Mercy, that he will shew no mercy for Parents sake? |
A26924 | M. Is it lawful deliberately to lie in a trifle? |
A26924 | M. Is it meerly at Command? |
A26924 | M. Is it not possible for two Commissions to be contrary? |
A26924 | M. Is the Apocrypha any part of the Common- Prayer Book, and contained in it, or not? |
A26924 | M. It is most expresly made such: What is an Article of Faith but that which must be Assented to as certain by the Word of God? |
A26924 | M. It only follows that the fault is Primarily in the Governours corruption, and neglect of Discipline; but it''s next also in the Liturgy? |
A26924 | M. Look over the foregoing instances: Will you make a Law among Heathens that all shall be baptized, that this may draw them to believe? |
A26924 | M. Must their indifferent things be enforced with so great penalty as damnation? |
A26924 | M. Neither of them is any wonder to me, considering who the men were, and in what circumstances, and what moved them? |
A26924 | M. Not at all: If they were why did the New Convocation alter them? |
A26924 | M. Say you so? |
A26924 | M. Say you so? |
A26924 | M. Shall any words go for a Profession, or what must that Profession be? |
A26924 | M. So then; You would have Protestant- Dissenters rooted out, and not Papists or Infidels? |
A26924 | M. This is to jest with holy things? |
A26924 | M. What if they openly apostatize and turn Infidels, Iews, or Mahometans; will they yet force them to Communicate in the Lord''s Supper? |
A26924 | M. What is the Treasonable Plot? |
A26924 | M. What must you do that is sin? |
A26924 | M. What was the sence of the old ▪ Roman Orators, Philosophers and Historians as to this point? |
A26924 | M. Who do they mean by Dissenters or Conventiclers? |
A26924 | M. Who do you think in your Conscience is liker to bring it in, we or they? |
A26924 | M. Who must try and judge of that Profession, whether it be Christianity or not: Is it Magistrates or Pastors? |
A26924 | M. Whom will they constrain? |
A26924 | M. Why do you not name the difference, if there be any? |
A26924 | M. Will you allow any Countrey to resist an Army that shew the Kings Commission, if they are confident, or can prove that it is against his Interest? |
A26924 | M. Will you take us to be the just reporters what they are and hold? |
A26924 | May it not be true among many false ones? |
A26924 | May not the King and Kingdom defend themselves against Invaders? |
A26924 | More infallible and perfect, with more aweful Power, and with ten thousand fold greater Rewards and Punishments? |
A26924 | Murthering Infants is death by God''s Laws and mans? |
A26924 | Must all Subjects be made Judges whether Princes and Patrons are Orthodox and fit to choose? |
A26924 | Must all Subjects every where do all commanded them? |
A26924 | Must all go out of the Church, if the Curate omit part? |
A26924 | Must every Fellow be believed that produceth a Commission? |
A26924 | Must we either own or hide all their faults, or else disown and renounce them all? |
A26924 | Must we make new Creeds or new Scriptures as oft as dissemblers will falsely profess that already made? |
A26924 | Must you believe all his mistakes? |
A26924 | Must you put up any unlawful request to God? |
A26924 | Must you say all that the Priest will say? |
A26924 | Name any difference if you can? |
A26924 | No man is meet to be a just Member that careth not for a just Excommunication? |
A26924 | Now if it be a Controversy, Whether the English be meer Subjects or Slaves, the ignorant Vulgar are no fit Judges to decide it, and that by Oath? |
A26924 | Noxa caput sequitur, should all the Clergy be called guilty if Sibthorp, or Manwaring, or Heylin were proved so? |
A26924 | Of consenting to the false Rule, as true, for finding Easter Day always: Whether small lyes be Sin? |
A26924 | Oh how little doth this way savour of any true Knowledge of the State of Man, or what Faith or Sanctification is? |
A26924 | On what account: Is it for their Relation to them? |
A26924 | Or as if they were but fulfilling[ They shall cast out your names as Evil doers,& c.] L. Why should you put Cases that may never come to pass? |
A26924 | Or can any do it when they will? |
A26924 | Or did it bind us to preferr a desertion of all publick Communion before it? |
A26924 | Or did they find it so uneffectual and vain? |
A26924 | Or did you ever know any go to him for such a License? |
A26924 | Or is he a capable Judge for many Hundred Parishes when they must Fast or Pray? |
A26924 | Or may they put what sense they list on Laws? |
A26924 | Or must we all( as necessary to Christianity) believe all such things lawful if the Clergy do but say they are? |
A26924 | Or that Queen Mary''s bone- fire should have extinguished Popery? |
A26924 | Or that he that thinks his own sin but a tolerable frailty, should much abhor it in the World? |
A26924 | Or that the two hundred thousand murdered by the Irish should but have hastned the overthrow and ruine of the murderers? |
A26924 | Or what if a Papist doubt whether King- killing be lawful, and the Clergy command it, must it therefore needs be done? |
A26924 | Or what pretence can you find to extirpate them? |
A26924 | Or when Paul said, Else were your Children unclean, but now are they holy? |
A26924 | Or where did they ever command or authorize any others so to do? |
A26924 | Or will he not say, In as much as ye did it to one the least of these my brethren, ye did it to me? |
A26924 | Or, Will it not be easier for Sodom than for such? |
A26924 | Reason is pretended for every Errour and Wickedness: must we therefore renounce Reason? |
A26924 | Say,[ I Assent that some things are true and good, and some things false and bad, which yet for Peace I will use] and try how it will be taken? |
A26924 | Shall Judges do so on the Bench? |
A26924 | Shall every Papist or Atheist choose me a Physician as fitter than I? |
A26924 | Shall hundreds or thousands of Innocent people suffer for my fault, and that in their Souls? |
A26924 | Shall one that is no Pastor have the Benefice? |
A26924 | Shall we tell Turks and Heathens that it is no Wiser a Saviour that we trust in, and no Wiser a Heavenly King that we obey? |
A26924 | Should a Master of a Family be forbidden this in his House? |
A26924 | Should things Indifferent exclude things Necessary, when Christ saith, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice? |
A26924 | Should you for this have deprived all persons of any help, which they have had by all my Preaching and VVritings this Twenty or Fourty years? |
A26924 | Some Lawyers and Students at Law are accused: Shall all Lawyers and Students therefore be extirpated? |
A26924 | Some that have been of the Kings Privy Council were accused ▪ Is his Council therefore to be disgraced or destroyed? |
A26924 | Suppose they scrupled it through mistake? |
A26924 | Taylor do, and that joined with Abbot and the Parliament against Dr. Laud, Sibthorpe and Mainwaring: Which of them think you was in the right? |
A26924 | Tell us plainly, Is it all doubted cases or some only, in which you say we must obey? |
A26924 | That Christ''s Body in Heaven hath Flesh and Bones, is contrary to two General Councils, that of Nice? |
A26924 | That he give the Sacrament to none but those that are Confirmed, or are ready and willing to be Confirmed: And how can they know this without trial? |
A26924 | That the Author had never leave to confute his accusers about it? |
A26924 | The Bishops themselves by the King''s order, do upon special occasions of Fasts and Thanksgivings, prescribe, impose and use other Forms? |
A26924 | The Historians Rule is Distingue de temporibus, Do you know in what times that was written? |
A26924 | The Universal Church ever since Christ''s days hath agreed in this: And shall we now overthrow it? |
A26924 | The question is, whether it be no wrong to any of these to be denied Communion at a neighbour Parish, where his doubts are removed? |
A26924 | There is no Man without Error: why do not all the Clergy rectifie their own judgment, and presently free themselves from Error? |
A26924 | They are outside men that think Vse reacheth but the Body: Are Articles of Faith Assertions of no use? |
A26924 | This brings up to the other part of your Reasons; and why may you not say that none is so bound? |
A26924 | To conclude, whose Service is it, think you, to perswade 2000 such Ministers to give over their Preaching and Ministry? |
A26924 | Twelve pence an Oath, is thought enough for Prophane Swearers, and is there one in many hundreds pay it? |
A26924 | Tyler? |
A26924 | Usurpers may pretend that it''s them that we must obey: Must not we therefore obey the King? |
A26924 | VVhen Ionas over- ran an unpleasing Ministery, did not God overtake him with his Judgment? |
A26924 | VVho did Christ mean by the Hypocrite that seeth a mote in his brothers eye, and could not see the beam in his own? |
A26924 | Was Bishop Bilson none of the Church? |
A26924 | Was R. Hooker none of the Church? |
A26924 | Was it a duty in England in the days of Thomas Becket, Anselm, Dunstan,& c. or in the Reign of all the Kings that were Papists? |
A26924 | Was it not enough to cast us out of Ministry and Maintenance for blaming a Ceremony, but they must cast us out of the Church? |
A26924 | Was not Cain''s posterity cursed for his sake? |
A26924 | Was not Jack Straw, and many a Rebellion lawfully resisted? |
A26924 | Was not Peter guilty of some Schism? |
A26924 | Was this any of the conditions of Baptism of Christ''s making? |
A26924 | We Pleaded, we Wrote, we Petitioned, and Beg''d for Peace, even for that which the King had granted: And what could we do more? |
A26924 | We are all Sworn not to resist you?] |
A26924 | Were Christ''s Apostles unreverent that did not kneel at receiving it in his own visible presence? |
A26924 | Were neither Arch- bishop Abbot, nor his Clergy, nor the Parliaments of those times of the Church of England, as well as S ● bthorp and Mainwaring? |
A26924 | Were not the Laws made by those Parliaments, made by the Members, if not Representatives of the Church of England? |
A26924 | What Reasons have you from your selves? |
A26924 | What Seal must it be that must make a Commission? |
A26924 | What are those Errours? |
A26924 | What are your reasons from the Church? |
A26924 | What could be said more of the Ten Commandements, or the Creed? |
A26924 | What front have these men then that say we Dissent without giving Reason for it? |
A26924 | What if you many times Swear Allegiance to the King? |
A26924 | What is Diabolism if this be not? |
A26924 | What is Schism, if this be not, causelessly to keep out so many from the Church? |
A26924 | What is the fourth part of your reason against this point? |
A26924 | What is this for? |
A26924 | What is your own judgment, and how will you give Security for your Loyalty? |
A26924 | What jealousies have such a Clergy of one another? |
A26924 | What mean you by your reasons from the matter? |
A26924 | What mean you by[ our party?] |
A26924 | What necessity can they pretend to the Hollanders, Helvetians, Geneva, Embden, Bremen, the Palatinate, and Scotland heretofore? |
A26924 | What need Christ command his Disciples to use that Iewish Government which was in use before, and they could not avoid? |
A26924 | What need a Saviour, a sanctifying Spirit, a teaching Ministry,& c. if it be so easily done at a Command? |
A26924 | What need they then after to confirm their Canons? |
A26924 | What our Nonconformity is not? |
A26924 | What shall my poor Country Neighbours and Tenants do that few of them understand one half the Creed? |
A26924 | What sin have you proved to be in the Conformity required of you? |
A26924 | What think you of all the ancient Churches that taught the Adult long as Catechumens before they would baptize even them that begg''d it? |
A26924 | What use have we for a Law of God then? |
A26924 | What wiseman will be the Pastor of such a Church? |
A26924 | What would you have all these Thousands do? |
A26924 | When was there a Lord- Chancellor more Trusted and Honoured than Sir Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon, who had long been faithful to the King? |
A26924 | Wherein doth such mens badness lie? |
A26924 | Whether all that be not undoubtedly certain of it, should be no Ministers? |
A26924 | Whether most Parish- Ministers have not so much Work at home, that they have little time to spare for Strangers? |
A26924 | Whether the Church real be only the Clergy, or also the Laity? |
A26924 | Whether the King and Parliament, Nobles, Gentry and Commons, be all Represented in the Convocation? |
A26924 | Who accuseth the owner for killing his own Sheep? |
A26924 | Who allow''d you to take and keep such in Christ''s Church, that will not endure either to live obediently, or be called to Repentance? |
A26924 | Who can think ill enough of such an Absolution? |
A26924 | Who caused all the blood and banishments that have been exercised on Christians, since the Heathen Persecutions? |
A26924 | Who caused the French and Irish, and other Massacres and Murders? |
A26924 | Who deposed the Empeperour Henry 4. but his own Son? |
A26924 | Who deposed the Emperor Ludovicus Pius, but his trusted Clergy and Servants? |
A26924 | Who destroyed those many thousands of Christians called Albigenses, and Waldenses, and Bohemians, in History mentioned? |
A26924 | Who hath done and suffer''d more to keep it out? |
A26924 | Who is it now that giveth them the Power? |
A26924 | Who keep out Truth and Reformation from all Kingdoms subject to the Pope? |
A26924 | Who set up the Inquisition as against Protestants, and Tormented and Burnt so many? |
A26924 | Who would have thought that the great French Massacre should have rather increased than diminished the Protestants? |
A26924 | Whom did Christ or any of his Apostles ever Silence, who Preached only sound Doctrine, for any difference about Circumstantials of mans invention? |
A26924 | Why do they Ordain them all to be faithful Dispensers of the Word of God?] |
A26924 | Why do they not this way decide all the Controversies at Liege, Colen,& c. to make the People determine them by Oath? |
A26924 | Why do they then charge them with avoiding Vice in Hypocrisie? |
A26924 | Why do you seem to grant the Bishops and Patrons votes in the choice of Pastors, when before you seem to have much against them? |
A26924 | Why is not publick Repentance of it proclaimed? |
A26924 | Why should I deny this? |
A26924 | Why should they put Apostates or Hereticks to death, any more than Infidels that never believed? |
A26924 | Why then do they call themselves Christians? |
A26924 | Why then should they be against it? |
A26924 | Will Christ that receiveth them to pardon, grace and endless Glory, own these Rejecters and Condemners? |
A26924 | Will not Drunkards, Fornicators, malignant haters of Holy Life choose men as fit for their turn as will be admitted? |
A26924 | Will not the experience of 1300 years yet teach us to forbear tearing the Church by unnecessary snares? |
A26924 | Will not the unconscionable do any thing for worldly Interest? |
A26924 | Will the Name of Christians save perfidious Hypocrites? |
A26924 | Will the fear of a Jail make Men believe the Gospel, or Love God? |
A26924 | Will you deny the Name where there is this Definition? |
A26924 | Will you give men leave to open all the real Faults they can find in the Diocesan or Parish Churches? |
A26924 | Will you therefore take them for your Physicians or Lawyers? |
A26924 | Would you have all Infidels and Pagans baptized, and Communicate without any Profession of the Christian Religion first? |
A26924 | Yea, do you think that even in circumstances and things doubtful, all good Christians will ever be so much of one measure of knowledge as to agree? |
A26924 | Yea, or if you knew he would speak amiss? |
A26924 | Yet further, Why look you not on all the rest of the World, as well as Spain and Italy? |
A26924 | Yet no man accuseth any of them for being in Plots; and yet must they also be destroyed? |
A26924 | and are not Men then deprived of the use of it? |
A26924 | and desire some of these faults to be amended, doth he deserve to be cast out as an impenitent wicked man for this? |
A26924 | and his Clergy and Lords? |
A26924 | and if that be it, why may not we be endured to help them for nothing, while we Preach the same Gospel, and submit to beg our Bread? |
A26924 | and is he not an Enemy to the Kingdom who destroyeth the King? |
A26924 | and scarce afford the scraps to others? |
A26924 | and to prevent the Insurrections in the days of Q. Mary, and Q. Elizabeth? |
A26924 | and what Unity will be in that Church and Kingdom, that will endure none but such as are wiser than you and I? |
A26924 | and whether they may sit in Parliament while Excommunicate? |
A26924 | and whom shall the People chuse, and where shall they Assemble? |
A26924 | can these bones live? |
A26924 | can you wish for a clearer Exposition? |
A26924 | how came they by a right to chuse Pastors for all the ● and? |
A26924 | how many Thousands live quietly in their Communion, who err in greater Matters than a Ceremony? |
A26924 | how the Reason and Will of Man are moved? |
A26924 | may it not be counterfeited? |
A26924 | or disown them that are thus cast out? |
A26924 | or if it be lawful to do it, and any of them Swear to endeavour it in his place, is he bound to perform that Oath? |
A26924 | or is it unlawful to obey them? |
A26924 | or that the second Oath binds not to it because the first did? |
A26924 | shall I make a Covenant to rob Christ and the Church of visible Members for nothing? |
A26924 | shall every mistake or errour of Parents deprive the child of Baptism? |
A26924 | they will say, No: Is it lawful thus to Suborn Men, and put them on so great a Sin? |
A26924 | was this necessary when Philip said to the Eunuch, If thou believe with all thy heart, thou maist be baptized? |
A26924 | we have not read the Fathers? |
A26924 | were it not wiser to cast lots to determine it? |
A26924 | what did they? |
A26924 | what is Pharisaical if this be not? |
A26924 | what is there in it that is contrary to God''s word? |
A26924 | who are supposed to come by their procurement? |
A26924 | whose interest requireth it? |
A26924 | why then may he not force you and your Children, and Servants to hear them, as Catechumens? |
A26924 | will you become abler to Answer them, when we have Sworn them? |
A26924 | you are not called immediately by Christ as the Apostles were; who then doth give it you, if not the Ordainers? |
A26924 | you vowed your self to Christ in Baptism, and you renew the same in the Lords Supper: Are all the latter null, because the first is valid? |
A26951 | & c. Is there life where there is no motion? |
A26951 | ( Nay rather let them take heed lest they omit such prescripts:) Or, is it the disorder or defects that makes them odious? |
A26951 | 2 Remember the continual presence of the most holy dreadful God: And can Pride lift up the head before him? |
A26951 | 2. Who should bring a sinner to Repentance, whose heart is corrupted with the love of sin? |
A26951 | A Juda ● kiss is thought sufficient to prove him a true Christian and Pastor of the Church, though it be but the fruit of what will you give me? |
A26951 | Alas, how dead are our affections? |
A26951 | Alas, how far have I been from living, as one that seeth the things that he professeth to Believe?] |
A26951 | Alas, my Lord, is this dark prospect all that I must here hope for? |
A26951 | Alas, what a deal of sin do we daily see or hear of? |
A26951 | All this is true; but still we find it a thing impossible to love our neighbour equally with our selves: Can you teach us how to do it? |
A26951 | Am I not an Apostle? |
A26951 | And I would further ask you; Do you fear damnation, and Gods wrath, or not? |
A26951 | And O how full, and how near a treasure hath it to go to? |
A26951 | And afterward how incessantly was he doing good to mens bodies and souls? |
A26951 | And among how few is the sin of flesh- pleasing sensuality mortified? |
A26951 | And another came with a[ Good Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?] |
A26951 | And are his rewards no greater than a mans? |
A26951 | And are not both these suitable to your natural perfection, and necessary to your good? |
A26951 | And are you exempt from the universal Law? |
A26951 | And ask your selves daily, How shall I wish at the day of reckoning, that I had expended and used all my estate? |
A26951 | And can I dream that the vast and glorious Orbs and Regions, are all uninhabited? |
A26951 | And can it be a lover of earth, and fleshly pleasures, and also a Believer and lover of Heaven? |
A26951 | And can that man be wise, that foreseeth not his everlasting state? |
A26951 | And can they be idle, while all this lyeth undone? |
A26951 | And can we think that GOD is not much more to be trusted, and is not a greater hater of a lye? |
A26951 | And can you believe this, and yet be so eager to be humoured, and to have all things fitted to your pleasure and desires? |
A26951 | And do they take the world for vanity and vexation, while they mind and seek it more than Heaven? |
A26951 | And do we not all profess to believe these things, as revealed from Heaven by the infallible God? |
A26951 | And do you neither love your souls, nor your lives? |
A26951 | And do you not believe that it''s he indeed that tempteth you? |
A26951 | And do you not profess to believe all this? |
A26951 | And do you not verily believe that all this will very shortly be? |
A26951 | And do you think God will love you ever the better, for that which is against your wills? |
A26951 | And do you think, and speak, and pray, and live, as those that do indeed believe it? |
A26951 | And doth he indeed pray, and labour, and suffer for Heaven, who would not come thither? |
A26951 | And here the first question shall be, How the Apostles, and all other the first witnesses, knew it themselves? |
A26951 | And how aptly doth the very permission of sin it self, subserve this end? |
A26951 | And how basely is it esteemed new by the most? |
A26951 | And how can that be a duty, which is to nature it self an impossibility? |
A26951 | And how can that be true Repentance, which changeth not the will and life? |
A26951 | And how can you justly expect the benefit of such prayers? |
A26951 | And how can you think of Christ, and not think of his Body? |
A26951 | And how miserable are they who make such a God their revenging Judge and enemy? |
A26951 | And how necessary was it that our Sun in glory should continually send down his beams and influence on the earth? |
A26951 | And how shall a man know his godliness, but by his life as the product of his inward graces? |
A26951 | And how should men justifie Abraham for k ● lling his only Son? |
A26951 | And how small a matter is Justification by man, when we may be saved without it? |
A26951 | And if God be willing, will not you refuse it? |
A26951 | And if the proudest Gallants can, with their hat at your foot, profess themselves your humble servants, why may not Religious Bride go as far? |
A26951 | And is it not as great a demonstration of his knowledge also, and of his goodness? |
A26951 | And is not HYPOCRISIE as visible in their practice, as Christianity in their profession? |
A26951 | And is not a lively foreseeing faith as effectual? |
A26951 | And is not a walk in Heaven with better company, a pleasure desirable in such a case? |
A26951 | And is not that good, which calleth us up to the greatest good, and will not allow us to be such enemies to our selves, as to take up with the lesser? |
A26951 | And is not this a question that you are most nearly concerned in? |
A26951 | And is that state better and more desirable, for which all that perish turn from God, and fell their souls, and are befooled and undone for ever? |
A26951 | And it is very observable, how most of the great changes of the world are made? |
A26951 | And let it be your next question, What spiritual good may be got by this affliction? |
A26951 | And let your next question be[ Have I yet got that good which God doth offer me? |
A26951 | And look up to the heavenly Regions, and think, Is this world so replenished with inhabitants, both Sea, and Land, and Air it self? |
A26951 | And many terrible texts come into the minds of humble souls, that have right to comfort, and should not be more terrified? |
A26951 | And mark what contrary answers the flesh and faith will give to it, when it comes to practice? |
A26951 | And may a believing joyful death be expected, without the preparations of exercise and experience in a believing life? |
A26951 | And must all these trifles be considered in our Faith? |
A26951 | And shall I set my heart on that which is not? |
A26951 | And shall Idleness be excused in us? |
A26951 | And shall we envy men such a happiness as this? |
A26951 | And should any be more careful ● to please you, that are but worms and dust, than you should be to please your Maker? |
A26951 | And should that duty be taken for a burden, which as to my comfort maketh all the wealth, and honour, and Kingdoms of others to be my own? |
A26951 | And should this heavenly fire be imprisoned in the body, which it should command and move? |
A26951 | And some Devils would not be cast out without fasting and prayer: And is luxury fit in such a case? |
A26951 | And that a sadder frame is more awakened, illuminated, fixed, sensible, considerate and fit for great employments? |
A26951 | And that if ye will be friends of the world, you are Gods enemies? |
A26951 | And that you would but take his Word to be as sure as sense? |
A26951 | And the consequents on both parts are intollerable; and how are they to be avoided? |
A26951 | And then have not all a promise of the same degree which the best attain, conditionally if they do as much as they for it? |
A26951 | And then who can expect that their consciences should avoid it? |
A26951 | And what can be more suitable to our miserable state? |
A26951 | And what can be so bad that a man will not do, if he take it once to be of Gods commanding? |
A26951 | And what did he ever command you, which was not for your benefit? |
A26951 | And what he hath declared we may know: But how much more do these men pretend to know, than ever Christ declared? |
A26951 | And what is the world when Heaven stands by? |
A26951 | And what it is that the life of man should be spent in seeeking after? |
A26951 | And what kind of Religious performances are most excellent which we must principally intend? |
A26951 | And what laborious lives did his Apostles live? |
A26951 | And when our pravity is undeniable, how credible should it be, that we have such a Law? |
A26951 | And whether it be not sin it self, which is the first part of all mens hell and misery? |
A26951 | And who can walk safely in the dark? |
A26951 | And why is it not foreseen, when it is foreshewn? |
A26951 | And why should any others be bound to use Justice or Charity to you any more than you to them? |
A26951 | And why should not others good be secured, as well as your posterities? |
A26951 | And why should that be my sorrow, which is his benefit, and should be his joy? |
A26951 | And why so? |
A26951 | And why then doth the believing of it do no more, when the ● h ● ng is certain? |
A26951 | And why then should not the believed truth prevail, if indeed you did believe it, when the thing is as sure, as if you saw it? |
A26951 | And will God reward men for such self- made sufferings? |
A26951 | And will you grudge them this much? |
A26951 | And will you grudge to suffer so small and short a chastisement in the way to an endless rest and joy? |
A26951 | And will you use them to turn your affections from him? |
A26951 | And would you be in the same condition again? |
A26951 | And would you wish us to trifle in the sight of Heaven? |
A26951 | And yet are you Believers, and have none of this? |
A26951 | And yet do you say that you get not your wealth by any thing that is unlawful? |
A26951 | And yet that he be so high and near the Father, as may put a sufficient value on his works, and make him most meet to mediate for us? |
A26951 | And, why doth living man complain, a man for the punishment of his sins? |
A26951 | Are they not not now your friends who love you better than they could do on earth? |
A26951 | Are they not such as were latety near you in the flesh; some of them your dearest companions and friends; and should you causlesly forget them? |
A26951 | Are they nothing to us? |
A26951 | Are they taught, or untaught? |
A26951 | Are we derided, slandered, abused by the ungodly? |
A26951 | Are you and your party all the world, or all the Church? |
A26951 | Are you frowned on or contemned by men? |
A26951 | Are you more offended and grieved when you are crost and hindered in doing good, or when you are crost and hindered from your personal honour? |
A26951 | Are you only for your present ease? |
A26951 | Are you really more mortified, more penitent, more humble, more heavenly, more obedient, more patient than you were before? |
A26951 | Are you slandered by men? |
A26951 | Are you the better Masters? |
A26951 | Are you truly willing that thus it should be? |
A26951 | Are you wronged, oppressed, or trodden on by pride or malice? |
A26951 | Are your words so much more excellent than the words of others? |
A26951 | As if he should say, have you the Spirit of Christ, or have you not? |
A26951 | As we see it in constant experience in men, when they see that they must presently die indeed, how light then set they by the world? |
A26951 | Ask your selves what you would be found doing if death now surprize you? |
A26951 | Behind you, upon Time, and say, It is gone, and never will return: and hear conscience ask you, How you spent it, and what you did with it? |
A26951 | But beyond Sea where it is not so reputed, how ordinarily is it committed? |
A26951 | But doth not Job''s case tell us, that some afflictions are only for tryal, and not for sin? |
A26951 | But how can I have faith indeed, and not desire intuition? |
A26951 | But how shall I know what application to make of Scripture to my self, but by the teaching of the Spirit of God? |
A26951 | But how then shall I know when it is the Spirit which putteth any thing into my mind? |
A26951 | But if all be otherwise, alas, where be they, and how few that love their neighbours, or betters, as themselves? |
A26951 | But if he that hath thousands, and is used to fulness, should be reduced to an hundred, how querulous or impatient would he be? |
A26951 | But if it be demanded, How did the next Christians of the second age, receive all this from the first Churches, who received it from the Apostles? |
A26951 | But if while we seek to be justified by Christ, we our selves also are found sinners, is therefore Christ the Minister of sin? |
A26951 | But if yea, then what is it that they serve you for? |
A26951 | But if yet conscience have not begun to plead this cause against you, let me begin to plead it with your consciences: Are you Believers? |
A26951 | But if you have not such gain to shew, what wonder if you are weary of the medicine which healeth not? |
A26951 | But is it by Reason corrupted and by ● ssed by sense, or is it by Reason elevated by faith? |
A26951 | But is it not lawful to set ones self only to Religion, as John Baptist, Anna,& c. did? |
A26951 | But is it not the same Spirit which spake to the Apostles, which speaketh to us? |
A26951 | But is it not worldliness when we follow worldly business, without any need? |
A26951 | But is not additional grace given by way of reward? |
A26951 | But no necessity will excuse your worldly love and cares: What will the love of the world do towards the supply of your necessities? |
A26951 | But shall not all at last be perfect? |
A26951 | But still the difficulty is, What is the condition to be inserted? |
A26951 | But suppose it were so, must not others be regarded? |
A26951 | But the Lord whom we wait for, will once more come and cleanse his Temple: But who may abide the day of his coming? |
A26951 | But the question is, whether you love God for himself, and as your sanctifier better than you do the gratifying of your flesh? |
A26951 | But was not labour and toil a curse upon Adam after his sin? |
A26951 | But what if I find by constant experince, that my soul is more worldly after worldly business, and more cold and alienated from God? |
A26951 | But what if I find that it hurteth my body to labour; may I not forbear? |
A26951 | But what if a man can live without labour; may not be forbear who needeth it not? |
A26951 | But what if they had only doubted of Christs Will? |
A26951 | But what if you do not? |
A26951 | But what then shall we think of the children of godly Anabaptists, whose Judgement is against such dedication? |
A26951 | But when wast thou ever offended at the ambition of loving thee with the most perfect Love? |
A26951 | But who hath known the mind of the Lord, or who hath been his Counsellor? |
A26951 | But will this excuse you for loving your riches more than God? |
A26951 | But wilt thou know, oh vain man, that faith without works is dead? |
A26951 | But, silly soul, do Physicians use to charm men into health? |
A26951 | By how small, contemptible and unthought of mean ●? |
A26951 | Can Faith set open the windows of the soul, and no light of heavenly pleasures enter? |
A26951 | Can a bird flye that hath a stone tyed to her foot? |
A26951 | Can any thing in the world be more unlawful and abominable, than to love the flesh and the world, above God and Heaven? |
A26951 | Can faith save him? |
A26951 | Can it peruse the Map of the Land of Promise, or see and taste the bunch of Grapes, without any sweetness to the soul? |
A26951 | Can not a swine have his ease, and meat, and lust, without reason? |
A26951 | Can not the birds make their nests, and breed, and feed their young, and sit and sing, without an intellectual nature? |
A26951 | Can we believe that very shortly we shall be there? |
A26951 | Can we believe that we shall live in Heaven for ever? |
A26951 | Can you do no more for an endless life, and the escaping of the wrath to come? |
A26951 | Can you forget that death is ready to undress you? |
A26951 | Can you have a mind full of lust, and of God at once? |
A26951 | Can you not say, I am sure that I am regenerate, justified and adopted? |
A26951 | Can you play, or loiter away your hours, with Eternity in your eye? |
A26951 | Canst thou possibly forget so great, so sure, so near a day? |
A26951 | Could not you eat, and drink, and sleep, and play, without an intellectual soul? |
A26951 | Could they be sensual, ungodly and secure, if they had a faith that serv''d instead of sight? |
A26951 | Could you be perswaded by any company or recreation, to waste your precious time in vain, with such things in your eye? |
A26951 | Could you go on to think, and speak, and live as sensually, stupidly and negligently as now you do? |
A26951 | Could you live as merrily, and sleep as quietly in a negligent uncertainty of your salvation, if you had seen these things, as now you do? |
A26951 | Could you live at hearts ease, while you know not where you shall be to morrow, or must live for ever? |
A26951 | Dare you go home, and make a jest at piety, and neglect your souls as you have done?] |
A26951 | Dare you think that you are more gracious and merciful than God? |
A26951 | Deal truly, Is it in Heaven or Earth? |
A26951 | Did God ever frame you so glorious a retinuue, to attend you only to sleep, and laugh, and play, and to be idle? |
A26951 | Did it not work more compleatly, and unto more infallibility in their writing the Scriptures, than it doth in our Vnderstanding, and obeying them? |
A26951 | Did they come to Heaven by a worldly, formal, hypocritical, ceremonious Religion? |
A26951 | Did they spend the day in feasting and sports, and idle talk? |
A26951 | Did they swagger it out in pride and wealth,& hate their brethren that were not in all things of their conceits? |
A26951 | Do not many comfortable texts come into the minds of Hypocrites, who are unfit for comfort? |
A26951 | Do not your sorrows then instead of joyes, tell all men that you believe that your friends are gone to sorrow, and not to joy? |
A26951 | Do they believe God, that no man shall see him without holiness? |
A26951 | Do they believe the communion of Saints, while they fly from it, and perhaps detest and persecute it? |
A26951 | Do they believe, that except a man be converted and new born, he shall not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven? |
A26951 | Do they know who seeth them in their sin? |
A26951 | Do they take Christ for their Saviour, and yet would not be saved by him from their sins, but had rather keep them? |
A26951 | Do they take Heaven for their endless home and happiness? |
A26951 | Do they take the Holy Ghost for their Sanctifier, while they will not have a sanctified heart or life, and love it not in those that have it? |
A26951 | Do we not say, that such a Divine Revelation is as sure as if the things were in themselves laid open to our sight? |
A26951 | Do we not shamefully forget our ignorance, and our distance? |
A26951 | Do you approve of the state of those in Heaven? |
A26951 | Do you believe that God hath promised that all true Believers shall be saved? |
A26951 | Do you believe that if you are or shall be a true Believer, you shall be saved? |
A26951 | Do you call it the fruit of Gods Wisdom and Love, and yet be as weary of it, as if there were nothing in it but his wrath? |
A26951 | Do you carry within you the evidence of things unseen, and the substance of the things which you say you hope for? |
A26951 | Do you fear it, and not believe that there is any such thing? |
A26951 | Do you fetch your Joyes from Heaven or Earth? |
A26951 | Do you impatiently long to be delivered from your gain? |
A26951 | Do you like holiness, when it is for from you? |
A26951 | Do you live the life of Faith, or not? |
A26951 | Do you live upon things that are unseen, or upon the present visible baits of sensuality? |
A26951 | Do you look to be saved for doing as a Swine will do, in leaving that which he can neither eat, nor carry away with him? |
A26951 | Do you not know that they are men, that have seen the Lord, whom they daily serve? |
A26951 | Do you not perceive that a merry prosperous state inclineth to folly, levity, rashness, inconsiderateness, stupidity, forgetting the latter end,& c? |
A26951 | Do you study to do all the good you can, and to make men happy by your Government? |
A26951 | Do you then repent of it, or not? |
A26951 | Do you think when the Israelites passed through the Red Sea, that the Leaders had not the greatest tryal? |
A26951 | Do you wonder why he liveth not in peace, and concord, and quietness with others, who hath no better agreement in himself? |
A26951 | Doth all the frame of nature continue in its course( the air, the waters, the summer and winter) for you as well as for others, or not? |
A26951 | Doth he govern the whole world, and should not I be governed by him? |
A26951 | Doth he not offer me by it all this good? |
A26951 | Doth not Paul say to servants, If ye can be free, use it rather? |
A26951 | Doth not the Master write his Copy more perfectly, than his Scholars imitation is, though he teach him, yea and hold his hand? |
A26951 | Doth the Believer speak against sin and sinners: and for an holy, sober, righteous life? |
A26951 | Doth the Sun shine for you as well as for others? |
A26951 | Faith saith, I must shortly be with Christ; and what then are these dying things to me? |
A26951 | For a Lazarus that must be comforted in Abraham''s bosom, to murmure that he waiteth a while in poverty at the rich mans doors? |
A26951 | For if they be good for nothing else but idleness, and beastly pleasures, why should you expect to have them continued? |
A26951 | For instance, Ask what kind of Religion is likest to that which is in Heaven? |
A26951 | For it is for our profit that God correcteth us; but for what profit? |
A26951 | For what greater dishonour can be cast upon Religion, than to make it seem a friend to sin? |
A26951 | For what maketh them Christians and Churches but the receiving of it? |
A26951 | For what? |
A26951 | Formal preaching and praying in the Church they exclaim against; but how formally do they pray at home, and catechize and instruct their family? |
A26951 | God by his Ministers was wo nt to call to me, How long, O scorner, wilt thou delight in scorning? |
A26951 | God forbid: How shall they that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? |
A26951 | Had you not rather be as great and rich as others? |
A26951 | Had you not rather live at ease and fulness? |
A26951 | Had you seen the things that you say you do believe, what effect would Sermons have upon you, after such a sight ● s this? |
A26951 | Hast thou eaten of the fruit which God forbade? |
A26951 | Hast thou no better wealth, no higher honour, no sweeter pleasures than these husks? |
A26951 | Hath God delivered in Scripture so many signs or characters of the justified in vain? |
A26951 | Hath God given you too much? |
A26951 | Hath God made man for any end, or for none? |
A26951 | Hath God pardoned a Manasseh, a Peter, a Paul,& c. upon repentance? |
A26951 | Hath he Goodness enough to communicate as he hath done to Sun and Stars to Heaven and Earth, to Angels and Men, and every wight? |
A26951 | Hath he commanded all these cares to be our needless torments, which brutes, and fools, and sottish sinners do all scape? |
A26951 | Hath he helped the distressed? |
A26951 | Hath no one need of you? |
A26951 | Hath not God chosen the poor of this world, rich in faith, and heirs of the Kingdom? |
A26951 | Hath the Lord delight in burnt- offerings, and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the Lord? |
A26951 | Have Angels or heavenly Saints deserved so ill of God or us, that we should be so shy of their communion? |
A26951 | Have I any considerable benefit to sh ● w, which I have received by this affliction since it came?] |
A26951 | Have we cause to be ashamed of them? |
A26951 | Have we nothing to do with them? |
A26951 | Have you considered that Faith is the beholding grace? |
A26951 | Have you that Faith that serves instead of sight? |
A26951 | Having enquired whether you are Believers, I am next to ask you, what you will be for the time to come? |
A26951 | He that planted the ear, shall be not hear? |
A26951 | He that spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things? |
A26951 | How abundantly they overvalue their own understandings? |
A26951 | How attentively would you hear, and carefully consider and obey? |
A26951 | How blessed an invention would it be, if all the world could be brought again to the use of one universal language? |
A26951 | How can men judge of the acts of Repentance, Faith, Love,& c. which are in the heart? |
A26951 | How can you remember God himself, and not remember those that are his Courtiers, and nearer to him than you are? |
A26951 | How contrary is the judgement of the world to Christs? |
A26951 | How dangerously have I long deceived my self in calling my self a true Christian, and pretending to be a true Believer? |
A26951 | How easily would they pardon wrongs? |
A26951 | How fervently should we importune you in the name of Christ? |
A26951 | How great a loss is it, to lose your part in all those prayers of the Churches( how weak soever) which you disown? |
A26951 | How happy are they who have such a God, engaged to be their God and Happiness? |
A26951 | How hard is it for them that trust in Riches, to enter into the Kingdom of God?] |
A26951 | How highly is it valued by all at last? |
A26951 | How ill they bear the least contempt, neglect or disrespect? |
A26951 | How impossible were it then that you should be careless and prophane? |
A26951 | How is it said of those baptized Believers, Acts 19. that they had not heard that there was a Holy Ghost? |
A26951 | How long wilt thou go on impenitently in thy folly? |
A26951 | How much is Christs family dishonoured by his silly froward children? |
A26951 | How much they love and look to be esteemed, to be taken notice of, to be well thought of, and well spoken of? |
A26951 | How much would a meer Philosopher rejoyce, if he could find out natural evidence, of so much as we know by Faith? |
A26951 | How now will you know whether a man believe Christ, and trust this promise or not? |
A26951 | How patiently would they bear the dissent of honest, upright Christians, who can not force their judgments to be of other mens mould and size? |
A26951 | How plentifully and pleasantly would most poor Country- men think to live, if they had but a hundred pounds a year of their own? |
A26951 | How safely and quietly might we live by them in the world, if they loved their neighbours as themselves? |
A26951 | How shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? |
A26951 | How short is the knowledge of the wisest unbelievers? |
A26951 | How should things unseen be apprehended so as to affect our hearts, without any serious exercise of our thoughts? |
A26951 | How soon will all your gallantry shrink into the shell? |
A26951 | How studiously he prosecuted it, and conformed himself to the humours& interest of those, from whom he did seek it? |
A26951 | How to use Faith against particular sins? |
A26951 | How unfit is he to endure imprisonment, banishment and want, who hath alwaies used to please his flesh? |
A26951 | How unlike would their heavenly ravishing expressions be to these our sleepy heartless duties? |
A26951 | How wisely is it determined of God, that he who undertakes all ● is, should be Man, and yet more than Man, even God? |
A26951 | How would such a Message work with you? |
A26951 | How would you deal by the next temptation, if you had heard what use the tempter will hereafter make of all your sins? |
A26951 | How you came into your offices and honours? |
A26951 | I am but pleading a lower cause, How seldom they would be in doing hurt? |
A26951 | I am fully satisfied that Heaven is better than Earth, and God than the creature, and holiness than the prosperity or pleasure of the flesh? |
A26951 | I answer; 1. Who art thou O man that disputest against God? |
A26951 | I do not ask you, where you are, but where you dwell? |
A26951 | I do not say now, How plentiful would men be in doing good to others? |
A26951 | I durst then ask the worst that heareth me,[ Dare you now be drunk, or gluttonous, or worldly? |
A26951 | If God cast him into poverty, how impatient would he be? |
A26951 | If God should regard but one, why should it fall to your lot rather than to anothers? |
A26951 | If Heaven be thy fear or sorrow, what can be thy joy? |
A26951 | If Paul and Silas sing in the stocks, why should not I sing with them? |
A26951 | If all need of pardon had been prevented by Christ, what use were there of his advocation for our future forgiveness? |
A26951 | If an idle life be best, why do you blame it in your servants? |
A26951 | If any say, what use will there be of our superiority, after the world is destroyed? |
A26951 | If he hath, why are you loth that he should shorten it? |
A26951 | If it be not, why do you live such lives your selves? |
A26951 | If none have need of you, what do you in the world? |
A26951 | If not, what troubleth you? |
A26951 | If not, why do you lose it? |
A26951 | If not, why should you desire it to be taken away? |
A26951 | If not, why speak you of them so honourably? |
A26951 | If pride brought you in, you have cause to fear, lest it govern you when you are there? |
A26951 | If sight in all these ten particulars would do so much, should not faith do much, if you verily believe the things you see not? |
A26951 | If some, doth it name them, or notifie them by any thing but the marks by which they must find it in themselves? |
A26951 | If the Sun were an intellectual Deity, and still looked on me, should I presumptuously offend him? |
A26951 | If there were no other life but this, and men had no hopes of future happiness, nor any fears of punishment, what a Hell would this world be? |
A26951 | If thus the innocent Lord of life, and Master of the house was injured and afflicted, am I better than he? |
A26951 | If we are Believers, Heaven and Hell are as i ● were open to our sight? |
A26951 | If we or an Angel from Heaven bring another Gospel, let him be accursed — Is not all this a plain decision of the case? |
A26951 | If you do believe it, how can you chuse but believe also, that every true Believer shall be saved? |
A26951 | If you do not, what maketh you fear damnation? |
A26951 | If you do, tell me then whether you do believe Gods threatning, that he that believeth not shall be damned, or not? |
A26951 | If you had asked them then, H ● w know you that all these things were said and done? |
A26951 | If you have enough, why do you make your selves more? |
A26951 | If you have not enough, why do you complain of it? |
A26951 | If you heard men laugh, and hear not so much as the voice of him that gives the jeast, would you not imagine them to be brain- sick? |
A26951 | If you knew but where to hear an Angel, you would all prefer him before Aristotle or Plato, or Cartesius, or Gassendus; how much more the Son himself? |
A26951 | If you knew his Fulness and Goodness, how joyfully would you run to him, and cry Abba, Father? |
A26951 | If you saw a mans action in eating and drinking, and see not the meat and drink it self, would you not think him mad? |
A26951 | If you saw but what you say you do believe, would you not be convinced that the most pleasant gainful sin, is worse than madness? |
A26951 | If you saw him, and heard him h ● ssing you on to sin, perswading you to gluttony, drunkenness, or unclean ● ess? |
A26951 | If you saw how the world is altered with those, that once were as proud and confident as others, what do you think such a sight would do with you? |
A26951 | If you think me troublesom for mentioning such ungrateful things, what a trouble wil it be to feel them? |
A26951 | If you would not believe that you must die, do you think that this would delay your death one year or hour? |
A26951 | In a word, Are you in good earnest, when you say, you believe a Heaven and Hell? |
A26951 | In a word, how voluminously do they darken counsel by words without knowledge? |
A26951 | In this you are unlike your heavenly Father, that doth good to the just and unjust: would you change cases with them? |
A26951 | In your love to the godly, and your charity, in expressions, and in your daily prayers, what lameness and partiality is there? |
A26951 | Is Christ the Minister of sin? |
A26951 | Is God of as narrow a mind as you? |
A26951 | Is God true in his Threatnings, and not in his Promises? |
A26951 | Is Heaven worth no more ado than this? |
A26951 | Is a day that is spent, or a life that is ● xtinct, any thing, or nothing? |
A26951 | Is it Earth or Heaven that you have prayed for, and laboured for, and waited, and suffered for till now? |
A26951 | Is it any wonder that a d ● splaced bone is painful? |
A26951 | Is it by the eye of sense, or faith? |
A26951 | Is it by your own desire that you are poor? |
A26951 | Is it in Heaven or Earth? |
A26951 | Is it in the multitude of Sects and divisions ▪ every one saying, Our party, and our way is best? |
A26951 | Is it not enough that you shall everlastingly be honoured by the Lord? |
A26951 | Is it not said, Blessed are the dead, for they rest from their labours? |
A26951 | Is it not your duty therefore to learn it when you are at age, rather than not at all? |
A26951 | Is it striving what Pastors shall be greatest, or have precedency, or be called gracious Lords or Benefactors? |
A26951 | Is it studying bare words, and disputing about things unprofitable, or contending and quarrelling about precedency, preheminence or domination? |
A26951 | Is it with Angels and Saints? |
A26951 | Is it your design to make Heaven either contemptible or strange to men on earth? |
A26951 | Is light and darkness more contrary than their words and deeds? |
A26951 | Is not Heaven enough to make you reparation? |
A26951 | Is not eternal joy sufficient for you? |
A26951 | Is not his rod an act of love and kindness to me? |
A26951 | Is not the seal perfect, when the impression is oft imperfect? |
A26951 | Is not this the Carpenter? |
A26951 | Is the Lords Prayer and the Psalms all odious, because they are book- forms? |
A26951 | Is the greatest obedience to God, become a sign of the greatest folly, or the way to the greatest loss or disappointment? |
A26951 | Is the same degree of grace conditionally promised to all? |
A26951 | Is their honour any dishonour to God or us; if it be no more than what is their due? |
A26951 | Is there any sweetness in a feast that was eaten, or drink that was drunk, or time that was spent in sports and mirth, a year ago? |
A26951 | Is this a matter of honour or of delight? |
A26951 | Is this dull, and dreaming, and amazing apprehension, all that I shall reach to here? |
A26951 | Is this living by faith? |
A26951 | Is this mens love to mankind? |
A26951 | Is this sensless heart, this despondent mind, these drowsie desires, the best that I must here employ in the contemplation of so high a glory? |
A26951 | Is this the glory that is so neglected?] |
A26951 | Is this their love to the Kingdom of Christ? |
A26951 | It hath lately been a controversie, whether this be not the golden age? |
A26951 | It is a wonderful and pittiful thing, to read Divines upon this point[ Whether the Laws of men do bind the conscience?] |
A26951 | It is easie there to find, whether laziness or labour, whether sensuality or spirituality hath alwaies been the way to Heaven? |
A26951 | It would be no discrimination of the good and bad, the wise and foolish, if the reward and punishment must be seen? |
A26951 | It''s blind, and therefore seeth not God; and how then should he be feared and loved? |
A26951 | It''s common to say, I do believe: but is it common to find men, pray and live as those that do believe indeed? |
A26951 | John 3.3, 5. and yet never trouble their minds about it, to try whether they are converted and new born, or not? |
A26951 | Know ye not that the Saints shall judge the world? |
A26951 | Know ye not that the love of the world, is enmity to God? |
A26951 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? |
A26951 | Know ye not that we shall judge Angels? |
A26951 | Know you not that Christ is in you( by faith) except you be reprobates? |
A26951 | Lastly, And how wisely is it ordered, that God in Heaven, from whom all cometh, should be the end of all his graces and our duties? |
A26951 | Let conscience tell you: What eyes do you see by, for the conduct of the chief imployment of your lives? |
A26951 | Let it be your first question therefore[ What is it that I am obliged to in this condition?] |
A26951 | M ● st God come down to the bar of man, to render an account of the reason of his works? |
A26951 | Mark here what a task Faith hath? |
A26951 | May not a man that hath several callings before him, chuse the easiest? |
A26951 | May not my repentance be renewed? |
A26951 | Must I come in such a sleepy state to God? |
A26951 | Must the Husbandman see the Harvest before he plow his Land, and sow his seed? |
A26951 | Must the Souldier see that he hath the victory before he fight? |
A26951 | Must the sick man feel, that he hath health before he use the means to get it? |
A26951 | Nature and Scripture teach men as soon as they see their sin and misery, to say, What must I do to be saved? |
A26951 | Nay, do you not know without believing, that you must die, and leave your worldly glory? |
A26951 | Nay, that will sin for a shilling, when great ones do it for greater summs? |
A26951 | Nay, would not falshood and perfidiousness become our perfection, to make us like God? |
A26951 | No thanks to any of you all to be godly if Heaven were to be presently seen? |
A26951 | Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A26951-e50550 What true Christian Faith is? |
A26951 | O did you but see what they now enjoy, and what they see, and what they are, and what they do; you would never sure scorn or persecute a Saint more? |
A26951 | O therefore for your souls sakes, and as ever you love your everlasting peace, Examine your selves, whether you are in the faith or not? |
A26951 | O turn not now thine ears from my requests: For if thou receive me not now as thy humble supplicant, how shall I hope that thou wilt receive me then? |
A26951 | O what a change it would make upon our preaching, and your hearing, if we saw the things that we speak and hear of? |
A26951 | O what would you not give ere long for one of the hours that you now mis- spend? |
A26951 | Of all the multitude of covetous Preachers that be in the world, is there any one that will not preach against covetousness? |
A26951 | Oh what a fading flower is your strength? |
A26951 | Oh what manner of persons would you then be? |
A26951 | Or Judas have betrayed Christ, if he had foreseen the hanging himself in his despair? |
A26951 | Or are all words ba ● which are resolved on before- hand? |
A26951 | Or as Paul met with Christ when he humbled and converted him, saying, Who art thou, Lord? |
A26951 | Or can that mind that is used to these inordinate sensualities, be fit to rellish the things that are spiritual? |
A26951 | Or doth the Book, or Press, or Pen, make them odious to God? |
A26951 | Or doth the command of other men make God hate them? |
A26951 | Or else why would Lazarus lie at his gates, if he used not to give something to the poor? |
A26951 | Or how can you remember your selves, and forget your chiefest Friends and Lovers? |
A26951 | Or how can you think of his Body, and forget the most excellent and honourable parts? |
A26951 | Or if all the Churches could be perfectly reconciled, how joyful would the Author of so great a work be? |
A26951 | Or is it in a proud conceit of the peoples power to ordain their Pastors, and to rule them and themselves by a major vote? |
A26951 | Or is it in making the flock of Christ, to dread the secular power of the Shepherds, and tremble before them, as they do before the Wolf? |
A26951 | Or that God is there alone without any company? |
A26951 | Or that there is no Heaven? |
A26951 | Or that which no man ever sinned for, nor forsook God for, or was undone for? |
A26951 | Or what greater honour can be given it, than to represent it as it is, as an enemy to all evil; and to take the blame, as is due, unto your selves? |
A26951 | Or who can love thee truly, and yet be contented to love thee but a little? |
A26951 | Or who ever tasted truly of thy Love, that desired not the fulness of it? |
A26951 | Or would you have his Laws written like the words of a Bedlam, or the Laws of Barbarians or Cannibals? |
A26951 | Or would you have the King pictured like a fool? |
A26951 | Or would you not believe that he is the blessed man, whose delight is in the Law of God, and meditateth in it day and night? |
A26951 | Or would you perswade the world, that the souls of the Saints are not immortal, but perish as the bruits? |
A26951 | Or, If it be for our good? |
A26951 | Or, If it be for the universal good of the world? |
A26951 | R ● member what a mad and sad condition you were in while you lived according to the flesh, and how plainly you saw it when your eyes were opened? |
A26951 | Read over this question once and again, and mark what answer your hearts give to it, if you would know whether you live by sense or faith? |
A26951 | Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
A26951 | Shall I ever again resist or disobey the word and wisdom of him, who made and ruleth such a world? |
A26951 | Shall I ever again wilfully or carelesly sin against a God of so great Majesty? |
A26951 | Shall I ever distrust the power of him that made such a world? |
A26951 | Shall I fear a worm, a mortal man, above this great and terrible Creator? |
A26951 | Shall a wicked worldling venture into endless pains, and put himself out of the hopes of Heaven, and all this for a short and foolish pleasure? |
A26951 | Shall no man be restrained from felony or murders, but he that seeth the Assizes or the Gallows? |
A26951 | Shall there be evil in a City, and the Lord hath not done it? |
A26951 | Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? |
A26951 | Shall we distrust God, and trust a lyar and a worm? |
A26951 | Shall worldlings over- do you?] |
A26951 | Shall ● e not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith? |
A26951 | So ask, what is it that would make the Church on Earth to be likest to that part which is in Heaven? |
A26951 | Some are constant in Church- duties, perhaps with some superstitious strictness; but in family duties how neglective are they? |
A26951 | Speak out; do you live the life of faith upon things unseen? |
A26951 | Suppose you had seen the matters revealed in the Gospel to your faith, as to what is past and done already? |
A26951 | That I believe, is no where in the Scripture: If it be, doth the Scripture say, that all men believe, or only some? |
A26951 | That is attended in his way to Hell with greater pomp and state than others? |
A26951 | The blind men came to him, and Jesus said, Believe ye that I am able to do this? |
A26951 | The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? |
A26951 | The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? |
A26951 | The one preach Christ of contention, not sincerely, supposing to add affl ● ction to my bonds — what then? |
A26951 | The question is, whether God or the world have your hearts? |
A26951 | The question then which remaineth is, How we receive all this infallibly from the subsequent Ages or Churches to this day? |
A26951 | Then where are your pleasant habitations and contents? |
A26951 | Therefore if an erring person ask, What am I bound to? |
A26951 | They would not cry out, what needeth all this praying? |
A26951 | This caused Christ to say, How hard it is for the Rich to be saved? |
A26951 | This is all true; but who is there in the world that doth it, or findeth it possible to love another as himself? |
A26951 | Thou fool, this night shall thy soul be required of thee: then whose shall these things be that thou hast provided?] |
A26951 | Though you are full of fears sometimes whether you shall be accepted, and have a part in Christ, or no? |
A26951 | To discover this, will you ask your selves these Questions following? |
A26951 | To say nothing of our own language, what changes are made in all other tongues, since the times that the Gospel was recorded? |
A26951 | True: but mark that their works follow them: And what are the works which follow you? |
A26951 | Vse your selves much to think and speak of Heaven, and the invisible things of Faith? |
A26951 | WHat sins are religious people who fear sin, most in danger of? |
A26951 | Was it not the Spirit of Christ which was in the Prophets, and in all the godly before Christs coming? |
A26951 | Was not the Spirit in a greater measure in the Apostles, than in us? |
A26951 | We are in great danger of sinning, in cases where we are ignorant: For who can avoid the danger which he seeth not? |
A26951 | Were it but an Angel that did thus appear to you, what manner of hearers would you be? |
A26951 | Were our Congregations composed of such persons, what manner of worship would they perform to God? |
A26951 | What Countrey is it that your hearts converse in? |
A26951 | What Garden yieldeth you your sweetest flowers? |
A26951 | What a Baptism and Sacramental Communion do these men make? |
A26951 | What a change would it make on the judgements of the world? |
A26951 | What a happy change would it make upon you? |
A26951 | What a peal will conscience then ring in the unbelievers ears? |
A26951 | What abundance doth the world set together by the ears? |
A26951 | What abundance of complaints and calamity would foresight prevent? |
A26951 | What abundance of trades doth Pride maintain? |
A26951 | What are our News- books filled with, or the daily reports which come to our ears, but sin, and sorrow, vanity and vexation? |
A26951 | What can be so false that a man will not plead for, if he take it to be a necessary truth of God? |
A26951 | What case are your children in? |
A26951 | What case is your soul in? |
A26951 | What company is it that you solace your selves with? |
A26951 | What course would you take, if you had but seen this dreadful day? |
A26951 | What course would you take, what manner of persons would you be after such a sight as this? |
A26951 | What did God ever forbid you, that was not hurtful to you? |
A26951 | What difference between a man asleep and dead, but only that one is more in expectation of usefulness when he awaketh? |
A26951 | What do you in the place of honour that you are in? |
A26951 | What do you think you should be and do, if you had seen but such a sight as this? |
A26951 | What else shall we trust to? |
A26951 | What have you to shew that you gained by your sufferings? |
A26951 | What if I find that worldly business doth hinder me in the service of God; I can not pray, or read, or meditate so much? |
A26951 | What if I were not brought up to labour; am I bound to use it? |
A26951 | What if you had not been brought up to pray, or to read, or to any needful trade, or ornament of life? |
A26951 | What if you should find it so after giving to the poor, or visiting the sick, or providing for your family? |
A26951 | What if your Parents had never taught you to speak? |
A26951 | What is more contrary to Christianity than Pride? |
A26951 | What is the special duty of one in this sickness, this poverty, imprisonment, restraint, contempt, or slander, which I undergo?] |
A26951 | What mind do you think you should be of? |
A26951 | What need then have such as we to be doing, and make much of time? |
A26951 | What say they, Are we not all believers? |
A26951 | What shall we do willingly, if not our duties? |
A26951 | What sins the best should most watchfully avoid? |
A26951 | What then must you do? |
A26951 | What wisdom then remains in Unbelievers, when all their lives 〈 ◊ 〉 mis- imployed, because they know not the end of life? |
A26951 | What worldling or hypocrite is there that will not drop now and then an Alms, while he pampereth his flesh, and satisfieth its desires? |
A26951 | What would you think of a life of sin, if once you had heard such accusations as these? |
A26951 | What would you think of the most serious holy life, if you had seen the things that you say you do believe? |
A26951 | What wretched muck- worm would not pray, if he believed that praying would make him rich? |
A26951 | What, shall we do any thing coldly for eternity? |
A26951 | When Satan saith, Ye shall not die: and when the sinner with Adam hideth himself, Faith will call him out to Judgment, and say, What hast thou done? |
A26951 | When he saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid; which caused Christ to say[ O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?] |
A26951 | When shall I receive one moments ease? |
A26951 | When the omniscient God, that will certainly perform his Word, hath so plainly revealed it, and so frequently and loudly warns you of it? |
A26951 | When the unbeliever saith, what harm is it to please my flesh, in ease, or pride, or meat and drink, or lustful wantonness? |
A26951 | When you read your Grammar, if one ask you, why? |
A26951 | Whence are the spirits and cordials that revive you; when a frowning world doth cast you into a fainting fit, or swoun? |
A26951 | Whence is the food, that your hopes and comforts live upon? |
A26951 | Where is it that you repose your souls for Rest, when sin or sufferings have made you weary? |
A26951 | Whether Saints were gluttons, drunkards, whoremongers, riotous, licentious and proud, or temporate, chaste, mortified and humble? |
A26951 | Whether it be not much contrary to that clemency of Jesus Christ, by which he pardoneth the failings of Believers? |
A26951 | Which of the Prophets did not your Fathers kill and persecute? |
A26951 | Which world do you take for your pilgrimage, and which for your home? |
A26951 | While you arrogate the name and honour of being Christians, will you bethink you what Christianity is? |
A26951 | Who would not boldly follow such a multitude of excellent persons, who have sped so well? |
A26951 | Why are we no more transported by them? |
A26951 | Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? |
A26951 | Why askest thou thus after my name, seeing it is secret? |
A26951 | Why did Paul persecute the Christians, and compel them to blaspheme? |
A26951 | Why do they no more command our souls, and stir up our faculties to the most vigorous and lively exercise? |
A26951 | Why then are we no more affected with them? |
A26951 | Why then are you so glad of good bargains, or of gifts? |
A26951 | Why then do you not cease your wondering at their diligence? |
A26951 | Why then do you not like it for your selves? |
A26951 | Why then doth not faith thus shame temptations, if indeed you do believe these things? |
A26951 | Will he count that man to be no worldling, that would fain have more of the world, and can not? |
A26951 | Will you be Fellow- Citizens with them, and have no communion with them, nor seriously remember them? |
A26951 | Will you envy the trifling commodities or delights of earth, to those that are like to have no more, but to lye in Hell when the sport is ended? |
A26951 | Will you perswade us that the man is wise, that can climb a little higher than his neighbours, that he may have the greater fall? |
A26951 | Without Love the world would have neither unity, peace or safety: What were a family without it? |
A26951 | Would Achan have medled with his prey, if he had foreseen the stones that were his Executioners and his Tomb? |
A26951 | Would Gehezi have obeyed his covetous desire, if he had foreseen the leprosie? |
A26951 | Would Sodom have been Sodom, if they had foreseen that an Hell from Heaven would have consumed them? |
A26951 | Would not usurpers have been less feared, if all could have foreseen their fall? |
A26951 | Would temptations be as powerful, as now they are, if you did but see the things you bear of? |
A26951 | Would the world have despised the preaching of Noah, if they had believed the deluge? |
A26951 | Would you be godly or ungodly after it? |
A26951 | Would you be unsanctified, and unjustified, and unpardoned, and unsaved? |
A26951 | Would you draw the picture of your friend like an Ape or a Monkey, or a Monster? |
A26951 | Would you have us silent, or talk to you as in jeast, while we see such a day as this before us? |
A26951 | Would you know who it is that is the Christian indeed? |
A26951 | Would you sport it out in sin as you have done? |
A26951 | Would you take no better care for your salvation? |
A26951 | You covet to have more to be your own, than God allotteth you? |
A26951 | You live then upon the labours of others, but who liveth upon yours? |
A26951 | You may ask perhaps, what is all this to our faith? |
A26951 | You would take such conceits in worldly matters to be the symptoms of distraction: And will you cherish them where they are most pernicious? |
A26951 | [ How hardly shall rich men enter into Heaven?] |
A26951 | [ Is this the fire that sinners do so little fear? |
A26951 | and also gracious desires, which shall but deceive us, and never be satisfied? |
A26951 | and as if he caused it to stand still a day? |
A26951 | and conversing in another world? |
A26951 | and do you like the way that brought them thither? |
A26951 | and eternity long enough for your joyes? |
A26951 | and go as in a dream to the beatifical vision? |
A26951 | and hath he not Goodness enough to draw, and engage, and continually delight, this dull and narrow heart of mine? |
A26951 | and hath not a greater care of the interest of his creatures? |
A26951 | and how can we preach the Gospel to others, if the only cogent argument of faith be incommunicable, or such as we can not prove? |
A26951 | and how hardly they will think ill of their most false or foolish apprehensions? |
A26951 | and how many are continually at work to serve it? |
A26951 | and how many deeds would be otherwise done? |
A26951 | and how many hours would be otherwise spent, if the change that will be made by Judgement and Execution, were well foreseen? |
A26951 | and how seriously they will then talk of sin and grace, of God and Heaven, which before they could not be awakened to regard? |
A26951 | and how sweet that Love is to themselves? |
A26951 | and how unanswerable are my joyes, and my desires, to those convictions? |
A26951 | and how wise they are in their own conceits? |
A26951 | and how wise would they be esteemed? |
A26951 | and is not the fountain of all fidelity? |
A26951 | and is not this the end of my heavenly Father? |
A26951 | and is ruled by it, and seeketh it more? |
A26951 | and is this the labour of your lives? |
A26951 | and mark what the work of self- denyal is? |
A26951 | and no more composedness and true peace rt home? |
A26951 | and not rejoyce in such believing? |
A26951 | and perhaps deride it? |
A26951 | and seen the glory which they daily seek? |
A26951 | and seen the place of torments which they fly from? |
A26951 | and set me highest in the world?] |
A26951 | and taking God for All, and the world for Nothing? |
A26951 | and tell you, that your sport and mirth is done? |
A26951 | and that it can not be well and safely done without it? |
A26951 | and that it was not an exceeding increase of their courage, who came after in the rear, when they saw most of their brethren safely passed through? |
A26951 | and that loveth God and Heaven no better than the rich? |
A26951 | and that now you have had all that the world can do, for those that serve it, and take it for their part? |
A26951 | and that these things are as certain truths, as if you had seen them? |
A26951 | and to say, They are too bad for such as you to communicate with? |
A26951 | and what a Hell would the world be? |
A26951 | and what a deal of sorrow is round about us? |
A26951 | and what a strange difference there is in their judging of any case, when it is anothers, and when it is their own? |
A26951 | and what all that are in Hell and in Heaven do think of them? |
A26951 | and what can there be added to perfection? |
A26951 | and what he hath told you is or will be, to be as certain as if you saw it with your eyes? |
A26951 | and what it is that you most delight in as your treasure? |
A26951 | and what many thousands are suffering for the like, while they see no danger? |
A26951 | and what will accommodate me best at present? |
A26951 | and what will ingratiate me most with men? |
A26951 | and what wouldst thou have me do? |
A26951 | and where must they set the strongest watch? |
A26951 | and where wilt thou have refuge, if thou fly from God? |
A26951 | and wherein the infirmities of the upright d ● ffer from mortal sins? |
A26951 | and whether d ● th it tend? |
A26951 | and whether work or idleness will be best in the review? |
A26951 | and which we have need of our selves as well as others? |
A26951 | and why complain you? |
A26951 | and why would you keep holy- daies in remembrance of them? |
A26951 | and will you be indeed what you say you are, and would be thought to be? |
A26951 | and ye fools, when will ye be wise? |
A26951 | and yet dare they be unholy? |
A26951 | are none Christians, but those that live so strictly? |
A26951 | are you so childish as to pull off the plaister, if you believe that it is curing the sore? |
A26951 | as if he wanted better means? |
A26951 | at least to have brought him to a freer exercise of his Reason, in a sober consideration of his state and waies? |
A26951 | by him that hath commanded every man his work? |
A26951 | dare you be voluptuous, proud, or fornicators any more? |
A26951 | did the place need you, or did you need the place? |
A26951 | did they seek you, or did you seek them? |
A26951 | dost thou believe this dreadful day or not? |
A26951 | either for your present delight, or for your future happiness; for the healing of your diseases, or the preventing them? |
A26951 | even of them for whom their posterity erected Monuments? |
A26951 | even the Spirit of the Father to be his constant Agent here below; and to plead his cause, and do his work on the hearts of men? |
A26951 | from things unseen or seen? |
A26951 | hath he heard and pittied, even the weak in faith? |
A26951 | hath no one any right to your labours, that you are so long idle? |
A26951 | hath no one hired you? |
A26951 | he that formed the eye, shall he not see?] |
A26951 | how affectionate? |
A26951 | how carefully and fruitfully would you speak and live? |
A26951 | how cold, and how slow are our endeavours? |
A26951 | how far from the truth and power of Christianity? |
A26951 | how flat are our duties? |
A26951 | how full of Infidelity? |
A26951 | how many words would be otherwise spoken? |
A26951 | how much would it tend to their holiness and their peace? |
A26951 | how sensible? |
A26951 | how serious? |
A26951 | how shall I wish that I had used my time, my wealth, my power, when time is at an end, and all these transitory things are vanished? |
A26951 | how strange are many Christians to the extent of this duty, and how far are we all from practising it in any eminent degree? |
A26951 | how unprofitable are our lives, in comparison of what one hours sight of Heaven and Hell would make them be? |
A26951 | how void of Faith? |
A26951 | if not, why dost thou dissemble, by professing it in thy Creed? |
A26951 | if thou do, how 〈 ◊ 〉 thou live so merrily or quietly in a careless unprepared state? |
A26951 | in a dead man, that never troubled you with his presence or reproofs, or in a Saint in Heaven, that comes not near you? |
A26951 | make such a do of p ● verty, imprisonment, injuries, disgrace, with Heaven and Hell before our eyes? |
A26951 | my self- denyal, humility, contempt of the world, patience, and confidence on God, be exercised and increased by it? |
A26951 | not where are your persons, but where are your hearts? |
A26951 | or all that is to be regarded and prayed for? |
A26951 | or by any thing which many others do partake of? |
A26951 | or count it more ado than needs? |
A26951 | or doth it not? |
A26951 | or grace, and not desire glory? |
A26951 | or had you the same promises? |
A26951 | or if we breath as hard after Christ in holy desires, as you do in blowing the bubble of vain- glory? |
A26951 | or is it against your wills? |
A26951 | or rather do you not by your idleness forfeit life, and all these helps and maintainers of your lives? |
A26951 | or that a disordered body is sick, and hath no great pleasure in life? |
A26951 | or that a disordered or maimed watch or clock, doth not go right? |
A26951 | or the life of sense on things that you behold? |
A26951 | or the unchristian folly of those that will obey you? |
A26951 | or to God and Godliness? |
A26951 | or to leap into Hell, when we see it as before us? |
A26951 | or what will your eager desires, and your cares do, more than the labours and quiet forecast of one that hath a contented patient mind? |
A26951 | or, will you find them better work? |
A26951 | or, will you pay them better wages? |
A26951 | shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
A26951 | shall we deifie creatures, and say to a stock, Thou art my Father? |
A26951 | so torn in pieces by its zealous ignorant self- conceited Pastors and Members? |
A26951 | so worryed by its open and secret enemies; even by the usurping tyrannizing Wolves in Sheeps cloathing, who spare not the flock? |
A26951 | than[ what is most pleasant to my flesh? |
A26951 | that Heaven is Heaven, and yet prefer the world before it? |
A26951 | that Hell is Hell, and yet will venture upon it for a lust, or a thing of nought? |
A26951 | that the Holy Ghost was not yet given, because Christ was not yet glorified? |
A26951 | the believer takes it as the question of a fool, that should ask[ what harm is it to take a dram of Mercury or Arsenick?] |
A26951 | the evidence of things not seen? |
A26951 | things future or present? |
A26951 | things hoped for, or things possessed? |
A26951 | what ardent love? |
A26951 | what confidence of faith? |
A26951 | what constant patience should one serious thought of God, possess the believing holy soul with? |
A26951 | what earnestness of desire? |
A26951 | what envy and wrath, what malice and persecution, what opposition and discouragements on every side we must expect? |
A26951 | what hatred of sin? |
A26951 | what if they be able to command mens lives, and to hurt those that they hate for a little while? |
A26951 | what is it but to put a scorn on your Creator and Redeemer, to live as if he had created and redeemed you for no better and nobler ends than these? |
A26951 | what is it that Court and Country, City, and all Societies ring of, but vanity and vexation, sin and sorrow? |
A26951 | what is the employment of most of the world? |
A26951 | what lives would you have led, after such sights, as all or any one of these? |
A26951 | what lives would you have led, if you had been eye- witnesses of all these things? |
A26951 | what manner of people would you have been? |
A26951 | what name can express the inhumane cruelty of such a wish o ● motion? |
A26951 | what should you do with reason for such uses? |
A26951 | what thief so mad as to steal at the Gallows, or before the Judge? |
A26951 | what transporting joy? |
A26951 | what work they have made as in the dark, when the case is so very plain and easie? |
A26951 | what, is all this for no higher an end? |
A26951 | when faith makes unseen things to be as seen? |
A26951 | when he told you of dying, and I told you that you should not die? |
A26951 | when shall I see one glimpse of hope? |
A26951 | whence is it that this cometh? |
A26951 | where is thy sting? |
A26951 | where is thy victory? |
A26951 | whether as a part, or end, or fruit, or consequent? |
A26951 | whether in the Scripture, or in our hearts? |
A26951 | whether it be, If God will? |
A26951 | which way will be most comfortable to me in my last review? |
A26951 | while they neither mind nor seek it, in comparison of the world? |
A26951 | who believeth not that there is a God? |
A26951 | who can be more unfit for Heaven, than he that loveth a life of labour, and want, and misery better? |
A26951 | why doth it not do what sight would do, in some good measure, if it were but a lively saving faith indeed that serveth instead of sense? |
A26951 | why then doth not your belief affect you, or command you more? |
A26951 | will you hearken now as long to your consciences, as you have done to me? |
A26951 | will you live upon things seen or unseen? |
A26951 | will you make Infidels of all that are not Saints? |
A26951 | would it leave you as you are? |
A26951 | would you be drunk, or filthy, if you saw him stand by you? |
A26951 | would you ever again reproach it as preciseness? |
A26951 | your honours and attendance? |
A27004 | & divina ratio? |
A27004 | & quae facta non erant falsis proderent testimoniis, ut puerili assertione firmarent? |
A27004 | & quomodo potest contemperantia insensibilium, sensibile constituere? |
A27004 | ( But how shall we know that they said truth?) |
A27004 | ( It is the best that is done in this lower world) Would any enemy of God so much honour him, and promote his interest, and restore him his own? |
A27004 | ( mihi) 673. saith, Miraris hominem ad Deos ire? |
A27004 | * An vero nisi Deum genus humanum respicere ▪ eique praeesse putaremu ●, adeo puritati& innocentiae studeremus? |
A27004 | * Quid nobis est investigare ● a quae neque scire compendium, neque ignorare detrimentum est ullum? |
A27004 | 13.32 ▪ Did John Baptist flatter him, when he lost his liberty and life for reprehending his filthy lust? |
A27004 | 14. de eo quod solet quaeri, Cur Deus lapsum hominis evenire permiserit, pro quo Incarnatio ejus necessaria fuit? |
A27004 | 2. l. 1. c. 6. sintne coelum& sydera habitabilia? |
A27004 | 23.29, 30, 31. why do you honour the dead Saints, and abhorre the living? |
A27004 | 53. Who hath believed our report ▪ and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed? |
A27004 | A Harlot bought the other, and taught her the trade of wickednesse: And who, saith he, can give the reason of this event? |
A27004 | A Swine hath a nature as suitable to these as you? |
A27004 | A Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son,& c. And why should the fulfilling of a Prophesie by miracle be incredible? |
A27004 | A sinner in this case hath nothing but blasphemy to say against the Justice of his Maker: for what can he say? |
A27004 | An dubium est quin virtus ita maximam partem obtineat in rebus humanis, ut reliquas obruat? |
A27004 | An hoc usquequaque aliter in vita? |
A27004 | An si omnia ad intelligendum non habeo, quae habere vellem, ne iis quidem quae habeo, mihi per te uti licebit? |
A27004 | And 3. doth not your own experience reprehend your own complaint as guilty of contradiction? |
A27004 | And I pray you, how should he do this otherwise? |
A27004 | And I would know whether they can prove against Gassendus, that Impetus& Nisus vel conatus is ipse motus? |
A27004 | And all because self- love and guilt doth make sinners unwilling to believe the truth? |
A27004 | And are not Miracles according to our own necessities and desires? |
A27004 | And are you sure that no matter is indivisible? |
A27004 | And by what proof do you distinguish matter into those three degrees, or sorts, any more than into two, or four, or six, or ten, or ten hundred? |
A27004 | And can any then be a more suitable object of our love? |
A27004 | And can the minde of man on Earth, have higher and greater delights than these? |
A27004 | And can you doubt whether God be most worthy of your love? |
A27004 | And can you think that things so little satisfying, and so quickly perishing, are more suitable objects for your love than God? |
A27004 | And do you know what you oblige your selves to, when you undertake to solve all phaenomena by matter and motion only? |
A27004 | And do you not find that your Wills have a suitableness to good as such in the general? |
A27004 | And doth he not know and regard what is continually as in his hand, or by continual volition produced or maintained by him? |
A27004 | And he addeth that[ Forma substantialis non per se est substantia: substantia enim per se sul sistit,& c. — Quid ergo erit substantialis forma? |
A27004 | And he said, Who art thou, Lord? |
A27004 | And how can they discern the divine motions of their souls, that only see them in common conversation? |
A27004 | And how dark were they about the life to come? |
A27004 | And how know we what other Creatures God hath, to whom these punished sinners may be a warning? |
A27004 | And how know you that former motion proceedeth not from such Natures, or Principles, when you confess that later motions do so? |
A27004 | And how little know we how incomparably more excellent the nature of Angels may be than ours? |
A27004 | And how prove you, that the Souls of Bruits exist not, after death? |
A27004 | And how then cometh there so much enmity between them, and so great disparity? |
A27004 | And how would you have such testimonies better confirmed, than by multiplyed miracles, delivered in a way which can not possibly deceive? |
A27004 | And if Confidence in Christ be yet deceit, must I not say that thou hast deceived me? |
A27004 | And if all this were so, who made the things inanimate, that have no souls of their own to make them? |
A27004 | And if it must be conditional, who but God can tell what must be the condition? |
A27004 | And if it were false, would they not hate such deceivers, and make them a common scorn, instead of being converted by them? |
A27004 | And if my Soul did thus fabricate my Body, then what needed it pre- existent Matter to make it of? |
A27004 | And if my Soul did thus independently make my Body, did all other Souls do so by their Bodies, or not? |
A27004 | And if no better a solution be given us of the nature of Light and Heat, what shall we expect from them about Intellection and Volition? |
A27004 | And if you believe it not, what will you do with Reason, or any of your faculties, or your time? |
A27004 | And if you can believe an Individuation of Greater Souls, why not of Lesser? |
A27004 | And is all this the effect of perfect Goodness? |
A27004 | And is he to be blamed for telling them the truth? |
A27004 | And is his motion rectus vel circularis? |
A27004 | And is it not certain that Christ doth truly perform this undertaking? |
A27004 | And is not Godliness a pleasure in it self? |
A27004 | And is that a dream or a delusion, which causeth a man to live as a man? |
A27004 | And might he not inflict that on men which they deserve? |
A27004 | And must this messenger live in every age, and go into every Land, to do these Miracles in the presence of every living Soul? |
A27004 | And seeing that experience forced him to confess it of Cats and Owls, how could he think that all other eyes or sight were quite of another kinde? |
A27004 | And shall Man be worse than Beasts? |
A27004 | And shall no Chronicles, no Records, no certain History be believed, as long as there are any foolish superstitious Lyars left upon the Earth? |
A27004 | And shall that be a hinderance to your belief, which is your last remedy against unbelief? |
A27004 | And shall the same man say, when execution cometh, it is too great? |
A27004 | And shall we deny or question a proved truth, because the reason of the circumstances is unrevealed to us? |
A27004 | And shall we make it necessary for our selves, and then quarrel with him for making it necessary in his Covenant? |
A27004 | And so almost of all other Birds and Beasts? |
A27004 | And that no spiritual incorporeal substance is quantitative, extended, or divisible? |
A27004 | And that such wonderfull successive trains of impediments are set in the way of almost any man that intendeth any great good work in the World? |
A27004 | And then how came they also to do miracles? |
A27004 | And then, which think you will have the greater party, and what a case would mankind be in? |
A27004 | And these difficulties will concern you nevertheless, whether you are Christians or not? |
A27004 | And to the Question, What use would there be then of Judicatures? |
A27004 | And to what Authors will they send us for the proof of this assertion? |
A27004 | And what Spirit of sanctification doth accompany any of their peculiar doctrines? |
A27004 | And what a world must it be, when Lust is the Law to all the Governours? |
A27004 | And what is it in the Tree which is still the same? |
A27004 | And what is the Pondus which Gassendus doth adde to magnitude and figure as a third pre- requisite in Atomes? |
A27004 | And what is the end of all that I have said? |
A27004 | And what justice would be done upon any Rebels or Robbers that are but strong enough to bear it out? |
A27004 | And what mortal man is able to say, whether the distinction of Persons be either greater or less than this? |
A27004 | And what should we think of the Atheist that denyeth it? |
A27004 | And what the nearer is any man by this, for the discerning of any of their wild hypotheses? |
A27004 | And what think you is to be done to bring any man to heaven, but to pardon him, and make him holy? |
A27004 | And when one kickt him, and the people marvelled at his patience, he said, What if an Ass had kickt me, should I have sued him at Law? |
A27004 | And when the Rock descendeth, doth it carry down none of the ascendants with it? |
A27004 | And when they have attempted it, they have been like a man that is wrestling with a Spirit? |
A27004 | And where will you find this done but in Jesus Christ alone? |
A27004 | And whether is Reason or Appetite, think you, naturally made to be the predominant faculty? |
A27004 | And whether the witnesses of his Resurrection were sufficient? |
A27004 | And who is the wiser Philosopher? |
A27004 | And who then should have that happiness, but the holy and renewed souls? |
A27004 | And why did it not make it sooner, seeing it hath such an inclination to it? |
A27004 | And why do not the same( partial) atomes, bear down a Feather, or the Birds that fly quietly in the air? |
A27004 | And why do you against your own inclinations, make every action to be done by God alone? |
A27004 | And why doth it not amend the infirmities of this Body? |
A27004 | And why feel we not the power of their motion upon us? |
A27004 | And why was he before revealed to so few? |
A27004 | And will Lying bring a man to Heaven? |
A27004 | And will mens averseness to the love of God then disprove it? |
A27004 | And will you make a few condemned malefactors the measure of it? |
A27004 | And will you reduce all their unknown perfections, or their known intelligence to matter and motion only? |
A27004 | And will you say then, For ought I know it may be so, Ergo, Christianity is incredible? |
A27004 | And would so many men run themselves into all this for nothing, to save the labour of an easie enquiry, after some matters of publick fact? |
A27004 | And yet on the other side, Do not the sins of them that love God, deserve death and misery, according to his Law? |
A27004 | And yet the Mercy would be but the same? |
A27004 | And yet they are denyed and derided by the Protestants? |
A27004 | Are any of these becoming God? |
A27004 | Are not the Devils now set out in Scripture for a warning to Man? |
A27004 | Are not the Legends written with as great confidence as the Scriptures? |
A27004 | Are these the Objections of unbelief? |
A27004 | Are they not more terrible than comfortable to your most retired sober thoughts? |
A27004 | Are those atomes that carry down the Rock, more powerfull than an hundred thousand men, who could not lift it up at all; much less so swiftly? |
A27004 | Are you certain that no true matter is penetrable? |
A27004 | Arist ● ppus rogatus alicuando, quid haberent e ● imium Philosopi? |
A27004 | Aristippus being asked, Quid esset admirandum in vita? |
A27004 | Art thou not in Covenant with me, as my Sanctifier, and Confirmer, and Comforter? |
A27004 | At nunquid dicemus illius temporis homines usque adeo fuisse vanos, mendaces, stol ● dos, brutos, ut quae nunquam viderant, vidisse se fingerent? |
A27004 | Atqui si natura confirmatum jus non erit, virtutes omnes tollantur: ubi enim liberalitas? |
A27004 | Audetis ridere nos cum Gehennas dicimus& inextinguibiles ignes, in quos animas dejici ab eorum hostibus cognovimus? |
A27004 | Audetis ridere nos quod animarum nostrarum provideamus saluti? |
A27004 | Audetis ridere nos — Quid Plato vester nonne animo surgere suadet e terris,& circa Deum semper( quantum fieri potest) cogitatione ac mente versari? |
A27004 | Because I can not know how a spirit by contact can apply it self to matter, shall I dream that therefore it is uncapable of moving bodies? |
A27004 | Behold the children of Israel have not hearkned to me, how then shall Pharaoh hear me? |
A27004 | But I would know whether we have any atomes smaller than the body of Light, which thus penetrateth the Glass and Chrystal? |
A27004 | But do you not ordinarily say, that Vice bringeth its punishment with it in its natural effects? |
A27004 | But doth it follow therefore that it can not be proved? |
A27004 | But doth not the light of Nature, and the concurrent sense and practice of all the World confute you? |
A27004 | But for Error and Deceit, Idolatry and Superstition, how industriously are they propagated? |
A27004 | But for the doctrin of Obedience in general, who hath ever taught it more plainly and pressingly, than Christ and his Apostles? |
A27004 | But how can one man know another''s heart to be sincere? |
A27004 | But how much of this is spoken in the dark? |
A27004 | But how shall I know that there is indeed such holiness in Christians as you mention, and that it is not dissembled and counterfeit? |
A27004 | But if they do not Apostatize, what a shame will it be to the Church of God, to have our Religion thus betrayed, by such as are not able to defend it? |
A27004 | But in all this you argue against experience: Hath there not been Government and order kept up among Heathens? |
A27004 | But is it natural to you to have lust and appetite, and is it not natural to you to have Reason to moderate and rule them? |
A27004 | But is there no different tendency to motion in the parts of matter? |
A27004 | But it is incredible that the World should perish for one mans sin, whom they never knew, nor could prevent? |
A27004 | But may not all this which you call Regeneration, and the Image of God, be the meer power of fantasie, and affectation? |
A27004 | But none of these, nor any such, are in our present case: There are Lyars in the world; but shall none therefore be believed? |
A27004 | But qualis est illa contemperatio? |
A27004 | But that which we expect from them is, to tell us, what motion it is that maketh the different Elements? |
A27004 | But this is caused by the power of a deluded fantasie, which seeketh after that which is not to be had: What if you fall in Love with the Sun? |
A27004 | But what are such Trinities in Vnity as these to the Trinity of Persons in the Deity? |
A27004 | But what can be imagined by the wit of man more certain than sense? |
A27004 | But what difficulty is there in these few precepts, that all men may not easily learn them? |
A27004 | But what if there had been nothing in the intellect, but what passed through the sense? |
A27004 | But what is Morality but the modality of Naturals? |
A27004 | But what kin are these assertions of Philosophers to yours, of the Incarnation of the Eternal Word and Wisdom of God? |
A27004 | But who is able to believe the Incarnation and Hypostatical Vnion? |
A27004 | But who is able to discern it in the smaller and innumerable branches? |
A27004 | But why should it captum omnem superare, that a nobler and more potent nature can do that, which a more ignoble can do? |
A27004 | But why should they be thought incredible? |
A27004 | But why should you run out on one side the way, because other men run out on the other? |
A27004 | But why then have they no knowledge, no reason, no speech? |
A27004 | But yet I will answer your question, Who can reconcile these things? |
A27004 | But you seem here to forget that you had before made Godliness to be a Mans loss and undoing, if so be there were no life to come? |
A27004 | Can God enable a man to that which he is not able to do himself, and can he give that which he hath not to give? |
A27004 | Can a groundless conjecture allow any rational man such a Conclusion? |
A27004 | Can an independent Mind be ignorant what it was, and what it did it self from all eternity, before it entred into this flesh? |
A27004 | Can it be any worse then it is already? |
A27004 | Can we learn of him, if we take him for a deceiver? |
A27004 | Can you doubt whether all things which appear here to your sight, have an invisible Cause and Maker? |
A27004 | Can you think that that man hath any Religion who hath no God? |
A27004 | Centum decies centum annos demus deliciis? |
A27004 | Certainly all of us feel from our childhood too much of the truth of this? |
A27004 | Certainly, they did not cure all men that were sick: For then who would have dyed? |
A27004 | Christiani nomen frustra sortitur, qui Christum minime imitatur: Quid enim tibi prodest vocari quod non es,& nomen usurpare alienum? |
A27004 | Could it choose no better? |
A27004 | Cum igitur haec ita sunt, quaenam injustitia tanta est, ut fatui vobis credulitate in ista videamur? |
A27004 | Cum vos& similia credere,& in eadem videamus expectatione versari? |
A27004 | Cum à negotio omni sevocamus animum? |
A27004 | Deus autem quando ultima supplicia decernit, non edocet eos qui poenarum causas, sed scelerum memoriam omnem tollet? |
A27004 | Deus) ubi tua, aut qualis? |
A27004 | Dicimus aliquem hilarem vivere? |
A27004 | Did Caligula think so? |
A27004 | Did Christ flatter Herod, when he said, Go tell that Fox, Behold, I cast out devils& c? |
A27004 | Did Christ flatter the Pharisees? |
A27004 | Did Commodus, Caracalla, Heliogabalus, think so? |
A27004 | Did God care for none on earth, but a few Jews? |
A27004 | Did King Philip think so, who put his own Son and Heir to death, by the Inquisition? |
A27004 | Did Nero think so, that wished Rome had but one neck; that set the City on fire, that he might sing over it Homers Poem of the flames of Troy? |
A27004 | Did Socrates die in his bed? |
A27004 | Did you know what you did when you owned your Baptismal Vow and Covenant? |
A27004 | Do not men call for signs and wonders, and say, If I saw one rise from the dead, or saw a Miracle, I would believe? |
A27004 | Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgment- seats? |
A27004 | Do the people need to be saved from such stuff as this? |
A27004 | Do we not know what we doe? |
A27004 | Do you know how many thousand fixed Stars there are, besides Planets? |
A27004 | Do you know the degrees of holiness and Glory which those superiour Inhabitants possess? |
A27004 | Do you know what is meant by the resolution and grounds of faith? |
A27004 | Do you know what number the holy and glorious Angels are, in comparison both of wicked men and Devils? |
A27004 | Do you know whether sin and sorrow be not kept out there, and confined to this, and some few such obscurer receptacles? |
A27004 | Do you know whether they are all Suns? |
A27004 | Do you know whether they are all inhabited or not? |
A27004 | Do you not see that fleshly interest ruleth them, and therefore they are what the Great ones would have them be, who can help or hurt them? |
A27004 | Do you think that all your Learning is thereby obliterated? |
A27004 | Do you think there is any thing existent in the World, besides matter and motion, or not? |
A27004 | Do you understand what Government is? |
A27004 | Doth any mans understanding perceive the true positive difference by these words? |
A27004 | Doth he think to refuse Heaven, and yet to have it? |
A27004 | Doth not Justice require punishment on them, that yet sin not away the Love of God, nor a state of Holiness? |
A27004 | Doth not a man feel in himself a certain Power, to sudden and voluntary motion? |
A27004 | Doth not natural reason tell you, that so good a God will shew his love to those that are good, that is, to those that love him? |
A27004 | Doth not this objection as much militate against this? |
A27004 | Doth the falshood of Historians make it uncertain whether ever there was a Pope at Rome, or a King in France, or an Inquisition in Spain,& c? |
A27004 | Doubtless there is, as the case of Angels, Devils, and the Souls of men declare: Is this difference among any of them specifical and formal? |
A27004 | Ergone illa quae gesta sunt, daemonum fuere praestigiae,& magicarum artium lud ●? |
A27004 | Et bona Diis ex hac scelerata ducere pulpâ? |
A27004 | Etiamne si quae sint Tyrannorum leges, si 30 illi Athenis leges imponere voluissent? |
A27004 | For what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
A27004 | Germander, Betony, Peony,& c. what are the different motions that cause all these differences? |
A27004 | God only can recover lapsed man? |
A27004 | Gods fore- knowledge or Omniscience is his perfection, and will you argue from thence against his Mercy? |
A27004 | Graeciae discipulus& coeli? |
A27004 | HOW long, Lord, holy and true, how long? |
A27004 | Had you rather your servant, that is trusted with your estate, did believe that there is a life to come, or that there is none? |
A27004 | Haec Stoicorum praecepta sunt — ▪ When will the whole tribe of the Epicureans ever give the world such a Prince as Antonine? |
A27004 | Hath a Worm more goodness than the Sun, if it have more feeling? |
A27004 | Hath every single Priest himself any assurance of the sense of the Council, the Canons, the Popes Decreetals and Bulls, but by the way of writing? |
A27004 | Have atoms sense? |
A27004 | Have you not a positive conception of Intellection and Volition? |
A27004 | Have you not a sure and positive conception, that omnis actus est alicujus actus,& quod nihil, nihil agit? |
A27004 | He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit, and worketh miracles among you, doth he it by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? |
A27004 | Hic animus tam in Equitem Romanum, quàm in servum potest cadere; Quid est eques Romanus? |
A27004 | His foreknowledge of mens sin and misery causeth them not: What if he foreknew them not? |
A27004 | How Souls may be said to have more or less such matter or substance? |
A27004 | How cometh it to prevail against the best Education, Helps and Means? |
A27004 | How contemptibly would he think and speak both of the pleasures and the sufferings of this dreaming life, in comparison of the everlasting things? |
A27004 | How easie is it for cunning malice to burn a* Town, to kill a King, to poison wife or children, and to defraud a neighbour, and never be discovered? |
A27004 | How else should it be so universal as it is? |
A27004 | How excellently doth Seneca speak against a vain curiosity of speech in divers of his Epistles, and with what contempt and vehement indignation? |
A27004 | How few of all the Roman Heathen Emperours was there, that died not by subjects hands? |
A27004 | How gallantly have your Learned Philosophers excelled us? |
A27004 | How glad then would they have been of a certain Teacher sent from Heaven? |
A27004 | How know I what one particular may be unseen by me, which would change my judgment, and better inform me in all the rest? |
A27004 | How know we what faults he might have, which come not to our knowledge? |
A27004 | How know we who shall survive this present World, to whom God may make mans Hell a warning? |
A27004 | How little doth the hopes and fears of another world do with the most? |
A27004 | How much more holy and Heavenly would it make even those that by the purblind World are thought to exceed herein already? |
A27004 | How oft have I read over many lines when I have thought of something else, and not known one word that I have read? |
A27004 | How should it be found in all sorts of Constitutions and Complexions? |
A27004 | How should it work so early in Children as commonly it doth? |
A27004 | How strangely do these Epicureans differ from Aristotle? |
A27004 | How then came they to be moved first? |
A27004 | How then can he be a deceiver, who doth perform all that he undertaketh? |
A27004 | How will this stand with the infinite goodness of God? |
A27004 | How will you live in the world, to any better purpose, than if you had slept out all your life? |
A27004 | I answer, mark in our Books and Sermons whether it be any thing but Christianity which we preach? |
A27004 | I beseech you Sirs, as you regard the reputation of your Reason, tell us why you will professe a Religion, which you abhorre? |
A27004 | I confess, that I took my Religion at first upon my Parents word: And who could expect that in my Childhood I should be able to prove its grounds? |
A27004 | I have answered before, that so have all Creatures: Is it because it proveth the Soul material? |
A27004 | I hope you will not put off all questions that are put to you, with these same two general words only? |
A27004 | I know the perverse wrangler will ask me, How I know this? |
A27004 | I oft think what one told me, that an Infidel answered him, when he asked him, How he could quiet his Conscience in such a desperate state? |
A27004 | If Christ be indeed the Saviour of the World, why came he not into the World till it was 4000 years old? |
A27004 | If Philosophy be medicinal to the foolish world, why were Thales, Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Zeno born no sooner? |
A27004 | If Subjects would love each other as themselves, and forgive injuries, and love their enemies, what could be more joyfull to a faithfull Governour? |
A27004 | If all individuals of compound beings were not from Eternity, what was? |
A27004 | If all others, what security shall Kings have of their lives? |
A27004 | If it be so bad for all that belief, what would it be without? |
A27004 | If it do,( as visibly it doth) why must Christ be blamed for our faults, when he is condemning them, and reproving us, and curing us of them? |
A27004 | If man be under no duty to God, and if nothing that he can do is a sin against God, what a thing will Man be, and what a Hell will Earth be? |
A27004 | If no man can hitherto truly say, that any one Promise or Prophecie hath failed, why should we think that hereafter they will fail? |
A27004 | If not, do you not allow us to take these faculties for incorporeal? |
A27004 | If not, how would those that live in another Land or Age, be brought to the knowledge of them, but by the testimony of those that saw them? |
A27004 | If not, it is natural to you to be Bruits, and not natural to you to be men: What is more natural to Man than to be Rational? |
A27004 | If not, what place hath it in arbore Porphyrii vel Gassendi? |
A27004 | If not, why should it be beyond your capacity to conceive the same in a second Order of a second spiritual being? |
A27004 | If only motion made that fire to day, which yesterday was but a stone, why doth not the strongest wind so much as warm us? |
A27004 | If our Physician come to cure us of a mortal disease, would we reject him because he came not sooner? |
A27004 | If possible, I next ask you whether it be not most probable also? |
A27004 | If the Monarchs of the Earth do take themselves to be left free by God to do what they list; what work will be made among the people? |
A27004 | If the nature of it be the same, why should not the duration be the same? |
A27004 | If the soul know not it self to be an immortal spirit, what maketh almost all the world to judge so of themselves? |
A27004 | If there be no Life after this, what business have you for your Reason? |
A27004 | If there had been any collusion in all this, what likelier man was there in the world to have detected it? |
A27004 | If yea, what Locomotion( for you deny all other) can you ascribe to God, who is unbounded and infinite? |
A27004 | If you are not wise enough to be Christians, why will you not be as wise and honest as the better sort of Heathens? |
A27004 | If you could have an Angel come from heaven to tell you what is there, would you quarrel because you are put upon believing him? |
A27004 | If you do, then, Is it beyond your capacity to conceive that God being unmoved moveth all things? |
A27004 | If you say, How can all this stand with the infinite Goodness of God? |
A27004 | If you say, No, you feign without proof a state of things and order of Causes, contrary to that which all mens sense perceiveth to be now existent? |
A27004 | If your Religion had reason for it, what need it be kept up by cruelty and bloud? |
A27004 | If your selves only, why envy you the Truth( as you suppose) to others? |
A27004 | Iisdemne ut finibus nomen suum quibus vita terminaretur? |
A27004 | Illa enim gloria quid est nifi aeternum Angelorum ● eatorumque spirituum convivium, quod est semper laudare Deum? |
A27004 | In quo igitur est loco? |
A27004 | In vitia alter alterum trudimus: quomodo ad salutem revocari potest, quem nullus retrahit,& populus impellit? |
A27004 | Is God so mutable, to do all for one instant, and to do nothing ever after? |
A27004 | Is Hypocrisie a Virtue? |
A27004 | Is he a God that is not better than the Pleasures of the Flesh and World? |
A27004 | Is he liker to live as a good subject or servant, who looketh for a reward in heaven for it, or he that looketh to die as a beast doth? |
A27004 | Is inventing, compounding, dividing, defining,& c. no action? |
A27004 | Is it a likely thing that any individual mixt body should be eternall, when we know that mixt bodies incline to dissolution? |
A27004 | Is it an incredible thing, that all Being should be from the First Being? |
A27004 | Is it because they transcend the Power of God, or his Wisdom, or his Goodness? |
A27004 | Is it incredible that God doth further than this forsake the wicked in the World of punishment? |
A27004 | Is it not as easie to raise one man from the dead, as to give life to all the living? |
A27004 | Is it not for want of Religion that all the vices and contentions of the world are? |
A27004 | Is it to Gassendus? |
A27004 | Is it to Mr. Hobs? |
A27004 | Is not Reason a nobler faculty than sight? |
A27004 | Is not remembring a knowing of things past? |
A27004 | Is not silly naughty man much liker to be the cause of sin and misery, than the wise and gracious God? |
A27004 | Is not the life of a Glutton and Drunkard punished by poverty, and shame, and sickness? |
A27004 | Is not the virtue and goodness of things as laudable, as their quantity and motion? |
A27004 | Is not the world then troubled with ambiguitie of words? |
A27004 | Is not this inclination then somewhat different from motion? |
A27004 | Is such a man fit to be trusted any further in humane converse, than his present fleshly interest obligeth him? |
A27004 | Is the Law of Nature no clear Revelation of Gods will? |
A27004 | Is there a difference between Intellectual and Spiritual Beings among themselves or not? |
A27004 | Is there any thing in this that is incredible or uncertain? |
A27004 | Is there not a certainty in that history which telleth us of the Norman Conquest of this Land? |
A27004 | Is there not a reason à priore to be given, why one Creature is more agile and active than another? |
A27004 | Is there not in many Creatures a Power, an Inclination, or aptitude to motion, besides motion it self? |
A27004 | Is there nothing in a Habit but actual motion? |
A27004 | Is there then any agreement in substance, or in another essential part, where there is a formal difference? |
A27004 | Is this agreeable to infinite Goodness? |
A27004 | Is this the Life which you live, or which you hate? |
A27004 | It is not actual motion it self? |
A27004 | It was none of the intent of the Spirit of Christ, in working Miracles, to make men immortal here on earth; and to keep them from Heaven? |
A27004 | Judge then whether the use of reason be not to make man a more deluded and tormented creature than the bruits, if so be there were no life after this? |
A27004 | Judge then your selves whether it be not likely that God hath innumerable more noble and excellent creatures, than we silly men are? |
A27004 | Look into the Scripture, and see whether it do not disown and contradict every fault, both great and small, which ever you knew any Christian commit? |
A27004 | Many shall say in that day, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy Name? |
A27004 | May I not expect that he should live like a Beast, who thinketh that he shall die like a Beast? |
A27004 | May not God create a new Heaven and Earth? |
A27004 | May not a Parent or Physician honestly deceive a Child or Patient for his recovery to health? |
A27004 | May not an excellent Limner, Watch- maker, or other Artificer, make a Picture, a Watch, or Musical Instrument, meerly for his own delight? |
A27004 | Moreover, what think you is the nature of all our Habits? |
A27004 | Must Christ be answerable for him? |
A27004 | Must I believe that God''s enemies shall love him for ever, meerly because they are the greater number? |
A27004 | Must we have so much adoe to reason debauched hypocrites and apostates, to that which nature taught so many, who yet did but in part improve it? |
A27004 | Nam quid faciet is homo in teneoris, qui nihil timet nisi testem vel judicem? |
A27004 | Nay quaere, whether it be more proper to say, that all between us and Heaven is a Vacuum or not? |
A27004 | Nay, why doth not your objection militate as strongly against the thief''s believing, that there will be an Assize? |
A27004 | Nec ejus authoritas plurimum à veritate declinat? |
A27004 | No other creature hath such hopes and fears: If you ask, how I can tell that? |
A27004 | Nonne Acherontem, nonne Stygem,& c. nominat? |
A27004 | Nonne dat ista contemperatio quod non habet? |
A27004 | Nonne satis vanis curas erroribus aufert? |
A27004 | Nonne vel haec saltem vobis fidem faciunt argumenta credendi, quod jam per omnes terras in tam brevi tempore immensi hujus sacrament ● diffusa sunt? |
A27004 | Not to meddle with the controversie, whether it take with it hence the material sensitive Soul as a body afterward to act by? |
A27004 | O that I might be your effectual Monitor, to awaken you to consider what you have been doing? |
A27004 | Object Doth not Campanella, Telesius,& c. argue, that all things have sense? |
A27004 | Offendet te superbus contemptu, dives contumeliâ, petulans injuriâ, lividus malignitate, pugnax contentione, ventosus& mendax vanitate? |
A27004 | Or an Angel that were sent thence to tell them what is there, and what they must for ever trust to? |
A27004 | Or at least what need is there of it, after so much already written? |
A27004 | Or at least, I can not believe that Christ is the Son of God, unless he work Miracles? |
A27004 | Or because they are harder to him than the things which our eyes are daily witnesses of? |
A27004 | Or can you think while you are awake and sober, that Perfidiousness will save you, and be taken by God instead of Christianity? |
A27004 | Or hath he indeed a God, who preferreth his lust, or wealth, or honour, or any thing in the World before him? |
A27004 | Or rather should we not say, he were a blessed Deceiver, that had deceived us from our sin and misery, and brought back our straying souls to God? |
A27004 | Or shall he let the Devil go for true, who told Eve at first, You shall not die? |
A27004 | Or suppose your Lives are more civilly and smoothly carnall? |
A27004 | Or that God should vouchsafe his further light and conduct to that Man, who willfully sinneth against him, in despight of all his former teachings? |
A27004 | Or that he should discern the evidence of extraordinary Revelation, who opposeth with enmity the ordinary light or Law of Nature? |
A27004 | Or that is not devoted to his Obedience and his Love? |
A27004 | Or that is not greater than a mortal man? |
A27004 | Or that such are meet for punishment, and unmeet for the love and holy fruition of God? |
A27004 | Or that you are after as unapt for your arts and trades as if you had never learnt them? |
A27004 | Or was he not murdered by the rage of wicked Hypocrites? |
A27004 | Or will you go in the Vessel with a Pilot, or serve in the Army under a Captain, whom you can not trust? |
A27004 | Or will you take Physick of any Physician whom you trust not, but take him for a deceiver? |
A27004 | Principes terrarum& Barones, arte Diabolicâ edocti, nec curabant Juramenta infringere, nec Fidem violare,& jus omne confundere? |
A27004 | Q. Si divinae Scriptura probationibus sufficiunt, quid necessaria est Religioni fides? |
A27004 | Q. Unde probamus libros Religionis nostrae divina esse in spiratione conscriptos? |
A27004 | Quae autem natio non comitatem, non benignitatem, non gratum animum,& beneficii memorem diligit? |
A27004 | Quae causa est quod serius hyems, aestas, autumnus fiant? |
A27004 | Quae est ei natura? |
A27004 | Quae est illa Justitia sanctos colere,& sanctitatem contemnere? |
A27004 | Quae superbos, quae maleficos, quae crudeles, quae ingratos non aspernatur, non odit? |
A27004 | Quaenam erit ex his ad aeternitatem compensatio? |
A27004 | Qualis est ista philosophia, quae non interitum afferat pravitatis, sed sit contenta mediocritate vitiorum? |
A27004 | Quare Deus natus& passus est? |
A27004 | Qui sancti? |
A27004 | Quid Plato vester in volumine de animae immortalitate? |
A27004 | Quid adeo simile Philosophus& Christianus? |
A27004 | Quid aliud voces hune, quam Deum in humano corpore hospitantem? |
A27004 | Quid dicitis O parvuli? |
A27004 | Quid enim est aliud natura quàm Deus? |
A27004 | Quid enim sumus homines, nisi animae corporibus clausae? |
A27004 | Quid ergo criminaris Deum, tanquam tibi desit? |
A27004 | Quid hoc est? |
A27004 | Quid in deserto loco nactus quem multo auro spoliare possit imbecillum atque solum? |
A27004 | Quid in hac Republica tot tantosque viros ad Rempublicam interfectos cogitasse arbitramur? |
A27004 | Quid inquam tum agimus, nisi animum ad seipsum, aduocamus? |
A27004 | Quid juvat hoc, templis nostros immittere mores? |
A27004 | Quid soboles, virtusque Dei,& sapientia Christus? |
A27004 | Quid ulcus leviter tangam? |
A27004 | Quid visum est ut ante horas pauculas sospitator Christus coeli ex arcibus mitteretur? |
A27004 | Quis est tam vecors, qui cum suspexerit in coelum, Deo, esse non sentiat? |
A27004 | Quis nomen unquam sceleris errori dedit? |
A27004 | Quo cum ab eis insimularetur negligentiae, Quid ergo, inquit, noune vos ista curatis? |
A27004 | Quod est enim majus argumentum nihil eam prodesse, quam quosdam perfectos Philosophos turpiter vivere? |
A27004 | Quod si falsa historia illa rerum est, unde tam brevi tempore totus mundus ista religione completus est? |
A27004 | Quod si inest in hominum genere, mens, fides, virtus, concordia, unde haec in terras nisi à superis diffluere potuerunt? |
A27004 | Quomod ● animae differant:& quomodo sint immortales in form ● propria restantes? |
A27004 | Quomodo ad salutem revocari potest, quem populus impellit,& nullus retrahit? |
A27004 | Quotus enim quisque Philosophorum invenitur, qui sit ita moratus, ita animo ac vitâ constitutus ut ratio postulat? |
A27004 | Remittite haec Deo, atque ipsum scire concedite, quid, quare,& unde sit? |
A27004 | Sed Gegenetis Christus humani( inquitis) c ● nservator advenit cur non omnes aequali munifi ● entia liberat? |
A27004 | Sed haec cadem num censes apud cos iplos valere, nisi admodum paucos à quibus inventa, disputata, conscripta sunt? |
A27004 | Sen. What then may the presence of God do? |
A27004 | Shall God be a Governour and have no Laws? |
A27004 | Shall any man that ever considered the number, magnitude, glory, and motions of the Fixed Stars, object any difficulty to God? |
A27004 | Shall no Subjects honour and obey their King but those that see him? |
A27004 | Should the Horse rule the Rider, or the Rider the Horse? |
A27004 | Sic ille( Strato) Deum opere magno liberat,& me timore: Quis enim potest cum existimet à Deo se curari, non& dies& noctes divinum numen ho ● rere? |
A27004 | So that if the Scripture must have been phrased according to Philosophers terms of art, who knoweth to which Sect it must have been suited? |
A27004 | So that when God hath done all things so, as my very reason is constrained to acknowledge best, what should I desire more? |
A27004 | Suppose that you sleep without a dream? |
A27004 | That any thing existeth besides God can not be known but by sense or history: Have you either of these for those Inhabitants? |
A27004 | That this is very desireable no man can doubt: How gladly would men receive a Letter or Book that dropt from Heaven? |
A27004 | The first thing I studyed was, the Matter of Christianity, What it is? |
A27004 | The learned Gassendus his modesty is sufficient, who if he speak of Occult Qualities, will ask you, What Qualities are not occult? |
A27004 | The success of his doctrine in the Regeneration of his Disciples, and the actual saving them from their sins? |
A27004 | There is history which is false; but is none therefore true? |
A27004 | There is nothing of sensuality in it, that by gratifying a lust of the flesh, might have such an universal effect? |
A27004 | They find a suitableness in God to their highest esteem and love; and are they not as fit Judges for the affirmative, as you for the negative? |
A27004 | They may as well reproach us for Loyalty to our King, because there are secret Traytors, that call themselves his Subjects? |
A27004 | This is but meer perversness? |
A27004 | This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? |
A27004 | To this I answer, 1. Who gave those atoms their ingenite mobility, and how? |
A27004 | To which I answer, Do you deny that a Habit doth it self conduce to future motion, or not? |
A27004 | To whom should we live, but to him from whom and by whom we live? |
A27004 | Ubi gratus, fi non eum ipsum cui referunt gratiam, ipsi cernunt grati? |
A27004 | Vbi igitur aut qualis ista mens? |
A27004 | Vos enim nonne omnes pro illarum geritis incolumitatibus curas ▪ Metus ille vos habet ne velut trabalibus clavis affixi, corporibus haereatis? |
A27004 | Vos in Philosophis virtutes secuti quas estis? |
A27004 | We expect also to hear from them, how Density and Solidity come to be the effects of motion? |
A27004 | Were it any praise to him to be ignorant? |
A27004 | Were it not better lie down and sleep out our days, than waste them all in dreaming waking? |
A27004 | What Party of Christians should we joyn with, or be of, seeing they are divided into so many Sects? |
A27004 | What Party of Christians should we joyn with, or be of, seeing they are divided into so many Sects? |
A27004 | What Prince so just that hath not some rebellious Subject, or some Enemy that seeks his life? |
A27004 | What a Saint doth he make Jamblichus to be? |
A27004 | What a confused loathsome spectacle would the world be? |
A27004 | What a glorious fabrick hath God set man to contemplate? |
A27004 | What a stir doth he first make to keep out the Gospel, that it may not be Preached to the Nations of the World? |
A27004 | What abundance of sects, and voluminous contentions, and tired consuming studies have they caused? |
A27004 | What antecedent Prophesies have foretold us of these mens actions? |
A27004 | What are you to Christians, that we should be reproached for your Villanies? |
A27004 | What blindness and impurity against Nature was in this opinion? |
A27004 | What but our ultimate end should be principally intended, and sought through our whole lives? |
A27004 | What can you think is suitable to your love, if God be not? |
A27004 | What frame of Holy doctrine do they deliver bearing the Image of God, besides so much of Christs own doctrine as they acknowledge? |
A27004 | What have we our tongues for, but to speak of what we know to others? |
A27004 | What have you to do in the World, that hath any weight in the tryal, any content or comfort in the review, or will give solid comfort to a dying man? |
A27004 | What if a Celsus, or Porphiry, or Epicurus had called himself a Christian? |
A27004 | What if a pack of Murderers, Thieves and Rebels, do live together in love, and do one another no harm? |
A27004 | What if your servants be averse and slothful to your service? |
A27004 | What if your wife and children be averse to love you? |
A27004 | What is Nature but the principium motus& quietis? |
A27004 | What is a sufficient or likely motive to restrain that man, or make him just, who believes not any life after this? |
A27004 | What is it that Jesus Christ hath undertaken? |
A27004 | What is it that this addeth to a penitent confession? |
A27004 | What is mans memory( for with bruits we meddle not) but scientia praeteritorum? |
A27004 | What is the Creature to the Creator? |
A27004 | What is the difference in motion that causeth one Creature to love this food, and another that; that one eateth Grass, and another Flesh? |
A27004 | What is there in the World that you are so averse to, as to be seriously that which you professe your selves to be? |
A27004 | What juster Rule can there be than to suit all our actions to the perfect Law of Primitive Justice, and to do as we would be done by? |
A27004 | What made a Nero, a Heliogabalus,& c. such swine? |
A27004 | What man so good that is not maliced by some? |
A27004 | What more effectual principle of Justice can there be, than Charity and Self- denial? |
A27004 | What more necessary to ungodly men( whatever they call themselves) than to convince them that there is a God, and Life to come? |
A27004 | What need I more to prove the Cause than the adequate effect? |
A27004 | What need we more than this? |
A27004 | What say you to all them that are otherwise minded, and that take the Love of God for their work and happiness? |
A27004 | What serious desires, and labours, and joyes, and patience, would such a sight procure? |
A27004 | What shall a presumptuous minde now say to all these difficulties? |
A27004 | What shall make their Covenants obligatory to their consciences, if they be under no government of God? |
A27004 | What the better are all generations past, for all the wealth and fleshly pleasures which they ever received in the World? |
A27004 | What therefore may not be believed in the world? |
A27004 | What think you should be the cause, that sacrificing was thus commonly used in all ages through all the earth, if it savoured but of poetical fiction? |
A27004 | What trust can you put in Wife, or Child, or Servant, or any man that you converse with? |
A27004 | What was it but an Incarnation of a Deity, which they affirmed of Aesculapius and such others? |
A27004 | What would men rather desire to attest the veracity of a Messenger from Heaven, than Miracles: Evident, uncontrolled; multiplyed miracles? |
A27004 | When I find that Christ doth actually save me, shall I question whether he be my Saviour? |
A27004 | When I find that he saveth thousands about me, and offereth the same to others, shall I doubt whether he be the Saviour of the world? |
A27004 | When an Adulterer asked Thales whether he should make a vow? |
A27004 | When did we do any such works our selves? |
A27004 | When he saw in Fairs and Shops what abundance of things are set to sale, he rejoycingly said, Quam multis ipse non egeo? |
A27004 | When themselves divide all things into such as have understanding, and such as have none; of which part do they suppose GOD to stand? |
A27004 | When you see a holy life, what reason have you to question a holy heart? |
A27004 | Whence is it that all opportunities are so strangely fitted to a sinners turn, to accommodate him in his desires and designs? |
A27004 | Whereupon it is that the Schoolmen have questioned how many Angels may sit upon the point of a Needle? |
A27004 | Whether God as the universal cause produce new- metaphysical matter for new forms? |
A27004 | Whether he that taketh a man to be but an ingenuous kinde of Beast, can take it ill to be esteemed as a Beast? |
A27004 | Whether in the multiplication of sensitive souls, there be an addition of substance communicated from the Universal Causes? |
A27004 | Whether millions of Souls since generated, have not more such metaphysical matter, than the soul of Adam and Eve alone? |
A27004 | Whether the Souls of men or bruits, or both, do lose their individuation, and fall into some Vniversal Element of their kinde? |
A27004 | Whether they may not be ten thousand to one? |
A27004 | Whether they operate after death as now? |
A27004 | Whether this difference of magnitude and figure and site, being now antecedently necessary to different motions, was not so heretofore as well as now? |
A27004 | Who can believe that God will torment his creatures in the flames of hell for ever? |
A27004 | Who can believe that the damned shall be far more than the saved? |
A27004 | Who can think now that any Wars are like to make America, or Galilaeus''s Stars unknown again? |
A27004 | Who hate you more than those that are that in heart and life, which you call your selves in customary words? |
A27004 | Who hath mony or an estate, which one or other doth not desire? |
A27004 | Who hath told us any thing of the naked matter or form of fire( such as the Sun and Luminaries are)? |
A27004 | Who should interpose and any way hinder God, from the free disposall of his own? |
A27004 | Whose else should it be? |
A27004 | Why doth not the snow make us as warm as a fleece of wool? |
A27004 | Why doth not the wind make the air alive, and the bellows the fire? |
A27004 | Why else will you love and provide for your own Children, if they be not at all the same that you begat, nor the same this year as you had the last? |
A27004 | Why is fire more active than earth? |
A27004 | Why then is not reason as well as Religion on that account to be rejected? |
A27004 | Why will he make, maintain, and move that which he doth not regard? |
A27004 | Why will you now be so cruel to your own souls, and then call God cruel for giving you your choice? |
A27004 | Will it profit the world to write confutations of such stuff as this? |
A27004 | Will it prove, that you must be loved by it, see it and enjoy it, in the life to come? |
A27004 | Will we follow his example, if we believe him not to be our pattern? |
A27004 | Will we obey him, if we believe not that he is our Lord? |
A27004 | Will you call the consequents of Gods own Wisdom, Justice, Veracity, Goodness,& c. uncertain as coming from a Morali Cause? |
A27004 | Will you learn of Plato or Aristotle, if you believe not that they are fit to be your Teachers? |
A27004 | Will you not believe without miracles, and yet will you not believe them because they are Miracles? |
A27004 | Will you not quickly feel the effect of their opinions? |
A27004 | Will you pretend to prove the Trinity by natural reason? |
A27004 | Will you reward and punish the man that is, or the man that was? |
A27004 | Will you say that he hath done no good, because he made not his Picture sensible, and made not its pleasure his ultimate end? |
A27004 | Would Satan or any evil cause produce so excellent an effect? |
A27004 | Would all the sensual vitious persons in the world be ordered like men, without any Government, by such as are wiser than themselves? |
A27004 | Would not men be better subjects, and better servants, and better neighbours, if they had more Religion? |
A27004 | Would not they lie, and deceive, and steal, and wrong others less? |
A27004 | Would they not say, when did we ever hear your Languages? |
A27004 | Would you be only your selves of this mind, or would you have all others of it? |
A27004 | Would you choose that which you think it is cruelty to inflict? |
A27004 | Would you have me to go further yet? |
A27004 | Would you see Physical Arguments for the Souls Incorporeity and Immortality? |
A27004 | Yea, if it were but one of their old acquaintance from the dead? |
A27004 | You''l say perhaps that the particles in the Steel are all in motion, among themselves: but when will you prove it? |
A27004 | Your own Souls are invisible, will you not therefore love them? |
A27004 | [ Nonne verendum, si est ita ut dicis, ne Philosophiam falsa gloria exornes? |
A27004 | [ Quorsum igitur haec spectat oratio? |
A27004 | [ What shall we say of the Sacrilegious, Perjured, and Ungodly? |
A27004 | ad eos qui dicunt, Quid profuit nobis Filius Dei homo factus? |
A27004 | and Obedience its Reward? |
A27004 | and a Swallow than a Snail? |
A27004 | and according to the nature and use of his reason and all his faculties? |
A27004 | and all Goodness from the Infinite, Eternal Good? |
A27004 | and all because he did no man wrong? |
A27004 | and all your noble faculties and time, that is worthy of a man; or that is not like Childrens games or Poppet- playes? |
A27004 | and at the same time say, It is the first duty of a man that would be wise, to believe no more than by evidence he is forced to? |
A27004 | and because he cured not all others that were sick as well as us? |
A27004 | and can you possibly have narrow thoughts of his Goodness? |
A27004 | and done many wonderfull works? |
A27004 | and fully and perpetually attested by the Spirit of effectual sanctification on Believers? |
A27004 | and greater multitudes of Miracles there mentioned, and believed by the Subjects of the Pope? |
A27004 | and had lived like a Pagan still, and domineered according to his ambition? |
A27004 | and have Laws which are never meant for execution? |
A27004 | and how falsly through partiality? |
A27004 | and how have you satisfied the studious and impartial World herein? |
A27004 | and how little of it is here known? |
A27004 | and how many myriades of such bodies hath God created? |
A27004 | and how much bigger they are than the Earth? |
A27004 | and how much more excellent are the forms or souls than any of those bodies? |
A27004 | and how much more glorious? |
A27004 | and if there were nothing but death and annihilation to restrain men, what Prince, what person, had any security of his life or estate? |
A27004 | and in every Countrey and Age till now? |
A27004 | and in thy Name cast out devils? |
A27004 | and is there not a Government at this day in all the Kingdoms and Common- wealths throughout the world? |
A27004 | and know the cause of all the wonderful effects which you see: and what is this but to know, God? |
A27004 | and let the world sin on with boldness, and laugh at his Laws, and say, God did but frighten us with a few words, which he never intended to fulfill? |
A27004 | and may he not delight in the excellency of it, though you imagine him to have no need of it, or of the delight? |
A27004 | and may not all these people force themselves, like melancholy persons, to conceit that they have that which indeed they have not? |
A27004 | and must I dwell with him for ever? |
A27004 | and must these either satisfie him, or appease his wrath? |
A27004 | and of the series of Kings which have been since then; and of the Statutes which they and their Parliaments have made? |
A27004 | and prove also that the particles are moved by an extrinsick mover only, and have no principle of motion in themselves? |
A27004 | and prove also that they are so in the Lead or Rock that by Gravity inclineth to descent? |
A27004 | and shall I get no nearer him, while I have a Saviour and a Head so near? |
A27004 | and that he may have something to say to those Rulers and People, with whom he would fain make Religion odious? |
A27004 | and that his Laws must command and prohibit, and the sanction contain rewards and punishments? |
A27004 | and that in the Land, the City, the Age, the Year, of the transaction? |
A27004 | and that men should be judged righteously according to their works? |
A27004 | and that motion is all that is necessary to the diversity? |
A27004 | and that none shall disappoint his Purposes, nor make him fall short of any of his Councils or Decrees? |
A27004 | and that nothing can overcome the Power of the Omnipotent? |
A27004 | and that nothing should be unknown to the infinite omniscient Wisdom? |
A27004 | and that they should be moved as men by motives of good or evil to themselves? |
A27004 | and that those are so that are higher than we? |
A27004 | and the devil have more than God? |
A27004 | and to choose the transitory pleasure of sinning, before the endless fruition of his God? |
A27004 | and to preferre the most contemptible vanity before him? |
A27004 | and to them so darkly? |
A27004 | and to your own felicity? |
A27004 | and was not Life and Death offered to your choice? |
A27004 | and what Divine Government is? |
A27004 | and what an inconsiderable moment is it, till it will be so with all the rest? |
A27004 | and what doth constitute them? |
A27004 | and what glorious Beings may inhabit the more glorious Orbs? |
A27004 | and what is the end of it? |
A27004 | and when did we receive such a Spirit?] |
A27004 | and when they are thus compelled, how know you who believeth Christianity indeed? |
A27004 | and when we see many of them oriri& interire daily before our eyes? |
A27004 | and whether he raised Lazarus, and others, from death, who were then living? |
A27004 | and whether the earth trembled, and the vail of the Temple rent, and the Sun was darkned at his death? |
A27004 | and why doth not the Rock as well go upward with the ascending atomes? |
A27004 | and why they act in their various wayes? |
A27004 | and why was the oblation to God contained in the Sacrifice? |
A27004 | and with what brazen- faced impudency the most palpable falshoods in publick matters of fact, are most confidently averred? |
A27004 | and would make more Martyrs, while you keep Festivals of Commemoration of those that others made? |
A27004 | and would not by perjury, or any commanded villany, save himself from their fury and cruelty? |
A27004 | and would not study more to flatter and humour them, than to obey their God? |
A27004 | and yet can you think meanly of the Creator''s Goodness? |
A27004 | and yet shall I know him no better than thus? |
A27004 | answered, Vir probus& moderatus? |
A27004 | as D ● s 〈 ◊ 〉 un ● a ● n? |
A27004 | aut in unam coire quî potuerunt mentem, gentes regionibus disjunctae? |
A27004 | aut libertinus? |
A27004 | aut quam praestat intellectui tarditatem? |
A27004 | aut quid o ● n no, cujus nullum merit m ● t, e ● debere potest? |
A27004 | aut servus? |
A27004 | aut si omnes Athenienses delectarentur tyrannicis legibus, num idcirco hae leges justae haberentur? |
A27004 | besides so many thousands more in Spain and the Low Countreys, by that and other wayes? |
A27004 | besides the number? |
A27004 | but the world suffered to lie so long in ignorance? |
A27004 | can it not heal and perfect this? |
A27004 | can it not prevent the dissolution of it? |
A27004 | do atoms understand or will? |
A27004 | doth it follow that it is not their duty, or that you hired them not for it? |
A27004 | doth matter feel or see as such? |
A27004 | est, ut omnem n ● ox fastum& ambitionem non respuat? |
A27004 | even in the very seeds themselves? |
A27004 | famae negotiator& vitae? |
A27004 | he that judgeth the course and nature of things to be, and have been what he now findeth it, till the contrary be proved? |
A27004 | how great a stress doth he lay upon it? |
A27004 | how many thousands and hundred thousands hath sword, and fire, and inquisition devoured, as for the supporting of Religion? |
A27004 | how small a part of the world hath knowledge or piety? |
A27004 | i d est ipsi nobis? |
A27004 | if it be, why should it not more rule you, and dispose of you? |
A27004 | in comparison of what it is to the other who never saw the light? |
A27004 | in quibus animas asseverat volvi, mergi, exuri? |
A27004 | incomperta vobis& nescia temerariae vocis loquacitate garrientes? |
A27004 | is he my light, and life, and all my hope? |
A27004 | is it lust, or play, or meat and drink and ease? |
A27004 | is it not his essential form? |
A27004 | is it one or multifarious? |
A27004 | is it therefore none of their duty so to do? |
A27004 | may he not create a new Star, or a new Plant or Animal, if he please, without the breaking of any word that he hath spoken? |
A27004 | nor no other way of causation but by motion? |
A27004 | or Subjects of their lives of liberties? |
A27004 | or a greater quantity or degree of matter( physical or metaphysical) propagated and produced into existence by generation, than there was before? |
A27004 | or all the rest of his obedient prosperous subjects? |
A27004 | or by what terms of gradation the souls of millions are distinct from one? |
A27004 | or can you think him less amiable, because he is invisible, that is, more excellent? |
A27004 | or did he not care for the Worlds recovery till the later age, when it drew towards its end? |
A27004 | or doth motion understand or will? |
A27004 | or hath delivered us any such revelation, and told us when, and to whom, and how it was made? |
A27004 | or he that findeth it one thing, and feigneth it sometime to have been another without any proof? |
A27004 | or is it a Law without any Rewards or Penalties? |
A27004 | or is not fully sufficient for you? |
A27004 | or must a man that is not condemned to Stage- playing or Ballad- making, thus waste his time? |
A27004 | or not? |
A27004 | or rather have made them deride the cause that must have such a defence, and say,[ Who be they that work miracles among us? |
A27004 | or rather will you not renounce all these? |
A27004 | or remain without any body of it self? |
A27004 | or shall he have Laws that have no penalties? |
A27004 | or shall he set up a lying scar- crow to frighten sinners by deceit? |
A27004 | or should God have damned all the world according to their desert? |
A27004 | or that a Lethargy intercept your intellectual motion? |
A27004 | or that are serious in the Religion which you say your selves you hope to be saved by? |
A27004 | or that he is certainly able to procure the accomplishment of all his own Will? |
A27004 | or that he should receive that Truth which he doth not yet know, who is false to that which he already knoweth? |
A27004 | or that other business alienate your thoughts? |
A27004 | or that the Messengers of Christ should intreat and perswade men to obey? |
A27004 | or they rather who create these difficulties and dangers to themselves? |
A27004 | or was he delighted in the bloud and sufferings of harmless sheep and other cattel? |
A27004 | or what in the Bird that flyeth about, which is still the same? |
A27004 | or what more do we plead for? |
A27004 | or when did we ever see your Cures and other Miracles? |
A27004 | or whether God in the blessing of multiplication, hath enabled them to increase the quantity of matter which shall serve for so many more forms? |
A27004 | or whether a Power distinct from motion it self, be not as evidently the Cause? |
A27004 | or whether he do it by his own immediate Causation alone without the use of any second Cause, save meer motion it self? |
A27004 | or whether it fabricate to it self an aethereal body? |
A27004 | or why did it not make it self a Body more excellent, more comely, more sound, more clean, and more durable? |
A27004 | or why doth it so much cool us? |
A27004 | or why will you abhorre a Religion which you professe? |
A27004 | or would you perswade us that it is but three of God''s Attributes, or our inadequate conceptions of him? |
A27004 | passion) urgeth me to? |
A27004 | potesne dicere? |
A27004 | qui Religionem colentes, nisi qui meritam Diis immortalibus gratiam, justis honoribus, memori mente persolvunt? |
A27004 | qui disciplinam suam non ostentationem scientiae, sed legem vitae putet? |
A27004 | qui obtemperet ipse sibi,& decretis suis pareat? |
A27004 | quid est in hominis vita diu? |
A27004 | said to an immodest woman, Non vereris mulier, ne forte stante post tergum Deo( cuncta enim plena ipso sunt) inhoneste te habeas? |
A27004 | saith he,[ I rather wonder how you can quiet your Conscience in such a common careless course of life, believing as you do? |
A27004 | secum esse cogimus? |
A27004 | shall I learn no more that have such a Teacher? |
A27004 | shall a sinner refuse his everlasting happiness when it is offered him, and then think to have it, when he can possess the pleasure of sin no longer? |
A27004 | shall not have use of this warning to keep them in their righteousness? |
A27004 | shall that excuse their murders or rebellions, and give them the name of honest men? |
A27004 | so we will not be revengefull and contentious, lest you should say, To what end are Judicatures? |
A27004 | that every seed doth bring forth only its proper species? |
A27004 | that ript up his own Mother, that he might see the place where once he lay? |
A27004 | to be that and do that which never came into your hearts? |
A27004 | to love all men for God, and to account our neighbours welfare as our own? |
A27004 | to the ends that he was made for? |
A27004 | toti mundo partibusque ejus inserta? |
A27004 | ubi aut bene merendi de altero, aut referendae gratiae voluntas, poterit existere? |
A27004 | ubi patriae caritas? |
A27004 | ubi pietas? |
A27004 | ut magis vo ● illis, quam nos Christo oportuerit credere? |
A27004 | utiumne quid leve, an hirsuta cum asperitate promatur? |
A27004 | was God angry? |
A27004 | were you not told of it? |
A27004 | what greater wickedness can man commit, than to deny, despise and disobey his Maker? |
A27004 | what hatred and contention for honour and wealth? |
A27004 | what is the reason that the motus projectorum doth continue? |
A27004 | what is wronging a Neighbour, in comparison of this wrong? |
A27004 | what maketh peace- makers the most neglected men? |
A27004 | what maketh vertue and piety the mark of persecution and of common scorn? |
A27004 | what method we shall preach in? |
A27004 | what place is he moved from, and what place is he moved into? |
A27004 | what pledges hast thou given to my staggering faith, in the words which prayer hath procured, both for my self and many others? |
A27004 | what should he find to do with his understanding? |
A27004 | what then is this Habit? |
A27004 | what though the things seem improbable to us? |
A27004 | what vice or villany doth not every where abound, for all the belief of a life to come? |
A27004 | when did we see an Ananias and Saphira die? |
A27004 | when it is to be denominated from the space which so far exceedeth all the rest as 7600 to one? |
A27004 | whether they will not, return more expert than an Ideot? |
A27004 | which is when you usurp the name of Christians, and joyn in visible communion in the Church? |
A27004 | who can be ignorant what haste Time maketh, and how like the Life of man is to a dream? |
A27004 | who can choose but shake the head, to see wise Philosophers thus impose upon the world? |
A27004 | who did but see, but once see, those unseen and future things, which every Christian professeth to believe? |
A27004 | who durst not deny the Eternity of the World, lest he should make God an unactive Being ad extra, from Eternity till the Creation? |
A27004 | who is it that is cruel to you but your selves? |
A27004 | who? |
A27004 | why did they not choose a more honourable dwelling? |
A27004 | why do not these stop or hinder one another? |
A27004 | why do they all stoop to the service of man, if they are equally excellent? |
A27004 | why do you not rather argue from the doctrine in the sober mean, that it is true; than from the extreams that the truth is falshood? |
A27004 | why doth the Ant take one course, and the Bee another, and the Fly another,& c. what different motions are they that are the cause? |
A27004 | why is one wise, and another foolish or bruitish, and one the Ruler of the other? |
A27004 | why then may not God do so? |
A27004 | will God accept you for a perjured Profession? |
A27004 | will you say, it is because the Soul hath a Beginning? |
A27004 | would Christianity have been ever the worse for that? |
A27004 | would the worst of beings do the best of works? |
A27004 | would you have him do more than this is to disclaim them? |
A27004 | yea, of a battail and other transaction, before the Incarnation of Jesus Christ? |
A27004 | — Nam quis Peccandi finem posuit sibi, quando recepit Erectum semel attrita de fionte ruborem? |
A27004 | — Quae porro pietas e ● debetur, à quo nihil accepe ● is? |
A27004 | — Quid habet ista res aut laetabile aut gloriosum? |
A27004 | ● gitur si semel tristior effectus est, an hilara vita amissa est? |
A27004 | ☞ Whether God or our selves, Virtue or Pleasure be chiefly to be loved? |
A26858 | & c. Which way are all these things to be known? |
A26858 | & c. call the Councils of Nice, Ephesus,& c. or had an Antecedent right to it? |
A26858 | ( About Genuflexions, Milk and Honey, Chrysme, the white Garment?) |
A26858 | ( And doth Church- Unity, Concord, and Salvation, lie on things not necessary to Salvation?) |
A26858 | ( And doth any but the Pope pretend to this Soveraign place)? |
A26858 | ( And hath not God''s fundamental Law as much Power?) |
A26858 | ( Or will they turn Nonconformists?) |
A26858 | ( Who would think that our Bishops or Priests could subscribe to these, and to the 39 Articles, and the Oath of Supremacy also?) |
A26858 | ( and for what)? |
A26858 | ( d) Did the third tye us to the fourth? |
A26858 | ( f) Is it no Obedience unless it be absolute? |
A26858 | ( g) Did Christ make the Subjects of the Roman Emperors perpetual Law- makers to other Princes and all the World? |
A26858 | ( g) This yet is some mercy to us: But is it as your grant? |
A26858 | 1. Who called them to Nice, Ephesus, Chalcedon, Constantinople,& c. out of the Extra- Imperial Countries? |
A26858 | 10. Who, and how many will undertake that task? |
A26858 | 15. to say, Except ye be circumcised and keep the Law of Moses, ye can not be saved? |
A26858 | 2. Who be these Men that make this College? |
A26858 | 2. Who have most increased them? |
A26858 | 2. Who made Pope or Prelates the Representatives of those that never consented to them? |
A26858 | 2. Who shall call them now out of the Empire of the Turk, Abassia, the Mogul, Tartary, and the rest? |
A26858 | 2. Who shall carry them all over the World to procure Votes? |
A26858 | 2. Who shall judge which of them are Hereticks while they hereticate each other? |
A26858 | 2. so Concordant were they all; What have you against even Constance and Basil on your Grounds? |
A26858 | 20. Who must call a valid Council? |
A26858 | 23. Who hath Authority to make Patriarchs now or Metropolitans for all the Christian World? |
A26858 | 3. Who are the greatest Controversie themselves? |
A26858 | 3. Who must choose and make them? |
A26858 | 3. Who shall assure us that their Votes are truly gathered? |
A26858 | 3. Who shall gather the Votes, and Judge of the Majority? |
A26858 | 3. in France, were to be hired over to the King of France, what need he more than that the General or Field Officers Swear fidelity to him? |
A26858 | 4. Who shall bring them from all over the Earth to the person to be judged? |
A26858 | 6. Who be these Patriarchs they talk of? |
A26858 | A Patriarch and Primate hath some degree of Governing Power, or else wherein doth his Primacy consist? |
A26858 | A humble Expostulation to the Zealous Antipapists, Conformists and Nonconformists whether they have been innocent as to promoting Popery? |
A26858 | A humble Expostulation to the zealous Antipapists, Conformists and Nonconformists, whether they are innocent as to promoting Popery? |
A26858 | Alas Sir, is not the whole Bible big enough to make us a Religion? |
A26858 | Alas what abundance of Heresies have been Published since the Six Councils which you own? |
A26858 | Alas, what Work have Hereticators and Anathematizers made in the Church? |
A26858 | All this time( from Laud till now), it is a hard Controversie which of the two Parties is to be called, The Church of England? |
A26858 | And I ask all the Questions before askt of the Laws of Councils: How shall we know which be Current? |
A26858 | And I asked, where shall we find them if they are our Laws? |
A26858 | And Pastors there agreeing, oblige us to obey their true Authority far before a single Pastor''s: For it is Authoritas Doctoris? |
A26858 | And are not altered or corrupted since? |
A26858 | And are the other two more necessary than all the rest? |
A26858 | And are their Priests infallible herein or not? |
A26858 | And are there any Words that Men can not misunderstand? |
A26858 | And are they not then degraded? |
A26858 | And are those Patriarchs of Divine Authority& infallible? |
A26858 | And are you against them there? |
A26858 | And are you not in England for obeying Provincial Councils? |
A26858 | And by whom? |
A26858 | And can I believe the Churches Power from God, without believing the Promise of it? |
A26858 | And can all Christians or Ministers judge of their pretensions? |
A26858 | And can all or any of them know which of these must make up a Legislative Council of the whole Church on Earth? |
A26858 | And can they come from all the Dominions of the Abassines, Armenians, Turks, Persians, Muscovites,& c. And who hath right to call them? |
A26858 | And can they null that Law by their pretended Soveraignty? |
A26858 | And can we all be here resolved? |
A26858 | And can we be sure such are infallible? |
A26858 | And could not one Origen or Jerom tell that better than a General Council of Men that understand not those Tongues? |
A26858 | And do not we know that there is no one common Language which they can use to understand one another as a College? |
A26858 | And do you not yet understand them? |
A26858 | And doth he not Damn the Bishops of all the World then for neglecting their great Duty a thousand years together? |
A26858 | And doth he now seem to deny it? |
A26858 | And for Photius, and for Ignatius? |
A26858 | And have Compacts by we know not who brought us all into the snare of the unpardonable sin? |
A26858 | And how can they know this when Councils and Decrees are so Voluminous; and few Priests know them? |
A26858 | And how can we feign another sence? |
A26858 | And how few( if any) other Names are Subscribed? |
A26858 | And how it was known? |
A26858 | And how knoweth he in great Parishes who are his Communicants, when he knoweth not who or what they are? |
A26858 | And how many Ages will this require? |
A26858 | And how many of these are forsaken by us, yea, and by almost all the Churches? |
A26858 | And how shall we know that the Churches own the Acts of their Delegates, and dissent not( as the Greeks did after the Council of Florence? |
A26858 | And how shall we understand the semper? |
A26858 | And how should it be otherwise? |
A26858 | And how should it when it was never agreed on from the first? |
A26858 | And how their Church- Government( as Described from themselves by Mr. Jurieu) differeth from that which you are for? |
A26858 | And how then do I receive all Scripture from a Council? |
A26858 | And how will this end a Thousand Controversies? |
A26858 | And if I can understand all these Promises without a Council, why may I not understand more? |
A26858 | And if it be for mutable Circumstances, is not every Church or Countrey sufficient for such variable Determinations? |
A26858 | And if it be the Soveraign the question is, Who that is? |
A26858 | And if not all, how shall we know which? |
A26858 | And if so, how narrow is the Power of his magnified little Church? |
A26858 | And if so, is it not a Papal or Antichristian Church that these Foreign Subjects own and are of? |
A26858 | And if so, is it on the Authority of that same Council, or another? |
A26858 | And if the Controversie de nomine be whether a Christian Kingdom as such may be called A CHURCH what pretence have the deniers? |
A26858 | And if the Universal Church have such in all Ages, and that by Christ''s Institution, should we be against it? |
A26858 | And if there have been none these Thousand Years( which must follow their Opinion that end it as the Sixth Council) why should it be new made now? |
A26858 | And if these may undo the Scripture Laws and Institutions, and make other Sacraments and Worship in their stead? |
A26858 | And if they might be called Laws to their proper Subjects, can Usurping Foreigners therefore make us Laws? |
A26858 | And if this threatning reach to every individual, what will become of perjured Church and Kingdom? |
A26858 | And if we took it for a duty before, how can we take the Act of Toleration to be it that must justifie us? |
A26858 | And indeed who else but the Pope should call Universal Councils? |
A26858 | And is all this Historical Knowledge necessary to Salvation, in Learned and Unlearned? |
A26858 | And is any man on Earth so Skilful? |
A26858 | And is every single Bishop infallible; or the Majority only? |
A26858 | And is he a Man that knoweth not how little it is that the wisest know? |
A26858 | And is he no Legislator that maketh but mutable Laws? |
A26858 | And is he not a Monarch though he must Rule by Law? |
A26858 | And is it credible that all the Eastern and Western Churches should be ignorant of them? |
A26858 | And is it more offence to you to hear what you did towards it, than to them and their Flocks to suffer it? |
A26858 | And is it not certain that those next the Antipodes, and remotest Kingdoms, can send but few? |
A26858 | And is it not so in the rest of the VVorld? |
A26858 | And is it the Name of a Roman Bishop, or the Thing that is necessary to the being of an Universal Pastor? |
A26858 | And is not other Princes Authority as necessary in their Dominions? |
A26858 | And is obedience to an unknowable Power necessary to Concord and Salvation? |
A26858 | And is this the way of making Christians? |
A26858 | And may not the same way secure us of the Matter of Fact about the Scripture? |
A26858 | And must a Council from all the Earth be gathered to that Assembly to rebuke such Disorder? |
A26858 | And must every Minister in England determine which of all these is right, because it''s Dr. Guning''s Opinion? |
A26858 | And must the accused and witnesses go through all the World? |
A26858 | And must we Confederate against such Bishops in England? |
A26858 | And must we Unite in this? |
A26858 | And must we condemn God''s Law of Insufficiency to be the Universal Law, that we may come under the Universal Legislation of such men as these? |
A26858 | And must we not believe Gods plain words till a Council repeat them? |
A26858 | And must we not take the Imperial Subjects of Asia, Africa and Europe,( we know not who) for our Fore- fathers in Brittain? |
A26858 | And now can any Man tell which is that Church which he speaketh such wonderful things of? |
A26858 | And now can you tell which is the Church that he is of: Or is there a more notorious Separatist or Schismatick than he? |
A26858 | And on what account is that other to be believed? |
A26858 | And on whose Authority did Christians believe the first 300 years before there was any General Council? |
A26858 | And quo jure? |
A26858 | And shall the Cause be tryed without witnesses, or hearing the defence of the accused? |
A26858 | And shall the Council come to them, or they all go to the Council? |
A26858 | And shall the Majority of these be Rulers of Kings, Bishops and Pastors? |
A26858 | And since them what Council ever was there that could be so known by numbers to be of Authority? |
A26858 | And so Govern England as our Patriarch, and Principium unitatis Vniversalis also? |
A26858 | And that the Captains be subject to the Colonels, and the common Soldiers to them? |
A26858 | And that the Votes were faithfully gathered? |
A26858 | And that the more dangerously, because without any noise or notable alteration, and so without resistance? |
A26858 | And that the question will be only of the Degree of the Popes power, and whether the French sort of Popery be best? |
A26858 | And that these Laws had the Major Vote? |
A26858 | And that these were true Bishops themselves that did it in America, Ethiopia, Armenia, Greece,& c. out of our reach? |
A26858 | And that they are not forged or corrupted since? |
A26858 | And that they opened the Case aright to them? |
A26858 | And that they truly bring us back their Judgments? |
A26858 | And that those Judgments were truly past without hearing what could be said against them? |
A26858 | And the Pope must have a Power to oblige all particulars to come when he calleth them? |
A26858 | And then the Vniversal Church met in a House together, celebrated the Sacrament together,& c. Must they do so now? |
A26858 | And then, are they not guilty of the Damnation of most of the World for not so Preaching to them? |
A26858 | And they will abate you many other things: And must we be Frenchified? |
A26858 | And to defend them against Adversaries? |
A26858 | And to teach the People to know and obey them? |
A26858 | And was it all the Bishops on Earth, or a major part, that wrote these Legislative and Judicial Letters? |
A26858 | And was it only the Church of those Ages that was bound to Govern? |
A26858 | And were not Christians all that while sure that the Scripture was true? |
A26858 | And were they not of the same Faith as now? |
A26858 | And what Councils or other Church Power save the Popes, judged the many Southern and Eastern Countries that revolted? |
A26858 | And what Peace will this hypocrisie keep? |
A26858 | And what a Church will that be that taketh in all Sinners not worse than these? |
A26858 | And what can be more Treasonable by all the Principles of Government? |
A26858 | And what if the later condemn the former, and the next condemn that( as Florence and Pisa, Constance and Basil?) |
A26858 | And what if they had found Ancient Councils Excommunicate some men without the Empire? |
A26858 | And what is it to teach the Truth with authority, but to command and oblige all people to receive the Truth so taught? |
A26858 | And what is the Judiciary Power that they can use? |
A26858 | And what is the perishing and wasting here meant? |
A26858 | And what man can think that a claim is the proof of a title in those Councils which began to transgress the bounds of Civil jurisdiction? |
A26858 | And what means have they to know it but what all other men have? |
A26858 | And what need General Councils be gathered to Condemn such, if we can know the sence of all without them? |
A26858 | And what use is there for the assertion of the later Council, when it''s done already by a former? |
A26858 | And what wonder if they strive most about Religion who value it most? |
A26858 | And what wonder, when there is no other certain Note by which an obliging Council can be known from others? |
A26858 | And what''s all this to do? |
A26858 | And what''s this to an Universal Church Soveraignty? |
A26858 | And when did they ever once Petition any Parliament to reverse the dividing wicked Laws? |
A26858 | And when is it that all Nations that obey not shall utterly perish? |
A26858 | And when it becomes a Controversie who shall judge? |
A26858 | And when the Canon- makers are dead 1000 Years ago, where now is the Ruling Power whose Laws those are? |
A26858 | And where? |
A26858 | And whether by the Law of Nature every Nation have a right of self- defence against open Enemies? |
A26858 | And whether the Book was written for none but a few men that agree not of the sence of it, so near the End of the World?] |
A26858 | And whether their Literae formatae are to be found written? |
A26858 | And whether they are necessary or not, if they are plainly exprest in Scripture what need we a Council to say the same again? |
A26858 | And whether we have now such a College; or is there no Church? |
A26858 | And which is the Church that in all Ages( th ● se thousand years) have had this power? |
A26858 | And whither shall all their collected Votes be carried, and to whom? |
A26858 | And who can believe this? |
A26858 | And who else shall judge Patriarchs, Metropolitans, and National Churches, when they prove Hereticks or Schismaticks? |
A26858 | And who giveth the Pope his Power? |
A26858 | And who is it that dare not do it? |
A26858 | And who knoweth by Majority of Votes, which Years they were in the right? |
A26858 | And who knows to what Councils he will limit this power? |
A26858 | And who shall Govern these several Bishops, if each one be a Supreme? |
A26858 | And who shall Judge? |
A26858 | And who shall an injured Person appeal to from a Tyrannical Metropolitan or National Church, but to the Pope? |
A26858 | And who shall bear their Charges? |
A26858 | And who shall propose and draw up the Laws? |
A26858 | And whose sin is it but the Fathers that depriveth all Infidels Children of Baptism, and so of the benefit of it? |
A26858 | And why are we called to Swear Canonical Obedience? |
A26858 | And why may not the same Means satisfie us about Fundamentals, which satisfieth us about the Integrals of Religion? |
A26858 | And why name you Asia alone? |
A26858 | And will a Call make a General Council, if the Men come not? |
A26858 | And will all these ever meet in Council? |
A26858 | And will not the Turk then choose them, and so be Master of our Religion, and of all the Christian World? |
A26858 | And with what Conscience could the Subjects of Christ have obeyed all the rest of the Usurpers sinful Canons? |
A26858 | And yet could you appeal to Reason, Nature, and common Consent? |
A26858 | And yet did Paul rail when he said, Beware of evil- workers, beware of Dogs, beware of the Concision? |
A26858 | And yet must all needs hear from the Antipodes, or know the Sense of a Humane Soveraign of the World, before they receive them? |
A26858 | And yet what Universal Council, or Literae formatae of all the World, have given us sufficient notice of their Evil? |
A26858 | Antioch: and Cyril by Theodosius threats were brought to confess that they had differed but in Words, and did not know it: Which part was Obligatory? |
A26858 | Are Learned men such miserable Casuists as not to know what Lying, Perjury, Sacriledge, Profaning Baptism, Sinful Excommunicating,& c. are? |
A26858 | Are all Princes under it? |
A26858 | Are all the believers of Popes and Councils themselves infallible, or not? |
A26858 | Are dead Men our Governors? |
A26858 | Are not present Pastors fitter Moderators of their Assembly, than a General Council of dead Men? |
A26858 | Are there not many Horse- Loads of Volumes of Controversies among themselves? |
A26858 | Are these Literae formatae, Legislative, Judicial or Executive? |
A26858 | Are these things indifferent or jesting Matters of small Infirmity? |
A26858 | Are they necessary to tell us that Christ died, rose, ascended because Scripture speaketh it not plain enough? |
A26858 | Are they not Valid upon the Councils making them? |
A26858 | Are they not all turned into Names and Shadows, Condemning one another? |
A26858 | Are they the only means of ending Controversies, 1. Who do end none? |
A26858 | Are those of the Church of England that are not Conformists? |
A26858 | Are we Traytors for not being Traytors? |
A26858 | Are we not beholden to the Universal Presidentship for this concession? |
A26858 | Arimin, Sirmium, Milane, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem, Rome,& c.) how shall we now be sure which err not? |
A26858 | As whether I see the Light or Colours? |
A26858 | B. be a Heretick, or C. D. be a Fornicator,& c. who shall bear the Messengers Charges that must go through the World to all the Bishops to decide it? |
A26858 | But Kings and their Kingdoms may be Criminal: And if private men must obey Authority ▪ or be put to death, so must Kings and Kingdoms? |
A26858 | But are not all we( poor nothings then) obliged on pain of damnation to stand to all that our Fore- fathers did? |
A26858 | But are they indeed his Rulers and Lawgivers, and he their Subject? |
A26858 | But by whom Convocated? |
A26858 | But do these words prove that this is true? |
A26858 | But fraudulent Disputers will dissemble, and silently pass by that which they can not answer: But will that be Peace to Conscience in the End? |
A26858 | But have I said half so ill by them, as they said by one another? |
A26858 | But here you leave us utterly in the dark: What mean you here by[ the Church] and what by[ its publick Acts?] |
A26858 | But how shall any man know that ab omnibus& ubique without more Knowledge of the World than Drake or Candish had, or any Traveller? |
A26858 | But how shall we know who constitute this Voting Society which you call the Church? |
A26858 | But if it be done, must new ones be called to the end of the World, to say the same thing over again, and do that which others had done before them? |
A26858 | But if it be only points not Necessary, a Council can not make that necessary which God made not so? |
A26858 | But if it be only the Sound Part that hath this Universal Government, how can I, and all Men know which, and who that is? |
A26858 | But if the Apostolick Succession prove not such a Soveraignty, will not the Antient General Councils do it? |
A26858 | But if this had been true( as it is not) which you say, How shall all Christians know it to be true? |
A26858 | But is not that as true of a Councils Words, as of the Creed? |
A26858 | But is not the common Protestant way( which you call Chillingworth''s) much surer? |
A26858 | But is the Church of England yet delivered from all the Inclination to a Foreign Jurisdiction, and the French Government? |
A26858 | But is the Nature of the Covenant- Benefits, Duties,& c. so easily known as he talks? |
A26858 | But it''s downright Popularity or Democracy of the worst sort; And can such men cry down Republicans? |
A26858 | But must the Church still suffer so much by its zealous Friends? |
A26858 | But say you, It is but mutable Laws that they make? |
A26858 | But specially what be the words of God here meant which express this undoubted certainty? |
A26858 | But that''s a Name of Comparative Order? |
A26858 | But they contradict and condemn each others Laws? |
A26858 | But what Universal Laws were made by Literae formatae? |
A26858 | But what call they the Church of England but that part of the Clergy who conform to the Laws: And did not the Law- makers understand the Laws? |
A26858 | But what if they declare the contrary? |
A26858 | But what if you mean but the Major Vote of Bishops? |
A26858 | But what is your proof? |
A26858 | But what will now become of all the Papists that( by dispensation) come in to Protestant Churches? |
A26858 | But when it cometh to Practice( in Councils or out) how small a part have any but the Bishops? |
A26858 | But while the Clergy hath no power of the Sword, who will feel such Penalties? |
A26858 | But who giveth the Bishops their Power? |
A26858 | But why should he think that we must take his word for this difference and the Prelatical Donation instead of Ministry? |
A26858 | But would you think what a stress this Humane Catholick layeth on innovating Prelates Compacts? |
A26858 | But yet all Baptized Infants may be saved? |
A26858 | By this we see what the Protestant Church of England must be? |
A26858 | By what Authority do they the first? |
A26858 | By what Evidence doth a Council know the Scripture to be God''s Word? |
A26858 | Can I believe the Promise of Pardon and Salvation, or the Promise made to General Councils or Prelates, without knowing the meaning of those Promises? |
A26858 | Can I know that Pope or Council have Authority given them by Christ, before I believe that Christ is Christ, and had Authority himself? |
A26858 | Can all Men and Women rest on things no better known to them? |
A26858 | Can they judge truly without hearing the accused and their witnesses? |
A26858 | Can they that are unlearned and never see a Bishop, tell whether the Parish Priest and the Bishop say the same? |
A26858 | Can this Supreme Colledge speak the Fundamentals plainlier than God hath done, and than the Parish Priest can do? |
A26858 | Can you tell me how to be sure whether the College be more for it or against it at this day? |
A26858 | Cheat not Magistrates to be your Lictors, and Cursing will go round as Scolding at Billingsgate? |
A26858 | Christ I know and Paul I know should be heard, but who are this one Universally ruling College for me to to hear? |
A26858 | Christ never bound them to go to every Nation or Person in the World; else how greatly had they sinned? |
A26858 | Christ will decide them all at the Great approaching Judgment: And is there any on Earth that can decide them all? |
A26858 | Could all the Christians in America, Africa, Asia and Europe know that the major Vote of the Apostles met at Jerusalem had thus or thus decided? |
A26858 | Could they think us so mad as to suffer Jails and Ruine and Scorn( and Death to many,) for known Schism? |
A26858 | Council but what the recorded Acts do tell us? |
A26858 | Council did in Nazianzens case) are both the sides infallible or authoritative? |
A26858 | Deposing Ministers, and Anathematizing the Laity? |
A26858 | Did Councils only receive the old Apostles Creed, when they made so many new ones, or added so many Articles? |
A26858 | Did I not still profess to you to speak only of this? |
A26858 | Did ever Council or College determine which is the truest Translation? |
A26858 | Did ever Council or College give the Church a Commentary on the Bible? |
A26858 | Did ever the Presbyterians or Independents say, that All Christians on Earth must Govern the whole Church ▪ in one Meeting ▪ or by Delegates? |
A26858 | Did he never read the late Act of Parliament in Scotland, that asserts all Church- Power in Exteriors to be in the King? |
A26858 | Did he not know where he lived? |
A26858 | Did it cease at Charles the Great''s time? |
A26858 | Did not Apostles and other Preachers singly convert men( even thousands) before there was any General Council? |
A26858 | Did not every Baptizer expect a Profession of the Creed? |
A26858 | Did the Catholick Church die or cease after the sixth General Council? |
A26858 | Did the Pope or his Bishops intend them any against himself? |
A26858 | Did they not set him up in the beginning, and pull him down at the end? |
A26858 | Did this reading Man never hear of the Claim of Princes to call Councils in their Dominions? |
A26858 | Did your other Councils add any Decrees to the first? |
A26858 | Dimissa sunt ei peccata, an non sunt dimissa? |
A26858 | Do all here and in other Churches worship only versus Orientem? |
A26858 | Do not the Subscriptions of the Antient Councils shew that they were General only as to the Roman Empire, and not to all the World? |
A26858 | Do some Bishops first make Laws for all the World, and then the rest consent, or only for their own Churches? |
A26858 | Do these Men believe that all Infidels and Hypocrites shall be saved if they die as soon as they are Baptized? |
A26858 | Do they meet to Consent, or do they not? |
A26858 | Do they represent the Laity? |
A26858 | Do you all forbear, and forbid Adoration Kneeling, on any Lord''s Day, or any Week Day between Easter and Whitsunday? |
A26858 | Do you anoint them as they did, and cross them with the Ointment? |
A26858 | Do you dip them over head in Water? |
A26858 | Do you exorcise them? |
A26858 | Do you give them to taste Milk and Honey? |
A26858 | Do you indeed think that[ One] and[ Two] are words that have but one signification? |
A26858 | Do you keep the Memorial of Martyrs at their Graves as then they did? |
A26858 | Do you not too hardly censure the Church of England as Schismatical? |
A26858 | Do you now clothe the Baptized anew in White? |
A26858 | Do you take the Major part of your Congregation to be your Governours? |
A26858 | Do you think that none of your Readers will see how much you here overthrow or give up your Cause? |
A26858 | Do you think this is true? |
A26858 | Do you use their Bones and relicts as they did? |
A26858 | Do you wonder that this Man Conformeth not? |
A26858 | Do your Bishops only make that Chrysme? |
A26858 | Doth he not confess now that God''s Law may give the Power, which men may not alter, but only determine of the Person to receive it? |
A26858 | Doth he prove a word of this? |
A26858 | Doth not Mr. D. oft say, that the Body is the seat of Power, and so giveth it? |
A26858 | Doth not every Conformist Subscribe to the Articles of Religion, which say, that General Councils may not be called but by the Will of Princes? |
A26858 | Eligant quod volunt — si dimissa dixerint, quomodo ergo spiritus sanctus disciplinae effugerit fictum? |
A26858 | Else why do not you now practise accordingly? |
A26858 | Even of the first at Nice, how long did three Popes contend about it with the African Bishops? |
A26858 | Even that which the Thousand years shall have? |
A26858 | Excommunicating is their destroying work: But the Heathen and Infidel Nations are not to be Excommunicated? |
A26858 | For it is no small number of Bishops that are in the Mahometans Dominions? |
A26858 | For must they all agree that their acts may be valid in Legislation or Decisive Judgment, or must it be a Major Vote? |
A26858 | Had every one a Governing Power to whom the Apostles commanded with such not to eat, nor bid them good speed? |
A26858 | Hath Christ given any new commands since those which he sent the Apostles to deliver? |
A26858 | Hath any Council or College yet Decreed which are the true and current Copies of the Original of the Scripture? |
A26858 | Hath no King or Parliament a right to call a Convocation in England? |
A26858 | Hath the King no power but as a Representative? |
A26858 | Hath the Pope the Calling Power? |
A26858 | Hath this been the way to Convert the World? |
A26858 | Have I not proved the Ambiguity, and the Misunderstanding of each other in too many? |
A26858 | Have I not proved to you that Nestorius denied two Persons? |
A26858 | Have I said so much against that at Chalcedon as the many Councils that anathematized them did? |
A26858 | Have not Councils differed about the Canonical Books of Scripture? |
A26858 | Have these Pretenders yet ended Controversies? |
A26858 | Have they not as much need of Government as Presbyters? |
A26858 | Have they yet written any Infallible or Determining Commentary on the Bible? |
A26858 | Have you any more of his commands to give us than the Apostles delivered in their times? |
A26858 | He calleth Councils, Precedeth,& c. And if he can not command Archbishops, how can they command Bishops? |
A26858 | He denieth Communion with any part of the Roman Church( Doth Dr. Saywell do so?) |
A26858 | He inferreth Toleration while he denieth it, in that he is against putting us to Death: How then will he hinder Toleration? |
A26858 | He was angry at the Argument fetcht from the incapacity of an Universal King or Civil Senate; But why? |
A26858 | His Proof of my Slander is mostly by way of question; Where did I say this or that? |
A26858 | How are they forced to fall under the reproach of Schismaticks? |
A26858 | How can I obey a Power that acteth not? |
A26858 | How can Subjects preserve( their due Subordination to their Superiours) if they practice differently? |
A26858 | How can our Church Governours censure, and cast out any others that be not greater Sinners than these men whom they would draw in? |
A26858 | How can they represent those that never choose them? |
A26858 | How can we obey a Power that is not? |
A26858 | How can we prove that ever any went over all the World to them? |
A26858 | How commonly did they that were for, and against the Chalcedon Council, Excommunicate each other: And those that were for and against Images? |
A26858 | How few Councils were ever so great as that at Basil? |
A26858 | How great is their guilt if they are bound to do it, and will not? |
A26858 | How happy had it been for the Church, if there had been no Hereticating or Anathematizing but for violating Scripture, Doctrine and Law impenitently? |
A26858 | How impossible a thing do you make Church Union to be? |
A26858 | How is Gods Law sufficient in s ● o Genere, if it leave out that which is to be commanded to all the World of Christians? |
A26858 | How is Mans Universal Legislative Power proved,( any more than an Universal Civil Soveraignty?) |
A26858 | How is he the Principium, if he have no more Power than the rest? |
A26858 | How is this then a belief of Councils? |
A26858 | How know we what Curses are valid, when General Councils have cursed per Vices almost all the Christian World? |
A26858 | How know we which Councils to believe when so many condemned one another? |
A26858 | How little difference is it to us, whether e. g. Image- worship, Transubstantiation or any Sin be commanded us by a Council, or by the Pope? |
A26858 | How many Canons in the Six Councils can I name which do not now bind us? |
A26858 | How many Messengers must there be to go into all the World? |
A26858 | How many Millions of Criminals will a Bishop have to hear at once, or Judge? |
A26858 | How many Years will it be after a Council before we can know whether all or most of the Christian World receive it? |
A26858 | How many there must be? |
A26858 | How many things then must we refuse to believe, which are plainly exprest in Scripture? |
A26858 | How much more will Papists be more dangerous among us, than without our Churches? |
A26858 | How proveth he that we Brittains are under such Compacts, when our Ancestors( and the Scots) renounced Communion with the Romanists? |
A26858 | How shall all Christians know that they are truly gathered? |
A26858 | How shall all the distant World be sure the Votes were truly taken? |
A26858 | How shall lawful Councils be known from unlawful, if none have Authority to call, approve, and difference them? |
A26858 | How shall we be sure that the Canons bind us till Adrian''s time, and not since? |
A26858 | How shall we be sure that the Council of one Nation or Empire is Ruler of all the other Kingdoms of the World? |
A26858 | How shall we be sure that the minor part are not in the right? |
A26858 | How shall we be sure that they truly state all the Cases to them? |
A26858 | How shall we be sure when they come home that they have truly taken the Votes? |
A26858 | How shall we be sure? |
A26858 | How shall we know which we must obey? |
A26858 | How then could they be known by your Rule? |
A26858 | How then shall the people know what Councils as such are so received? |
A26858 | How then shall we know the Sense of all the rest of the S. Scriptures? |
A26858 | How will this stand with all that you have written for the continued Universal Legislative Church? |
A26858 | How, and by whose Call, and where and when? |
A26858 | I am a Stranger to Abassia, Armenia, Georgia, India, Russia, Mexico,& c. And what if I never knew that there are such Countries in the World? |
A26858 | I confess that Dr. Saywell sayeth well; If single persons must be punished, shall not Nations also? |
A26858 | I do but recite his words and the History? |
A26858 | I know that the Papists appropriate that title to the Clergy? |
A26858 | I know those that have read or heard such books as these, that have said, How have we misunderstood the Papists? |
A26858 | I pray tell us whether the French be Papists? |
A26858 | I provoke him again to answer my proof against Terret, that they were the Compacts but of one Empire? |
A26858 | I would know, whether it be only the Scripture, or also our Christianity and Creed, which must be received as from a Soveraign Church- Power? |
A26858 | I. Humfrey''s, as derogating from the Regal Power, when yet I abhord such a derogation as your Majority of the Society? |
A26858 | If Church and State should openly be perjured, who can expect that all Individuals should stick at it? |
A26858 | If I must first know the said Church Authority before I receive the Scripture, how shall I know it? |
A26858 | If a Lay- man should know but one part of the Councils Decrees about Faith or Obedience, will such a defective half Faith and Obedience save him? |
A26858 | If at any time no meeting were ascertained, the Government would be dissolved? |
A26858 | If but part, which part, and who, and where shall we find them? |
A26858 | If by some fore- known Character of Infallibility, what is it? |
A26858 | If calling Men make the Council Universal though they come not, is it a Council if none come? |
A26858 | If his may be given by Divine Charter without a Humane Donor, but a meer Invester, why may not a Presbyters? |
A26858 | If in the Patriarchs and Metropolitans they are divided, and account each other sometime Hereticks, and sometime Schismaticks? |
A26858 | If it be Causes and not Persons that they must judge, what are they if they be no Persons Causes? |
A26858 | If it be in all the Bishops of the Earth, 1. Who shall go to them all over the World with all our Church cases? |
A26858 | If it be not Legislation but Judicature that we must have an Universal Judge or Power for, what are the Cases that they must Judge? |
A26858 | If it be not always so in General Councils( as the Articles of our Church say) how much less in the diffusive Body of People or Clergy? |
A26858 | If it be only as to time past, then how knew they that lived in the first Age, how long their Customs would continue? |
A26858 | If it be whole Churches that are to be judged, will not a brotherly power of disowning their Communion serve, without a Governing Power? |
A26858 | If it be, where is the Visible Constitutive Supremacy or Power? |
A26858 | If it come all to one in the effect, why do you contend for so much more in the Cause? |
A26858 | If it must be but to make a General Law to forbid it, that''s done already in Scripture and in Nature: And must the World meet to do it again? |
A26858 | If it were spoken of the other present Prophets, what''s this to Men that are no Prophets, and that are dead 1000 Years ago? |
A26858 | If it were, who were they? |
A26858 | If none, why would they silence and damn us all for not obeying that which is not? |
A26858 | If not, then they are no Supream Rulers that have no Legislative Power? |
A26858 | If not, what need of believing any thing as theirs? |
A26858 | If not, why may I not take Bread to be Bread, and Wine to be Wine, on the credit of my senses, though the Bishops or Council say the contrary? |
A26858 | If not, why may not the Canon of Scripture be known( yea much better) by meer Historical Tradition and inherent Evidence? |
A26858 | If of all, is such a Council possible, or lawful? |
A26858 | If of another, must the Church suspend its belief of one Council till ano ● her is called to attest it? |
A26858 | If of part, who shall chuse them? |
A26858 | If of the same, then must every Council, even the Heretical, be so believed, or which, and how known? |
A26858 | If only between Councils; have they a Legislative Power, or only the Judicial and Executive? |
A26858 | If sedente Concilio, which of them is Supream? |
A26858 | If so, How did that former Council know it? |
A26858 | If so, their Laws are dead a thousand years; and we can not disobey or obey dead men: Therefore why do you press us to obey their Laws? |
A26858 | If so, then we owe no Obedience to their Laws, but to their Sentence according to Christ''s Law: How then is obeying them the only way of Concord? |
A26858 | If so, why must we needs obey the six Councils that were 1000 Years ago, under another Prince? |
A26858 | If the College of Bishops be their Successors, are they bound to that Work in uno Collegio, which the Apostles did each one apart? |
A26858 | If the Empire of Abassia have but one Bishop( the Abuna) shall that Empire have but one Vote in Councils, and be ruled by the rest? |
A26858 | If the Letters in the Caballa and other History be credible, how great a hand had G. Duke of Buckingham in making the Church of England in his days? |
A26858 | If the Question be, Whether our Statutes were really made by those Kings and Parliaments whose Names they bear? |
A26858 | If the change must be in the Protestants, what is it that they must change? |
A26858 | If the former, where are their Laws to be found? |
A26858 | If the former, where shall they meet to Vote? |
A26858 | If the use of your Ruling Church ended so long ago, why doth not the Church end? |
A26858 | If there be, where and what is the Pars regens, the constitutive visible Supremacy? |
A26858 | If these Oaths be sinful, why were they imposed? |
A26858 | If they do and must, when, where, how? |
A26858 | If they had agreed but of the vulgar Latin, would Sixtus 5th and Clemens 8th, have Published Editions so vastly different? |
A26858 | If they had, how could the Bishops have known but from the Apostles themselves what Christ Commanded? |
A26858 | If they have, are not their Decrees and Writings God''s Word, and equal to the Scriptures? |
A26858 | If they never did it yet, when will they do it? |
A26858 | If those few that are sent do that which the rest at home dissent from, is it valid? |
A26858 | If thousands were then made Christians without the knowledge of Councils or College, may they not be so now? |
A26858 | If to Councils, to whom must we appeal from disagreeing Councils? |
A26858 | If to the whole Church on Earth, how shall we hear from them and know their mind? |
A26858 | If we must appeal from particular Pastors, to whom is it? |
A26858 | If we must believe Scripture on the credit of Councils, must we not also believe which Councils are true upon the credit of Councils? |
A26858 | If yea, why not others? |
A26858 | If you know that all the Bishops of the World receive any Doctrine or Practice as needful or good, will not you do so too? |
A26858 | If you say it''s only Scripture, why may we not receive the Scripture otherwise, if we may otherwise receive our Christianity, Creed and Baptism? |
A26858 | If you say they erred, I grant it: and how shall we know that none of the Six did so? |
A26858 | If, yea, are they not bound in uno Collegio, to Preach to all the Heathen World? |
A26858 | In preserving these Laws and Doctrines of Christ? |
A26858 | In voto quod ejus nomen praeferebat an veritus est haec 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 profiteri? |
A26858 | Indeed if Princes will make themselves Subjects to a Council or Pope, who can hinder them? |
A26858 | Is Christ no Head at all? |
A26858 | Is it a Divine Faith that is resolved thus into the meer belief of Man; yea, of an Ignorant Priest or Prelate? |
A26858 | Is it a necessary Supream Legislative and Judicial Power? |
A26858 | Is it all that are in the Parishes? |
A26858 | Is it all the Council agreeing, or the major Vote against the rest that hath the credit or authority aforesaid? |
A26858 | Is it by Scripture, Reason or Authority of Councils themselves, that we must Judge? |
A26858 | Is it by other Councils Testimony? |
A26858 | Is it not ad Curam Animarum?] |
A26858 | Is it not by History and not Church Power that we know what Popes have been at Rome, what Councils have been called, and what they decreed? |
A26858 | Is it not contrary to the Oath of Canonical Obedience? |
A26858 | Is it not known that it is the Excellency and Merit of our Clergy to be obedient to the Kings Will? |
A26858 | Is it only Communicants? |
A26858 | Is it only by the Testimony of a former Council? |
A26858 | Is it only the uncertain relicts of all these? |
A26858 | Is it the King and Parliament that they represent? |
A26858 | Is it the King of the Church or the People that must be obeyed? |
A26858 | Is it the sin against the Holy Ghost, and unpardonable, not to despise Christ''s Laws, and not to obey the Devil? |
A26858 | Is it to every Christian, or to every Bishop? |
A26858 | Is it to make new Universal Laws? |
A26858 | Is none due to God above Man? |
A26858 | Is not Gods plain words intelligible, as well as theirs? |
A26858 | Is not the Law the Rule of Duty and Judgment? |
A26858 | Is not the word[ Prelate] purposely put in to exclude that Power hence which Prelates claim? |
A26858 | Is that of Pope or Councils neither Ecclesiastical nor Spiritual? |
A26858 | Is that our thankfulness to God? |
A26858 | Is the Church no Church in the long intervals of Councils? |
A26858 | Is the Church now Governed by One Aristocracy, that is, per Optimates that are One Persona Politica by Vote ruling all the Christian World? |
A26858 | Is there now a visible Catholick Church, or is there none? |
A26858 | Is there one of a hundred thousand that knoweth it? |
A26858 | Is this College of Pastors to Rule while General Councils sit, or but in the intervals? |
A26858 | Is this impartiality? |
A26858 | Is this like the Law of Christ? |
A26858 | Is this the way of Peace? |
A26858 | It is against the Essence of the Government of this Kingdom? |
A26858 | It is not so in any one Kingdom or National Church yet known in the World, no not the World; And what is the whole but the Parts Conjunct? |
A26858 | It may be questioned, What is the Law of Nature? |
A26858 | It was but rational, over their own Subjects: What Power had they over others? |
A26858 | It''s a question considerable, whether England be a Protestant Church or not, if it have a Papist King? |
A26858 | Kingdoms have been engaged in War by it against each other? |
A26858 | Majority abroad? |
A26858 | May not 1000 Years time, and another King''s Government make a Change in the Matter and Reason of the Law? |
A26858 | May not Princes renounce Communion with Neighbour Princes and Nations without being their Governour? |
A26858 | Might not one in Armenia have been as truly called the Bishop of Rome? |
A26858 | Must a General Council( or this College) consist of all the Bishops of the World, or but of part? |
A26858 | Must accused Persons and Witnesses travel all over the World to be Judged? |
A26858 | Must all good Christians be so great Historians as to know what Ceremonies have been used in all Ages by the Major part? |
A26858 | Must all the World come before all the World? |
A26858 | Must he not be Patriarch of the West? |
A26858 | Must he not be President? |
A26858 | Must it respect all time to come? |
A26858 | Must not he call the Councils? |
A26858 | Must not his Law be undorstood? |
A26858 | Must not this be by an undeniable Miracl ●? |
A26858 | Must they be so Skill''d in Cosmography, as to know what Countries make the Major part? |
A26858 | Must they have so good intelligence of former Affairs, as to know who have now the greater Vote in Councils and out of them? |
A26858 | Must we be able to confute their pretensions of Antiquity and Custom as to all these? |
A26858 | Must we have new Councils to deliver us again the same Creed and Bible? |
A26858 | Must we know what the Council or spacious College saith, before we believe the Creed, Lord''s Prayer, and Ten Commandments? |
A26858 | Must we needs know what sense perceiveth, by the credit of a General Council or all the Bishops of the World? |
A26858 | Must we now obey the major part of the old Patriarchal Seats? |
A26858 | Nay, what will you say if after all he be half an Independent? |
A26858 | Nazianzen saith? |
A26858 | Nazianzen, and in the end was against him? |
A26858 | No, nor King and Lords to obey the Major part of the House of Commons? |
A26858 | Nor Mayors and Bailiffs be bound to obey the Major part of the Cities and Corporations? |
A26858 | Nor any of the Protestants Confessions or Divines? |
A26858 | O how happy a Church do you Dream of? |
A26858 | O what a vafricious sort of men do sometime appropriate the Name of the Church? |
A26858 | Oh that these Law- makers would keep Christ''s Laws? |
A26858 | Only, as invidious? |
A26858 | Or are only transmitted to all the World by Memory? |
A26858 | Or are these no Societies? |
A26858 | Or are they none of the Church? |
A26858 | Or can the Church be a thousand years without its Supreme Government? |
A26858 | Or do their Critical Writers send us to the College or Council to know? |
A26858 | Or do they think that none such may be and are, Baptized? |
A26858 | Or do you also Condemn them as Schismaticks for about 300 Years after the Nicene Council? |
A26858 | Or do you not wonder that those Subscribe and are called Protestants that are of his Mind? |
A26858 | Or hath the Church had one Form of Government for 200 or 300 Years, and another for all the other 1300? |
A26858 | Or how differeth it from Gods? |
A26858 | Or is any other Person or Court capable of Governing all Christians on Earth? |
A26858 | Or is the King and Parliament no Part of the Church of England? |
A26858 | Or must all believe the report of every single Pastor? |
A26858 | Or our Emperors or Kings? |
A26858 | Or the Diocesan Churches of Eli, of Norwich, of Oxford,& c. while Dr. Guning, Dr. Sparrow, Dr. Parker,& c. were Bishops? |
A26858 | Or the Judgments they past on any Persons after exploration? |
A26858 | Or the Major part of the Diocess to Rule the Diocesane? |
A26858 | Or the Western Nations in their various Changes and Crimes? |
A26858 | Or to that Empire when it''s dissolved? |
A26858 | Or was it by the Argument of Universal Consent that every one then was converted? |
A26858 | Or what Councils we may be sure are General or what not? |
A26858 | Or whether the greater part be for them or against them? |
A26858 | Or whether their Bishop be of the same Mind with the other Bishops? |
A26858 | Our Canons condemn those who deny the Convocation to be the Representative Church? |
A26858 | Our Question is, Whether any, or all the Extra- Imperial Churches had Bishops in those Councils, or were there represented, yea or ever called? |
A26858 | Paul saith, What have we to do to judge them that are without? |
A26858 | Pogonatus his sixth( or seventh) Council? |
A26858 | Principium Vnitatis? |
A26858 | Protestants have too often advantaged Popery, by ill answering the Question, Where was your Church before Luther? |
A26858 | Put doth any of all this belong to the Bishops? |
A26858 | Quid dicam? |
A26858 | Reader, is here one word of the certain undoubted Salvation of dying baptized Infants without exception? |
A26858 | Reader, is it not a shame to confute such Dreams? |
A26858 | Readers, Did you think till Experience told you that England had had such Clergy men? |
A26858 | Shall Kings, Parliament and Magistrates be bound to obey the Major part of the Kingdom? |
A26858 | Shall Millions of Sinners be unjudged till all the Bishops of the World Judge them? |
A26858 | Shall he not choose the Place and Time? |
A26858 | Shall the same Men urge all to take them, and then say, You may break them as being sinful? |
A26858 | Shall they Vote and Judge without ever consulting each other, and hearing what be said on every side? |
A26858 | Shall we, till we know the Major Vote of all Bishops on Earth, suspend our Obedience? |
A26858 | Shew me any Literas formatas of all Bishops in the World before the Council of Nice, yea, or ever since to this day? |
A26858 | Should I think he had quite forgotten all this? |
A26858 | Si in isto ficto remissionem operatus est peccatorum? |
A26858 | Suppose I were mistaken — why should they take it ill to be warned of a danger? |
A26858 | Sure it is not whether John or Thomas shall be judged capable of Baptism? |
A26858 | Tell me not of their Mass, and other Corruptions? |
A26858 | Tell us how to know the Councils that we must obey from all the rest? |
A26858 | Tell us then who shall? |
A26858 | Tertullian, Cyprian, Hierom, Augustin,& c? |
A26858 | The Bishops swear their Clergy to them,( though old Canons condemned it:) Loose this Bond, and what are Societies? |
A26858 | The Council is above them: Do they give them their Power? |
A26858 | The Inferior hath not Power to give to the Superior: Who then but a Pope can give Patriarchs and Metropolitans their Power? |
A26858 | The Question is, Who must be the Presenters? |
A26858 | The continuance of the Question so oft answered[ How shall Controversies be ended? |
A26858 | The same Arguments forementioned confute it? |
A26858 | Their dislike is scandal taken; but the quitting of that which is right for their satisfaction should be the scandal given: Whether is the worse? |
A26858 | Then the Parish Priest of one place will have a Church of one sort, and another of another sort? |
A26858 | Then what Religion was the Diocesan Church of Gloucester, while Godfrey Goodman was Bishop? |
A26858 | Then, none can know his Duty till the End of the World? |
A26858 | Theodoret, Isidore, Pelusiota, Socrates and Sozomen,& c. make him, how partial were his Admirers? |
A26858 | Therefore none but Christ had now an Universal Legislative Power? |
A26858 | Therefore the doubt between Dr. Pierce and me is, What is Popery? |
A26858 | They are disagreed which be their Canons? |
A26858 | They have no way to give the World any satisfactory certainty who is Pope, and who not: How then can the World be ruled by him? |
A26858 | They must utterly perish that obey not a Governing Universal Soveraignty? |
A26858 | This is very cautelously spoken: Is it only Fundamentals that they are to expound by Soveraign Judgment? |
A26858 | To deny Canons to be Laws: And then what is their Churches Legislative Power? |
A26858 | To make them the rule of their Communion by the exercise of the Keys? |
A26858 | V. And who else shall be the stated Judge of new started Controversies? |
A26858 | VVhat Council abrogated the 20th Nicene Canon against Kneeling on the Lord''s Day in adoration? |
A26858 | VVhen it is so plain that Christ did set Twelve above Seventy, and kept up the number by Matthias? |
A26858 | VVhen they have Excommunicated the King, will not the Subjects the more dishonour him, if they take the Excommunicators Power to be Supreme? |
A26858 | VVho knoweth not how much the Government and Peace of the State will depend on the Government of such an Universal Church Governor? |
A26858 | VVill a Power of Governing never exercised serve for a Thousand Years last, and 300 before, and not for the other 300? |
A26858 | Was Gregory Nazianzen a Fool, that spake so much of the hurt that Councils do, and resolved never to go to more? |
A26858 | Was Moses so to Aaron, or Solomon to Abiathar? |
A26858 | Was it Anti- Episcopal Presbytery which the King''s Declaration 1660 determined of? |
A26858 | Was it not Constantine that called the first General Council at Nice? |
A26858 | Was not that Church Papal before there were any Jesuites? |
A26858 | Was not the Bible received before there was a General Council? |
A26858 | Was the Church no Church, or ungoverned for the first 300 years when there was no General Council? |
A26858 | We differ about the sence of the Words Imposed, and of the Law and Canons: And then how should we know who is the Sinner? |
A26858 | Weeds are not suffered in a Garden: But in the Commons who pulls them up? |
A26858 | Were not the Canons of 1640. cast out even by your own long Parliament? |
A26858 | Were not the Schoolmen Prelatical enough? |
A26858 | Were our Brittish Churches, and the Scottish no Churches? |
A26858 | Were the Gospels written by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John received only by the Argument of the Councils or Colleges Authority? |
A26858 | Were they his Body or Church first themselves, or not? |
A26858 | Were you ever in Ethiopia, Syria, Armenia, Georgia, Circassia, Mengrelia, and in all the Greek Churches? |
A26858 | What Authority had the Roman Emperors to call Bishops out of other Princes Dominions? |
A26858 | What Changes have the Majority oft made? |
A26858 | What Men be they that have given these Patriarchs this Power? |
A26858 | What Nation under Heaven hath Bishops just of the Mind of these with us in England? |
A26858 | What Place will you give the Pope in the College? |
A26858 | What Sect can not easily without a Doctors degree thus dispute? |
A26858 | What a case would you bring this Church and Kingdom to, by your Law of the Custom of the Major part? |
A26858 | What a dismal noise and dangerous rupture doth the Controversie make now about Conformity in Brittain? |
A26858 | What are the true terms of Universal Christian Concord? |
A26858 | What be their Laws? |
A26858 | What can a Principium Unitatis signifie in the Universal Church, but some Governing Power and Unifying Prerogative? |
A26858 | What could be said more gently by such a man? |
A26858 | What could the Papists say more against them? |
A26858 | What formal Judgments were past by them? |
A26858 | What have you to do to judge them that are without? |
A26858 | What if a Christian Kingdom had no Pastors? |
A26858 | What if few come? |
A26858 | What if one or two Votes turn the scales for a majority? |
A26858 | What if the Pope call one, and the Patriarch of Alexandria another, and the Emperor another? |
A26858 | What is the Duty of all other Christians towards the Papists in order to the Promoting of the Common Interest of Christianity? |
A26858 | What is this that you call an external means of Correspondence? |
A26858 | What need the Council meet, if all Bishops could know each others Mind and Consent without it, e. g. Did they all agree about Easter- Day before? |
A26858 | What one Act of Government hath the College performed in our Age? |
A26858 | What order shall be kept among them, if none have Authority to appoint the Place, the Time, to Preside and Moderate, and to dissolve them? |
A26858 | What shall satisfie any Man that the Six Councils owned by you are the Acts of a Supream Vicarious Universal Church Power, and no other? |
A26858 | What strange things can some Men gather from meer Communion and Concord? |
A26858 | What taste my Meat hath,& c? |
A26858 | What the sence was? |
A26858 | What though they commit not Idolatry in our Churches, will that expiate the guilt of all the rest? |
A26858 | What work hath the Pope made by Excommunications? |
A26858 | What, must the Christian World suffer even by Learned, and I hope pious Doctors? |
A26858 | Whatever maketh true Christians maketh Men Members of Christ and his Church? |
A26858 | When Councils Contradict, Condemn and Curse each other, who shall tell us which of them to receive, believe, and obey? |
A26858 | When as a Diocesane hath no Bishops under him to Convocate? |
A26858 | When such as I with all our searching can not know it? |
A26858 | When they condemn each other: and when each call the other Heretical or Schismatical? |
A26858 | When they so greatly differ? |
A26858 | Where at this day may we find their Decrees by which they Rule, except in Councils? |
A26858 | Where did I once call Thomas Aquinas a Saint? |
A26858 | Where did the Writers meet first to hear the Accused and examine Witnesses? |
A26858 | Where is their Meeting? |
A26858 | Where now is all the Reformers Power? |
A26858 | Where seated? |
A26858 | Where then is that Universal Colledge on whose Judging- Authority you are a Christian? |
A26858 | Whereas questioning the Authority by questioning whether the acts of it be agreeable to ☞ God''s Law or not, how should Unity be maintained? |
A26858 | Whether I mis- recited or misapplied the Case of St. Martin''s Separation? |
A26858 | Whether Pope or Council be such? |
A26858 | Whether here be any renunciation of his claimed Universal Jurisdiction over all the Church on Earth? |
A26858 | Whether in all this here be any renunciation of the Popes Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England, but only of the Divine Right of it? |
A26858 | Whether such a Bargain be the way to save us from Popery? |
A26858 | Whether the Pope did himself think that by this bargain he ceased to be Pope, and all Papists to be Papists? |
A26858 | Whether they repented, and must we go to all the Bishops in the World one by one for tryal? |
A26858 | Whether they were Heretical? |
A26858 | Whether they wrote such words? |
A26858 | Which Sect, say they, would you have me turn to, if I turn? |
A26858 | Which be the Bishops and Church that have all that Leviathan- like Power of Heaven and Hell, which he describeth and asserteth? |
A26858 | Which part was the Universal Governor? |
A26858 | Who are the real Church which they represent? |
A26858 | Who but the King can be Principium Vnitatis in the Kingdom? |
A26858 | Who can Dispute on these terms? |
A26858 | Who can tell but much of this is Lies? |
A26858 | Who can trust him that maketh no conscience of the Obligation of Oaths, any more than an Enemy? |
A26858 | Who gave him Power to take any of it from us? |
A26858 | Who gave it them? |
A26858 | Who giveth them theirs? |
A26858 | Who have pretended to it but the Papacy? |
A26858 | Who is he, or who are they that had power to make Christ a Body or Church in specie, before he made it himself: Christs Body is not made by Man? |
A26858 | Who is hurt by a causeless curse, but the Curser? |
A26858 | Who is it that wresteth them from their usual signification? |
A26858 | Who it is that we must hear as the Catholick Church, and take Universal Laws from, when there is no General Council? |
A26858 | Who knoweth how many must come to make it a General Council? |
A26858 | Who then hath he Communion with? |
A26858 | Whom do they so try and judge? |
A26858 | Whom do we obey or disobey in obeying or disobeying such Laws? |
A26858 | Why answer they not my late Book of English Nonconformity? |
A26858 | Why are there still Cart loads of Books of Controversies among Papists, and Protestants, and all; and yet no Council doth decide them? |
A26858 | Why doth not one Council determine of all that is necessary to Salvation, but leave it still undone? |
A26858 | Why hath[ Filioque] continued such a Distraction in the Churches, and Councils yet end it not? |
A26858 | Why should they escape? |
A26858 | Why should they not oblige God in one case as well as the other? |
A26858 | Why should we make Impossibilities necessary, while surer and easier Means are obvious? |
A26858 | Why then not from all Pastoral Guidance? |
A26858 | Why was the major Vote counted invalid if the Patriarchs were against it? |
A26858 | Will not all our Faith be resolved into the Credit of these Messengers? |
A26858 | Will not they over- rule the choice of such as are to be sent to General Councils; as King James chose the Six that went hence to Dort? |
A26858 | Will they joyn with them that have charged them with Idolatry, as Dr. Reignolds, Dr. Stillingfleet,& c. have done? |
A26858 | Will this bring us to Conformity? |
A26858 | Will you cast them out that never were in? |
A26858 | Will you have yet another of his Self- contradictions? |
A26858 | Will you know more of this Self- confutation? |
A26858 | Would a Turk own such dealing with his Neighbour? |
A26858 | Would not this have been plainly done, if the certainty of Scripture and Salvation, and the Churches Unity had been founded on it? |
A26858 | Yea Subiects against their Kings? |
A26858 | Yea, Is there one Priest of many that hath such certainty of such History of Councils, when Writers so much disagree? |
A26858 | Yea, but who shall judge when any of of these Conditions fail? |
A26858 | Yes: But by whom? |
A26858 | You confess they were called out of the Imperial Provinces? |
A26858 | You know Epiphanius hath a peculiar Treatise to tell us, what then were the Customs and Ceremonies of the Universal Church? |
A26858 | You may possibly believe that Solomon by[ Mother] meant an universally Governing College of Bishops] but when will you prove it? |
A26858 | You say the Council at Frankford condemned that at Nice: How shall I know which the College owned at the time of the sitting of each Council? |
A26858 | You say, such there must be? |
A26858 | You tell us of Penalties made by Church Laws? |
A26858 | You think they did ill, and will that justifie you? |
A26858 | [ Quid non praestitit ut clarissimum Virum Hugonem Grotium ad Catholica ● Communionem adduceret? |
A26858 | [ Quid si ad ipsum baptismum fictus accessit? |
A26858 | and Theodoret to agree, did they not confess that they had wrongfully anathematized each other, and were of one Mind, and did not know it? |
A26858 | and be of that Heathens mind that drew back from Baptism, when he heard his Fore- fathers were in Hell, and said, that he would be where they were? |
A26858 | and by whose Memory? |
A26858 | and do you not so receive the Creed and Bible? |
A26858 | and foreign Divines, that I will not stay now to repeat that work: were all the Traditions forementioned since laid by, received from the Apostles? |
A26858 | and gave power to Apostles, and they to other to be exercised over other Churches and Pastors? |
A26858 | and had he any Authority to call any but his Subjects? |
A26858 | and have no Faith, no Concord till then? |
A26858 | and how can we obey a Law that is no Law? |
A26858 | and how much Ignorance all Mankind is guilty of? |
A26858 | and how shall it be known what the Majority said? |
A26858 | and in the end forced him to resign going about to depose him; which part was obligatory? |
A26858 | and might invade the Hospitals at their pleasure? |
A26858 | and must all Christians be Judged at last by the Bishops Canon Law? |
A26858 | and must these five fighting Shadows Represent and Rule the Christian World? |
A26858 | and must they therefore be ruled by those near the place who will be many? |
A26858 | and necessary? |
A26858 | and of whom we may all enquire of them with certain Satisfaction? |
A26858 | and second of Nice for General Councils also? |
A26858 | and so the first Council that had none before to testifie it? |
A26858 | and that Cyril oft asserteth but one Nature after the Union? |
A26858 | and that by such evidence as the single Preacher brought? |
A26858 | and when as Great a Number were at one as at the other; and the same Authority chose and called both sorts? |
A26858 | and when the World is yet disagreed, what Canons or Laws are obligatory, and what not? |
A26858 | and when? |
A26858 | and where else should we expect their sentence? |
A26858 | and which are not? |
A26858 | and which of the various Lections are true? |
A26858 | and which side had the Major Vote? |
A26858 | and whither? |
A26858 | and who pretends to this but the Pope? |
A26858 | and yet are all damned that are not subject to it? |
A26858 | as the One Body Politick of Christ) with one visible human Government? |
A26858 | dictates, and the Councils that Hereticated Royalists as Henricians? |
A26858 | hath the Pope? |
A26858 | how many Years or Ages will it be doing? |
A26858 | or be judged without being ever heard? |
A26858 | or but a Humane? |
A26858 | or by him as Absolute or as Patriarch of the West, and Principium Vnitatis? |
A26858 | or did the ancient Christians receive them only on such Authority? |
A26858 | or for the People to live in Obedience and Communion with the Presbyters that do so? |
A26858 | or how are we to be Governed by it, when it doth not Govern? |
A26858 | or how many must it be to ascertain us that it is Universal? |
A26858 | or in the Age foregoing? |
A26858 | or must all the Bishops on Earth come to them? |
A26858 | or must he know all? |
A26858 | or not? |
A26858 | or of another Species? |
A26858 | or of the Lord''s Supper? |
A26858 | or so sound and judicious as ours have been, and some yet are? |
A26858 | or that he had the craft to take no notice of it, as that which was too hot to handle? |
A26858 | or to free them from dying with Rogues in Jails, or to prefer the Ministers of Jesus, before Barabbas? |
A26858 | or to know that there is a Life to come, and the Soul Immortal? |
A26858 | or to restore the Silenced Ministers? |
A26858 | or whence they come, nor whether ever they came before? |
A26858 | or whether he be an Adulterer, a Drunkard, and impenitent therein, and so to be Excommunicate? |
A26858 | or who is it, and how proved, that they that obey it not may be unexcuseable? |
A26858 | or why are we called Schismaticks for not obeying them? |
A26858 | quisnam Imperatorum celebrari i d Concilium jusserit? |
A26858 | shall they be undecided till the World have a true general Council? |
A26858 | that all the Church may know them? |
A26858 | that hath either so great Knowledge, or so Universal a decisive Power? |
A26858 | that is, to run in a Vain Circle: How know we that the later is right other way than of the former? |
A26858 | was there ever such a meeting which was no Council? |
A26858 | was this to unite the Protestants, and to strengthen them against the United Papists? |
A26858 | we are for all this as well as you? |
A26858 | we can not obey them till we know them; Are they all the Bishops in the World, or but part? |
A26858 | what is his work as such a Principium? |
A26858 | what power hath he over all other Princes Subjects? |
A26858 | when you cast out of the Church those that will not Kneel at the Sacrament? |
A26858 | where be the Laws that any of them pretend all Christians made? |
A26858 | which is valid? |
A26858 | who chooseth the Clergy? |
A26858 | who shall gather them? |
A26858 | yea are past doubt that it is false? |
A26858 | yea, and raise a suspicion of Nonconformists as Republicans? |
A26858 | § V. Have not the old and many later Nonconformists advantaged Popery by decrying all Episcopacy or Imparity of Ministers? |
A26858 | — And if the Society be not represented by unlawful Assemblies, how can it in justice be obliged by them? |
A27053 | & 16. and think whether it be safe to imitate them? |
A27053 | 13. and if these men say( as the Devil to Eve) you shall not die, are they able think you to make it good? |
A27053 | 2. and calling upon him, and rejoycing in his praises, and the Communion of his Saints? |
A27053 | 31. and that the fleshly do make their bellies their Gods? |
A27053 | 33, 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect; It is God that Justifieth, who is he that condemneth? |
A27053 | 34. yet proud- hearted selfish men will refuse it? |
A27053 | 6, 7, 8, 9. and then what would become both of us and you? |
A27053 | Alas that at one and the same time, men should be extolling me, and Devils tormenting me? |
A27053 | Alas thinks a poor Tradesman, or Plowman, or Servant, What do I but drudge in the world? |
A27053 | Alas, how much further hath it proceeded now? |
A27053 | Alas, thinks he, I am almost below a man and am I fit to make a God of? |
A27053 | All that follow him, live with him: For whither should he lead them but to himself? |
A27053 | Also if we live in dayes of persecution, how easily do we receive those Opinions that would keep us from prison and fire? |
A27053 | Among the millions of desires that are in mens hearts, how few of them are kindled by the commands of God, or moved by his Interest and Glory? |
A27053 | And I would ask you also, Whether you are content with the measure of sanctification which you have, or which is to be attained in this life? |
A27053 | And alas what work doth selfishness make with inferior Magistrates? |
A27053 | And are men that once made profession of Religion, become the enemies of such a Ministry? |
A27053 | And call''d a precise fool or Puritane? |
A27053 | And can not you make shift with an ordinary habitation and with small& common things till then? |
A27053 | And can self endure to be thus used and arraigned for its life? |
A27053 | And can the Lord that is most just and wise, Found all mans duty in deceit and lies? |
A27053 | And can you expect that God should save those that deny him and would dethrone him? |
A27053 | And can you read such an example of self- denial, given you by the Lord of glory, and not be transformed into the image of it? |
A27053 | And did not he know what was for his good as well as you? |
A27053 | And did they not use him worse than you are used? |
A27053 | And did you think that gathering it was the way to make you willing to leave it? |
A27053 | And do they indeed excell us in knowledge as much as they pretend? |
A27053 | And do they worse than this by you? |
A27053 | And do they worse than this by you? |
A27053 | And do you not know that you are liker to over- love a sumptuous house, with gardens, orchards, and such accommodations, than a mean habitation? |
A27053 | And do you think that among wise men fine clothes will go instead of wisdom, or vertue, or holiness? |
A27053 | And doth not Reason bid thee then forecast, And value the least hope of endless joyes, Before known vanities and dying toyes? |
A27053 | And doth not Reason tell us by the light of Nature, that God should be loved better than our Lives? |
A27053 | And for the question, whether we may not take any meat or drink purposely to please the appetite? |
A27053 | And for what I pray you, should we esteem you? |
A27053 | And had not the world enough of your Pride while you were alive? |
A27053 | And how comes it to pass that a man may quietly enough follow such vices, if he will but forbear the profession of Godliness? |
A27053 | And how comes this difference? |
A27053 | And how much should I be valued by the Papists, if I would turn to them? |
A27053 | And how should good men be moved to compassionate you? |
A27053 | And how stubbornly do they resist not only God, but Magistrates and Ministers that would draw them from it? |
A27053 | And how unsutable will such Honor be to your condition? |
A27053 | And if that part of Religion which seemeth hardest& harshest be so sweet, what is our Love and Delight in God, but the foretaste of Heaven it self? |
A27053 | And if the desires of the flesh might be followed, who would not be such as they, in some measure? |
A27053 | And if you would not have it thus with all, what reason have you to desire it for your self? |
A27053 | And indeed what should draw a self- denying man to sin,( were he but perfect in self- denial?) |
A27053 | And is any of this agreeable to our holy Rule and Pattern? |
A27053 | And is it any wonder if Proud and selfish sinners are displeased with such a word as this? |
A27053 | And is it any wonder if they be all ill- governed then, where the Devil doth so much to choose the Governors? |
A27053 | And is it not better be walking Lights to illuminate the world, than Candles shut up within the walls of our own habitation? |
A27053 | And is it not better suffer under these temrs of unconceivable advantage, than to suffer in a natural way for nothing? |
A27053 | And is it not much like it for you to carry the badge of pride or lust abroad with you in the open streets and meetings? |
A27053 | And is it suitable for such a spirit to be eager after the Reputation of sincerity, and to be much troubled that you are taken by others to be naught? |
A27053 | And is not God ten thousand thousand times even infinitely more above you, than you are above your fellow- creatures? |
A27053 | And is not that our best condition that makes us best? |
A27053 | And is our time so ● … ort and precious, and yet is idleness an excusable sin? |
A27053 | And is that lost that''s sent to Heav''n before? |
A27053 | And is that sav''d that''s spent upon thy lust? |
A27053 | And is there not the same Reason that he dispose of your life as of theirs? |
A27053 | And it is but poor mortals that will magnifie your Names, and what can they add to you? |
A27053 | And know you not that Christ that hath purposely come down into flesh that you might know him? |
A27053 | And must such ignorant or jugling confusions serve turn, to cheat a Nation of their Religion and Liberties, and many thousands of their salvation? |
A27053 | And must they therefore be let alone by man? |
A27053 | And must we lose our labour? |
A27053 | And our use of means for their removal? |
A27053 | And seeing all your turnings and unwillingness can not avoid it, is it not better to submit to it willingly than unwillingly? |
A27053 | And shall a party be the judge? |
A27053 | And shall a thief be proud that he is pardoned and taken from the gallows? |
A27053 | And shall self be thy Ruler? |
A27053 | And shall self presume to dethrone the Lord, and sit down in his place? |
A27053 | And shall we fear to go the way that Christ hath gone, and purposely gone to clear it for us? |
A27053 | And should it be abased and abused to idleness and vanity? |
A27053 | And should not you much more submit to God? |
A27053 | And should the breaking of such an earthen Vessel be so unpleasing a thing to you? |
A27053 | And should we be so loth to leave( whether naturally or violently) such a life as this? |
A27053 | And should we grudge at this? |
A27053 | And should you desire it? |
A27053 | And that they hear him with heart- rising, enmity, or suspicion, that doth declaim against them? |
A27053 | And therefore who should be brought lower than such? |
A27053 | And though the power of grace in Job did shame the boasts of Satan, yet how frequently doth he prevail with men that seem Religious? |
A27053 | And to what end desire you these thoughts of men? |
A27053 | And under Laws for every bit and cup? |
A27053 | And under pining sickness be content? |
A27053 | And what a striving is there in their wills against him? |
A27053 | And what a world would it be, if all men were Disposers of themselves, when there would be as many different ends and minds as men? |
A27053 | And what are you in the mean time? |
A27053 | And what doth worldly greatness add to your real worth in the eyes of God or of wise men? |
A27053 | And what higher self- exaltation can there be, than to make ourselves as gods to our selves? |
A27053 | And what hindreth? |
A27053 | And what if God call you to sacrifice your lives to him, as he called Abraham to sacrifice his Son? |
A27053 | And what if one Minister excel in one gift, and another in another, and few in all? |
A27053 | And what is it but some selfish End that causeth any man to pervert Justice, or slander, or bear false witness against his neighbour? |
A27053 | And what is it but the furnishing and providing for self that provoketh any man to Rob another? |
A27053 | And what is it but the satisfaction of your Own ● ● ● thy lusts, that causeth Adultery and all uncleanness? |
A27053 | And what is the Heart of most men more against? |
A27053 | And what is the deformity that you would hide by this? |
A27053 | And what is the reason of this strange partiality? |
A27053 | And what of that? |
A27053 | And what though this be unknown to the opposers? |
A27053 | And what was the matter that deserved all this, yea and the death of almost all the Prophets and Apostles of Christ? |
A27053 | And what''s the argument pleaded for all this? |
A27053 | And what''s the reason of these accusations? |
A27053 | And when one is flattering, and the other pleased with it, what a foolish and sordid employment have they? |
A27053 | And when the hour comes, what can hinder? |
A27053 | And when the soul of the worldly fool is required of him, then whose shall all their Dignities, and Honours, and Riches be? |
A27053 | And when they are once possessed of it, how partially do they indulge it? |
A27053 | And whence is it but for want of self- denial, that Peace- makers succeed no better in their attempts? |
A27053 | And whereas men ask, What can the strongest do more than die for Christ? |
A27053 | And who is it that can do this that God and their salvation may not do? |
A27053 | And why are they not as zealous against sin as against the plague? |
A27053 | And why is all this? |
A27053 | And why is all this? |
A27053 | And why is this? |
A27053 | And why not as soon and as zealously when Ale- sellers reset mens sons and servants, and drown mens understandings and turn them into beasts? |
A27053 | And why should the body be so dear to you? |
A27053 | And why should we not be willing of that condition, in which we do our Master the best service, what ever the doing of it shall cost us? |
A27053 | And why so? |
A27053 | And why so? |
A27053 | And why so? |
A27053 | And why so? |
A27053 | And why, but because it is espoused to them and their own? |
A27053 | And will God put up all this? |
A27053 | And will it also e ● se men in he ● l to think that some others suffer more? |
A27053 | And will you do so in a case ten thousand fold greater? |
A27053 | And wilt thou keep it? |
A27053 | And wilt thou the consuming fire defie? |
A27053 | And would not you have God make a difference between those that sin once, and those that live in it? |
A27053 | And would you still live at these rates? |
A27053 | And wouldst thou have thy riches in thy way, Where thou art passing on and canst not stay? |
A27053 | And yet alas, how many are there that know not any better frame of will than this? |
A27053 | And yet are you loth to have the victory,& see your enemy under feet? |
A27053 | And yet have you leasure for idle talk? |
A27053 | And yet this is our peoples sport: what say these wretches, may we not jest and be merry, when we mean no harm, without all this ado? |
A27053 | And yet what is there that more pleaseth the minds of the most? |
A27053 | And yet what negligence of Magistrates, and what contentiousness of Ministers, destroy all hopes? |
A27053 | And yet will go against your experience? |
A27053 | And yet will you follow it still, and take no warning, as if it had not done enough against you? |
A27053 | Are they such odious things? |
A27053 | Are you better than the Lord of life? |
A27053 | Are you better than they? |
A27053 | Are you content to live for ever with no more knowledge or love of God? |
A27053 | Are you not daily constrained to groan and complain to God under the burden of too much Love of the world, and too much delight in worldly things? |
A27053 | Are you travelling towards another world with a Play- book in your hand? |
A27053 | Are you upon any imployment spiritual or secular? |
A27053 | Art thou not sure to let go what thou hast? |
A27053 | As if all the controversie were, whether we should force others to be of our Religion? |
A27053 | As if my heart were made of flint or steel? |
A27053 | Ask now any stander by that is impartial, whether God or the flesh should be denied? |
A27053 | Ask your hearts,[ Can I keep these things for ever; or not? |
A27053 | Beauty surpasseth all deceitful paints: What''s empty mirth to the delights of Saints? |
A27053 | Besides, will not any honest man make a great difference of the same acts according as they come from different hearts? |
A27053 | But alas how contrary is the case with the most? |
A27053 | But are you willing also to go to hell for company? |
A27053 | But do we not know that Papists have Italy and Spain and Germany and France at hand to help them? |
A27053 | But do we not lawfully use his Mercies for our selves? |
A27053 | But doth it follow that men must be no Teachers under him? |
A27053 | But doth not your calling require diligence as well as ours? |
A27053 | But how can I think it for my good to die? |
A27053 | But how far is this Appetite to be denied? |
A27053 | But how rare is it to meet with men that are meek and patient in their own cause, and passionate in a holy zeal for God? |
A27053 | But how shall I know whether I seek preferment for God or my self? |
A27053 | But how unreasonable is this? |
A27053 | But if it be not as Ministers and Christi ● n ● that we are hated; what is it then? |
A27053 | But if it be; will merciful Rulers set up a trade for butchering of souls? |
A27053 | But if you will not have the Grapes to be gathered and prest, how can you expect to have the Wine? |
A27053 | But is it not lawful at a feast to taste of another dish, or eat another bit, when I think that nature needs no more? |
A27053 | But is it not lawful to seek for dignity and superiority? |
A27053 | But is there no harm in needless flesh- pleasing, and in the loss of precious time, to men that are ready to step into eternity? |
A27053 | But it is but your conceit that you are wise enough to be a Teacher, or wiser than others, and why may not I as well conceit it? |
A27053 | But may not a Gentleman fare better than a poor man? |
A27053 | But may not the Creatures be received for Delight as well as for Necessity? |
A27053 | But must he not therefore teach or rule by men? |
A27053 | But see what flesh and self can do? |
A27053 | But then how comes it to pass that it is their Praying and Preciseness that is so much in the scorners mouths? |
A27053 | But what ado shall we have with carnal, unsanctified wretches to perswade them to all or any of this? |
A27053 | But what of that? |
A27053 | But what will is it that is to be called a self- will? |
A27053 | But when we would help their souls, what cavils, and quarrels, and unthankful obstinacy do we meet with? |
A27053 | But where''s that mirth when sorrows overtake thee? |
A27053 | But who knows but God may convert them? |
A27053 | But why must you be let alone? |
A27053 | But why was he not as angry with himself for a greater sin? |
A27053 | But yet you are not wholly a stranger there; Is it not that God that you have loved, and that hath first loved you? |
A27053 | Can any man be a loser by God? |
A27053 | Can any thing be more Honourable than to be the children of the heavenly Father? |
A27053 | Can not you do it better? |
A27053 | Can you find in your heart to stand jesting& prating with a poor unregenerate man that is within a step of Hell? |
A27053 | Can you have while to look so much after superfluities and delights in the world, when you have Necessaries yet to look after for your souls? |
A27053 | Can you talk so idly and God stand by, and hear every word, and put down all? |
A27053 | Come down into our Courts of Justice, and whose voice is loudest at the bar, but selfs? |
A27053 | Come lower into the Country and who is it that plows and sows; who is it that keeeps House or Shop but self? |
A27053 | Dare you run on in idle foolish prating when you remember that he heareth you? |
A27053 | Did I ever sollicite you so much as for my Arrears( which is many hundred pounds?) |
A27053 | Did you ever know such a one? |
A27053 | Did you make your selves? |
A27053 | Do I need to prove it to you? |
A27053 | Do they put a Fools Coat on you, and a Reed in your hand, and make a laughing stock of you? |
A27053 | Do they slander you? |
A27053 | Do you deal with those you have so well, and overcome them so easily and so constantly, as that you have reason to desire more? |
A27053 | Do you desire to be happy, or do you not? |
A27053 | Do you fight against it as for the life of your souls,& yet are you afraid lest death should hurt it or break it down? |
A27053 | Do you not feel a continual burden of infirmities? |
A27053 | Do you not feel sin as a heavy burden pressing you down, and perceive how easily it entangleth and besetteth you? |
A27053 | Do you not know that this desire is Pride it self? |
A27053 | Do you not know your selves? |
A27053 | Do you not see that where self is but deeply engaged, the judgement is bribed or overmastered, and carried from the Truth? |
A27053 | Do you really find that they conduce to your main end, even to make you more holy, or more serviceable to God? |
A27053 | Do you remember Gods presence, and withall his holiness and jealousie? |
A27053 | Do you see any thing that your Appetite desireth, whether meats or drinks, whether for quality or quantity? |
A27053 | Do you set more by Christ and Holiness, which are the way to God? |
A27053 | Do you think I wrong them or speak without proof? |
A27053 | Do you think of your Dignities and Offices as places of meer superiority and honour and accommodation to your carnal selves? |
A27053 | Do you think that God made you for your selves: and not for himself and service? |
A27053 | Do you think that the more you love or delight in any thing below, you will not be the lother to leave it? |
A27053 | Do you think that this will look like wise or righteous dealing when you stand in judgement? |
A27053 | Do you think there is any want of Riches or Honour there? |
A27053 | Do you think to be saved indeed or not? |
A27053 | Dost thou delight to feel thy hurt and smart? |
A27053 | Doth God our ease and pleasure to us grudge? |
A27053 | Doth God remit to us the everlasting torments, and shall we inflict on another the venom of our private spleen? |
A27053 | Doth any man make a House for its own sake, or for his use to dwell in? |
A27053 | Doth he not desire God as a Means for himself as the End, that desireth him as his Portion, Treasure, Refuge, and Felicity? |
A27053 | Doth it go better or worse with the Church and cause of Christ in general, where they are, than it did before? |
A27053 | Doth that signifie Hypocrisie or Pride? |
A27053 | Doth the name( Puritan] signifie a covetous man, or a vicious person? |
A27053 | Doth time run on so fast, and are you hasting to the dreadful bar of God: and do you want pastime? |
A27053 | Every hour that you lose in idleness, what noble faculties, and large provisions are all laid by? |
A27053 | For example, if Infidel, or Papists Books be prohibited, what cruelty or persecution is this? |
A27053 | For if you are set toplease your flesh by idleness, must I joyn with you to please it by such supplies as shall cheri ● ● you in your sin? |
A27053 | For must he support and feed you to do nothing? |
A27053 | For such Lepers to carry about us a sense of our uncleanness? |
A27053 | For what do you give thanks for, but for salvation from these odious sins, and the damnation which you have deserved? |
A27053 | For what is all the stir and stirrings, the tumults and contentions of the world but for self? |
A27053 | For while one saith, I am of Paul, and another I am of Apollo, are ye not Carnal? |
A27053 | From the excessive care, and cost, and labour that almost all the world is at for self? |
A27053 | God gave me Life: and shall I choose to die Before my time? |
A27053 | God should have the honour of his glorious works, from generation to genetion: and how shall that be if all be forgotten? |
A27053 | God will not ask us, where we have grown( in order to our Justification) but what fruit we have born? |
A27053 | HOw far must we deny our own Reason? |
A27053 | HOw is it that Self- denial requireth us to love our neighbour as our selves: Is it with the same degree of Love? |
A27053 | Had you rather all your labour were lost? |
A27053 | Had you rather be erroneous, or be thought to be so? |
A27053 | Had you rather part with Truth and Religion, or with the name& Reputation of them? |
A27053 | Hadst thou not rather have thy friends and store, Where thou may dwell for ever, in the light Of that long glorious day that fears no night? |
A27053 | Hast thou found me O mine Enemy? |
A27053 | Hast thou found sweeter pleasures than Gods Love? |
A27053 | Hath God, hath Christ, hath your own salvation deserved no better at your hands than this? |
A27053 | Hath not he said, He that humbleth himself shall be exalted? |
A27053 | Hath not selfishness and Pride done this? |
A27053 | Hath the Spirit of God renewed and sanctified you? |
A27053 | Have you fought your selves friends with it, that you are so tender of it? |
A27053 | Have you more delight in the Company of them that would entice to sin, than in the Company of the godly that would draw you from it? |
A27053 | Have you no honester mirth than this? |
A27053 | Have you not been brought into the world by him, and lived by him, and been preserved and provided for by him? |
A27053 | Have you not greater things to mind than these, which these occasion you to neglect? |
A27053 | Have you not more need to call to him to look about him in time, and to remember eternity, and to turn and live? |
A27053 | Have you not taken God for your portion, and Heaven for your home? |
A27053 | Have you not temptations enough already? |
A27053 | Have you nothing but filthiness, and the service of the Devil, and the wrath of God to play with, and to make merry with? |
A27053 | Have you yet not sin enough, and sorrow, and fear, and trouble enough? |
A27053 | How can you be so contemptuously fearless of his presence? |
A27053 | How close stick they to their own conceits? |
A27053 | How comes the world to be all in a flame about the Universal Reign of the Pope of Rome, but from the dominion of selfishness? |
A27053 | How commonly are the word and ways of God distastful to the world? |
A27053 | How constantly and zealously do they preach in publick, at home and abroad, some of them many times a week? |
A27053 | How contemptuously do they think and speak of the persons, the judgements, the writings, the reasonings of any that are against them? |
A27053 | How diligently do they instruct the ignorant in private, from house to house? |
A27053 | How eager are others for one Ecclesiastical National Head? |
A27053 | How eager are the Popular party for their way? |
A27053 | How eager is the Papist to have his way by an Universal Monarch? |
A27053 | How easily can Papists endure one to speak against Protestants? |
A27053 | How else do you think the Devil rules the children of disobedience, but by self- conceit and self- will? |
A27053 | How fain would selfish corrupted man be the chooser of his own condition? |
A27053 | How far is my own worldly, fleshly ends or prosperity concerned in it?] |
A27053 | How far must we be content with Gods afflicting will? |
A27053 | How far must we deny our Reason? |
A27053 | How far must we deny our own Reason? |
A27053 | How few Nations on the Earth, where Pride and Selfishness maketh not their Kings or Soveraigns? |
A27053 | How few Societies be there in the world, whether Corporations, Colledges, or the like, but Pride and Selfishness makes their Governors? |
A27053 | How few can say that their Love to God, is greater and hotter than their Love to themselves? |
A27053 | How generally is the Will of God disliked by the world? |
A27053 | How hard is it to convince a selfish ● … e ● … e of any sin that will admit of an excuse or cloak? |
A27053 | How hardly are they brought to any dear and costly duty? |
A27053 | How ill do men like the disposals of his providence? |
A27053 | How light do they make of the strongest arguments that are brought against it? |
A27053 | How little is there in a prosperous state, that should seem desirable in a wise mans eyes? |
A27053 | How long have some been longing, and praying, and moving, and labouring for Peace among the professed sons of Piety and Peace, in England? |
A27053 | How long will you have that you love, though God forbid it? |
A27053 | How many causes hath self at an Assize, for one that God hath? |
A27053 | How many may you come in company with, before you shall have any edifying Communication, that tends to minister grace to the hearers? |
A27053 | How many thousand idle words have you been guilty of in your time? |
A27053 | How much am I able to say of this, from sad experience of the change of many of my antient friends? |
A27053 | How much do they indulge their appetites and passions? |
A27053 | How much more should the belief of a Resurrection unto life, confirm us against the fears of death? |
A27053 | How plainly spoke the Prophets even to Kings? |
A27053 | How ready and speedy, how effectual and diligent, how constant and unwearied are they in the service of self? |
A27053 | How shall a man know his own mind? |
A27053 | How shall he bind up your hearts, when Self will not suffer them to be broken? |
A27053 | How shall he cloath you with his righteousness, while self keeps on your own defiled rotten rags? |
A27053 | How shall he come in, while Self is the Porter that keeps the door? |
A27053 | How shall he pardon you, when Self will not suffer you to feel the want and worth of pardon? |
A27053 | How shall we live without recreation? |
A27053 | How strange do they look at them that can not follow them in their fancies? |
A27053 | How unblameably, and meekly, and self- denyingly do they behave themselves? |
A27053 | How we must Love our neighbours as our selves? |
A27053 | How wise and how honest a man could I be with the Anabaptists, if I would but be Rebaptized, and turn to them? |
A27053 | How wise are they in their own eyes, and how hardly yield they to any advice that crosseth Self? |
A27053 | How? |
A27053 | Humility cherisheth the fear of God, and makes us say, How shall we do this evil? |
A27053 | I come off so lamely in the duty of a Creature as deserves damnation: and am I fit to arrogate the work of the Creator? |
A27053 | I do not believe that there is ever a house among them all that would not very shortly set up prayer, if they were but paid for it after these rates? |
A27053 | I mean what else but carnal self is the Principle? |
A27053 | I say, how oft do we convince men of all estates of these important evident truths? |
A27053 | I would put this question to you for your serious answer, Can you be contented, yea do you desire, to have no more of God than here you have? |
A27053 | If Quakers be hindred from railing at Gods Ordinances in the open streets and Assemblies, what cruelty or persecution is this? |
A27053 | If all should have this Priviledge, what a miserable Priviledge would it prove? |
A27053 | If corrupt unsanctified selfish man might make a Law for himself in stead of the Word of God, what a Law would it be? |
A27053 | If in good sadness you believe the Resurrection, what cause is there for so much fear of death? |
A27053 | If it be a necessary part of self- denial to deny our own lives; I am much afraid that I am no Disciple of Christ, as having no true self- denial? |
A27053 | If it be an offence to wrong man, what is it to wrong God? |
A27053 | If it be, why do you not as well fear it before it comes, even in your youth and health? |
A27053 | If life lay on it wouldst thou turn again, For the winds blowing or a little rain? |
A27053 | If men had but the Government of themselves, what a difference would there be between their way and Gods? |
A27053 | If not; Why then are you loth to go to him? |
A27053 | If not? |
A27053 | If the poor be discontented and murmur at their condition, and steal from others, who is it that is the cause of this but self? |
A27053 | If we can not force them to the Christian faith, can not we hinder them from drawing others from it? |
A27053 | If you ask me, How far a surviving reputation may be regarded? |
A27053 | If you buy an hundred sheep of a man, and he let you have but fourscore, doth he not rob or cheat you? |
A27053 | If you come to any in earthly misery, and ask them, who brought this upon them? |
A27053 | If you do, what need have you of the smoak of mans applause, when you are with God? |
A27053 | If you do,( as certainly you do) would you not go where happiness it to be had, when you are sure that it is not not to be had on earth? |
A27053 | If you further ask me, How this may be known? |
A27053 | If you must deny the Passions and sensitive appetite, and the inferiour faculties of nature in one thing, why not in another? |
A27053 | Is Religion in more strength, and beauty, and life, and honour? |
A27053 | Is Satan turn''d thy friend? |
A27053 | Is Self- revenge and Penance self- denial? |
A27053 | Is a fools laughter like the joyes above? |
A27053 | Is any Creature good enough to do it without the communication of its imperfection which would disorder& destroy all? |
A27053 | Is any Creature powerful enough, to dispose of the world and all things in it? |
A27053 | Is any Creature wise enough to order the world and the affairs thereof? |
A27053 | Is any other fit for the undertaking? |
A27053 | Is faith and holiness propagated by perswasion, and not by force? |
A27053 | Is it God or you? |
A27053 | Is it God or you? |
A27053 | Is it Natural to man to be Reasonable, as well as to be sensitive and animate? |
A27053 | Is it a desirable thing to be a Lord or Ruler, before we turn to common earth? |
A27053 | Is it bodily ease, or God that you set most by? |
A27053 | Is it cruelty or persecution to hinder them from ticing souls to Hell, as long as they may freely go thither themselves? |
A27053 | Is it for the things sake that any man makes an Instrument, or for his service by it? |
A27053 | Is it for your cloaths? |
A27053 | Is it for your comely bodies? |
A27053 | Is it for your vertues that you would be esteemed? |
A27053 | Is it from Gods will, or is it not? |
A27053 | Is it gain, or ease, or worldly advantages that continueth me in this work? |
A27053 | Is it more think you for God or self that Merchants compass Sea and Land for commodity? |
A27053 | Is it more think you for God or self that our Courts of Law are filled with so many Suits, and Lawyers have so much employment? |
A27053 | Is it not a lump of warm and thick clay, that you would have men observe and honour? |
A27053 | Is it not better be among innocent souls, than a defiled guilty world? |
A27053 | Is it not better be where no sin entreth, and never a h ● st or passion comes, than to live as among Wild beasts, with furious unreasonable sinners? |
A27053 | Is it not just and according to the Laws of God and man? |
A27053 | Is it not lawful to take either meat or drink on this account, that the Appetite is pleased with it? |
A27053 | Is it not thine more in thy Fathers hand, Than when it is laid out at sins command? |
A27053 | Is it not to be thought either Rich, or beautiful, or of an handsom person? |
A27053 | Is it not to draw the eyes and observations of men upon you? |
A27053 | Is it not your Father, and he that hath given you his Son and his Spirit? |
A27053 | Is it that of your mind? |
A27053 | Is it the Pleasing and glorifying of God, and the everlasting fruition of him? |
A27053 | Is it the greatness of its suffering that you stick at? |
A27053 | Is it the pain that you fear? |
A27053 | Is it the strangeness of your souls to God, and the place that you are passing to? |
A27053 | Is it wise, or safe, or profitable for your child to be casting for provision of meat, and drink, and clothes for it self? |
A27053 | Is it you or God? |
A27053 | Is it your meaning to tell this to all the town? |
A27053 | Is not Adultery, Murder, Theft, Rebellion, against the Cause of Christ, and his Laws, as well as Popery and Infidelity? |
A27053 | Is not Heav''n worth the bearing of a flout? |
A27053 | Is not SELF the great Idol which the whole world of unsanctified men doth worship? |
A27053 | Is not a day in his Courts, better than a thousand any where else? |
A27053 | Is not mirth Fitter to warm a cold heart here on earth? |
A27053 | Is not our Meat, and Drink, and Cloaths, and Houses, and Goods our own, and may we not use them for our selves? |
A27053 | Is not sin worse than suffering to thee, and holiness better than ease and peace? |
A27053 | Is not that better which turns grief to peace, Than that which doth thy misery encrease? |
A27053 | Is not this like the Primitive administration? |
A27053 | Is not this the case of all you that are carnal? |
A27053 | Is one creature fitter to kill another, and afterwards devour it, and becomes its grave, than God to dispose of the Lives of all? |
A27053 | Is self- denial to be without Passion? |
A27053 | Is the applause of mortals sutable to a poor tormented soul? |
A27053 | Is the company of those sinners, better than the company of God, and his favour? |
A27053 | Is the name or the thing more odious to you? |
A27053 | Is there no remedy, but selfishness must undo all? |
A27053 | Is this all that the world can do for you? |
A27053 | Is this much of the knowledge of him, and his will and works sufficient for you? |
A27053 | Is this thy greatest love to thy dear Lord? |
A27053 | Is thy servant a dog that he should do this?] |
A27053 | Is your work so great, and your time so short and utterly uncertain; and yet must you hunt about for pastime? |
A27053 | It hath no mind to quarrel with God; how easily will a self- denying man submit to those duties which another man abhors? |
A27053 | It is a confessing of sin, unworthiness and guilt, and will you be Proud of this? |
A27053 | It is a confessing that you deserve everlasting torment; And will you be Proud of such a confession as this? |
A27053 | It is natural for men to think well of all that they love, and of all that they do: and whom do they love better than themselves? |
A27053 | It''s the common cause of beggery and want: and what comfort can you have under such afflictions which you bring upon your selves? |
A27053 | It''s the throne of God, the Lanthorn of holy truth, the temple of the Spirit; and shall self Rule there? |
A27053 | Judge by the use of all whether self have not yet Dominion of all? |
A27053 | Judge impartially, whether all this be not for want of self- denial? |
A27053 | Know this, and you may know whether you have true Self- denial? |
A27053 | Know ye not him whom you have loved above all? |
A27053 | Know you not that Spirit that hath made so many a motion to your soul? |
A27053 | Know''st thou not that which God himself hath spoken? |
A27053 | Lastly, I would ask you, Are you contented to attain no other end of all your life and labours and sufferings than here you do attain? |
A27053 | Look over all the world, and see how few you can find at work for any one but for carnal self? |
A27053 | Mark, what is the issue of most of those ways, that these men are so hot for? |
A27053 | May God be finally Loved as our Felicity and Portion? |
A27053 | May God be finally loved as our felicity and portion, for our selves? |
A27053 | May not a man conjecture by their Education, what trade they are intended for? |
A27053 | Men use not to lament it, and call themselves to account for it, and say, what have I done? |
A27053 | Moreover, are you contented to remain for ever as unserviceable to God as here you are? |
A27053 | Must I be made the foot- ball of disdain? |
A27053 | Must I be pain''d and wronged, and not feel? |
A27053 | Must all Passion be denied? |
A27053 | Must it go with you in heaven or hell for ever as you spend this hasty inch of time, and yet have you days or hours to spare for needless recreation? |
A27053 | Must we give it up to the lusts of self? |
A27053 | Must we make a stir in choosing Parliament- men? |
A27053 | Must we not conceive them wiser after much experience ▪ than before? |
A27053 | Must we sit down and look on its miserable torn condition, with lamentation and despair? |
A27053 | Must you be beholden to Christ to save you from the Hell that the sins of your performances deserve, and yet dare you be proud of them? |
A27053 | Must you be carking and caring for your selves when you have an Infinite God engaged to care for you? |
A27053 | Must you have Honour? |
A27053 | Must you have your greatness and honour perpeuated? |
A27053 | Nay do not your own Consciences tell you, that they hinder you and cross those ends? |
A27053 | No man then would die, and then either you must forbear marriage, or what would you do with your posterity, when there were no room on earth? |
A27053 | No more faith or love to Christ? |
A27053 | No more meekness, humility, or heavenly mindedness? |
A27053 | No more righteousness or peace or joy in the Holy Ghost? |
A27053 | No more sense of the worth of Grace? |
A27053 | No, they scorn it: never talk to them of it more: they will never do it: And why so? |
A27053 | Now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received it? |
A27053 | O Sirs, it is another kind of life that we shall have with God? |
A27053 | O ambitio,( inquit Bernardus) ambientium crux, quomodo omnes torques? |
A27053 | O but you never saw it for all this? |
A27053 | O how busie would all the Town and Parish be to learn to pray, that now look not after it? |
A27053 | O how dear must I pay for my ease, and honour and gluttony and drunkenness and sensual delights, if I part not with them when God commandeth? |
A27053 | O how scurvily they will look at you? |
A27053 | O how the hearts of many that seemed godly men, will swell against them that speak to their disparagement? |
A27053 | O man, if thy eyes were opened to see a little, a very little of the glory of that blessed God thou speakest to, how flat wouldst thou fall down? |
A27053 | O remember when thou art next in idle talk, Did God make thee for this? |
A27053 | O saith the selfish ungodly wretch,[ I know he meant me to day: had he no body but me to speak against?] |
A27053 | O that they would tell us what is the due Call; and where is the Ministery on Earth that hath it, if we have not? |
A27053 | O that you did but know what greater matters you have to mind and to to do? |
A27053 | O were it not for the Powerful resistance of this selfishness, what work would every Sermon make that we preach to you? |
A27053 | O what abundance of excellent mercies lie useless and idle, because you are idle that should use them? |
A27053 | O, we it not for carnal self, how easily might we deal with ● ● ● ● rts of sinners? |
A27053 | One man hath many thousands a year, and another hath many hundreds, and how much of this is devoted to God, and how much to carnal self? |
A27053 | Or Relieving Strangers before Kindred? |
A27053 | Or doth Religion make a man a drudge? |
A27053 | Or in denying our Relations? |
A27053 | Or in renouncing Publick Offices and Honours? |
A27053 | Or in renouncing publick Offices and Honours? |
A27053 | Or in solitude and renouncing secular affairs? |
A27053 | Or is it the Pleasing of your fleshly mind in the fruition of any inferiour thing? |
A27053 | Or must God lay a greater load on you, to make you desire to be disburdened? |
A27053 | Or that we love them better? |
A27053 | Or which must be a prey to thieves or rust? |
A27053 | Otherwise if the best and greatest of you all were thought no better or greater than you are, alas, how far would men be from admiring you? |
A27053 | Peter said Behold we have for saken all and followed thee; what shall we have therefore? |
A27053 | Peter telleth you of such a conversation of women as may win their unbelieving husbands without the word: And what is it? |
A27053 | Presently enquire when you set upon it,[ Is there no self- interest and selfish disposition lurking here? |
A27053 | Reason''s the Rider: sense is but the Horse: Which then is fittest to direct thy course? |
A27053 | Shall every man have leave to do evil, that can but be ignorant enough to think,( or say he thinks) that he doth well? |
A27053 | Shall the pot quarrel with the Potter, or claim title to it self and say, I am mine own? |
A27053 | Should it not be easie for such wretched sinners as we to carry about with us a sense of our unworthiness? |
A27053 | Should they murmur at the breaking of t ● ● ● r former habitation? |
A27053 | So that you may see, that self- denial teacheth no man to ask,[ Whether he could be content to be damned for Christ?] |
A27053 | Sppose your recreations were the lawfullest in the world, in their own nature? |
A27053 | Such a man is an honest man, say they; but he is a peevish, humorous, self- conceited fellow: And why so? |
A27053 | Tell me if you can, when ever the Will of God did wrong you? |
A27053 | That canst not for his sake bear a foul word? |
A27053 | The Lord be merciful to us, and save us from this unreasonable vice; who would think that it should be thus with a man in his wits? |
A27053 | The Scythian therefore was no fool, that when the Emperour Mich. Paleologus sent him precious Ornaments and Jewels, askt, What they were good for? |
A27053 | The free choice of the most when they are bad( as where is it better?) |
A27053 | The understanding is it that guideth the soul and all the actions of your lives: and if self rule there, what a Ruler will you have? |
A27053 | They talk of our want of a just call: But what is it in point of Calling that is wanting? |
A27053 | This night shall thy soul be required of thee: then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided? |
A27053 | This ruleth Kingdoms, and this is it that raiseth wars, and what is it except the works of Holiness but self is the author of? |
A27053 | To have a reasonable soul, as to have a temporal life? |
A27053 | To speak evil? |
A27053 | WHether Self- denial consist in solitude, and avaiding secular affairs, as trades, merchandise, labour,& c? |
A27053 | WHether Self- denial consists in the forswearing or renouncing of Marriage, or the natural use of it by those that are marryed? |
A27053 | WHether Self- denial require men to renounce all publick offices, and honours, and not to be Magistrates, Ministers, or the like? |
A27053 | WHether self- denial consist in the laying by of all Passions, and bringing the soul to an impassionate serenity? |
A27053 | WHether self- denial require that we should relieve godly strangers, before our natural Kindred, especially that are ungodly? |
A27053 | Was I not capable of Secular and Military advancement as well as others that are grown great? |
A27053 | Was it not the very flesh it self that Paul saith he fought against, and kept under, and brought into subjection, lest he should be a cast a- way? |
A27053 | Were there not sick men enough in the Town besides me?] |
A27053 | What Consciences have you that look no better after your tongues, but will let them wander so long after vanity, before they call them to account? |
A27053 | What a Case are those mens understandings in that think it their Honour to revenge themselves when God hath so forbidden it? |
A27053 | What a multitude that seem of the highest form, in zeal, and opinions, and duties, delude themselves with a selfish kind of Religiousness? |
A27053 | What abundance of labour seemeth to be lost, that we bestow against i? |
A27053 | What abundance of sin doth self- denial kill at once? |
A27053 | What abundance of words may you use in vain, with most men to perswade them to any of this work? |
A27053 | What are all the thoughts of unsanctified men employed for, but for themselves and theirs? |
A27053 | What can they overcome the God of heaven? |
A27053 | What cavilling shall you have against the duty? |
A27053 | What eager desires have they to be above other men? |
A27053 | What else do most live for or look after? |
A27053 | What else was the life of holy Paul and the rest of the Apostles, but a constant exercise of Love and Self- denial? |
A27053 | What get you by an hours idle talk? |
A27053 | What good will it do a simple patient, to know the ingredients of every medicine compounded for him, and given by his Physician? |
A27053 | What good will it do you to be magnified by men, when you neither know nor feel it? |
A27053 | What good will sorrow do us? |
A27053 | What great difference is there betwixt the serving your own flesh and anothers? |
A27053 | What hath God spoke against in his Word but sin? |
A27053 | What have you done and suffered so much for heaven, and now would you not go to it? |
A27053 | What if a blind man should argue as you do with one that sees, and say,[ You say that you see so far off, and why may not I say so too?] |
A27053 | What if all men should do as you do, how would the poor be maintained, and the Church and Commonwealth served? |
A27053 | What if he call you to come to him by a persecutors hand? |
A27053 | What is every Ale- seller, or Drunkard, or Swearer, or Prophane person, wiser than all the Parliament and the Prince? |
A27053 | What is it that you Live for? |
A27053 | What is it that you pray for, and seek and strive for? |
A27053 | What is the Scripture fuller of, than comforting promises to the sufferers for Christ? |
A27053 | What is this but too much preferring self( I hope not habitually, but) in that act, before the Church and honour of God? |
A27053 | What is your own fleshly sensual Appetite any better than that of a Beast? |
A27053 | What pennance or self- revenge it requireth? |
A27053 | What progress could be made in the building of Babel, when no man was ruled by another, but every man ran confusedly after his single imagination? |
A27053 | What reason have you to be so tender of the flesh? |
A27053 | What say you then by the wishes of Moses and Paul? |
A27053 | What should move a self- denying man to be Proud, or covetous, or injurious to others? |
A27053 | What sin almost doth not enter at some of these ports? |
A27053 | What the better can any man be for their discourse, unless by taking warning by them, to avoid the vanity which we hear them guilty of? |
A27053 | What uncharitable, unchristian deportment, will a little injury produce? |
A27053 | What was his whole life, but the exercise of Love and self- denial? |
A27053 | What will you think of a man that will pray to God to save him from uncleanness, and yet will dwell no where but in a Brothel- house? |
A27053 | What would men give for such a life as this? |
A27053 | What, will they be brought to open confessions and lamentations of sin, and to follow the guidance and perswasions of a Priest? |
A27053 | When God draws, and self draws, which do you follow in the tenor of your life? |
A27053 | When Passion begins to stir within you, ask What''s the matter? |
A27053 | When death comes, will you have it then? |
A27053 | When do they so fall out with men, for wronging God, or the Gospel, or their own souls, as they do for wronging them? |
A27053 | When men come to me for Physick for their Bodies, how submissive are they? |
A27053 | When people see you in an extraordinary garb, you draw their observation towards you, and one asketh, Who is yonder that is so fine? |
A27053 | When sport, and wine, and beauty do invite, Who is it whom such baits will not incite? |
A27053 | When the corn is ripe, would you have it grow there and not be cut? |
A27053 | When the fruit is ripe, should it not be gathered? |
A27053 | When the soul hath left it but a week, men can scarce endure to see it or smell it? |
A27053 | When the spirit hath hatched us for heaven, should we be so loth to leave the shell or nest? |
A27053 | When we are begotten again to the hopes of immortality, should we be so desirous to stay in the womb? |
A27053 | Whence can it be but for want of self- denial, that Magistrates professing a zeal for Holiness, regard no more the interest of Christ? |
A27053 | Whence is it but for want of self- denial, that Christian Love is grown so cold, while all profess it to be the badge of Christs Disciples? |
A27053 | Whence is it else that we have such contrary descriptions of Persons and Actions in the writings of the several Parties as we find? |
A27053 | Whence is it that Children learn a course of idle fooli ● h talking, more than of their own parents? |
A27053 | Where could you wish your Lives to be better, than in the hand of the most wise& gracious God? |
A27053 | Whether Heaven or Earth should be denied, seeing one of them you must deny? |
A27053 | Whether Self- denial lie in renouncing Propriety? |
A27053 | Whether it be a denying our Relations? |
A27053 | Whether it consist in renouncing Marriage? |
A27053 | Whether it lie in renouncing Marriage? |
A27053 | Whether it lie in solitude and renouncing secular affairs? |
A27053 | Whether self- denial consist in renouncing propriety? |
A27053 | Whether they would preserve him from calamity, sickness or death? |
A27053 | Which d ● you set most by? |
A27053 | Which is the Rule and Master of your lives? |
A27053 | Whither did self lead Adam when he hearkened to it, but to sin and death? |
A27053 | Who can eudure to be thus mewed up? |
A27053 | Who can love baseness, poverty and want? |
A27053 | Who giveth you strength to labour in the day, and refe ● ● eth you with sleep at night, and provideth all the creatures for your assistance? |
A27053 | Who have you lived to but him? |
A27053 | Who is it for but themselves that men make such a stir, for Offices and Honours, and places of Superiority? |
A27053 | Who is it that causeth your lungs to breathe, your stomach to turn your meat to nourishment; and that nourishment into blood and spirits and strength? |
A27053 | Who is it that is angry with those that Praise them, yea though they exceed their bounds, and ascribe more to them than is due? |
A27053 | Who is it that ruleth the children of disobedience, but carnal self? |
A27053 | Who is it that the Souldier fights for? |
A27053 | Who is it that the Tradesman deals for, that the Plowman labours for, that the Traveller goes for? |
A27053 | Who keeps your heart and pulse still beating, and your blood and spirits in continual motion, and warm in your veins? |
A27053 | Who should be so busie and laborious, as those that have the greatest account to make, and those that are to be exemplary to the rest? |
A27053 | Who would much fear a Tyrant or any other enemy, that saw God and Glory, which faith can see? |
A27053 | Whom would you have to be the Disposer of mens Lives but God? |
A27053 | Why are so many unwilling to enter by the way of Ordination? |
A27053 | Why do they not commend the good while they speak against the evil? |
A27053 | Why do we pretend to it our selves? |
A27053 | Why do you desire to be so fine, or neat, or excessive comely? |
A27053 | Why how soon will it be over? |
A27053 | Why should I think of what will be to morrow? |
A27053 | Why should Nature do any of these things but because God that makes and ruleth all, will have it to be so? |
A27053 | Why should not fruit when it is mellow fall? |
A27053 | Why should the Earth bear you an hour in vain? |
A27053 | Why should the Sun shine an hour or minute for you in vain? |
A27053 | Why should you be such enemies to your own salvation, as to make temptations for your selves? |
A27053 | Why then do you not desire to depart and to be with Christ? |
A27053 | Why then may not the living s ● ul, that is the Root and life of the body in the dust, be the instrument of God to reform its own body? |
A27053 | Why what''s the matter? |
A27053 | Why would we linger here when God doth call? |
A27053 | Why you bewray it more? |
A27053 | Why, what do you less, when by your attire you beg estimation from them? |
A27053 | Why? |
A27053 | Will any man say, these rags are lost? |
A27053 | Will it then hold when life and God forsake thee? |
A27053 | Will not thy sweet prove bitter in the end? |
A27053 | Will these deriders stand to what they say, And own their words at the great dreadful day? |
A27053 | Will this content you? |
A27053 | Will you allow no greater works for God than such as you can see a reason of, and can assign a natural cause of? |
A27053 | Will you cast away your souls, to leave a Name of renown behind you? |
A27053 | Wilt thou not bear for him a scorners breath, That underwent for thee a cursed death? |
A27053 | Wilt thou not shortly sing another song? |
A27053 | Wilt thou tell death and God, thou wilt not die? |
A27053 | Would not an Antidote preserve thy heart? |
A27053 | Would the Ambitious Proud person be delivered from his Pride or Honours? |
A27053 | Would the Covetous worldling be delivered from his worldliness? |
A27053 | Would you alone have the Disposal of your own lives? |
A27053 | Would you be deposed, and subjected to a spiritual government, and do nothing nor have nothing but at the pleasure of Christ? |
A27053 | Would you be no nearer him, and enjoy no more of him? |
A27053 | Would you make a Creature of him, that can be limited, comprehended or seen with fleshly mortal eyes? |
A27053 | Would you not laugh at one that should make such a request to you? |
A27053 | You are content that the lives of Emperors and Kings that are greater than you, should be at his Dispose? |
A27053 | You be not angry with your Apple- tree that it bears not Plumbs, nor with your Pear- tree that it bears not Figs? |
A27053 | You can trust your lives on the skill of a Physician; And can not you trust them on the will of God? |
A27053 | You delight in the company of those that Christ will judge as his enemies: and how then will he judge of you? |
A27053 | You have had many a thought of it, and bestowed many a days labour for it, and yet do you not know it? |
A27053 | You may as well call for proof whether there are men in the world? |
A27053 | You may put as fine clothes upon a fool as upon a wise man: and will that think you make him pass for wise? |
A27053 | You owe your labours to Church and Commonwealth and the souls of men, and will you not pay so great a debt? |
A27053 | You pray to God[ Thy will be done] and do your own wills answer these prayers? |
A27053 | You see how little interest God and their Ministers and their own salvation hath in them: But will you see what carnal self can do more? |
A27053 | [ Are we blind also?] |
A27053 | [ As a mad- man that casteth firebrands, arrows and death, so is the man that deceiveth his neighbour, and saith, Am not I in sport?] |
A27053 | [ Behold I am vile, what shall I answer thee? |
A27053 | [ Do I seek to please men? |
A27053 | [ For who maketh thee to differ? |
A27053 | [ Our lips are our own; who is Lord over us?] |
A27053 | [ Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
A27053 | all men, for ought I see, would be for us: Is it a crime to be a Minister? |
A27053 | and all our heart- burnings and malicious oppositions be turned into charitable consultations for an holy peace? |
A27053 | and allow men to set up a shop of poison for all to buy and take that will? |
A27053 | and another asks, Who is yonder? |
A27053 | and are you not strangers and pilgrims here? |
A27053 | and do you not know him? |
A27053 | and doth not experience tell you that you are not sufficient to relieve your selves in any pain or sickness that doth befal you? |
A27053 | and from hindring the means of mens salvation? |
A27053 | and from tempting unstable souls to sin and to damnation? |
A27053 | and from the open practise of Idolatry or ungodliness? |
A27053 | and had not you enough of it? |
A27053 | and hath he not need of teaching? |
A27053 | and how cheap a Religion do many think to come to heaven with? |
A27053 | and how comes all this inhumane forgery about? |
A27053 | and how do they intreat? |
A27053 | and how many millions might have come to Heaven, that now must be shut out? |
A27053 | and how much do they strive against all our perswasions that would bring them to it? |
A27053 | and how much of the Law of God should be repealed? |
A27053 | and how obstinately do they resist us, if not deride and scorn that Holiness which the will of God hath so abundantly commended to them? |
A27053 | and how patiently did they bear indignities and persecutions? |
A27053 | and how slow and backward, how remiss and negligent, how unconstant and tired are they in the works that are meerly for God, and their salvation? |
A27053 | and how strong is Self still in those few? |
A27053 | and if I may not let it down, what reason have I to be tasting it? |
A27053 | and if I may not meddle with it, why should I look upon it or hearken to them that would entice me to it? |
A27053 | and if I should not taste it, why should I touch it or be medling with it? |
A27053 | and if you may not be slothful in the work of a man, what a crime is it to be slothful in the work of the God of Heaven? |
A27053 | and is it not your work? |
A27053 | and is not God and everlasting glory sufficient for you? |
A27053 | and joyn with them in the holy Worship and ways of God, while they oppose their supposed viciousness? |
A27053 | and made your hearts his very work- house, where he hath been daily doing somewhat for God? |
A27053 | and may he not spend more time in ease or recreations? |
A27053 | and must the Nation lose its peace and hopes? |
A27053 | and must they sit there moneth after moneth, and use their utmost skill and diligence to make such Laws as are necessary for the common good? |
A27053 | and shall we deliver down this despair to our Posterity? |
A27053 | and that they are bringing you up for their own profession? |
A27053 | and therefore that it''s folly to be ambitious, and wisdom to contemn the world? |
A27053 | and therefore wiser in their recess, than in their aspirings? |
A27053 | and to have my nature dissolved? |
A27053 | and to prepare for death, and to get ready the graces that you must use in you last necessities? |
A27053 | and to what end? |
A27053 | and what a case will heart and life be in? |
A27053 | and what else hath he commanded his Messengers to Cry out against? |
A27053 | and what hast thou that thou didst not receive? |
A27053 | and what is that End which you principally design and endeavour to obtain, and which you set your heart on, and lay out your hopes upon? |
A27053 | and what thanks after will they return? |
A27053 | and when all is done, must not these Laws be executed? |
A27053 | and wherein is it more excellent than the beasts that perish? |
A27053 | and who is it commonly else that brings in the Verdict? |
A27053 | and who is it that is wronged?] |
A27053 | and whom you have daily served in the world? |
A27053 | and will not a mean habitation, and shorter accommodations serve you for so short a time? |
A27053 | and will you quit your hopes of God and glory? |
A27053 | and yet do you not know him? |
A27053 | and yet have you words to spare for vanity? |
A27053 | and yet shall we go on in selfishness still? |
A27053 | are you made the living members of Christ, and the Sons of God, and the heirs of Heaven? |
A27053 | as some of the Papists, Monks, and Fryars do? |
A27053 | at least who is it else that made and followeth on the quarrel? |
A27053 | bruitsh flesh how long? |
A27053 | but How we behaved our selves in it? |
A27053 | but whether we were Holy or unholy? |
A27053 | but, which is the way to Heaven? |
A27053 | choose that which lieth in the esteem of God: Must you be great and glorious? |
A27053 | d I may not hate another? |
A27053 | do you begin to repent of your choice? |
A27053 | do you think it more honourable to do hurt, than to suffer hurt? |
A27053 | doth he more regard their salvation than his own? |
A27053 | especially to confess disgraceful sins in any self- denying manner? |
A27053 | especially when they think it is but by a man? |
A27053 | even under the Cloak of Liberty and Religion? |
A27053 | for the matter of it, what is it but earth? |
A27053 | for what should hinder it? |
A27053 | for whom else have you laid out your time and labour? |
A27053 | hast not thou made an hedge about him, and about his house, and about all that he hath on every side? |
A27053 | have we not teaching enough at Church? |
A27053 | how lamentably do they improve them, to the contempt of Ministers,& trouble and division of the Church? |
A27053 | how little do you for him: how much do you to displease him? |
A27053 | how much more if he were but of their party? |
A27053 | how rare are self- denying men? |
A27053 | how soon would all our wars be ended? |
A27053 | how wouldst thou fear and tremble? |
A27053 | in whom you have trusted? |
A27053 | is it because it is not plainly required by God? |
A27053 | is it for God or self? |
A27053 | is it for God or self? |
A27053 | is it for no more than is to be had on earth? |
A27053 | is it more for God or self? |
A27053 | is there not plain reason in all this that I propound to you? |
A27053 | lay together all the service of your lives, and how small and poor a matter is it? |
A27053 | must I hate my self? |
A27053 | must a nature that is kin to Angels, be enslaved to that which is kin to beasts? |
A27053 | must you yet turn to the pomp and vanity of the world again? |
A27053 | nor no more cleanly jests than these? |
A27053 | nor what was our station? |
A27053 | nor whether we were Rich or poor? |
A27053 | or Anabaptists endure one to speak against Infant- baptism? |
A27053 | or are they all better, and juster, and honester than they? |
A27053 | or are they hypocritical dissembling words? |
A27053 | or at least to be willing of your natural death? |
A27053 | or by Riches, Honour, and Pleasures, which gratifie the flesh? |
A27053 | or can he make an ill bargain that makes sure of Heaven? |
A27053 | or do you sustain your selves, or are you sufficient for your selves? |
A27053 | or doth real holiness more abound? |
A27053 | or fear the passag ● in ● ● so 〈 ◊ 〉 ▪ ● ● wide, so strange a place, in 〈 … 〉 ● f 〈 … 〉 which they were in before? |
A27053 | or hath he not a soul to save or lose as well as they? |
A27053 | or hath the world more need of you than them? |
A27053 | or may he not wear more sumptuous apparel? |
A27053 | or more your own? |
A27053 | or neglect this duty? |
A27053 | or pine in miserie? |
A27053 | or rather is it not unreasonable selfishness that makes so unreasonable a difference with you? |
A27053 | or redeem your selves? |
A27053 | or should it make me question whe ● ● er I have mine? |
A27053 | or that he doth not mean you good even in your death? |
A27053 | or the sensual person from his sensual delights? |
A27053 | or what have you to tempt you to it? |
A27053 | or would you have all men else in the world also to have the Disposal of theirs? |
A27053 | or your lungs once breathe a breath in vain? |
A27053 | self- denial, that there is such scrambling for Rule and Greatness, for Riches and Honours among all? |
A27053 | shall all be at work for you to further your work, and will you think that idleness is no sin? |
A27053 | shall he be idle? |
A27053 | shall the traiterous delinquent be the judge? |
A27053 | should beggars be Proud, yea such needy miserable beggars, and be proud of their very begging? |
A27053 | than, What is the duty of a true believer? |
A27053 | that hath sanctified you, and formed the image of God upon you, and hath dwelt in you so long? |
A27053 | the means of your Salvation, and of the Glory of God; or the Means of providing for Self and Flesh? |
A27053 | to groan under your disease, and wilfully eat and drink that which you know doth increase it? |
A27053 | was that the height of presumption and self- willedness then? |
A27053 | were it not better to be that while with him in prayer, or about his work? |
A27053 | what a gross incongruity is this? |
A27053 | what a weary life is this? |
A27053 | what an absurdity would this be, and insensibility of your brethrens case? |
A27053 | what can they for shame say to it? |
A27053 | what do I get by serving God?] |
A27053 | what doth it in your mouths, if it be not in your hearts? |
A27053 | what else but carnal self is the End? |
A27053 | what else but the will of self is the Rule? |
A27053 | what else can we think of them when their discourse and songs are filthy, but that their hearts are filthy? |
A27053 | what incongruities are these? |
A27053 | what is it that God commendeth to the world so so much as an Holy and Heavenly life? |
A27053 | what is that Good which your mind is principally set to obtain? |
A27053 | what little need have you of such great matters on earth? |
A27053 | what matter of highest excellency, and greatest necessity? |
A27053 | what matters have you to mind and talk of? |
A27053 | what more do all Gluttons, Drunkards, and Whoremongers, but follow ther fleshly desires? |
A27053 | what perplexities then will you cast men into, to know just how many morsels they may eat? |
A27053 | what shiftings and cavillings will they find against this displeasing work of Discipline? |
A27053 | what the better is a Tree or House if men commend it? |
A27053 | what transcendent subjects? |
A27053 | what unworthythoughts have you of heaven, if you think when you are there, you shall have need of mens good thoughts or words on earth? |
A27053 | what work hath it made over all the earth? |
A27053 | what would you be thought but worms and sinners; and such as after all your glory, can not forbid a crawling worm to feed upon your face or heart? |
A27053 | when as my brother Must love me? |
A27053 | when did you speed the worse for the following of his counsel? |
A27053 | when it is only or principally, whether we may hinder them from robbing us of our own? |
A27053 | when you are in Hell, will you then have your wills, or that you love? |
A27053 | when you lie in pain expecting every hour to appear in another world, will you then have your wills? |
A27053 | whence do you fetch the rise and reason of your desires? |
A27053 | who is it for? |
A27053 | whose Word and Will is it ordinarily that prevails? |
A27053 | why carnal Self: If it were but for wordly commodities they would do more: Would you have me prove it? |
A27053 | why else do dying men most contemn it? |
A27053 | why else do they learn the art of talking of it, but in order to the art of practising it? |
A27053 | why should the air refresh you an hour in vain? |
A27053 | why should the springs and rivers run for you an hour in vain? |
A27053 | why should your pulse beat one stroke in vain? |
A27053 | why what''s the matter that many of our worshipful and honourable Beasts do not see that they do as bad? |
A27053 | why, it was for speaking against self and its carnal interest: But was it not a truth that was spoken? |
A27053 | will God let you alone if we should let you alone? |
A27053 | will they make themselves the laughing stock, and talk of the Countrey? |
A27053 | will they not think that you live in whorehouses, and not in Christian families? |
A27053 | will they stoop to such a fellow, and ask him forgiveness( specially if it be their inferior?) |
A27053 | will you feed upon that which is Carrion or corrupt, and make it your Junkets to delight your palate? |
A27053 | will you not judge by a mans language what Country man he is? |
A27053 | would not God have them do it? |
A27053 | would this kind of talk prove the man to have his eye- sight? |
A27053 | would you take a Dog or a Swine for your Master, and serve them, and obey them, and do what your brutish Master would have you? |
A27053 | your own brutish part, or any other brute that lives about you? |
A26879 | 1. WHo is it that we pray to, whom we call Our Father?] |
A26879 | 10. Who must teach us at Age? |
A26879 | 11? |
A26879 | 13 What think you of the name Sacrifice, Altar and Priest, here? |
A26879 | 13. Who be they that Christ will then justifie, or condemn? |
A26879 | 14. Who be they that prophane this Name of God? |
A26879 | 14. would have Sacrificed to Paul and Barnabas as gods? |
A26879 | 23. Who be they that be called here Haters of God? |
A26879 | 26. Who be they that must be Excommunicated, or refused? |
A26879 | 29. Who be the greatest breakers of this Com ● andement? |
A26879 | 3. Who made the Lords Prayer? |
A26879 | 30. Who are the greatest Robbers, or breakers of both parts of this Command, Negative and Preceptive? |
A26879 | 31? |
A26879 | 4. Who are the Parties Covenanting and Acting? |
A26879 | 5. Who is it then that is the King of this Kingdom? |
A26879 | 5. repeat it in so different Words? |
A26879 | 6. Who are the Subjects of this Kingdom? |
A26879 | 8. Who be they that must Teach? |
A26879 | ? |
A26879 | A Divine and Humane? |
A26879 | ARE the Ten Commandements a Law to Christians? |
A26879 | Alas, it will be a hard and long work ● … teach Children all this; or Servants either that ● … at age? |
A26879 | And a question of unspeakable moment it is, How we can be sure of such prophetical Revelations delivered to us by others? |
A26879 | And are not Infants the Kings Subjects, though they can not obey? |
A26879 | And by what Authority, and limit his Kingdom? |
A26879 | And can it be expected then, that Man give a proper Definition of the Infinite God? |
A26879 | And can we tell what then becomes of the Soul? |
A26879 | And can you believe that Wickedness is Wisdom, and all Conscionable Goodness is Folly and De ceit? |
A26879 | And how doth God beget a Son? |
A26879 | And how few will live to return home with the Decrees? |
A26879 | And how he is recovered? |
A26879 | And how shall he be able to relieve the Poor, or do any such good works, if he may not endeavour to grow richer? |
A26879 | And how stand we related to him? |
A26879 | And how ● … we be comforted or saved by such hope? |
A26879 | And if every Child and Subject must renounce God, Christ and Heaven, that is Commanded; and men become Gods and Antigods? |
A26879 | And is there no harm in all this? |
A26879 | And is ● t not prophaning the Name of God, to make him the Author of the murder of his Servants? |
A26879 | And shall the new Flesh be punished for that which it never did? |
A26879 | And shall we suspect any sleepy unactivity there? |
A26879 | And that Good Men are the Blessing of the World, and Bad Men the Plagues? |
A26879 | And that Mankind should have one Universal Head and Monarch in our own Nature? |
A26879 | And that Polluted Souls should not have immediate access to the most Holy, but by a Holy Mediator? |
A26879 | And that all the Choosers have trusted them with their Judgments, Consciences and Salvation, and will stand to what they do? |
A26879 | And that greatest Prosperity is usually parted with, with greatest sorrow? |
A26879 | And that he is infinitely Great, and Wise, and Good, and therefore should be Obeyed, Loved, and Trusted above all? |
A26879 | And that he should do this great work like his Greatness and Goodness, and above Mans shallow reach? |
A26879 | And that he should restore depraved humane Nature? |
A26879 | And that their Lives and Souls, and all are his, and at his will? |
A26879 | And that there is a Conscience in Man, that condemneth Sin, and approveth Goodness? |
A26879 | And to be ● ● far above their Laws? |
A26879 | And what do you next know of your self? |
A26879 | And what is He? |
A26879 | And what is all this to do? |
A26879 | And what is all this to do? |
A26879 | And what is it that God there doth as an actual Covenanter? |
A26879 | And what is the Hallowing of Gods Name? |
A26879 | And what wonders of Love God hath shewn to Sinners, to win their Hearts in Love to him? |
A26879 | And which shall be Chief when they differ among themselves? |
A26879 | And who is fitter than those whom Christ by Office hath thereto appointed? |
A26879 | And who shall make this European Church- Soveraign? |
A26879 | And who would not rather secure a reward to himself than to his Son? |
A26879 | And why he will not give us the Prize without the Race, and the Crown without the Warfare and Victory? |
A26879 | And why he would make Man with free will? |
A26879 | And why is it not annihilated? |
A26879 | And why it can not act out of a Body, what Reason can be given? |
A26879 | And will not the Countrey were they meet, by nearness, have more Voices than all the rest? |
A26879 | And you may next ask, Why he did not make every Star a Sun? |
A26879 | Are Devils and Wicked Souls in the same Hell that they shall be in after the Day of Iudgment, and have they the same punishment? |
A26879 | Are Infants Capable of doing all this? |
A26879 | Are all Men Subjects of God''s Kingdom? |
A26879 | Are all Saints that are members of the catholick Church? |
A26879 | Are all damned that die unbaptized? |
A26879 | Are any Children guilty of their Parents sins? |
A26879 | Are not the Souls of Men judged when Men die? |
A26879 | Are not these easily knowable to all? |
A26879 | Are sins pardoned before they are committed? |
A26879 | Are the words[ Six dayes shalt thou labour,& c.] a Command, or onely a License? |
A26879 | Are there any new Laws of Nature since the Fall? |
A26879 | Are there any other wayes of Murther? |
A26879 | Are there more Gods than One? |
A26879 | Are there more waies of self murder? |
A26879 | Are there not fewer Temptations in your own Houses, than they are like to find abroad in the World? |
A26879 | Are there then any Saints on Earth? |
A26879 | Are they Ministers in Office ● ● any but th ● Church? |
A26879 | Are we bound absolutely to forgive all Men? |
A26879 | Are we justified by believing in God the Father, and the Holy Ghost, and the rest of the Articles? |
A26879 | Are we not then guilty of disobedience? |
A26879 | Are ye so foolish, having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the Flesh? |
A26879 | Are you fit for the Ministry your selves? |
A26879 | At least should we not extend this Unifying Government as far as we can, even to Europe, if not to all the World? |
A26879 | BY what Laws doth God Govern the World? |
A26879 | But Alas, what have Selfish carnal worldlings to account for? |
A26879 | But God hath made us Individual persons, with so peculiar a Self- love, that no man can possibly love another as himself? |
A26879 | But God may change them when the Parents are dead? |
A26879 | But God speaketh to the World by Angels and Men; and who knows but they may be permitted to Lie? |
A26879 | But I have oft with Lamentation wondered why Godly Ministers do no more of the work now appropriated to Universities, for their own Sons? |
A26879 | But I pray you tell me how the CREED comes to be of so great Authority, seeing I find it not in the Bible? |
A26879 | But Men will not submit to publick Confession: may not Auricular private Confession to the Priest serve turn? |
A26879 | But are all these the unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost? |
A26879 | But are not National Churches necessary? |
A26879 | But are not all the rest of his Attributes Essential? |
A26879 | But are not the Articles of our Church, and the Confessions of Churches, their Religion? |
A26879 | But are the Souls of the Wicked in no other Hell than the Devils are? |
A26879 | But are we certain that the Records of them in the Scripture are true? |
A26879 | But are we not sure that this Life will be a Life of Trial and Temptation, and that we must pass through many Tribulations? |
A26879 | But ask any of that Opinion, under the Stone, o ● other tormenting Disease, or if he must die as a Malefactor, whether it be not a Natural evil? |
A26879 | But did not Christ''s go to Paradise? |
A26879 | But did not the Apostles as one Colledge Govern the whole Church? |
A26879 | But do we not get it by our Labour, and the gift of Men? |
A26879 | But do we not pray that on Earth he may use us as a Father? |
A26879 | But doth Nature tell us what kind of Rewards and Punishments men have? |
A26879 | But doth not God disclaim punishing the Children for the Fathers sins, and say the Soul that sinneth shall die? |
A26879 | But doth not Nature teach every Creature preserve its life, and rather than die to kill ano ● …? |
A26879 | But every where Salvation is promised only to Believers? |
A26879 | But had not Peter the Monarchical Government of all the Church on Earth in his Time? |
A26879 | But had not the Priests under the Law, t ● ● Spirit of God, as well as Moses that gave them t ● ● Law? |
A26879 | But hath not Christ his Subordinate Official Governours? |
A26879 | But have not Pastors or Bishops, a power of constraint by the Sword, that is, by Corporal punishments or mulcts? |
A26879 | But he shall not be hang''d for killing another that doth it against his Will: And no man is willing to damn himself? |
A26879 | But how can any Man love him above all, of whom we can have no true Conception? |
A26879 | But how can man conceive of an Eternal uncaused Being? |
A26879 | But how can they honour God''s Spirit and Grace, who have it not: Or they that have so little as not well to discern it? |
A26879 | But how come Devils or Souls to be visible being Spirits? |
A26879 | But how comes it to be so hard then to the most to become serious Believers and Godly, when the Evidence is so clear? |
A26879 | But how few be there that do all this? |
A26879 | But how is Christ''s Merits and Satisfaction perfect then? |
A26879 | But how is the Second Person in the Trinity more United to the humane Nature, than the Father and the Holy Ghost? |
A26879 | But how is the Universal Church visible, if it have no Visible Unifying Head and Government under Christ? |
A26879 | But how know you that sense is not deceived? |
A26879 | But how know you what those Spirits above us are? |
A26879 | But how may we know that we are Sanctifyed by the Spirit? |
A26879 | But how shall I know which is the true Church, when so many claim the Title; the Papists say it is only theirs? |
A26879 | But how shall we know what Pastors they be that have this Power of the Keyes, and judging of mens fitness for Communion? |
A26879 | But how was he conceived by the Holy Ghost, the Second Person by the third, when it is only the Second that was incarnate? |
A26879 | But if God give us more than Bread, even Plenty for our delight, as well as necessaries, may we not use it accordingly? |
A26879 | But if it be God''s will to punish, pain and kill us, how can we Will this when it is evil to us; and we can not Will evil? |
A26879 | But if the King Command me one thing and my Parents another, which of them must I prefer in my obedience? |
A26879 | But if these evil consequents be all, then a man that can moderately use Fornication so as shall avoid these evils, sinneth not? |
A26879 | But is all this meant in the Creed? |
A26879 | But is it not Adultery that is committed against secret Marriage, which was never published or legally Solemnized? |
A26879 | But is it not enough to know that they are of the Church visible? |
A26879 | But is it not more spiritual to make e ● … day a Sabbath? |
A26879 | But is it not safer to hold that Baptism put ● none but the Elect, who never lose it, into a title to Salvation? |
A26879 | But is it not strange that God will lay our Salvation on the belief of that which we can not understand? |
A26879 | But is it not then safest to keep two dayes; the seventh to honour the Creator, and the first to commemorate our Redemption? |
A26879 | But is it not very congruous to Nature and Reason, that God should have Mercy on lapsed man? |
A26879 | But is no ofter use of Husband and Wife lawful than for Generation? |
A26879 | But is not Christs Body present on Earth, and in the Sacrament? |
A26879 | But is not Heaven too high a Pattern for our desires? |
A26879 | But is not Knowledge the gift of God? |
A26879 | But is not Monarchy the best Form of Government, and should not the Church have the best? |
A26879 | But is not a General Council the Universal Governour? |
A26879 | But is not that a mans Idol which he Trusteth most? |
A26879 | But is not this by consent rather than by nature? |
A26879 | But is nothing here forbidden but symbolizing with Idolaters, in seeming to mean as they by doing as they? |
A26879 | But is there no Command to Parents, Prin ● …, and Pastors for their duty, as well as to Chil ● … n and Subjects for theirs? |
A26879 | But is there no remedy against both these Confusions? |
A26879 | But is this the Faith by which we are justifyed? |
A26879 | But it is so transcendently above all the Works of Nature, that such condescension of God is hard to be believed? |
A26879 | But it seems incredible that God should be made Man? |
A26879 | But it seems there is no Confession of Sin, or Thanksgiving in this Form of Prayer? |
A26879 | But it will make Ministers Lords and Tyrants, to have such power? |
A26879 | But it will seem sordid for Lords, and Knights, and Ladies to labour? |
A26879 | But many say that for nearer parents sins no punishments but temporal are due? |
A26879 | But may not a Child or Servant take that Meat or Drink which is but meet, if the Parents and Masters be unwilling? |
A26879 | But may not a crooked or deformed person ● … de their deformity by apparel or other means? |
A26879 | But may not others do it for his Children? |
A26879 | But might not Kings then make Religio ● Laws? |
A26879 | But must not all the affections be set on God as well as Love? |
A26879 | But our Original sin from Adam had an ● ther cause; God decreeing that Adam should stan ● or fall for all his posterity? |
A26879 | But seeing Parents are named and not Princes, must we defend our Parents against our King if he be their Enemy? |
A26879 | But should a man rather die by Famine than take from another that is bound to give, and will not? |
A26879 | But should not the whole Church be One? |
A26879 | But should they not do all that they do in Unity and Concord? |
A26879 | But some say that Chastisements are no punishments? |
A26879 | But some say, it is done only by saying these words, This is my Body; or by Blessing it? |
A26879 | But some think the Sabbath was first instituted in the Wilderness, when they were forbid to gather Manna? |
A26879 | But sure Unity is so excellent that we may conceive God delighteth in all that promoteth it? |
A26879 | But the Bishops of the World may meet by their Delegates? |
A26879 | But the Scripture speaks of no Infants baptized? |
A26879 | But the dust in a Grave is so vile a thing that one would think the raising it should not be very desireable to the Soul? |
A26879 | But the perfect Answer to this doubt is reserved for Heaven? |
A26879 | But there are so many difficulties and improbabilities about the Resurrection, as make the Belief of it very hard? |
A26879 | But there are things in the Scripture of exceeding difficulty to believe: Especially that God should become Man? |
A26879 | But these do none of them make Three Persons? |
A26879 | But this is a great and difficult work? |
A26879 | But though Infants be Church- Member ● is it not better that their Baptism be delayed till th ● ● know what they do? |
A26879 | But we are still apt to doubt of things unseen? |
A26879 | But we shall too much countenance the Papists Sacrifice by using the same Names? |
A26879 | But were there not Prophets after Moses that had the Spirit? |
A26879 | But what Confusion will this Cause, if every Subject and Child become judge whether their Princes or Parents Commands be lawful? |
A26879 | But what good will a Resurrection of the Body do us, if the Soul be in happiness before? |
A26879 | But what if I owe him as much as he oweth me, may I not stop it, and refuse to pay him? |
A26879 | But what if Men never hear of the Redeemer, may they not obey Gods Law of Nature? |
A26879 | But what if a man can not be satisfied that the seventh day is repealed, is it not safest for him ● ● keep both? |
A26879 | But what if as many will be scandalized or tempted to sin on the other side if I do it not? |
A26879 | But what if he can spare it, and I am in great necessity, and it be his duty to relieve me, and he refuseth? |
A26879 | But what if he consent to run the hazard, as in a Hors ●-race, a Game, a Wager,& c? |
A26879 | But what if he owe me a debt and will not pay me, or keep unjust possession of my goods, may I not take my own by stealth or force, if I be able? |
A26879 | But what if in gaming, betting or trading, I desire to get from him, though to his loss? |
A26879 | But what if it be a malicious man, that will disgrace or ruine him if he know it: Is he bound to Confess it? |
A26879 | But what if it be so small a matter as will be no loss to him? |
A26879 | But what if the Bishop or Pastor who is ● ● er us, differ from most in the Nation? |
A26879 | But what if the Bishops or Pastors be di ● ● ded; which of them must we obey? |
A26879 | But what if the King and the Bishops or Pastors differ about matters of Religion, to be believed or done, which of them must I obey? |
A26879 | But what if we have Slaves, that are no Christians? |
A26879 | But what is all this to the Sanctfying of God himself? |
A26879 | But what is the best Conception I can have of God? |
A26879 | But what shall such sorrowfull Parents ● o? |
A26879 | But when a Man hath Riches for many Years, what need he ask daily for what he hath? |
A26879 | But when doubting Thoughts return, would it not be a great help to Faith, if you could prove the Souls Immortality by reason? |
A26879 | But when experience assureth us, that f ● ● Christians can bear Church Discipline, should it be us ● ● when it will do hurt? |
A26879 | But when there are divers contending Churches, how shall I know which of them I should joyn with? |
A26879 | But when we can not conceive how Souls act out of the Body, how can the Thought of it be pleasant and satisfying to us? |
A26879 | But who shall be Iudge when mens Commands are contrary to Gods? |
A26879 | But whole Nations can not remove from Enemies and destroyers? |
A26879 | But why do you call it that which it is not really, when Christ saith, This is my Body, ● ● d not, this signifieth it? |
A26879 | But why is none of Christ''s Sufferings mentioned, before that of his being Crucified? |
A26879 | But why may not many Wives be permitted now as well as then? |
A26879 | But why may not the Pastors themselves give them to all that will? |
A26879 | But why was it that Christ forbad some to declare that he was the Christ? |
A26879 | But why would Christ appear to none but his Disciples? |
A26879 | But will it not be a long work to judge all that ever lived from the beginning of the World unto the End? |
A26879 | But will not God''s will be alwayes done, whether we pray or not? |
A26879 | But you make also our Friends that Love us to be murderers of us, if they draw us to sin, or neglect their duty? |
A26879 | By a serious remembring with Joy and thankfulness, how great Mercies we have received of God? |
A26879 | By certain Effects and Signs which notifie them: How little else did man differ from a Beast; if he knew no more than he seeth and feeleth? |
A26879 | By this it seems that scandal is a hainou ● sin? |
A26879 | By this it seems there are many wayes of denying the Holy Ghost? |
A26879 | By what Order are others to be kept from Church- communion? |
A26879 | By what degrees do Persons come to Forni ● … ion? |
A26879 | Can not Infants be Disciples of Christ, if Christ an Infant can be the Master and King of his Church? |
A26879 | Can not we learn this of our selves without Teachers? |
A26879 | Can not you do more at least to ground them well in Religion, before you send them from you for other Learning? |
A26879 | DOth it not seem Impossible that Christ should be begotten on a Virgin without a Man? |
A26879 | Did Christ mistake when he sent them to Disciple Nations, of which Infants are a part? |
A26879 | Did Christ stay all that while among his Disciples visibly? |
A26879 | Did Christ suffer the pains of Hell, which the Damned suffer? |
A26879 | Did not Christ fulfill the Commands of the Law for us by his Holiness and perfect Rrighteousness? |
A26879 | Do you Trust him so as to Consent and Take him for your Physician? |
A26879 | Do you Trust him so as to come to him and take his Medicine, forsaking all others? |
A26879 | Do you Trust his word by Believing him? |
A26879 | Do you believe that he saith True? |
A26879 | Do you disallow of the Common Course, which is to give all that men can get to their Children, save some small droppings now and then to the Poor? |
A26879 | Do you not by this set the Creed above the Bible? |
A26879 | Do you so far Trust him as to Consent to go with him? |
A26879 | Do you think that Anabaptists should be tolerated, or that all should not be forced to bring their Children to Baptism? |
A26879 | Doth God Tempt a Man to sin? |
A26879 | Doth God lead any into Temptation? |
A26879 | Doth God require Family Teaching, and daily Worship? |
A26879 | Doth he not leave them to those that are under him? |
A26879 | Doth he not pardon all Sin at once, at our Conversion? |
A26879 | Doth it not certifie them that they must die, and so that Fleshly Pleasure is short? |
A26879 | Doth it not tell them of the Vanity and Vexation of this World? |
A26879 | Doth it not tell them that there is a God that made them, and Ruleth all? |
A26879 | Doth it not tell them, that Mans Nature can hardly choose but fear what will follow after Death? |
A26879 | Doth not God forgive us the Guilt of the fault as well as the Dueness of Punishment? |
A26879 | Doth not Paul say, of all save Timothy, That All seek their own, and not the things that are Jesus Christ''s? |
A26879 | Doth not Paul tell us that all dayes are alike, ● ● we must not judge one another for dayes? |
A26879 | Doth not Sence and Reason tell men, how vile a thing that Flesh is which they preferr before their Souls? |
A26879 | Doth not the Scripture call Idols and Magi ● ● rates Gods? |
A26879 | Doth this Commandement belong to the first Table or the second? |
A26879 | For instance, Let it be questioned ▪ Whether our Statute- Book contained really the same Statutes that are there pretended? |
A26879 | For whom, and for what use did God make the World? |
A26879 | For whose sins did Christ Suffer? |
A26879 | God is not changeable, to forgive to day what he forgave not yester day: What then is his forgiving Sin? |
A26879 | Great Works best beseem the Infinite God: Is not the make of the whole World as wonderful, and yet certain? |
A26879 | HOw did God make all things? |
A26879 | HOw is this Article joyned to the former? |
A26879 | HOw is this Article joyned to the former? |
A26879 | HOw long was it between Christ''s Resurrection and his Ascension? |
A26879 | HOw must we prepare for a safe and co ● fortable Death? |
A26879 | HOw was Christ said to be three dayes in the Grave? |
A26879 | Had Mary any Children after Iesus Christ? |
A26879 | Had it not been better for us that he had staid on Earth? |
A26879 | Hath Christ a Soul besides his Godhead? |
A26879 | Hath Christ any Vicegerent or Universal Governour under him on Earth? |
A26879 | Hath God any Natural Officers under him in governing man? |
A26879 | Hath God given us a Law for all things ● his Worship? |
A26879 | Hath this Law no exceptions? |
A26879 | Have not Bishops and Councils the same Power now? |
A26879 | He is the Eternal God that had no Tempoporal beginning? |
A26879 | He shewed them that he had Flesh and Blood; ho ● ● ● en was he to them invisible, the most part of the Forty dayes? |
A26879 | He that ministreth to you the Spirit, and worketh Miracles among you, doth he it by the Works of the Law, or by the hearing of Faith? |
A26879 | Here are so many things contained, that we must desire you to open them severally: And first what Actions are here performed? |
A26879 | How are men called and separated to the Sacred Ministry? |
A26879 | How are men guilty of that? |
A26879 | How are the Ten Commandements the Law of Christ? |
A26879 | How are we certain that the Law of Moses was God''s Law? |
A26879 | How can Infants be Disciples that learn not? |
A26879 | How can a man know Gods Will and our duty by his Nature, and by all other Works of God about us? |
A26879 | How can the hope ● … unseen things make Affliction and Death easie ● … that Soul that shall never be saved? |
A26879 | How can we Love God above all, when we never saw him, and can have no Idea or formal conception of him in our Minds? |
A26879 | How can we pray for pardon to others, when we know not whether they be penitent Believers, capable of Pardon? |
A26879 | How can you know him that is no Object of sense? |
A26879 | How come the Scriptures to be Gods Wor ● when the Bishops Cannons are not? |
A26879 | How comes the Pope of Rome to call only his Subjects Catholicks? |
A26879 | How differ Charity and Iustice? |
A26879 | How doth Christ and his Apostles contract all the Law into that of Love? |
A26879 | How doth GOD govern Man on Earth? |
A26879 | How doth God Govern all things? |
A26879 | How doth God deliver us from Evil? |
A26879 | How doth God do this? |
A26879 | How doth God perform this Promise, when many godly Parents have wicked and miserable Children? |
A26879 | How doth the true Love of God work ● ● re in the Flesh? |
A26879 | How doth this Selfishness appear and work as Idolatry? |
A26879 | How els ● should Men here keep his Law, and hereafter ● ● judged according to it? |
A26879 | How else should he have Inceded for us as our heavenly High- priest? |
A26879 | How far are Christ''s Sufferings imputed t ● us? |
A26879 | How far are we from knowing fully what Sun and Moon and Stars are, and what is in them, and how they are ordered and move? |
A26879 | How far doth the Law of Nature assure us of Gods rewards and punishments? |
A26879 | How far were our sins imputed to Christ? |
A26879 | How few would study to make others odious, or ● o ruine them? |
A26879 | How gather you that he is our Father or Benefactor? |
A26879 | How is God known and honoured in his Providence? |
A26879 | How is Gods Name as our Sanctifier to be hallowed? |
A26879 | How is it proved that the Holy Ghost is God? |
A26879 | How is it that the Lords day must be s ● … and Sanctified? |
A26879 | How is it then that the Souls of Men are said sometimes to appear on Earth? |
A26879 | How is the Tongue guilty of Uncleanness? |
A26879 | How is the heavenly Glory as a Name of God to us that see it not? |
A26879 | How is this Name of God prophaned? |
A26879 | How is this Name of God prophaned? |
A26879 | How is this done, and what Action consecrateth them? |
A26879 | How know you that God is Eternal, without Beginning? |
A26879 | How know you that there is any thing above us, but what we see? |
A26879 | How know you that there is such a God? |
A26879 | How know you who made us? |
A26879 | How long was God making this World? |
A26879 | How man became sinful and miserable? |
A26879 | How many Patriarchs shall there be, and where? |
A26879 | How many sorts of Murder are there, 〈 ◊ 〉 which are the worst? |
A26879 | How many wayes hath God thus Revealed his will to man? |
A26879 | How may I be sure that God can not Li ● who is under no Law? |
A26879 | How may I be sure that I am forgiven? |
A26879 | How may I be sure that I shall enjoy this Everlasting Life? |
A26879 | How must Parents teach their housholds? |
A26879 | How must the Lords Supper be improved after the receiving? |
A26879 | How must the first, God''s Creation, be Sanctified? |
A26879 | How must we hallow this Name of God? |
A26879 | How must we hallow this inward Name of God? |
A26879 | How prove you against the Papists, that this is not part of the first Commandement? |
A26879 | How prove you all this? |
A26879 | How prove you that? |
A26879 | How prove you that? |
A26879 | How prove you that? |
A26879 | How shall we be sure that his Apostles by the Spirit were Authorized to give Laws to all future Generations? |
A26879 | How should good Rulers avoid it? |
A26879 | How should he as King have governed and protected his Church on Earth unto the End? |
A26879 | How should he have come again in Glory to Judge the World? |
A26879 | How should he have sent down the Holy Ghost to renew us? |
A26879 | How should one know the meaning and extent of the Commandements? |
A26879 | How then are Christians said to be of divers Religions? |
A26879 | How then are so few destroyed by false Witnesses? |
A26879 | How then doth the Christian Church as Christs Kingdom, differ from the World without, if they be any of his Kingdom too? |
A26879 | How then shall we know what and whom to believe? |
A26879 | How was Christ taken up to Heaven? |
A26879 | I Thought he had been only the Lord of his Church? |
A26879 | I am not bound to open my Mind to all men: What right hath a Thief to know my Goods or Heart? |
A26879 | I can not Conceive what GOD is? |
A26879 | I have oft wondred what harm twice baptizing doth, that it should be accounted a Heresie and intolerable? |
A26879 | I now tell you further, that we see God here but as in a Glass: His Image on Mans Soul is the nearest Glass: How do you conceive of your own Soul? |
A26879 | I perceive then that Christ''s Resurrection is t ● us an Article of the greatest use? |
A26879 | I perceive then that our main Question is, both as to Necessity and Evidence, How we are sure that the Gospel is true? |
A26879 | I pray shew me some such Instances? |
A26879 | I pray you open it to me by some familiar similitude? |
A26879 | I pray you tell me how far Mans Power is of God? |
A26879 | I pray you wherein is the difference? |
A26879 | I''le not ask you what his Attributes are, because you have told us that before; But how is this Name of God to be hallowed? |
A26879 | If Christ have all power, why doth he let Satan and Sin still reign over the far greatest part of the Earth? |
A26879 | If Christ was Mary''s Son, how escaped he Original guilt? |
A26879 | If God can so peculiarly Operate in and by our humane Nature, where lyeth the Incredibility? |
A26879 | If God hate murder, why did he Command ● … Israelites to kill all the Canaanites, Men, Women ● ● d Children? |
A26879 | If God will thus glorifie h ● ● Mercy to Man, by setting him above all the A ● gels, who shall say to him, What dost thou? |
A26879 | If forced, they are no Judges who is fit; And who then shall be Judge? |
A26879 | If he be GOD, why is he called the Son of God? |
A26879 | If it be so, why is any carnal acts of Generation forbidden? |
A26879 | If it do not so, doth it not tend to deceive us, that never heard of any other kind of Person? |
A26879 | If so, can not you teach others what you know? |
A26879 | If that be so, it is till then imperfect, and deprived of its desire, and so in pain and punishment? |
A26879 | If there be no Evil in it, why doth he groan under it? |
A26879 | If we are guilty of all neerer parents sin, will not our guilt increase to the end of the World, and the last man have the greatest guilt? |
A26879 | If you see ● Shilling of the Kings Coin, and the question be Whether this be a Shilling, or the Kings Coin, or Silver? |
A26879 | In what Nature did Christ appear of Old before his Incarnation? |
A26879 | In what Relation stands the person to be baptized? |
A26879 | In what Relations is God a Covenanter with man? |
A26879 | In what manner must Christs Ministers preach ● ll this? |
A26879 | In what manner must Parents teach th ● … Children? |
A26879 | In what manner will Christ come to Iudgment? |
A26879 | Is Christ a Man now he is in Heaven? |
A26879 | Is Government and Subjection all that ● ● here included? |
A26879 | Is Marriage in every forbidden degree ● … be dissolved? |
A26879 | Is Pardon perfect in this Life, and all punishment remitted at Once? |
A26879 | Is Rest as necessary now as under Mos ● ● Law? |
A26879 | Is all Deceiving of another a sin? |
A26879 | Is all Lying here forbidden, or only injurious Lying? |
A26879 | Is all desire of another mans unlawfull? |
A26879 | Is all false speaking Lying, or what is ● Lye? |
A26879 | Is all lust or inclination to Generation a Sin? |
A26879 | Is every Christian bound to say the Words of the Lords Prayer? |
A26879 | Is every worshipping Congregation a Church? |
A26879 | Is it Justice to damn a new- made Soul that never sinned? |
A26879 | Is it Love or Justice that saith, Whatever you would that men should do to you, do ye also to them?] |
A26879 | Is it Thievery to borrow and not pay? |
A26879 | Is it a dishonour to the Sun that every Eye, even of Flies, and Ants, and Toads, and Snakes, as well as Men, do see by the light of it? |
A26879 | Is it a duty to disinherit an incorrigible wicked Son; or to deny such filial maintenance and Portions? |
A26879 | Is it all that we need, that God lead us not into Temptation? |
A26879 | Is it all, or but some? |
A26879 | Is it certain that Christ rose from the Dead, the third day? |
A26879 | Is it equally necessary to us to believe every word in the Bible? |
A26879 | Is it lawful to buy and use men as Slaves? |
A26879 | Is it lawful to make any Picture of God? |
A26879 | Is it lawful to take Usury, or gain for Money lent? |
A26879 | Is it lawful to trye Masteries for a prize or wager: As running of Men, or Horses, Cock- fights, Fencing, Wrestling, contending in Arts,& c? |
A26879 | Is it meant of Gods vengeance in this Lif ● or in the next? |
A26879 | Is it necessary to restore all that one hath wrongfully got? |
A26879 | Is it not all one to deceive one way or another? |
A26879 | Is it not below God to concern himself with these lower things? |
A26879 | Is it only Parents that are here meant? |
A26879 | Is it sinful Theft to take it? |
A26879 | Is it such Souls, or is it Devils? |
A26879 | Is it to the Father only, or also to the Son tha ● we pray for Pardon? |
A26879 | Is it well, as is usual, to give the eldest Son all the Inheritance? |
A26879 | Is my sin forgiven, as long as I believe it not forgiven? |
A26879 | Is not God every where: Is he more in Heaven than any where else? |
A26879 | Is not God the only Glory and Ioy of the Blessed? |
A26879 | Is not Iustification and Forgiveness of Sin all One? |
A26879 | Is not that the common work of Lay- me ● that are no Officers? |
A26879 | Is not the Lords Supper a Converting Ordinance, which therefore should be used by the unbelievers or ungodly? |
A26879 | Is not the will of his Absolute Dominion exprest in the Course of Natural Motion, here inclided? |
A26879 | Is not this implyed in the five foregoing Commandements? |
A26879 | Is that Marriage void which is without ● … consent of Parents, and must such be separate as ● … lterers? |
A26879 | Is that an Evil which alwayes bringeth greater Good? |
A26879 | Is that to be only a Communion of Saints? |
A26879 | Is the Bread and Wine the true Body and Blood of Christ? |
A26879 | Is the Creation named to notifie to us God''s Almightiness? |
A26879 | Is the Spirit or the Scripture higher, and the Rule of Faith and Life? |
A26879 | Is there any True Religion, besides Christianity? |
A26879 | Is there any hope that Love should reign on Earth? |
A26879 | Is there any other Religion besides the Christian Religion? |
A26879 | Is there any so greatly obliged to take care of them as your selves? |
A26879 | Is there but One Christian Religion? |
A26879 | Is there no middle place between Heaven and Hell? |
A26879 | Is there no one Ministerial Head of all the Church on Earth? |
A26879 | Is there no other Reason for the naming of Hea ● en here? |
A26879 | Is there no way to prevent this danger to Mankind? |
A26879 | Is there not much selfishness in all? |
A26879 | Is there nothing in the Ten Commandements proper to the Israelites? |
A26879 | Is there yet any further witness of the Holy Ghost? |
A26879 | Is this Commandement now in force to Christians? |
A26879 | Is this Commandement of the Law of Nature as are the rest? |
A26879 | Is this it that is called, The witness of the Spirit in us? |
A26879 | Is this the meaning of this Article, that[ I believe that my own sins are actually forgiven] as a Divine Revealation? |
A26879 | Is àll use of Images unlawful? |
A26879 | It belonged to those that they were made for, and sent to; But what are they to us? |
A26879 | It is a Question unmeet for Man to put: It is bu ● to ask him, Why he would make a rank of reasonabl ● Creatures below confirmed Angels? |
A26879 | It is a thing well known, that the Church aboundeth with Catechisms, and Systemes of Divinity, and doth there yet need more? |
A26879 | It is a wonder that the Iews th ● n believed no ● in him? |
A26879 | It seems then Christ had three Natures, a Divine, a Soul, and a Body? |
A26879 | It seems then that we pray that we may not want, or be sick, or die, when God hath foretold us the contrary Events? |
A26879 | It seems then we must take great heed that we make not Christs Kingdom either less or Greater than it is? |
A26879 | It''s no wrong to a Consenter? |
A26879 | May men adde any thing to the prescribed Worship of God? |
A26879 | May not Hypocrites make such Professions, that are no Saints? |
A26879 | May not Parents have power to kill bad ● ● ● ldren? |
A26879 | May not Rich men that have no need, forbear the six dayes Labour? |
A26879 | May not a Man desire God to bless his labours, and to be rich? |
A26879 | May not a man kill another in the neces ● ● ● y defence of his own Life? |
A26879 | May not a man put away his Wife, or depart from her, if she seek his death, or if she prove utterly intolerable? |
A26879 | May not a tempted Man be delivered from Sin? |
A26879 | May not any man take an Infant out of the Street and give him food and rayment; much more offer him to Baptism, which is an Act of greater Charity? |
A26879 | May not the Pastors by this means become Church- Tyrants? |
A26879 | May not they be Knights and Lords, and have right to inheritances? |
A26879 | May not this signifie only his Kingdom as ● ● is God, or that which he shall have hereafter only at the Resurrection? |
A26879 | May one communicate who is uncertain of the sincerity of his Faith? |
A26879 | May they kill whom they will? |
A26879 | May we give over Learning when we are ● ● st Childhood? |
A26879 | May we hold Communion with a faulty Church and Worship? |
A26879 | May we know in this life, what Iudgment Christ will then pass on us? |
A26879 | May we not pray to Creatures? |
A26879 | May we not pray to the Son, and the Holy Ghost, as well as to the Father? |
A26879 | May we then pray against Poverty and Sickness, and hurt? |
A26879 | Must God needs make one Civil Monarch or Senate to be the Unifying Governour of all the Earth as one Kingdom, because he is a lover of Unity? |
A26879 | Must I take every motion in me, to be by the Holy Ghost which is agreeable to the Word of God, or for doing what is there commanded? |
A26879 | Must Ministers examine People before they communicate? |
A26879 | Must Subjects and Children judge? |
A26879 | Must a man work at his Trade for his Neighbour as much as for himself: Or as much use his Estate for others? |
A26879 | Must we Love all as true Christians who are baptized and communicate and profess Christianity? |
A26879 | NOw you have laid so good a Foundation, by shewing me the certain Truth of the Gospel, I would better know what Christianity is? |
A26879 | Nor of his Miracles? |
A26879 | Now tell me how We may be certain that all this History is true, and that these things are not misreported by the Scripture? |
A26879 | Now what is the Christian Religion? |
A26879 | O what manner of Persons should we be if all this were well believed? |
A26879 | Of Christ''s overcoming the Temptations of the Devil and the World? |
A26879 | Of what use is this Article to us? |
A26879 | Of what use is this Article to us? |
A26879 | On dayes of Thanksgiving men use to Feast: May we labour on the Lords day in providing Feasts? |
A26879 | Or any hope of a remedy? |
A26879 | Or are they abrogated with the rest of Moses Law? |
A26879 | Or if an Angel or many Angels came from Heaven? |
A26879 | Or of his fulfilling the Law, his perfect Holiness, Obedience and Righteousness? |
A26879 | Or use Physick or other remedies? |
A26879 | Or what proporion must they give them? |
A26879 | Or whether it was but an Index to point them to Christ the end of the Law, by whom they must be justified? |
A26879 | Proceed to open the formal Act of Faith, which you call Trust? |
A26879 | Proceed to shew me how their Followers were certain? |
A26879 | Rut how can we judge all such in a state ● f Salvation, when we see many at age prove wicked ● ● d Enemies? |
A26879 | SEeing you before proved that there i ● a God, from the Light of Nature, a ● ● Heathens know it, why is it made an Article ● ● Faith? |
A26879 | Seeing God can not be changed and moved by us, what good can it do us, and how can it attain our ends? |
A26879 | Should not Parents leave all their Estates to their Children? |
A26879 | Should not one prepare for the Lords Supper by Fasting and Humiliation before? |
A26879 | Sin can not hurt God: what need then is there of forgiveness? |
A26879 | So much for Gods publick Kingdom on Earth: But is there not also a Kingdom of God in every Christians Soul? |
A26879 | So much of God''s Works which make him known: Next tell us what you mean by the Words which you call his Name? |
A26879 | Soldiers who by unjust Wars destroy the Countreys, or in just war unjustly rob the People: O the Woful ruines that such have made? |
A26879 | Some say that by Bread is meant Jesus Christ ▪ because there is no Petition that mentioneth him? |
A26879 | Some say we must leave their case to God as unknown to us, and that he will save such of them as he electeth? |
A26879 | Some think that the Sabbath was not instituted till man had sinned and Christ was promised, and so God Rested in Christ? |
A26879 | Tell me I pray you, why God forbiddeth all such Lies? |
A26879 | Tell us now particularly, What these Signs or Names of God are, and how each of them is to be hallowed? |
A26879 | That there is a God, none but a mad M ● … sure can doubt: But what of God is so clearly r ● … vealed in Scripture? |
A26879 | Then Christ hath two Parts: One part i ● God, and the other Man? |
A26879 | Then how can it be lawful to spend any of the week- dayes in Religious Exercises, any more than to spend any part of the Sabbath day in Labour? |
A26879 | There are many that boast of the Spirit and Revelations; how shall we try such, whether their Spirits ● ● of God? |
A26879 | There is no Contradiction in it: And what is impossible to him that made all the World of nothing? |
A26879 | These are all excellent things, if we were sure that they were not deceived, nor did deceive: But how shall we be sure of that? |
A26879 | They know what they see, hear, feel; but how were they sure that it was of God, and not by some deceiving Cause? |
A26879 | This only would I learn of you; Received ye the Spirit by the Works of the Law, or by the hearing of Faith? |
A26879 | Those Delegates must come from the same Countreys and distance: And how shall the whole World know that they are truly chosen? |
A26879 | To what Use did Christ make it them? |
A26879 | To whom and on what occasion did he make it? |
A26879 | To whom doth God give such authority to ● ● men? |
A26879 | To whom is God a Father, and on what Fundamental account? |
A26879 | True: But what is the Reason which he giveth? |
A26879 | VVHat are the Parts of the Decalogue? |
A26879 | VVHat are the words of the First Commandement? |
A26879 | VVHat do you call Supernatural Revelation? |
A26879 | VVHat is the dependance of this Articl ● … on the former? |
A26879 | VVHo is Iesus Christ? |
A26879 | VVHy is this made the Third Petition? |
A26879 | WHY is this the Fourth Petition? |
A26879 | WHat are the Words of the Eighth Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the Words of the Seventh Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the Words of the Tenth Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the Words of the fifth Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the Words of the fourth Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the Words of the ninth Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the Words of the sixth Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the words of the Third Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat are the words of the second Commandement? |
A26879 | WHat is Prayer? |
A26879 | WHat is it which must be Taught and Learned? |
A26879 | WHat is meant by believing in the Holy Ghost? |
A26879 | WHat is meant by the Quick and ● … Dead? |
A26879 | WHat is the Sacrament called the Lords Supper or Eucharist? |
A26879 | WHat is the first thing that a man must know? |
A26879 | WHat is the meaning of this Conclusion, and it''s Scope? |
A26879 | WHere is it that we shall live when we go hence? |
A26879 | WHy is God here called[ The FATHER] in whom we believe? |
A26879 | WHy is this made the Second Petition? |
A26879 | WHy is this made the Sixth Petition? |
A26879 | WHy is this made the fifth Petition, or the second of the second part? |
A26879 | WHy is this made the first Petition in ou ● Prayers? |
A26879 | Was Christ GOD in his low condition on Earth? |
A26879 | Was Christ''s Flesh made of the substance of his Mother? |
A26879 | Was Christ''s Soul begotten by his Mother? |
A26879 | Was Rest on the Sabbath absolutely commanded? |
A26879 | Was it foreknown that Christ would rise? |
A26879 | Was it just with God to punish the Innocent? |
A26879 | Was it not as unlikely as dust to be what it now is? |
A26879 | Was it only Christs Body that suffered, or also his Soul and Godhead? |
A26879 | Was not all that was written in stone of perpetual obligation? |
A26879 | We are all by Nature Children of Wrath, and none can enter into Heaven that is not regenerate and born of the Spirit? |
A26879 | We lea ● hence what Sin deserveth: shall we play with tha ● which must have such a Sacrifice? |
A26879 | Were any sav ● d by Christ before he was made Man? |
A26879 | What Book like the Sacred Scriptures hath taught the World the Knowledge of God, the Creation of the World, the End and Hope and Felicity of Man? |
A26879 | What Laws hath Christ made, and what doth ● e rule by? |
A26879 | What Laws or Canons have Pastors power to make for the Church? |
A26879 | What Life is it that is the best Preparation? |
A26879 | What Power may allow one to take that which ● … anothers? |
A26879 | What Preparation is necessary for the keeping holy that day? |
A26879 | What Relations are here included? |
A26879 | What Sin doth this Clause specially condemn? |
A26879 | What Sin is it, whose forgiveness we pray for? |
A26879 | What Texts of Scripture do fully prove that the Soul liveth when it is separated from the Body? |
A26879 | What Will is it that is contrary to the Will of God? |
A26879 | What are God''s works which must be so Sanctified, as notifying God? |
A26879 | What are his Laws about Church- Officers? |
A26879 | What are the Acts of Christs Kingly Government? |
A26879 | What are the Duties which we owe to God alone? |
A26879 | What are the New Laws which he hath made for all? |
A26879 | What are the Outward signs of all this? |
A26879 | What are the Terms on which they must receive Men to Communion? |
A26879 | What are the best Remedies against all Unchastity and uncleanness of Mind and Body? |
A26879 | What are the chief Causes of this sin? |
A26879 | What are the parts of Church- Service be used on the Lords day? |
A26879 | What are the private duties of the Lords ● ay? |
A26879 | What are the rules to avoid sinful injury in buying and selling? |
A26879 | What are the things signified and given? |
A26879 | What are those Foundations on which this Law is built? |
A26879 | What be the Temptations of Satan which we pray against? |
A26879 | What be the certain signs then of tru ● Love to God? |
A26879 | What be the changes that have been made? |
A26879 | What be the worst sorts of Covetousness? |
A26879 | What be those? |
A26879 | What borrowing is it that is Theft? |
A26879 | What credible humane Testimony do you mean they had? |
A26879 | What did Christs Soul suffer? |
A26879 | What did God with the World when he had made it? |
A26879 | What do his Names[ Jesus Christ] si ● nifie? |
A26879 | What do the words signifie[ that brought thee out of the Land of Egypt?] |
A26879 | What do you next know of your selves? |
A26879 | What doth a Man first perceive of himself? |
A26879 | What doth daily Bread oblige us to? |
A26879 | What doth the word[ Father] signifie? |
A26879 | What doth the word[ Remember] signifie? |
A26879 | What doth this Hallowing particularly include? |
A26879 | What doth this Petition imply? |
A26879 | What doth this great Sacrament contain? |
A26879 | What duty doth the Word[ Honour] contain and Command? |
A26879 | What duty doth this Petition oblige us to, and what sin doth it reprehend? |
A26879 | What else besides Teaching is the Parents duty? |
A26879 | What else do you find in your self? |
A26879 | What else find you by your self? |
A26879 | What else is implyed in the word, Our Father? |
A26879 | What else know you of your self? |
A26879 | What else perceive you by your self? |
A26879 | What further must we learn from God ● CREATING us? |
A26879 | What if Children be rebellious in wickedness, as Drunkenness, Stealing,& c. must the Parents cause them to be put to death, as Moses Law Commanded? |
A26879 | What if God give us Riches, or more than we need our selves? |
A26879 | What if I win it by Gaming or a Wager; when he consented to run the hazard? |
A26879 | What if I wrong''d a Master but in some small matter in Marketting, which is long since gone? |
A26879 | What if Parents forbid their Children ne ● … ry mariage? |
A26879 | What if Parents or Princes command what God forbids? |
A26879 | What if a man can restore it, but not without the wrong or ruine of his Wife and Children, who knew not of his sin? |
A26879 | What if any Father got it ill, and left it ● s? |
A26879 | What if he be not able? |
A26879 | What if it would crack my Credit, and ruin my Trade if I should reveal the hazard and weakness of my Estate? |
A26879 | What if none were trusted with it, and Sacraments left free to all? |
A26879 | What if one live where are no Church- meetings, or none that he can lawfully joyn with? |
A26879 | What if the thing be so usual as well as small, as that none expect confession or restitution: As for Boyes to rob Orchards? |
A26879 | What if those that I wronged be dead? |
A26879 | What injury doth a jeasting Lie do to any one? |
A26879 | What is GOD,& what doth that word here mean? |
A26879 | What is God''s[ ALMIGHTINESS?] |
A26879 | What is Gods Kingdom? |
A26879 | What is Murder? |
A26879 | What is a Church? |
A26879 | What is an Oath? |
A26879 | What is false- speaking? |
A26879 | What is forbidden here, and what Command ● d? |
A26879 | What is forgiving Sin? |
A26879 | What is hard to God that made Heaven and Earth of nothing, and maintains all things in their state and course? |
A26879 | What is here meant by the Kingdom of God? |
A26879 | What is included in the first part, of God''s Soveraignty? |
A26879 | What is included then in our Child- like relation to this Father? |
A26879 | What is inward heart Fornication or Uncleanness? |
A26879 | What is it now that you call, The Holy Catholick Church? |
A26879 | What is it that God doth as a Covenanter with the baptized? |
A26879 | What is it that God requireth of Man, and ● e professeth? |
A26879 | What is it that all this is to bring m ● ● to? |
A26879 | What is it that is called the Mass, which the Papists say that All the Fathers and Church used in every age, and we renounce? |
A26879 | What is it that is specially here forbidden? |
A26879 | What is it that makes all Churches to be One? |
A26879 | What is it that maketh the Love of others so great a duty? |
A26879 | What is it that we must Learn to know, and believe? |
A26879 | What is it that we pray against in this Petition? |
A26879 | What is it that you Call the Law of Nature? |
A26879 | What is it then that you Call A Law? |
A26879 | What is it then which we here desire? |
A26879 | What is it to Sanctifie God''s Name as in our Redemption? |
A26879 | What is it to be a Saint? |
A26879 | What is it which is herein forbidden? |
A26879 | What is meant by Bread? |
A26879 | What is meant by God''s Name here? |
A26879 | What is meant by Gods resting from his work? |
A26879 | What is meant by Temptation? |
A26879 | What is meant by his descending into Hell? |
A26879 | What is meant by his sitting on the right Hand of God? |
A26879 | What is meant by keeping Holy the Sabbath day? |
A26879 | What is meant by taking the Name of God in vain? |
A26879 | What is meant by the Communion of Saints? |
A26879 | What is meant by the Name of God? |
A26879 | What is meant by the words[ The Lord will not hold him guiltless?] |
A26879 | What is meant by the words[ which art i ● Heaven?] |
A26879 | What is that Free- will which fits us to be Subjects? |
A26879 | What is that which you call God''s Name imprinted on Mans Mind? |
A26879 | What is the Command which is here im ● lyed? |
A26879 | What is the Consecration? |
A26879 | What is the Constitution here expressed? |
A26879 | What is the Duty of Husbands to their Wives? |
A26879 | What is the Evil that we pray to be delivered from? |
A26879 | What is the Forgiveness of Sin? |
A26879 | What is the Government of each Believer? |
A26879 | What is the Kingdom of Glory? |
A26879 | What is the Matter of the Lord''s Prayer in General? |
A26879 | What is the Method of the Lord''s Prayer? |
A26879 | What is the Nature of that heavenly Everlasting Life? |
A26879 | What is the Pastoral Power of the Church Keyes? |
A26879 | What is the Power of Parents and Rulers which we must obey? |
A26879 | What is the Practical duty properly due from us to God? |
A26879 | What is the Protestant Religion? |
A26879 | What is the Sin which is contrary to this? |
A26879 | What is the Stealing here forbidden? |
A26879 | What is the Use of Prayer? |
A26879 | What is the duty of Children to their Parents in special? |
A26879 | What is the duty of Masters to their Servants? |
A26879 | What is the duty of Parents for their ● … ldren? |
A26879 | What is the duty of Servants to their Masters? |
A26879 | What is the duty of Wives to their Husbands? |
A26879 | What is the duty required in this eighth Commandement? |
A26879 | What is the humane Government which Gods Law of Nature hath instituted to man since his fall and corruption? |
A26879 | What is the meaning and extent of the promise of Mercy to thousands of them that Love him and keep his Commandements? |
A26879 | What is the meaning of Kingdom, Power and Glory here? |
A26879 | What is the meaning of this Commandement? |
A26879 | What is the need and benefit of this Pastoral Discipline? |
A26879 | What is the positive Duty of the ninth Commandement? |
A26879 | What is the profaning of this Name of God? |
A26879 | What is the reason of of the Connexion of the two parts of this Petition, Lead us not into Temptation, but deliver us from Evil? |
A26879 | What is the reason of the Order of these three here? |
A26879 | What is the sin and danger of the love of Riches? |
A26879 | What is the sin here forbidden? |
A26879 | What is the sinfulness and the hurt of Selfishness? |
A26879 | What is the thing forbidden in the first Commandement? |
A26879 | What is the true Meaning of the Second Commandement? |
A26879 | What is the use of this Article of the Forgiveness of Sin? |
A26879 | What is this GOD to us? |
A26879 | What keepeth up doubts of forgiveness of Sin? |
A26879 | What know we of the things which we se ● and feel,& c? |
A26879 | What know you next of your self? |
A26879 | What know you of your self as related to others? |
A26879 | What made the Jews so to hate and Crucifie him? |
A26879 | What mean you by God? |
A26879 | What mean you by Loving others as ourselves? |
A26879 | What mean you by his Infiniteness? |
A26879 | What mean you by our concerns which we must know? |
A26879 | What mean you by our self- willedness? |
A26879 | What mean you by the First, that he is our OWNER? |
A26879 | What mean you by the Second, that God is our Ruler? |
A26879 | What mean you by the Sin of SELFISHNESS? |
A26879 | What must Children, Wives, Servants and Subjects do that have bad Parents, Husbands, Masters and Magistrates? |
A26879 | What must Christs Ministers say and do for ● he Worlds Conversion? |
A26879 | What must we Learn to Love, and Choose, and Hope for? |
A26879 | What must we believe of Himself? |
A26879 | What must we believe of his Works? |
A26879 | What must we learn to practise? |
A26879 | What need was there that he suffer for us? |
A26879 | What need we Cat ● chisms while we ha ● ● the Bible? |
A26879 | What need we Labour, if God give us all? |
A26879 | What new Laws hath Christ made? |
A26879 | What next perceive you of your self? |
A26879 | What of God doth the Scripture make kno ● ● better than Nature? |
A26879 | What punishment doth God forgive? |
A26879 | What reason have we to believe and hope that any are saved whom God never promised to save? |
A26879 | What reason have we to extort a forced sence against our own Interest and Comfort, without any warrant from God? |
A26879 | What shall Parents do by such? |
A26879 | What shall one doe that is tempted to doubt, ● … to think hardly of God because he hath made Heaven for so few? |
A26879 | What should a Man do that he may live in a comfortable hope of the Resurrection, and the Souls Immortality, and the Life to come? |
A26879 | What should we do to get the Soul so familiar above, as to desire to be with Christ? |
A26879 | What should we do towards the increase of Love? |
A26879 | What sins are pardoned? |
A26879 | What sorts of Sin did Christ die for? |
A26879 | What the better are Infants for being baptized? |
A26879 | What the heavenly Glory is, and how procured, and how to be obtained, and by whom? |
A26879 | What then are the presupposed things which we pray not for? |
A26879 | What then is Gods Law of Nature, made for man? |
A26879 | What then is it a Sun for? |
A26879 | What then is the full meaning of this Petition? |
A26879 | What thing that is seen can give all Men and Beasts their life and sense and safety? |
A26879 | What use are we to make of our Baptism ever after? |
A26879 | What use must ● ● make of it? |
A26879 | What was that Body a while ago? |
A26879 | What will be the state of that Glorious Kingdom? |
A26879 | What will of God is it that is here meant? |
A26879 | What words express the Constitution of God''s Kingdom? |
A26879 | What words mention[ Man as the Subject of the Kingdom?] |
A26879 | When and how did God institute and separate it? |
A26879 | When did he begin to be God? |
A26879 | When did he begin to be a Man? |
A26879 | When did he make all things? |
A26879 | When doth Mans Will love and cleave to him as God? |
A26879 | When doth the Lords day begin and end? |
A26879 | When doth the Understanding know, believe and esteem him as God? |
A26879 | When is Self- Love Ordinate? |
A26879 | When is it injurious? |
A26879 | When is it that sin is pardoned? |
A26879 | When is killing Murder, or unlawful? |
A26879 | When it comes to it, do you so far Trust him as to venture on all the difficulties, and go? |
A26879 | When may a man be accounted a Soul- selfmurderer? |
A26879 | When should a Man say, He hath enough? |
A26879 | Whence is it that so many Christians are more terrified than comforted by the Lords Supper? |
A26879 | Where are the Souls of the Dead before the Day of Iudgment? |
A26879 | Where is it that the Devils and Wicked are in misery? |
A26879 | Where is the true Christian Religion Doctrinal, to be found, that we may certainly know which is it indeed? |
A26879 | Where then are the Saints, if this be so? |
A26879 | Where was he all the rest of the Forty Days? |
A26879 | Wherein consisteth the Holiness of the Church? |
A26879 | Wherein doth the Truth of words consist? |
A26879 | Wherein doth this Communion consist? |
A26879 | Wherein lyeth the evil of it? |
A26879 | Wherein lyeth the evil of that Opinion? |
A26879 | Whether Nature be so bad as to allow such a revolt? |
A26879 | Which are the divers degrees of Lying or Culpable false speaking? |
A26879 | Which are the most hainous sorts of filthyness? |
A26879 | Which are those? |
A26879 | Which be the chief wayes of taking Gods Name in vain? |
A26879 | Which call you his Essential A ● tributes? |
A26879 | Which day is it which was called the Sabbath in this Commandement? |
A26879 | Which is the greatest and commonest Idol of the World? |
A26879 | Which is the next humane Power in order? |
A26879 | Which is the next sort of Natural Government? |
A26879 | Which way are the other senses guilty of this sin? |
A26879 | Whither is it that Christ will come, and where will he judge the World? |
A26879 | Why are Heaven and Earth named as the parts of his Creation? |
A26879 | Why ask we Bread of God as the Giver? |
A26879 | Why ask we for no more than Bread? |
A26879 | Why did Christ institute such a Ceremony as Washing in so great and weighty a Work as our- Christening? |
A26879 | Why do we ask Bread from Day to Day? |
A26879 | Why do we not read that the Apostles after used this Prayer? |
A26879 | Why do we pray for Pardon daily, when sin is already pardoned? |
A26879 | Why do we take ordinary light Swearing, s ● … cially by God or by Sacred things, to be a sure sign a wicked man? |
A26879 | Why doth God mention not only Servants but Beasts? |
A26879 | Why doth God name only the third and fourth Generation? |
A26879 | Why doth God threaten to visit the iniquities of the Fathers on the Children in this Command rather than in the rest? |
A26879 | Why doth he pray against it? |
A26879 | Why is Adultery so great a sin? |
A26879 | Why is Christ called Our Lord? |
A26879 | Why is Christ''s Death and Burial named besides his Crucifixion? |
A26879 | Why is Father and Mother named rather than Kings? |
A26879 | Why is Gods Iealousie here mentioned? |
A26879 | Why is Pontius Pilate named in the Creed? |
A26879 | Why is false Witness in Iudgement so great a sin? |
A26879 | Why is he offended at those that hurt him? |
A26879 | Why is his Almightiness only named, and no other properties? |
A26879 | Why is his Almightiness to be believed by us? |
A26879 | Why is it added[ as it is done in Heaven?] |
A26879 | Why is it called Catholick? |
A26879 | Why is it called[ The Sabbath of the Lord thy God?] |
A26879 | Why is it put last? |
A26879 | Why is man Ruled by Laws rather than Beasts and other things? |
A26879 | Why is mention here made of all within ou ● gates? |
A26879 | Why is our joyning in the Lords Supper called our Communion? |
A26879 | Why is the Catholick Church called Holy? |
A26879 | Why is this command the first that forbiddeth ● ● ivate wrongs? |
A26879 | Why is this description of Gods Soveraignty, and Mans Subjection, and the Ground of it, set before the Commandements? |
A26879 | Why is this threatning annexed more to this Commandement than to others? |
A26879 | Why is[ Remember] put before this more than before the rest of the Commandements? |
A26879 | Why may not a man have many Wives now as the Jews had? |
A26879 | Why may there not be many Gods, or Spirits, that were made by none, but are Eternally of themselves? |
A26879 | Why must Christ rise from the Dead? |
A26879 | Why must Christ suffer what he did? |
A26879 | Why must marriage be a publick act? |
A26879 | Why must there be stated Worshipping Congregations? |
A26879 | Why must we pray for Pardon then every day? |
A26879 | Why say we Our Father, and not My Father? |
A26879 | Why say we, Amen? |
A26879 | Why say we,[ as we forgive them that trespass against us? |
A26879 | Why say we,[ for ever?] |
A26879 | Why say we[ Give us] rather than[ Give me]? |
A26879 | Why then are they baptized, who can not Covenant? |
A26879 | Why then do they appear so seldom? |
A26879 | Why then do you say that he is in Heaven; if he be as much on Earth, and every where? |
A26879 | Why then do you tell us so much of Angels and Saints, and the City of God? |
A26879 | Why then doth the Church of Rome Canonize some few, and call them Saints, if all Christians be Saints? |
A26879 | Why then was bodily Rest ▪ Commanded? |
A26879 | Why then ● ● d Christians make a difference, and not serve God ● ● lly every day? |
A26879 | Why was Christ Born of a Jew? |
A26879 | Why was Crucifying the manner of Christ''s death? |
A26879 | Why was not Christ Born till about Four thousand Years after the Fall? |
A26879 | Why was that day made the Sabbath? |
A26879 | Why will God do and permit all this? |
A26879 | Why will God have all this and the rest whic ● is for the Church, to be an Office, Work of chosen, sep ● rated, consecrated Persons? |
A26879 | Will he not do so also by the Children of Unbelievers? |
A26879 | Will they not take all for unlawful which their folly or Corrupt wills dislike, and so cast off all obedience? |
A26879 | Will you doubt of the plain Matter, because in your darkness you understand not the manner or circumstances of it? |
A26879 | Will you first tell me, How the Apostles and that first Age were sure that the Gospel of Christ was the very Word of God? |
A26879 | Will you leave it to Magistrates, or to the People, who if they were able, have other work to do? |
A26879 | Would any of us receive a Law, and that of such operous, numerous, costly Services, by the Motive of such a report as this? |
A26879 | Would you believe if some came from the dead as Witnesses? |
A26879 | Would you have Magistrates or the People do it? |
A26879 | Yea, is it not on the bare saying of a Word, whose meaning none can know? |
A26879 | Yes: Else how had he been the Son of Man? |
A26879 | You have spoken much about the Consecration in the Sacrament; What is it which you call the Commemoration? |
A26879 | You have spoken of the Sacramental Consecration, and Commemoration; What is it which you call the Covenanting part and Communication? |
A26879 | You make the Mercy so very great, as maketh the denyal of it seem a hainous sin in the Anabaptists? |
A26879 | You may as well ask, Why he must be our Savior? |
A26879 | and all men are so Conscious of their own Insufficiency, that they can not Trust themselves for their own preservation? |
A26879 | and c ● ● that be penal? |
A26879 | and every Man an Angel? |
A26879 | and how do such Undertakers use to perform it? |
A26879 | and so marvellously form the bodies of all, and govern all the matters of the World? |
A26879 | and the Records of it the very Word of God? |
A26879 | and what it is to be a true Christian? |
A26879 | and what may we expect from him? |
A26879 | and when i ● it Sinful? |
A26879 | and wherein doth it differ from the ● ● rst? |
A26879 | and who must ● earn? |
A26879 | and why do you call him our King? |
A26879 | are they divided? |
A26879 | g Who can learn that will believe nothing which his Teacher saith? |
A26879 | h Why else ● ● t Martyrs choose to dye rather than to sin? |
A26879 | how few would backbite them, or ● ensoriously condemn them, if they loved them as themselves? |
A26879 | how much of the Preaching, Hearing, Praying and Sacraments of many is a taking God''s Name in vain, as if he did accept a Lye? |
A26879 | must they go out of their way for a Peacocks feather, when they are in a Race as for Life or Death? |
A26879 | o If all Magistrates loved the People as themselves, how would they use them? |
A26879 | or a Persecutor to know where I hide my self? |
A26879 | or a middle state of Souls that are in hope of deliverance from their pain? |
A26879 | or are you of the mind, that to ca nt over the Catechism is Divinity enough, before they have read Aristotle, or Studied the Sciences? |
A26879 | or how should we prepare? |
A26879 | or is every word equally certain to us? |
A26879 | or that it shineth at once upon every p ● le of Grass and Atome? |
A26879 | or what must they do with them? |
A26879 | p And if Parents that are bound to feed their Children, do famisn them, do you think they do not murder them by omission? |
A26879 | p Love is our Safety: who is afraid of any one who he thinks loveth him as himself? |
A26879 | seeing every man hath some sin? |
A26879 | specially when it is an act of Love, and doth no body any harm? |
A26879 | viz, That they were not deceived, nor deceive us? |
A26879 | what duty do we owe him? |
A26879 | who hath bewitched you, that you should not obey the Truth, before whose Eyes Iesus Christ hath been evidently set forth Crucified among you? |
A26879 | who is afraid that he should persecute, imprison or destroy himself, unless by ignorance or distraction? |
A26879 | who is it that is not selfish? |
A26879 | will you be like those Parents who set God- fathers at the Font, to Vow and Promise to do the Parents part? |
A26879 | you say that is Bread and Wine in the Sacrament, which the Papists say is not? |
A26879 | ● r a Lye which only saveth the speaker from some hurt, ● ithout hurting any other? |
A26879 | ● … s they said to Paul, Hast thou appealed to Caesar? |
A26932 | & c. whether you bid them or not? |
A26932 | ( mihi) Quid ingrati sumus? |
A26932 | ( what the Lords Supper is?) |
A26932 | * How oft doth Christ teach them publikely and apart? |
A26932 | 2. Who knows how God may bless his Ordinance, even to them? |
A26932 | 21.? |
A26932 | 3. Who is a wise man, and endued with knowledge among you? |
A26932 | 4 Our voluntary undertaking the Charge of souls will condemn us; For all men should be true to the trust, that they have undertaken? |
A26932 | 6 Whether they ought not to hold communion in publike worship, and Church- relation, with those that are so far agreed, and walk in the fear of God? |
A26932 | 9. and yet dare you neglect them? |
A26932 | A Diocesan Bishop is the Ruler of all the Pastors and Churches in a Diocess: Is such a Pastor one of these? |
A26932 | A Pope is the pretended head of the Catholike Church, and an universal Bishop to govern it; Are single ruling Pastors such? |
A26932 | A good stomack will not say at a feast, what a slavery is it to bestow my time and pains so much to feed my self? |
A26932 | Ait enim Christus: Quicquid liga veritis in terris,& c. Quid igitur agunt qui impediunt Ecclesiam ne sententiam Domini pronunciet? |
A26932 | Alas Neighbour, what if you had dyed before this hour in an unconverted state what had become of you? |
A26932 | Alas what is it that we have to be proud of? |
A26932 | All the Disputations and eager contests that we have had against unfaithful men, and for a faithful Ministry, will condemn us, if we be unfaithful? |
A26932 | All this trouble then, and stir of the Nation, hath been to bring the work to your hands: and shall it dye there? |
A26932 | And 1. what cause have we to bleed before the Lord this day, that have neglected so great and good a work so long? |
A26932 | And I would that were all, or the worst: But alas how frequently doth it go with us to our studies, and there set with us and do our work? |
A26932 | And O what a world of work have you to do? |
A26932 | And O what hainous aggravations do accompany this sin? |
A26932 | And a good Physitian look after every particular Patient? |
A26932 | And a good Schoolmaster look to every individual Scholler, both for instruction and correction? |
A26932 | And alas how weak are those of us that seem strongest? |
A26932 | And are these works to be done with a careless mind, or a lazy hand? |
A26932 | And are we not then in the matter agreed? |
A26932 | And can it be expected that God should much bless the labours of such men as these? |
A26932 | And can you think that any unsanctified man can be hearty and serious in the ministerial work? |
A26932 | And do you think God doth not require you to do all the good you can? |
A26932 | And do you think it safe to live and dye in such a known sin? |
A26932 | And doth any man live more to himself then the proud? |
A26932 | And doth it not then concern us to take heed? |
A26932 | And doth not common honesty bind you to be true to your trust? |
A26932 | And doth not this Objection of yours plainly give up your cause to the Separatists? |
A26932 | And especially how commonly are those duties neglected, that are like if performed to diminish our estates? |
A26932 | And for the second, How common is it with Ministers to drown themselves in worldly business? |
A26932 | And good Commanders look after every individual souldier? |
A26932 | And have not such sinners as we, need to do so? |
A26932 | And how can you talk against unfaithful Ministers, while you are so unfaithful your selves? |
A26932 | And how much vanity and evil it will prevent? |
A26932 | And how sadly do many Ministers come off in this part of their tryal? |
A26932 | And how should we be humbled without a plain Confession of our sin? |
A26932 | And if I ask further Can you be saved without the death of that? |
A26932 | And if it be Sacrament Controversies which he raiseth, tell him it is necessary, that you be first agreed, what Baptism is? |
A26932 | And if it had no enemy but what is in themselves, how easily will a frozen carnal heart, extinguish those sparks which you have been long in kindling? |
A26932 | And if this may not be done, What do we here to day? |
A26932 | And if we fail through weakness, how will they insult? |
A26932 | And if you pity them, will you not do this much for their salvation? |
A26932 | And is it not then our wisest course to see that God be our friend, and to do that which tendeth most to engage him in our defence? |
A26932 | And is there nothing in all this to awaken us to our duty, and to resolve us to speedy and unwearied diligence? |
A26932 | And no duty which you be not willing to perform? |
A26932 | And see what a help these poor impenitent sinners have for their cure? |
A26932 | And seeing the case of weakliness is comparatively so sad, how diligent should we be to cherish and encrease their grace? |
A26932 | And shall any of his Messengers question the Authority of his commands? |
A26932 | And shall we do that which we scarce ever see the most hardened sinner do? |
A26932 | And should all Ministers refuse preaching if the Magistrate bid them not? |
A26932 | And that they must be taught it in the most edifying advantagious way, I hope we are agreed? |
A26932 | And then, we shal have the opportunity by personal conference to try them how far they understand it, and how far not? |
A26932 | And these men count it a slavery to labour hard in his vineyard, and deny their ease, in a time when they have all accomodations and Encouragements? |
A26932 | And time will shew you, whether God will suffer them to prevail with the Governors of this sinful land to betray the Gospel into their hands, or not? |
A26932 | And what Evidence is the Church capable of, but their Profession of Repentance first, and their actual reformation afterwards? |
A26932 | And what are the hindrances now that keep the Ministers of England from the Execution of that Discipline which they have so much contended for? |
A26932 | And what do you think it was, that I delivered you for? |
A26932 | And what doth every sin deserve? |
A26932 | And what hindereth but you may joyn together if you will? |
A26932 | And what is it that hath brought people to this ignorance of their duty, but custom? |
A26932 | And what is the cause of all this misery? |
A26932 | And what is your own Hope, or Joy, or Crown of rejoycing? |
A26932 | And what was all this for? |
A26932 | And what would you have more? |
A26932 | And when I ask them whether their deeds can Merit any thing of God? |
A26932 | And when a work is like to prove difficult and costly, how backward are we to it, and make excuses and will not come on? |
A26932 | And who knows not how many of these men are yet alive? |
A26932 | And who would not have been afraid to contradict the Gospel, that had seen ● l ● mas smitten blind? |
A26932 | And why might we not have done it sooner as well as now? |
A26932 | And will he be true to Christ that is in Covenant with his enemy, and Christ hath not his heart? |
A26932 | And will he do any great harm to the Kingdom of the Devil, that is himself a member and subject of that Kingdom? |
A26932 | And will the sin of one excuse the other? |
A26932 | And will you be Proud of that which the Devils do excell you in? |
A26932 | And will you betray it, or neglect it after all this? |
A26932 | And yet so it is, and so it hath too plainly proved: and whence is all this strange deceit of heart? |
A26932 | Annon reus esset laesae Majestatis Caesareae, siquis ejus judicem ne sententiam Caesaris pronunciet impediat? |
A26932 | Are all mens hearts so deceitful? |
A26932 | Are all the penalties against Swearers, Cursers, Drunkards, Peace- breakers, Sabboth- breakers,& c. nothing? |
A26932 | Are any of them loving to their party, and contemners of the world? |
A26932 | Are not both agreed, that Professors of true faith and holiness, cohabiting and consenting, are a true Church? |
A26932 | Are not such and such as learned as you? |
A26932 | Are not their sufferings our warnings? |
A26932 | Are not these reasons as valid against Christianity it self in some times and places, as now against Discipline? |
A26932 | Are the Keyes of Christs Kingdom so unmeet and useless, that they will not open and shut without the help of the sword? |
A26932 | Are the souls of men thought meet by God to see his face, and live for ever in his glory, and are they not worthy of your utmost cost and labour? |
A26932 | Are there so many Traytors in our very hearts, and is it not time for us to take heed? |
A26932 | Are we not men, frail and corruptible flesh, unworthy sinners like themselves? |
A26932 | Are you Angels, or men? |
A26932 | Are you not of the same Generation of sinners, that need his grace as much as they? |
A26932 | Are you wiser then all the Ministers in the Countrey? |
A26932 | Art thou in earrest or in jest? |
A26932 | As E. G. What is God? |
A26932 | As if they had even wrestled for salvation it self? |
A26932 | As though Paul might not go preaching the Gospel in Ephesus? |
A26932 | As, E. G.[ What do you think becomes of men when they are dead? |
A26932 | At the utmost sure you would allow him none but of necessity? |
A26932 | BUT what likelyhood is there that men will be informed or converted by this means, that will not by the preaching of the word? |
A26932 | Be they three offices, or but one: and be they all?] |
A26932 | Brethren can you look believingly on your miserable neighbours, and not perceive them calling for your help? |
A26932 | Brethren, in the fear of God consider, Why is it that God hath done all this? |
A26932 | Brethren, may I take leave a little to expostulate this case with my own heart and you, that we may see the shame of our sin and be reformed? |
A26932 | Burnt and wasted we must be, and is it not fitter it should be in lighting men to heaven, and in working for God, then in living to the flesh? |
A26932 | But alas, for the most part, even of those that we take for Godly Ministers, how reservedly and how negligently do we go through our work? |
A26932 | But dare we preferr our carnal ease, and quietness, and the love or peace of wicked men, before our service to Christ our Master? |
A26932 | But dare you say so by the souls of men even by the Church of God? |
A26932 | But especially, What an excellent life is it to live in the studies and preaching of Christ? |
A26932 | But further, What is it that you would have the Magistrate to do? |
A26932 | But if Discipline( in its place) be necessary too, what is it but enmity to mens salvation to exclude it? |
A26932 | But if they are taken for members, how can we satisfie our consciences to forbear all execution of Discipline upon them? |
A26932 | But if they be as unwilling as ignorant, how much more difficult is it? |
A26932 | But if you could not suffer for Christ, why did you put your hand to his plough? |
A26932 | But is not Government of great concernment to the good of souls, as well as Preaching? |
A26932 | But is not the meaning, that you will not bear the trouble and hatred which it will occasion? |
A26932 | But is this much done? |
A26932 | But to have such a multitude of these, as most of us have, what work will it find us? |
A26932 | But to what purpose is all this, when most of the people will not submit? |
A26932 | But what if the Magistrate will not help us? |
A26932 | But what need we add more, when experience speaks so loud? |
A26932 | But what obligation lyeth on us to tye our selves to certain daies for the performance of this work? |
A26932 | But what remedy? |
A26932 | But what should a Minister do that findeth he hath quite lost his interest in them? |
A26932 | But what singular thing do you with your estates for your Masters use? |
A26932 | But what''s the matter that wise and godly Rulers should be thus guilty of our misery, and that none of our cries will awake them to compassion? |
A26932 | But where is there any such promise to the ungodly, that are not the children of the promise? |
A26932 | But why may not occasional Conference and Instructions serve the turn? |
A26932 | But will it never be a fit season? |
A26932 | But will you deny to Bishops the power of making Canons? |
A26932 | But you may say, This is not confessing sin, but applauding those whose sins you pretend to confess? |
A26932 | By favouring their sin you will shew your enmity to God,& then how can you love your brother? |
A26932 | Can he dye? |
A26932 | Can sloathful servants look for a good reward? |
A26932 | Can so much work, and such work as this be done by raw unqualified men? |
A26932 | Can we once conceive of him as purposely washing and wiping his servants feet, and yet be stout and Lordly still? |
A26932 | Can we think that a man can be too careful and painful under all these motives and engagements? |
A26932 | Can you hear them cry to you, as the man of Macedonia to Paul in his vision, come and help us? |
A26932 | Can you possibly make your selves believe that you shall have a comfortable review of these neglects, or make a comfortable account of them unto God? |
A26932 | Can you see them as the wounded man by the way, and unmercifully pass by? |
A26932 | Can you think that holy wisdom will gain- say it? |
A26932 | Can you think to be saved then by your Clergy? |
A26932 | Caveane ludi publici, au atrium Dei? |
A26932 | Convince them what a contradiction it is to be a Christian, and yet to refuse to learn; For what is a Christian but a Disciple of Christ? |
A26932 | Dare you like idle Gossips, chat and trifle away your time, when you have such works as these to do, and so many of them? |
A26932 | Desire also to know of them, whether they have any truth of God to reveal to them, that you do not reveal? |
A26932 | Did Paul cry out, who is sufficient for these things? |
A26932 | Did it threaten eternal torment to the soul only, or to the body also? |
A26932 | Did it threaten hell fire, or only temporal death? |
A26932 | Did the first Covenant of Nature make any promise of everlasting celestial glory? |
A26932 | Did we think when we were writing against this sect, and the sect that opposed Discipline, that we were writing all that against our selves? |
A26932 | Did you ever find the spirit of God by the word, come in upon your understanding, with a new heavenly life, which hath made you a new creature? |
A26932 | Did you not all this while know that you must shortly dye, and be judged as you were then found? |
A26932 | Did you not know, that you had a soul to save or lose? |
A26932 | Did you think as ill of sin as you spoke? |
A26932 | Do any of them express a hatred of sin, and desire of Church Reformation? |
A26932 | Do any of them use to spend their time when they meet together in holy discourse, and not in vain janglings? |
A26932 | Do not grudge at this now and say, This is a hard saying, who can bear it? |
A26932 | Do not many families in your Parish live on less? |
A26932 | Do these men delight in Holiness, that account it a slavish work? |
A26932 | Do you believe indeed that such Glory attends those that dye in the Lord, and such Torment attendeth those that dye unconverted? |
A26932 | Do you believe that you have any sin? |
A26932 | Do you know the Iudgement of God, that they that commit such things are worthy of death, and yet will you do them? |
A26932 | Do you long to see it upon the souls of your hearers? |
A26932 | Do you not know that it is your own benefit which you grudge at? |
A26932 | Do you think Christ will suffer all men to be as cruel, unmerciful, fleshly and self- seeking as you? |
A26932 | Do you think so basely of the Church of God, as if it deserved not the best of your care and help? |
A26932 | Do you think that all that you can get in this world will comfort you at a dying hour, or purchase your salvation, or ease the pains of Hell- fire? |
A26932 | Do you think that heaven is not worth your labour? |
A26932 | Do you think that it is a likely thing, that he will fight against Satan with all his might, that is a servant to Satan himself? |
A26932 | Dost thou believe what thou saist? |
A26932 | Doth any forbid them, or threaten them if they do it? |
A26932 | Doth he think that Gods truth is not worth his study? |
A26932 | Doth it not make you tremble when you open the Bible, lest you should read there the Sentence of your own Condemnation? |
A26932 | Doth not a careful Shepherd look after every individual Sheep? |
A26932 | Doth not reason and conscience tell you, that if you dare venture on so high a work as this, you should spare no pains to be fitted to perform it? |
A26932 | Doth not that threatning make us tremble? |
A26932 | Doth not the nature and end of the duty plainly tell you that an appointed time conduceth to the orderly successful performance of it? |
A26932 | Doth not this plainly bind us to the private as well as the publike part of our duty? |
A26932 | Doth such a one as Paul say? |
A26932 | Doth the secular Power forbid you to do it, or threaten or trouble you for not doing it? |
A26932 | E. G. I have oft asked some very ignorant people, How do you think of your sins, so many and great sins shall be pardoned? |
A26932 | E. G[ What is God? |
A26932 | Ergo imperfecta est patrum castitas, si non item& filiorum accumuletur? |
A26932 | Et qui intra ● t Ecclefiasticam domum, ut mala antiqua defleant, exeunt;& quid dico exeunt? |
A26932 | Et quid hoc, proh nefas, mali est? |
A26932 | Et templum omnes magis sectentur, au theatrum? |
A26932 | Et virum uxoris sobrium, prudentem? |
A26932 | For even now these wretched men, while they pretend themselves the servants of Christ, and are asking, What Authority we have for his work? |
A26932 | For how can a wretched sinner of so great transgressions, presume to justifie himself with God? |
A26932 | For how can an impenitent unreformed people expect to be sheltered by Holiness it self? |
A26932 | For how can we take heed to them, if we do not know them? |
A26932 | For instance; What hath been for more talked of, and prayed for, and contended about in England for many years past, then the business of Discipline? |
A26932 | For then how great, and how manifold will our condemnation be? |
A26932 | For what care I what Minister they hear or obey, so it be one that leadeth them in the waies of truth and holiness? |
A26932 | For what else should we do? |
A26932 | For what is true Holiness but a devotedness to God and a living to him? |
A26932 | For what man will put himself upon such a toilsom life; or what Parents will choose such a burden for their children? |
A26932 | For what speedyer way is there for the depraving and undoing of the people, then the pravity of their Guides? |
A26932 | For will you perswade others to that which you will not do( as far as you can) your selves? |
A26932 | HAving shewed you, What it is to Take heed to our selves, and Why it must be done? |
A26932 | Hactenus Christus rexit Ecclesiam suam hac Disciplinâ;& ipsi Principes, imo& Ministri aliquot, nolunt eam sic regi? |
A26932 | Had he any beginning? |
A26932 | Had they rather men went to Hell, then be taught the way to Heaven by Presbyters that had not their Imposition of hands? |
A26932 | Had you any greater work to do? |
A26932 | Had you but one ignorant old man or woman to teach, though willing to learn, what a tedious task is it? |
A26932 | Hath Christ bid you use the Keyes of the Kingdom, and avoid a scandalous sinner upon condition that the Magistrate will punish him with the sword? |
A26932 | Hath Christ put a leaden sword into your hands, when he bids you smite the obstinate sinner? |
A26932 | Hath God been hewing us out a way with his sword, and levelling opposers by his terrible Judgements, and yet will we sit still or play the sluggards? |
A26932 | Hath God brought down these enemies of godliness, and persecutors and depopulaters of his Church, and would you make a league with them again? |
A26932 | Hath any one suffered for our sins in our stead, or must we suffer for them our selves? |
A26932 | Hath any thing in the world done more to lose our authority, and disable us for Gods service then our differences and divisions? |
A26932 | Hath the Ministry suffered nothing in England, Scotland, and Ireland? |
A26932 | Have I done and suffered so much for their salvation? |
A26932 | Have not many able Ministers in the Prelates daies been glad of less, with liberty to preach the Gospel? |
A26932 | Have not many of us cause to enquire once& again, Whether sincerity will consist with such a measure of Pride? |
A26932 | Have we not lost enough already in the daies of our vanity? |
A26932 | Have you done all that you could with your friends and neighbours to get maintenance for another to help you? |
A26932 | Have you found such a change or work as this upon your soul? |
A26932 | Have you none in your Parish, not one or two to make Ruling Elders of, that by their conjunction you may be authorised to do more then now you do? |
A26932 | Have you not so much maintenance yourself as might serve your self and another? |
A26932 | He may make known to the Church that God hath commanded them, with such a one no not to eat? |
A26932 | He will not hold him guiltless, that by false Oaths, or Vows, or Covenants with him doth take his holy Name in vain? |
A26932 | Hospitalem? |
A26932 | How apt to stumble at a very straw? |
A26932 | How are we said to be Justified by faith? |
A26932 | How can people tell when to come if the time be not made known? |
A26932 | How can the people know the worth of bare notions and names of Discipline, without the thing? |
A26932 | How can they think that that is good which doth no good? |
A26932 | How can we tell whom to exclude, till we know who are included? |
A26932 | How can you Preach against unmercifulness, while you are so unmerciful? |
A26932 | How can you build if you first lay not a good foundation? |
A26932 | How can you call out with serious servour upon poor sinners to repent and come in to God, that never Repented or came in your selves? |
A26932 | How can you chuse, when you are laying a Corps in the grave, but think with your selves, Here lieth the body, but where is the soul? |
A26932 | How can you open your mouthes against oppressors, when your selves are so great oppressors, not only of mens bodies but their souls? |
A26932 | How can you set your selves day and night to a work that your carnal hearts are averse from? |
A26932 | How canst thou tell people that sin is such a thing, and that so much misery is upon them and before them, and be no more affected with it? |
A26932 | How couldst thou Preach of Heaven and Hell, in such a careless sleepy manner? |
A26932 | How far is this from forsaking all? |
A26932 | How few Ministers do Preach with all their might? |
A26932 | How few be there that understand the true state of Controversies between the several parties? |
A26932 | How few have I ever heard that heartily prest their people to their duty in this? |
A26932 | How few of us do so behave our selves in our office, as men that are wholly devoted thereto, and have devoted all that they have to the same ends? |
A26932 | How generally did the common sort of Ministers too often change their Religion with the Prince at several times in this land? |
A26932 | How gladly doth he entertain this Message and offer? |
A26932 | How graciously hath God prospered the studies of many young men, that were little children in the beginning of the late troubles? |
A26932 | How know you the Scripture to be the word of God? |
A26932 | How little difference is there between the pleasure of a long life and of a short, when they are both at an end? |
A26932 | How little is it that the most Learned know, in comparison of that which yet they are ignorant of? |
A26932 | How many Books have been written for Discipline, by English and Scottish Divines? |
A26932 | How many a faithful Minister& private man is hated and reproached for the sake of such as you? |
A26932 | How many a hot dispute have I heard of several subjects, which the disputants have been forced to manifest that they understood not? |
A26932 | How many able faithful men are there now in a County in comparison of what were then? |
A26932 | How many are dead already before they ever did any thing in this work that were long preparing for it? |
A26932 | How many are entangled again in their former sensuality? |
A26932 | How many difficulties in Divinity to be opened? |
A26932 | How many have I heard zealously condemning what they little understand? |
A26932 | How many natures hath Christ? |
A26932 | How many obscure Texts of Scripture to be expounded? |
A26932 | How many of us are oftner found in the houses of Gentlemen, then in the poor cottages of those that have most need of our help? |
A26932 | How many score, if not hundreds of Catechisms are written in England? |
A26932 | How many sins to be avoided, which without understanding and foresight can not be done? |
A26932 | How many weighty and yet intricate cases of conscience have we almost daily to resolve? |
A26932 | How oft and how openly have you born witness of the odiousness, and damnable nature of sin? |
A26932 | How oft doth it chose our subject? |
A26932 | How oft have you proclaimed the evil and danger of it, and called sinners from it? |
A26932 | How pleasant would the pulpit be? |
A26932 | How rare is it to meet with a man that smarteth or bleedeth with the Churches wounds, or sensibly taketh them to heart as his own? |
A26932 | How sad a sign do we make it to be in our preaching to our people, to live in the willful continued omission of any known duty? |
A26932 | How should such matters be preacht and discourst of? |
A26932 | How small is thy labour or condescention as to mine? |
A26932 | How strange are they to the Heavenly message that we bring them: and know not what you say when you speak in that only language that they understand? |
A26932 | How sweet would our study be to us? |
A26932 | How will you know the true Church? |
A26932 | However, do not the Devils know more then you? |
A26932 | I ask them further, But do you think that your amendment can make God any amendt or satisfaction for the sin that is past? |
A26932 | I believe they are all slack and faulty; but are not we much more faulty? |
A26932 | I can not but advise these men to search their own hearts, whether they unfeignedly believe that word, that they preach? |
A26932 | I know I must shortly leave this world, and I am afraid lest I shall be miserable in the next I Could you deny your help to such a sinner? |
A26932 | I know it is a great dispute whether preaching be proper to the Ministers or not? |
A26932 | I know some have more discouragements and hinderances then others: But what discouragements can excuse us from such a duty? |
A26932 | I know that Discipline is not essential to a Church; but what of that? |
A26932 | I would it were not too much long of Ministers, that a great part of the people are so obstinate and contemptuous? |
A26932 | If God''s threatnings be true, why do you not fear them? |
A26932 | If a cripple do but unlap his sores, and shew you his disabled limbs, it will move you without words? |
A26932 | If any business for the Church be on foot, how many neglect it for their own private business? |
A26932 | If excuses will take off the danger of this sign, what man will not find them as well as you? |
A26932 | If he could so value that which suited with his Platonism, how should we value the whole which is suitable to the Christian nature, and interest? |
A26932 | If he refuse to read the book, endeavour to convince him of his unfaithfulness to the Truth and his own soul? |
A26932 | If innocent Adam had need of heed, ● nd lost himself and us for want of it, how much more need have such as we? |
A26932 | If it be dangerous, how dare you venture on it? |
A26932 | If it be not, why do you disswade men from it? |
A26932 | If it be not, why do you tell men so? |
A26932 | If it must needs be many Pastors conjunct, that must exercise any act of Discipline, why is it not so done? |
A26932 | If it was used in a much greater measure, by men so wise and holy as these, why should it in a lower measure be dis- allowed in another? |
A26932 | If not, then what matter is it for Church- Governors? |
A26932 | If not; why hath God commanded it? |
A26932 | If only preaching be necessary, let us have none but meer Preachers: what needs there then such a stir about Government? |
A26932 | If others run into the other extream, will that be any excuse to you? |
A26932 | If sin be evil, why do you live in it? |
A26932 | If the Judgements of God on one man should do so much, what should so many years judgement on so many hundreds of them do? |
A26932 | If the Papists will Idolize the Church, shall we therefore deny it, disregard it, or divide it? |
A26932 | If the work of the Lord be not soundly done upon your own hearts, how can you expect that he should bless your labours for the effecting it in others? |
A26932 | If then he have committed to me the purchase of his blood, should I not as carefully look to my charge? |
A26932 | If there be any work of Reformation to be set a foot, how many are there that will go no further then they are drawn? |
A26932 | If these be no duties, why have we made such a noise and stir about them in the world as we have done? |
A26932 | If they be duties, why do we not practise them ▪ If none of all these persons be scandalous, why do we not admit them to the Lords Supper? |
A26932 | If they be false, why do you trouble men needlesly with them, and put them into such frights without a cause? |
A26932 | If they could but buy it, what would they give for it? |
A26932 | If they have not, why should they desire needlesly to tell them what they are daily told by you? |
A26932 | If they keep away themselves, is not that a sin which a brother should not be permitted to remain in? |
A26932 | If this be not a serving our selves of God, and not a serving God, and a selling mens souls for our fuller maintenance in the world; what is? |
A26932 | If we do it not, it will lie upon our successors; And how can we look that they should be more hardy and resolute, and faithful then we? |
A26932 | If we had but set a work this business sooner, that we have now agreed upon, who knows how many more might have been brought over unto Christ? |
A26932 | If yea; why may you not bid them do that which is their duty? |
A26932 | If you ask What is faith? |
A26932 | If you ask by whose office and Ministry this sentence is denounced? |
A26932 | If you ask them what is Forgiveness of sin? |
A26932 | If you ask, Whether this be done by the Minister alone? |
A26932 | If you be at that pass with Christ as the Israelite: were once with David, and say will the son of Jesse give you fields and vineyard? |
A26932 | If you did not, why would you dissemblingly speak it? |
A26932 | If you did, why would you keep it and commit it? |
A26932 | If you do, how can you think any labour too much, for such weighty ends? |
A26932 | If you have not therefore great seriousness, and fervency, and working matter, and fitness of expression, what good can you expect? |
A26932 | If you would not Teach men, what do you in the Pulpit? |
A26932 | If you would, why do you not speak so as to be understood? |
A26932 | In Constantines daies, how prevalent were the Orthodox? |
A26932 | In the Saints themselves, how soon do their graces languish if you neglect them? |
A26932 | In which of the Ministers is this power placed?] |
A26932 | Intus, nihil quod magis alat vitia, haeresis,& c. Annon vident Ecclesias suas principes plenas sectis haereticorum,& impurorum hominum? |
A26932 | Ipsa Dei Ecclesia quae in omnibus esse debet placatrix Dei, quid est aliud quam exacerbatrix Dei? |
A26932 | Is he a man or is he not? |
A26932 | Is he called the first- born of all creatures as God, or as man? |
A26932 | Is he called, the Image of the Invisible God, and the express Image of the Fathers person or subsistence as a creature, or as God? |
A26932 | Is he fit to be Christs Officer, that will not take his Command as obligatory? |
A26932 | Is infinite Goodness it self to be questioned or suspected by us, as making bad or unmerciful Laws? |
A26932 | Is it Names and Honour, or the Work and End that these desire? |
A26932 | Is it a Believing all the word of God? |
A26932 | Is it a drudgery to send to the utmost parts of the world, to exchange our trifles for Gold and Jewels? |
A26932 | Is it a name and a shadow that you have made all this noise about? |
A26932 | Is it a work so good, and apparently conducing to so great benefits to the souls of men, and yet can you perceive no obligation to the doing of it? |
A26932 | Is it all one as to become a true Christian? |
A26932 | Is it for their own case or gain that they trouble you, or is it for your own everlasting gain? |
A26932 | Is it for your persons, or for his Church? |
A26932 | Is it indeed a sign that a man loveth not the Unity of the Saints, because he loveth not their dis- union and division? |
A26932 | Is it necessity or not that hath cast you upon such a charge? |
A26932 | Is it not a fearful deceit of heart for a man to think himself a godly Minister for finding fault with them that are less faulty then himself? |
A26932 | Is it not a scandal for them to avoid the Ordinances of God and the Communion of the Church for so many years together as they do? |
A26932 | Is it not just with God to give him over to delusion, that will not be at a little pains to be informed, nor afford the truth an equal hearing? |
A26932 | Is it not more reason that you should pinch your flesh and family, then undertake a work that you can not do, and neglect the souls of so many men? |
A26932 | Is it not pitty then that our Hearts are not more Orthodox as well as our heads? |
A26932 | Is it not then a most happy undertaking that you are all setting your hands to, and desiring the assistance of Christ in, this day? |
A26932 | Is it not therefore a most doleful case that learned sober men should plead for this as a desirable priviledge? |
A26932 | Is it not your saved people in the presence of Christ Jesus at his coming? |
A26932 | Is it nothing to be bred up to Learning, when others are bred at the plough and cart? |
A26932 | Is it nothing to converse with Learned men, and talk of high and glorious things, when others must converse with almost none but silly ignorants? |
A26932 | Is it of our Learning, Knowledge, abilities and gifts? |
A26932 | Is it only to be sorry for sin, or is it, The change of the mind from sin to God, or both? |
A26932 | Is it worth their labour, and patience, and is it not also worth ours? |
A26932 | Is it your baptismal engagement to fight against the flesh? |
A26932 | Is not Ministerial Commnnion a duty, as well as common- Christian Communion? |
A26932 | Is not Pride the sin of Devils? |
A26932 | Is not every true Christian a member of the body, and therefore partaketh of the blessings of the whole, and of each particular member thereof? |
A26932 | Is not this a sad case in a Nation that glorieth of the fulness of the Gospel? |
A26932 | Is not this evil from the ordering of the Lord? |
A26932 | Is so hopeful and chargeable a Reformation so far frustrated by these men; and yet must we not open our mouths to tell them of it? |
A26932 | Is so much of the fire of hell yet unextinguished, that at first was kindled in us? |
A26932 | Is that point of order more necessary then the substance of the work, or the end it self? |
A26932 | Is that the voice of obedience, or of rebellion? |
A26932 | Is the Covenant of Grace made with the Elect only? |
A26932 | Is the Covenant of Works Abrogated, or not? |
A26932 | Is the distance so great that Presbyterian, Episcopal and Independent might not be well agreed? |
A26932 | Is there any conversion without the word? |
A26932 | Is there no way to peace but by participating of mens sin? |
A26932 | Is there not such and such, and such a one, O how many round about thee, that are yet the visible sons of death? |
A26932 | Is this Taking heed to our selves and to all the Flock? |
A26932 | Is this like the pattern that is given us here in the Text? |
A26932 | Is this the voice of Ministerial or Christian Compassion? |
A26932 | Is this your case, or not? |
A26932 | Is your flesh of any better mettle then your neighbours? |
A26932 | It is now near three years since many of us here did engage our selves to this duty: And have we been faithful in performance of that engagement? |
A26932 | It is worthy our consideration, Who is like to have the heavyer charge about this matter at the Bar of God? |
A26932 | It makes them ask, What shall I say, and how shall I deliver it, to be thought a learned able Preacher, and to be applauded by all that hear me? |
A26932 | It must be done, and why not by you as well as others? |
A26932 | It s time to make up all breaches between us and Heaven, when we stand in such necessity of the Divine Protection? |
A26932 | It was lawful in the Apostles daies to baptize without the Cross, and to pray, and praise God without the Surplice? |
A26932 | It was part of my charge, what account can I give of it, O Sirs, is it a small matter to you to answer such questions, as these? |
A26932 | Know we not how many malicious adversaries are day and night at work against us? |
A26932 | Know whether he agree to all that is in the Catechism, which you teach the people? |
A26932 | Let them know what a tendency this hath to their salvation; What a profitable improvement it will be of their time? |
A26932 | Let us all set close to this part of our work, and then see what time we can find to spare? |
A26932 | Let us be more so in propagating the Truth: Will they condescend to the meanest, and creep into houses to lead captive the sillyest of the Flock? |
A26932 | Let us do so much more: Are they unwearied in propagating their opinions? |
A26932 | May we not tell them of it, when we are bleeding by their hands? |
A26932 | Mens souls may be saved without knowing, whether God did predetermine the creature in all its acts? |
A26932 | Might not Mr. Bradford, or Hooper, or any that were burnt in Queen Maries daies have alledged more then this against duty? |
A26932 | Might not you possibly have procured assistance for so great a charge? |
A26932 | Much more may I say so about Justification( though perhaps the same thing with Remission) so if you ask them what Regeneration is? |
A26932 | Must God wait on your friends? |
A26932 | Must Paul do this, least after all his preaching he should be a cast- away? |
A26932 | Must the people therefore turn their back on the Assemblies and Ordinances of God? |
A26932 | Must they be served before God? |
A26932 | Must we be patient to be ruined by them, and have they not the patience to hear of it? |
A26932 | Nay is not your meaning, that you would have the Magistrate to do your work for you? |
A26932 | Nay it is meer mercy in him that imposeth this great duty upon us? |
A26932 | Nay when they can patiently live in the houses with riotous profane persons, and not follow them seriously and uncessantly for their change? |
A26932 | Nay, What if he were against it? |
A26932 | Nay, do not you rather by your abuse of God, provoke him to forsake and blast your endeavours? |
A26932 | Nay, should you not rather beg your bread, then put such a thing as mens salvation upon a hazard, or disadvantage? |
A26932 | Nay, what might we not have done, if our perversness had not marr''d our work? |
A26932 | O Brethren, what a field of work is there before us? |
A26932 | O Brethren, what abundance of good works are before us, and how few of them do we put our hands to? |
A26932 | O Dear Brethren what men should we be in skil, resolution& unwearied diligence, that have all this to do? |
A26932 | O how can you walk and talk, and be merry with such people, when you know their case? |
A26932 | O how many Congregations are now plainly and frequently taught, that lived then in great obscurity? |
A26932 | O how many precepts and admirable examples hath our Lord and master given us to this end? |
A26932 | O sirs, how plain, how close and earnestly should we deliver a message of such a nature as ours is? |
A26932 | O that this were your daily study, how to use your wealth, your friends, and all you have for God, as well as your tongues? |
A26932 | O then if they could call time back again, how loud would they call? |
A26932 | O what a Nation might England have been ere now, if it had not been for the proud and obstinate contentions of godly Ministers? |
A26932 | O what a heart is it that will not pity such a one? |
A26932 | O what a miserable world should we have, if blind self- conceited man had the ruling of it? |
A26932 | O what abundance of things are there that a Minister should understand? |
A26932 | O what an Argument is here to quicken the negligent? |
A26932 | O what is it to answer for the neglect of such a charge? |
A26932 | O what strong holds have we to batter, and how many of them? |
A26932 | Of our body? |
A26932 | Omnia amamus; omnia colimus; solus nobis in com ● aratione omnium Deus vilis est? |
A26932 | On those two daies a week that you set apart for this work, what hinders but you may take an hour or two to walk for the exercise of your bodies? |
A26932 | One would think it should be enough to set you on work, to shew a line in the Book of God, to prove it to be his will? |
A26932 | Or a Physitian, By what authority he enjoyment them to take his Medicine? |
A26932 | Or are they false- hearted to the interest of Christ, and have a design to undermine his Kingdom? |
A26932 | Or are they grown cruel to the souls of men? |
A26932 | Or are you cowardly and careless, and then blame your sword instead of using it, as thinking that the easier task? |
A26932 | Or could that man be a fit instrument for other mens illumination, that were himself so blind? |
A26932 | Or doth interlocution make it none? |
A26932 | Or else they would not be so disagreed in the point? |
A26932 | Or how can he plead Guiltless, whose conscience hath so much to say against him? |
A26932 | Or if the Ministers keep their places, can they wish all the Congregations to stay at home, and live like Heathens? |
A26932 | Or is their displeasure or censure a greater hurt to you, then Gods displeasure? |
A26932 | Or rather must not the penalty of the violated Law be executed? |
A26932 | Or that would give his money to relieve the poor, and they should ask him, By what authority do you require us to take this money? |
A26932 | Or that you were born with sin? |
A26932 | Or to believe that Christ is the Saviour of the world, and to Accept him for your Saviour to pardon, teach, govern and glorifie you? |
A26932 | Or to bring men to heaven, that do not soundly believe that there is such a thing? |
A26932 | Or what is Repentance? |
A26932 | Or would you excuse one of these men if he come off his work, and say, I am but flesh and blood, I must have some pleasure or relaxation? |
A26932 | Ornatum, non vinolentum, non percussorem, sed modestum, non litigiosum, non cupidum? |
A26932 | Our Learning and Knowledge and Ministerial gifts will condemn us ▪ For to what are we made partakers of these, but for the work of God? |
A26932 | Quare? |
A26932 | Quid enim agunt Ministri cum excommunicant? |
A26932 | Quid enim futurum est, si unicuique liceat quod libuerit? |
A26932 | Quid tibi blandiris O homo quisquis es, Credulitate, quae sine timore atque obsequio Dei nulla est? |
A26932 | Quomodo igitur gloriamur restitutum esse Evangelium in Ecclesiis nostris, si hanc eamque non postremam partem Evangelii restitutam- nolumus? |
A26932 | Read the Scripture and see, whether they that obeyed Gods Messengers, or they that despised and disobeyed them sped best? |
A26932 | Religionis Habeatur plane,& maximus: Nam quis ille est tam invidus hominibus, tam exosus Deo, qui isiud probibere conetur? |
A26932 | Sed for sitan dicit aliquis: Nullusneergo in Ecclesiâ Christi profectus haeb ● bitur? |
A26932 | Sed quid erit, ubi nec pater, nec filius, mali genitoris exemplo privatus, conspicitur castus? |
A26932 | Sed quomodo vos aliquid solvetis, ut sit solutum,& in coelis, à coelo ob scelera adempti,& immanium peccatorum funibus compediti? |
A26932 | Shall I take this therefore for a truth which the Church then held? |
A26932 | Shall Ministers study, and preach, and pray for you, and shall they be despised? |
A26932 | Shall all the blood and cost of this People be frustrated, or not? |
A26932 | Shall we hate them most, whom we are bound to love best? |
A26932 | Shall we pamper our bodies, and give them their desires in unnecessary pleasures, when Paul must keep under his body, and bring it into subjection? |
A26932 | Shall we say, This should not have been spoken of us in the ears of the people, but we should have been honoured before them? |
A26932 | Shall we think it was shed for them that are not worthy of our utmost care? |
A26932 | Shall we think that they have ceased their enterprise, because they are working more subtilly in the dark? |
A26932 | Should Christ have com, or been our Head, or have brought us to glory, if man had not fallen? |
A26932 | Should there have been any Resurrection of the body, if Christ had not come to procure it? |
A26932 | Should they do their part in a subordinate office to protect and further us, and should not we do ours who stand nearest to the end? |
A26932 | Si quis autem domui suae praeesse nescit, quomodo Ecclesiae Dei diligentiam adhibebit? |
A26932 | Sirs, do you think they will be hearty and diligent to save men from hell, that be not heartily perswaded that there is a hell? |
A26932 | So that if they had not been restrained and kept in quiet by the Emperor, how soon would they have made a sadder havock then they did? |
A26932 | So that when we have quarrelled never so long, what is it but the Peoples consent that the moderate men on one side do require? |
A26932 | So you have but food and rayment, must you not therewith be content? |
A26932 | Such men have a promise of pardon from God; and shall men take us by the throat when God forgiveth us? |
A26932 | Tell me Brethren, in the fear of God: Do you regard the success of your labours, or do you not? |
A26932 | Tell them of such a Glory, and scarce speak a word to them personallly to help them to it? |
A26932 | That good men should no better know themselves? |
A26932 | That those Ordinances of God should be the Occasions of our delusion, which are instituted to be the means of our conviction and salvation? |
A26932 | The Lord that seeth your heart doth know whether it be so or not? |
A26932 | The Magistrates Leave we have; who hindereth or forbiddeth you to set up Discipline, and exercise it faithfully? |
A26932 | The Nation may say, How oft did we beg it of God, and Petition the Parliament for it, and now the Ministers deny us the enjoyment of it? |
A26932 | The Parliament may say, How long did we sit and consult about Reformation; and now the Ministers will not execute the power that is granted them? |
A26932 | The great Objection that seemeth to hinder some from this work, is because we are not agreed yet, who it is that must do it? |
A26932 | Then wo to poor Prelates? |
A26932 | There is one more gone to Iudgement: what didst thou to prepare them for Iudgement? |
A26932 | They ask, where are we bound to pray morning and evening? |
A26932 | They will answer we hope so, or else we know not what will? |
A26932 | Think when you rise in the morning, O what if this day should be my last, and death should find me in an unrenewed state? |
A26932 | Thou that makest thy boast of the Law, through breaking the Law dishonourest thou God? |
A26932 | Thou that saiest a man should not commit adultery, or be drunk, or covetous, art thou such thy self? |
A26932 | Thou that teachest another, teachest thou not thy self? |
A26932 | To bind heavy burdens for others, and not to touch them our selves with a finger? |
A26932 | To this end their design is partly to cry them down as false teachers( but how are they baffled when it comes to the proof?) |
A26932 | To whom I say, why do you not on the same grounds forbear going to Christ, and say You love to live privately? |
A26932 | WHat it is to Take heed to all the Flock? |
A26932 | Was Adam bound to believe in Christ? |
A26932 | Was Christ a creature before his Incarnation, or the Creation? |
A26932 | Was it a Covenant of Works, or of Grace that was made by Moses? |
A26932 | Was one, or two Covenants made with Adam before his fall? |
A26932 | Was there ever a Nation on the race of the earth that hath so solemnly and so long, followed God with fasting and prayer as we have done? |
A26932 | We feel much: we fear more; and all''s for sin: and yet are we so hardly drawn to a Confession? |
A26932 | We may take time for necessary Recreation for all this? |
A26932 | We must study Humility, and Preach Humility; and must we not possess and practice it? |
A26932 | We teach them in publike; and how then are we bound to teach them man by man besides? |
A26932 | Were these such great matters with me at Church, and so small when I came home?] |
A26932 | Were they now become more necessary then the Preaching of the Gospel, when in the Apostles times they were of no necessity or use at all? |
A26932 | Were they worth my blood, and are they not worth thy labour? |
A26932 | What I must we have new Laws made every time the old ones are broken? |
A26932 | What Prince will chose the friends and voluntary servants of his enemy to lead his Armies in war against him? |
A26932 | What Sanctification is? |
A26932 | What Sanctification, Vocation, Regeneration? |
A26932 | What Sirs shall we despise the blood of Christ? |
A26932 | What Sirs, are you that are men of wisdom as dull as the common people? |
A26932 | What a number of slye and subtile temptations must we open to our peoples eyes, that they may escape them? |
A26932 | What a sad case is it that so vile a sin is no more easily discerned by us? |
A26932 | What abundance of distemperers, and lusts, and passions, do you cast your gracious words amongst? |
A26932 | What abundance of good might we do, could we but bring our people to this? |
A26932 | What an Obligation then is laid upon us by our call? |
A26932 | What are all those Articles that you have here agreed on among your selves about Catechizing and Discipline, but such things? |
A26932 | What are you to him more then other men, but for his work and peoples sakes? |
A26932 | What beams would these be in your eyes that now seem motes, if you did but see them with a clearer light? |
A26932 | What can they see in our Persons or Countenances for which they should so doate upon us? |
A26932 | What can we call it less? |
A26932 | What can you devise to say for the most part, but it will be against your own souls? |
A26932 | What can you say to this in judgement? |
A26932 | What change must be made on all that shall be saved? |
A26932 | What comfort will it be at death, that you lengthened your life by shortening your work? |
A26932 | What difference between their pulpit speeches and their familiar discourse? |
A26932 | What do you as Church- Governors against these same sins? |
A26932 | What doth the number we speak to make it preaching? |
A26932 | What else are we Overseers for? |
A26932 | What fornicator so impudent as to sin in the open streets while all look on? |
A26932 | What free- will is? |
A26932 | What hast thou said to them or done for their recovery? |
A26932 | What have we our time and strength for, but to lay it out for God? |
A26932 | What if Ephesus and each other City or Church had then but one Presbyter? |
A26932 | What if God will accept a Physitian though the Patient dye? |
A26932 | What if they be Lords, or Knights, or Gentlemen? |
A26932 | What if they came to your Study- door, and cryed for help, and would not away, till you had told them how to escape the wrath of God? |
A26932 | What if they should pay us in our own coyn? |
A26932 | What if they were lawful? |
A26932 | What if you might not excommunicate, may you not therefore do the rest? |
A26932 | What is Christs Priestly, Prophetical, Kingly office? |
A26932 | What is Freewill? |
A26932 | What is Jesus Christ? |
A26932 | What is Justification? |
A26932 | What is Person in the Trinity? |
A26932 | What is Repentance? |
A26932 | What is a Candle made for, but to be burnt? |
A26932 | What is faith? |
A26932 | What is forgiveness of sin? |
A26932 | What is it but our sins that is the strength of all these enemies? |
A26932 | What is it? |
A26932 | What is the Catholike Church? |
A26932 | What is the Holy- Ghost? |
A26932 | What is the first Covenant? |
A26932 | What is the true nature of special grace? |
A26932 | What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy Conversation and Godliness? |
A26932 | What mean you when you say, you will not do it without Authority? |
A26932 | What might not the Ministers of England have done for the Lord, if they had been but willing? |
A26932 | What mountains would these things appear to your souls, which now seem mole hils? |
A26932 | What must we do to be saved? |
A26932 | What need we more for this, then our experience? |
A26932 | What ornaments to the Church? |
A26932 | What pains take we to humble them, while our selves are unhumbled? |
A26932 | What remedy hath God provided for the saving of sinful miserable souls? |
A26932 | What remedy? |
A26932 | What repentance? |
A26932 | What say the people to them? |
A26932 | What say you will you do this presently? |
A26932 | What scolds so furious that will not give over, when the house is on fire over their heads? |
A26932 | What skill doth every part of our work require? |
A26932 | What skill is there necessary to deal in private with one poor ignorant soul for their conversion( of which more in the end?) |
A26932 | What subtile, and diligent, and obstinate resistance must we expect at every heart we deal with? |
A26932 | What tell them daily of threatned damnation, and yet let them run into it so easily? |
A26932 | What the second Covenant, and its Conditions? |
A26932 | What then? |
A26932 | What though it will not serve to maintain you in fulness? |
A26932 | What though they live civilly, and preach plausibly, and have the out- side of an easie cheap Religiousness? |
A26932 | What vile hypocrisie is it, to make it our daily work to cry it down, and yet to keep it? |
A26932 | What was the difference between the Covenant with Adam, and that by Moses? |
A26932 | What were the conditions of salvation before Christs Incarnation? |
A26932 | What will be recorded? |
A26932 | What would he do if he should indeed prevail against us? |
A26932 | What would you have done with such sinners? |
A26932 | What, are good mens hearts so deceitful? |
A26932 | What, are they so ignorant as not to know these things? |
A26932 | What, can you love other men better then your selves? |
A26932 | What, do you not know that Covetousness and Pride are sins? |
A26932 | What, do you think Christ can have no servants, if such as you shall with Demas turn to the present world and forsake him? |
A26932 | What, say they,( when a Minister doth his duty alone) Must we he ruled by every singular man? |
A26932 | What, shall the same tongue speak evil, that speaketh against evil? |
A26932 | What? |
A26932 | When do you look to see all these difficulties over, that you may set upon that which you now avoid? |
A26932 | When once the fa ● our of a Christ ● an Prince did shine upon the Churches, what self- exaltation and contention of the Prelates did ensue? |
A26932 | When they have plowed the field, will you sow it by the halves? |
A26932 | When they should ask, What should I say, and how should I say it, to please God best, and do most good? |
A26932 | When you are studying what to say to them, I know these are your thoughts( or else they are naught and to no purpose) How should I get within them? |
A26932 | Where is our chief Happiness? |
A26932 | Whereas if you be the means of their through- sanctification, how many souls may bless you, and what greater good can you do the Church? |
A26932 | Whether God have scientiam mediam? |
A26932 | Whether he suppose that you may attain salvation, if you be true to so much as you are agreed in? |
A26932 | Whether he that nameth him should not depart from iniquity? |
A26932 | Whether it will save us to speak well of the grace that we are without? |
A26932 | Whether only a Prelate? |
A26932 | Who be they that God will pardon? |
A26932 | Who can be reconciled to that which so lamentably crosseth his Masters interest, and his main end? |
A26932 | Who can escape the censure of such men, but he that can unite the Saints by dividing them? |
A26932 | Who can in study, preaching, or life, aliud agere be doing other matters, if he do but know, that This must be done? |
A26932 | Who can love, or seek, or desire that which he knoweth not? |
A26932 | Who dare condemn us, when God shall justifie us? |
A26932 | Who hath ever tryed it, that knoweth it not by experience? |
A26932 | Who shall lay that to our charge, which God hath declared that he will not charge us with? |
A26932 | Who would ever have been burnt at a stake for Christ, if this reasoning had been good? |
A26932 | Who would have been a Iudas that had seen him hanged and burst? |
A26932 | Why Brethren, do you consider where you stand, and what you have taken upon you? |
A26932 | Why Divines be not agreed, what they are themselves? |
A26932 | Why do you in your disputes against the Prelates maintain that every Minister is a Bishop of his own Church; and do you now abhor it? |
A26932 | Why may not written words that are still before their eyes and in their memories; instruct them, as well as the transient words of a Preacher? |
A26932 | Why might not Augustine, Prosper, and all the rest mistake in such a thing, as that? |
A26932 | Why should you think then that they will be satisfied with the empty sound of the word, Church- Government? |
A26932 | Why sirs? |
A26932 | Why then do we stand quarreling about the names? |
A26932 | Why, whom will they then set over them in our stead? |
A26932 | Will any work- man malign another because he helpeth him to do his masters work? |
A26932 | Will it be in your daies? |
A26932 | Will it not waken us to compassion to look upon a languishing man, and to think that within a few daies his soul will be in heaven or hell? |
A26932 | Will it satisfie you to deal with one person of 20. or 40. or an hundred, and to pass by all the rest? |
A26932 | Will you deal faithfully with your Creditors, and pay the Nation the debt which you owe them? |
A26932 | Will you have better season for it, when you are dead? |
A26932 | Will you make it your work to magnifie God, and when you have done, dishonour him as much as others? |
A26932 | Will you preach his laws, and willfully break them? |
A26932 | Will you proclaim Christs Governing Power, and yet contemn it, and rebel your selves? |
A26932 | Will you stand by and see sinners gasping under the pangs of death, and say, God doth not require me to make my self a drudge to save them? |
A26932 | Will zeal for God, will delight in his service, or love to the souls of men gain- say it? |
A26932 | Would the maintenance of the place serve two others, that have less necessity, or smaller families then you? |
A26932 | Would they not have separated from the whole Church on the same ground, if they had lived in these times? |
A26932 | Would you forbear Sermons and Sacraments so many years on pretence of unseasonableness? |
A26932 | Would you have a Law made to Punish you if you will not do your duty? |
A26932 | Would you have people value your way of Government or not? |
A26932 | Would you have the Magistrate to punish men eo nomine, because excommunicated, without any particular cognisance of the fact and case? |
A26932 | Would you have your people be more careful of their souls, then you will be of yours? |
A26932 | Would you not say, The work must be done, or we are all dead men: is the ship ready to sink, and do you talk of Reputation? |
A26932 | Yea and to take the sole Government of them, while the particular Teachers of them are free from that undertaking? |
A26932 | Yea or hazard the damnation but of one soul? |
A26932 | Yea or who would ever have been a Christian? |
A26932 | Yet if we had man only to plead our cause with, perhaps we might do much to make it good: but while God accuseth us, how shall we be justified? |
A26932 | You blame the Magistrate for giving so much liberty; and is it not long of your selves that he doth so? |
A26932 | You have neighbours that could learn more, that have had as much to do in the world as you, and as little time? |
A26932 | You may see here it is not a little fault that negligent Pastors are guilty of? |
A26932 | You pray for them in Publike: Must you not also pray for them in private? |
A26932 | You speak hardly of all the Ministers about you? |
A26932 | You will ask them perhaps What is God? |
A26932 | [ Quid plura? |
A26932 | [ What shall become of us after the end of this world? |
A26932 | a heart of stone, or a very rock, or adamant, or the heart of a Tyger? |
A26932 | and did not all this befall them for our examples? |
A26932 | and did not first set down and count your costs? |
A26932 | and do we need to heap up a multitude of words to perswade you to a known and weighty duty? |
A26932 | and do you know that much of the Christian warfare consisteth in the combate between the flesh and the spirit? |
A26932 | and encourage men to look out for better societties where that Discipline may be had? |
A26932 | and for Christ to say, It was the purchase of my blood that thou didst so make light of, and dost thou think to be saved by it thy self? |
A26932 | and hath not the Church always thought so, and practised accordingly? |
A26932 | and have not some of them the faces to justifie all the former impositions and persecutions, and draw or continue the guile of it upon their heads? |
A26932 | and have not we cause to fear it of our selves much more? |
A26932 | and have pitty on them that have none upon your selves? |
A26932 | and have there been no attempts for their overthrow? |
A26932 | and how can he be his Disciple, that refuseth to be taught by him? |
A26932 | and how can these men be fit for the Ministry that are such enemies to self- denyal, and so to true Christianity? |
A26932 | and how can we think that they will much regard our counsel, while they abhor or dis- regard the persons that give it them? |
A26932 | and how defective an answer must you make your selves? |
A26932 | and how fully hath it been defended? |
A26932 | and how high the same spirit yet is, and busily contriving the accomplishment of the same design? |
A26932 | and how is it made? |
A26932 | and how much happyer we might have made our Parishes, ere now? |
A26932 | and is it tollerable evil in a man that is so engaged against him and his Kingdom as we are? |
A26932 | and must they not shortly be as loathsom and abominable as the dung? |
A26932 | and of how much moment is every part? |
A26932 | and others sit still and look on it as a thing not worth the trouble: How many thousand persons may come to the condemnation of such men? |
A26932 | and partly to perswade you that they have no calling to the work; and urge them to prove their calling( which how easily can we do?) |
A26932 | and shall we shew it by forbearing our plain rebuke, and suffering their sin upon them? |
A26932 | and so whether such exercises or repetitions be more necessary? |
A26932 | and that the Presbyters might be but their curates and informers? |
A26932 | and that they tremble not rather at the thoughts of so great an undertaking? |
A26932 | and to a Real Reformation of Discipline in our practice? |
A26932 | and to distrain for that by a yet sorer Judgement, which we denyed voluntarily to surrender to him? |
A26932 | and was I willing to make thee a co- worker with me, and wilt thou refuse that little that lyeth upon thy hands? |
A26932 | and what a delight would our conference of these things afford? |
A26932 | and what a great defect is it to be ignorant of them? |
A26932 | and what a number of those worlds? |
A26932 | and what an Argument to condemn those that will not be quickned up to their duty by it? |
A26932 | and what do you call your selves the Ministers of Christ for? |
A26932 | and what have I done for it, before it departed? |
A26932 | and what is a wicked and damnable state, but a devotedness to our carnal selves, and a living to our selves? |
A26932 | and what is it that our hearts must be most set upon?] |
A26932 | and what is my life worth, but to do him service? |
A26932 | and what is the proper difference of a Regenerate man from all others? |
A26932 | and what reason have such to fear least their money perish with them? |
A26932 | and what reproach hath been cast upon the adversaries of it through the Land? |
A26932 | and what should I say that is likely most effectually to convince them, and convert them, and tend to their salvation? |
A26932 | and what sins more hainous then the betraying of souls? |
A26932 | and what would you have more then that which may enable you for the work of God? |
A26932 | and when God hath bid you, first seek his Kingdom and the righteousness thereof? |
A26932 | and when men can not do their worldly business without knowledge, nor learn a trade without an apprentiship? |
A26932 | and where had you now been? |
A26932 | and wherein doth it consist? |
A26932 | and whether God will hear their prayers, if they regard iniquity in their hearts? |
A26932 | and whether a wicked Preacher shall stand in the Iudgement, or sinners in the Assembly of the just? |
A26932 | and whether they should not go together from the very first? |
A26932 | and who can be silent while souls are undone? |
A26932 | and who shall be saved by the blood of Christ? |
A26932 | and who shall hide our sins, when he will have them brought to light? |
A26932 | and who would have been a lying sacrilegious hypocrite, that had seen ● nanias and Saphira dye? |
A26932 | and whose favour can recompence for the ruines of the Church? |
A26932 | and will he honour us, if we be idle and sensual? |
A26932 | and will not the case of souls that are neer to damnation move you? |
A26932 | and would we not have said as Hazael, Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing? |
A26932 | and yet dare we imitate them? |
A26932 | and yet shall we forbear to use them? |
A26932 | and yet those fore thoughts will not recover such working apprehensions? |
A26932 | and yet will you entertain it against all these professions and testimonies of your own? |
A26932 | and yet will you refuse your help? |
A26932 | another will ask you, how you can be a true Minister, if you had your Ordination from Prelates? |
A26932 | are they all so negligent? |
A26932 | as if the Law were not sufficient because men break it? |
A26932 | aut pr ● ter paucissim ● s qu ● sdam qui mala fugiunt, quid est aliud pene omnis coetus Christianorum quam sentina vitiorum? |
A26932 | but as to the sense and inside of it, it was, Whether there should be any effectual Church- Government, or not? |
A26932 | but that is the smallest matter: but who knows how many weak ones may be perverted by the success, to their own undoing and the trouble of the Church? |
A26932 | can not you speak soberly and moderately? |
A26932 | could you find in your hearts to drive them away without advice? |
A26932 | dare you tell God that you will not do his work unless the Magistrate drive you to it with scourges? |
A26932 | dicta Evangeliorum magis diligant au thymelicorum? |
A26932 | do you not know what it is to be unfaithful to your trust, and by negligence or self- seeking to betray mens souls? |
A26932 | give them up as hopeless? |
A26932 | how by works? |
A26932 | how have you spent your time till now? |
A26932 | how many Ministers may you ask before you have a right answer? |
A26932 | how oft have you declared the terrors of the Lord? |
A26932 | how sorrily would many very learned Divines answer you? |
A26932 | is he made of flesh and blood as we are? |
A26932 | is it not that wherein Satans Image doth much consist? |
A26932 | is it of our Graces? |
A26932 | it will make us talk to our selves in Bernards language, Quare O miser non omni hora ad mortem te disponis? |
A26932 | must I daily and earnestly plead with sinners about everlasting life and death, and have no more belief and feeling of these weighty things my self? |
A26932 | nor exercise any considerable part of Discipline at all? |
A26932 | or a single Pastor? |
A26932 | or any greater business to mind then your salvation? |
A26932 | or did you not? |
A26932 | or draw such a burden wilfully on themselves? |
A26932 | or for the quickning of others, that were himself so sensless? |
A26932 | or had you rather hazard your self and us, then hear of your sloathfulness? |
A26932 | or how can you set on the top- stone while the middle parts are neglected? |
A26932 | or is he an invisible spirit? |
A26932 | or less to God? |
A26932 | or rather of sensual Lazarus, and diabolical cruelty I Doth God set you work to do, and will you not believe that he would have you do it? |
A26932 | or rather the heart of an Infidel? |
A26932 | or should tell you that you wrong them by diminishing their reputation? |
A26932 | or that ever had solicitous thoughts of a cure? |
A26932 | or that ever well discerned how many of them are but Verbal, and how many are Real? |
A26932 | or that its like it can be had without any care or pains? |
A26932 | or the People? |
A26932 | or to prove to you that the work hath a tendency to mens salvation? |
A26932 | or to speak against the sin that we live in? |
A26932 | or whether a Presbyterie? |
A26932 | or will he venture his soul( as the ungodly do) and the Churches peace with it, and all to save himself so small a labour? |
A26932 | or with all? |
A26932 | or with whom? |
A26932 | quid nobis invidemus? |
A26932 | shall it censure, and slander, and secretly backbite, that cryes down these and the like in others? |
A26932 | shall they dye, and be in Hell before thou wilt speak to them one serious word to prevent it? |
A26932 | shall they there curse thee for ever that didst no more in time to save them? |
A26932 | shall we deny, or excuse, or extenuate our sins, while we call our people to such free Confessions? |
A26932 | shouldst thou not cry aloud, and shew them their transgressions? |
A26932 | shouldst thou not weep over such a people, and should not thy tears interrupt thy words? |
A26932 | the first- born of Hell? |
A26932 | the thoughts of a believer or of an Infidel; Are these men like to honour God, and promote his service that have such base thoughts of it themseves? |
A26932 | they say, No; And if I ask what hath he done or suffered for you? |
A26932 | to call it publikely all to naught, and privately to make it our bed- fellow and companion? |
A26932 | verba Christi, an mimi? |
A26932 | verba vitae, an mortis? |
A26932 | were these of more worth then so many souls? |
A26932 | what abundance round about you are blindly hastening to perdition? |
A26932 | what are we more then other men, that the people should do all this for us? |
A26932 | what did you think of? |
A26932 | what disadvantage must truth come upon? |
A26932 | what have you been doing all this while that you are so ignorant, or so unprepared for death if it should now find you? |
A26932 | what have you done? |
A26932 | what is faith? |
A26932 | what is it to Believe in Christ? |
A26932 | what rooting have their sins? |
A26932 | what shall I call the heart of such a man? |
A26932 | what thoughts have these men of their Master, their work and their wages? |
A26932 | what, its conditions? |
A26932 | what, must God let the souls of your Neighbours perish, to save you a little Labour and suffering: and this in mercy to you? |
A26932 | when the everlasting life or death of men is concerned in it: Me thinks we are nowhere so wanting as in this seriousness? |
A26932 | when you can not have the trifles of this world without? |
A26932 | whether God works Grace in a Physical or Moral way of causation? |
A26932 | whether it be a Christ in the mouth or in the heart that will save men? |
A26932 | whether the understanding necessarily determines the wil? |
A26932 | why, are they not made of the like materials as the brutes? |
A26932 | will his neglect excuse yours? |
A26932 | will it follow that he was a Prelate? |
A26932 | will you make them say you rage or rave? |
A26932 | wilt thou do no more to seek and to save them? |
A26932 | would it not break your hearts to think on it, that all the poor godly Christians about you should suffer reproach for your mis- doings? |
A26932 | yea or if he forbid them? |
A26932 | you may see what comes of all your stir; are you any better then others? |
A26932 | ● nd to come off by a legit ut Clericus, when there ● wanting the credidit& vixit ut Christianus? |
A26947 | & c. What did the holy Apostle leave thee? |
A26947 | ( I verily think incomparably more then they do ours,) and are we not willing to confer with the wisest of them that can inform us? |
A26947 | ( What then is become of Bellarmine and the rest of their champions?) |
A26947 | 10. had not Justification before? |
A26947 | 13. was Paul crucified for you, or were ye baptized in the name of Paul? |
A26947 | 1610. condemn Bellarmines book against Barclay, as an engine of treason and rebellion? |
A26947 | 1626. condemned Santarellus Book as guilty of the same villany, stirring up people to Rebellion and King- killing? |
A26947 | 2 But it defined the Popes Soveraignty: But how prove you that? |
A26947 | 2 Did not this Learned man know that we believe all the Bible? |
A26947 | 3. Who be they now that are the Apostles successors? |
A26947 | 4. Who made the Patriarchate of Constantinople, and gave them that vast Jurisdiction? |
A26947 | 5. Who made the Patriarch of Jerusalem? |
A26947 | 6 But what need we go any further? |
A26947 | 6. but all this is the smallest part, the Question is whether faith in Christ be of Necessity to a Pope? |
A26947 | ? |
A26947 | Also we would know, when they baptize the Adult, whether they require any profession of the faith from them or not? |
A26947 | And Azorius saith, Is it lawfull for a person of quality to kill one that would give him a box on the ear, or a bang with a stick? |
A26947 | And I pray, what General Council did ever condemn the Greeks, for those many errors charged on them? |
A26947 | And are all the Jesuites and Fryars dead? |
A26947 | And are not these four concessions enough? |
A26947 | And are the Papists agreed among themselves about either of these? |
A26947 | And because they would have had more power, doth it follow that it was their due? |
A26947 | And by what Law they can create or Generate a creature of a more noble species then themselves, as if a beast should beget a man? |
A26947 | And can a Body be present, and not in a Bodily manner? |
A26947 | And can ancient Bishops, spent with studies and labors, endure all this? |
A26947 | And can any Learned Papists be so ignorant, as not to know that the Arrians pretended the Authority of General Councils? |
A26947 | And can he not Govern it without a Visible Monarch? |
A26947 | And can there yet be greater divisions then these? |
A26947 | And can we look for better from the rest? |
A26947 | And dare you say that you have no sin to resist, or purge, or pardon? |
A26947 | And did not this writer know that Protestants can give him the same names as for them? |
A26947 | And did not your General Councils at Laterane and Florence declare that the Pope is above a Council, and that they can not depose him? |
A26947 | And do not these cheaters know, that if for this they would reproach us, they must do so by themselves? |
A26947 | And do not your Jesuites lay as heavy a charge on the Dominicans sometimes? |
A26947 | And do they make men true Christians by baptizing them, or not? |
A26947 | And do you not think so your selves? |
A26947 | And do you think the Head of the Roman Church was then Holy? |
A26947 | And do you think this doth not give away the Vicarship? |
A26947 | And doth a man change his Religion or Worship of God, if he either begin or cease to use a Book? |
A26947 | And doth not this Miracle justifie us that give the people the Wine, and condemn you, that refuse to give it them? |
A26947 | And for Councils themselves, who knows which to take for currant and of Authority? |
A26947 | And for Fathers, do I need to tell you how many condemned Marcellinus, Liberius, Honorius and others? |
A26947 | And for shame do not any more hereafter use any such self- condemning words, as to ask any Sect,[ How dare you condemn the Catholick Church? |
A26947 | And hath this Kingdom an Universal Visible Monarch? |
A26947 | And how easie and pleasing is this to proud corrupted Nature? |
A26947 | And how easie and pleasing is this to the ungodly? |
A26947 | And how many lives must he have that shall do it? |
A26947 | And how many thousand Whores are licensed at Rome, how sumptuously they live, what revenues come to the Pope by them? |
A26947 | And how prove they all this? |
A26947 | And how proves he the Minor? |
A26947 | And how shall the Christian world know whether it were a true General Council or not? |
A26947 | And how should these and all such Countries send Bishops to a General Council? |
A26947 | And how will Papists deal with Heathens if they will deny the proofs from sense and reason? |
A26947 | And if General Councils themselves, and that of your own, should be for the sufficiency of Scripture; what then is become of all your Traditions? |
A26947 | And if God be merciful to us, what other addition have we need of? |
A26947 | And if all be not, how shall we know which is? |
A26947 | And if it be still a true Church what hinders but we may be so to? |
A26947 | And if so, we will not take it for our adversary? |
A26947 | And if so, whether it be not all, de fide matter of Faith? |
A26947 | And if this be it they contend for, they may Rule without a Commission from the Prince: Who will hinder them, that hath any fear of God? |
A26947 | And if writing be not necessary, why have we so many Fathers, Histories, and Canons? |
A26947 | And if you go further, who can limit, and say who, and how many they be, and how far the number may be increased or decreased, and by whom? |
A26947 | And if you knew them, yet what a loss are you at to know their Decrees and Canons? |
A26947 | And if you say that it belongs to the Emperour, I answer, what hath he to do to summon the subjects of the French, Spaniards, Turks, Aethiopian,& c? |
A26947 | And in good sadness was that the meaning of your Question[ What Council, that is, what Pope condemned our Church?] |
A26947 | And indeed was Christ a Pope? |
A26947 | And is all this Nothing to you that seemed so much to Paul? |
A26947 | And is he to be in every Parish where are divers presbyters? |
A26947 | And is it certain that all these shall be damned, because they believe not in the Pope? |
A26947 | And is not the Church essentially a company of Christians; the spouse, and body, and school, and Kingdom of Christ? |
A26947 | And is not the Pope essentially the pretended Vicar of Christ? |
A26947 | And is there any thing in your way that better tendeth to the deciding of controversies then in ours? |
A26947 | And is this an easie task to one that hath the heart of a man in his brest? |
A26947 | And is this difference so great a business? |
A26947 | And is this man a Papist? |
A26947 | And let us ask you, as you teach your followers to ask us,[ If we must turn from the Universal Church to any Sect, why rather to yours then another? |
A26947 | And may we not conjecture, and be strongly perswaded that these, or some of these, or some one of these, was a holy justified person? |
A26947 | And may you not see in this, how other points came in? |
A26947 | And must I needs go that difficult way to Heaven, because that some of them get thither? |
A26947 | And must we cast out our Pastors to receive such as these? |
A26947 | And must we needs be of that faith that damneth all men, and of that Church where none are saved? |
A26947 | And now I am content that any impartial man be judge whether Papists or the Reformed Churches are the more mutable and unsetled in their Religion? |
A26947 | And now I leave it to the Conscience of any sober Papist, whether we be guilty in any one point that this great Cardinal chargeth us with? |
A26947 | And now I pray consider to what purpose is the rest of your reasoning? |
A26947 | And now Reader I leave thee to judge, whether the Romane Church had a holy Head, when it had a Heathen and a Devil incarnate? |
A26947 | And now censorious Slanderer, tell me, what thou wouldst have had me to have done more? |
A26947 | And shall these partial ambitious men be the witnesses? |
A26947 | And sometime the Pope is called the Pillar of the Church; And what of that? |
A26947 | And speaking of all others in his own person and Apollos, saith[ Who then is Paul, or who is Apollo, but Ministers by whom ye believed?] |
A26947 | And that the Council of Basil called by him did the like? |
A26947 | And then before the Nicene Council, what General Councils were there since the Apostle days? |
A26947 | And then how do succeeding Popes and Clergy know it? |
A26947 | And then why do not the Grotians in Ireland and England obey the Antiarminian Decrees of the Churches in both? |
A26947 | And therefore we ought not to be solicitous of obtaining a Unity with open ungodly men; For what Communion hath light with darkness? |
A26947 | And they will ask you what reason you have among all these Sects to believe one of them rather then another? |
A26947 | And this is our true answer to the question, whether the Church of Rome be a true Church? |
A26947 | And was John the thirteenth a Vice christ to extinguish Heresies by all that diabolical villany that he was deposed for by a Council? |
A26947 | And was the Church no wider then the Empire? |
A26947 | And was this St. Gregories Sanctity? |
A26947 | And was this the Roman Sanctity even then? |
A26947 | And we would be informed by them, whether all true Christians in the world are of the same stature or degree of knowledge and explicite belief? |
A26947 | And we would know of them whether all that is Revealed by God be of absolute Necessity to every mans salvation that do or may hear it? |
A26947 | And we would know whether all shall be damned, that know not as much as the most Learned and Wise? |
A26947 | And we would know whether there be not some things Essential to true Obedience, and some things not Essential? |
A26947 | And well it is done by you? |
A26947 | And were the Churches better in the third, fourth, fift, sixt, or following Ages? |
A26947 | And were they the Catholick Church? |
A26947 | And were this any Novelty in us? |
A26947 | And what Church did they forsake? |
A26947 | And what Controversie can there be, where so many Nations themselves are witnesses against you? |
A26947 | And what Noblemen or Persons of Interest in England lay not under assaults and solicitations in those days? |
A26947 | And what a wonder is it that Learned Doctors see not their own contradiction? |
A26947 | And what call you[ a material point?] |
A26947 | And what cause is here of your quarrell? |
A26947 | And what doth he so importune them for? |
A26947 | And what flattering language did his successors use to the most base murderers and usurpers of the Empire? |
A26947 | And what had Constantine, Martian, Theodosius, or any Roman Emperour to do, to call the subjects in India, Aethiopia, Persia,& c. to a Council? |
A26947 | And what if it be proved that exterior and interior Jurisdiction of a Pastor is all one? |
A26947 | And what if they could find that Rome were called the mother of all Churches? |
A26947 | And what if we do so at the Sacrament? |
A26947 | And what mean they to distinguish of Implicite and Explicite faith? |
A26947 | And what of all this? |
A26947 | And what power had those Emperors at the other side of the world? |
A26947 | And what reason have we to let the lesser number Judge over the Greater? |
A26947 | And what saith H. Turbervile to this? |
A26947 | And what should hinder the Introduction of Novelty when General Councils do so often err? |
A26947 | And what then? |
A26947 | And what then? |
A26947 | And what unity will you keep at the Antipodes? |
A26947 | And what''s that to all Patriarcks before and after that rejected it not? |
A26947 | And what''s their ground? |
A26947 | And when he was near to death was still at work, asking those that intreated him to forbear, Whether they would have God find him idle? |
A26947 | And when that is done, who shall bear their charges in the journey? |
A26947 | And whence came it that Sexby, and others, that have been Souldiers in our Armies, have confederated with Spain to murder the Lord Protector? |
A26947 | And whence came the Hiders Body of Divinity, that hath infected so many high and low? |
A26947 | And whence came their Jesuitical Treasonable Pamphlets( such as Killing no Murder) provoking men to take away his life? |
A26947 | And where are the swarms of the English Jesuites and Fryars, that are known to have emptyed themselves upon us from their Colledges beyond Sea? |
A26947 | And where be all that die in the Eastern and Southern Churches, that are no subjects of the Pope of Rome? |
A26947 | And where is this to be found and known? |
A26947 | And where then was the Church when it had no Head? |
A26947 | And whether Papists and Protestants were not in a fair way for reconciliation, if we differed not more in other things then in these? |
A26947 | And whether it be all Princes, or only Christian Princes that should consent, who can tell whether ever it will be? |
A26947 | And whether it be like to be the Cause of God that must be maintained by such means? |
A26947 | And whether that were a Pope or not that was chosen by the whole Romane Clergie? |
A26947 | And whether the People, the Council, or the Emperours were the Romane Clergy? |
A26947 | And whether the lives of all the Princes and People upon earth whom the Pope judgeth Hereticks, should be at his mercy? |
A26947 | And whether we should be Tormented and burnt as Hereticks? |
A26947 | And which of these is the firmer foundation? |
A26947 | And who are they? |
A26947 | And who denies that Christ also governeth his Church by men? |
A26947 | And who gave Paul that Power? |
A26947 | And who is now to be believed? |
A26947 | And who made Timothy and Titus Bishops? |
A26947 | And who shall be judge of each mans case, whether he could or ought to have been there? |
A26947 | And who shall pay for this, or maintain me in thy service? |
A26947 | And who will ever want so easie, so obvious, so cheap a Remedy against all danger of perjury, as a mental Reservation is? |
A26947 | And who will not rather be of the Roman Church and Religion then of none? |
A26947 | And whose Son was Aloisus, made Prince of Parma by Pope Paul the third? |
A26947 | And why beholdest thou the mote in thy brothers eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? |
A26947 | And why do not these blind and partial men see, that the same course also must be taken with their own Laws? |
A26947 | And why do they fetch their Tradition from these, and ridiculously call them unwritten verities? |
A26947 | And why doth not the Pope decide these controversies? |
A26947 | And why is[ Spiritually] put as contradistinct? |
A26947 | And why may not we do so then as well as you? |
A26947 | And why not one to give us his own body and blood in the Sacrament? |
A26947 | And why should we expect that it should now be otherwise? |
A26947 | And why then do they tell our people, that they take not the Pope for the Rule of their Faith? |
A26947 | And why then is it necessary in our case that all must explicitely believe all those Articles? |
A26947 | And why then should it be denyed of the power of exterior Jurisdiction? |
A26947 | And will ever a General Council be held upon these terms? |
A26947 | And will not this content you? |
A26947 | And will not this prove that Rome was but such a particular Church as one of them? |
A26947 | And will the Churches be so barbarous as to turn out their aged faithful Pastors upon the jaws of death? |
A26947 | And will they therefore grant that the Decrees of Popes and Councils are no sufficient discovery of their Faith? |
A26947 | And will you ask me now why I will not be of another sect, as well as of the Protestants? |
A26947 | And will you be there to condemn your selves? |
A26947 | And would not the Orthodox desire so much as a word from Rome for this advantage? |
A26947 | And would you have us give you a Catalogue of all the Christians in the world, since Christ? |
A26947 | And yet dost thou reproach me that receive not a groat? |
A26947 | And yet doth he grant it? |
A26947 | And yet have you the faces to make this a reproach of us? |
A26947 | And yet will they glory in the effectualness of their means of unity? |
A26947 | And[ Who then is Paul, and who is Apollo? |
A26947 | Answ Is this your sanctity? |
A26947 | Are not his words plain enough, and frequent enough to open to us so much of his mind as I have charged him with? |
A26947 | Are these points no whit Material? |
A26947 | Are they not like to Govern the Universal Church well, that can no better Govern themselves, or that one City where they dwell? |
A26947 | Are they not now of the same Church and Religion as ever they have been? |
A26947 | Are they unwritten, when they turn us to so many volumes for them? |
A26947 | Are we Protestants the lesser number as to you? |
A26947 | Are you in Heaven already? |
A26947 | Are you not all convinced by this admirable argument? |
A26947 | Are you not at odds among your selves about perseverance? |
A26947 | Are you not yet as full of controversies among your selves, as any Christians on the face of the earth? |
A26947 | Are you not yet at controversie with Infidels, Whether Christ be the Redeemer: and with Hereticks whether he be true eternall God? |
A26947 | As if it were nothing to see to the execution of Gods Laws? |
A26947 | Augustine began to doubt, whether there were not some kind of Purgatory: But who first made this also a point of faith? |
A26947 | Augustine tells them over and over what the Catholick Church was that they withdrew from? |
A26947 | Austin Retracted his own errors, and which of us dare Justifie every word that hath faln from our mouths or pen, before God? |
A26947 | BUT if this be not the way of the Churches Unity, which is? |
A26947 | But I would ask them, whether we or they do better know our Religion? |
A26947 | But alas, their very worship of God is much of it composed of Lyes, and is not that like to be acceptable worship? |
A26947 | But at least, tell us, Is no one of all those many hundred or thousand Texts which your Commentators differ about any matter of Faith? |
A26947 | But dare you say that you have no sinfull ignorance to bewail? |
A26947 | But for the first, 1. Who hath authority to make such diminutions? |
A26947 | But had they any Interest in the Councils and Forces of the Parliament? |
A26947 | But have we not better proof of the contrary? |
A26947 | But he concludeth hence[ Num alia ratione,& c. Shall we believe that Christ doth govern his Church in another way then God governeth the whole world?] |
A26947 | But how doth this Disputer prove his Minor, that we have no Succession? |
A26947 | But how know you that there is any such thing in Scripture? |
A26947 | But how prove they that Countrey Parishes may not have Bishops? |
A26947 | But how shall these Hiders be Detected? |
A26947 | But how shall we know the way and mind of the ages past? |
A26947 | But how will they answer this themselves? |
A26947 | But if Bishops succeed not Apostles, and have not any of the Apostolick Power, who then doth the Bishop of Rome succeed? |
A26947 | But if Gods anger on us remain, what help can the pride of the West bring us? |
A26947 | But if these Murders and deposing Kings be indeed a duty, how can they know it to be so, but by Believing? |
A26947 | But if they can shew us no law of God empowring these speciall consecrators, any more then others, then where is the Papacy that dependeth on it? |
A26947 | But if this must not hold, then Must All the Bishops of the world be there, or only some, and how many? |
A26947 | But if you are so little men as to venture your souls without Reason, me thinks you should not venture against it? |
A26947 | But in what case is it that you mean, that other points are of Necessity to some? |
A26947 | But is it not a fine world, when Wicklife must not be of our Church because he is supposed to deny the power of Magistrates in mortal sin? |
A26947 | But is it the Ancient Church, or the present Church that must decide the cause? |
A26947 | But is not the Juggle in the word[ Manner?] |
A26947 | But is there any hope that while men are as they are, such healing Truths should be received and obeyed? |
A26947 | But it is not against your faith? |
A26947 | But may it not stand with faith to be ignorant, and that through sinfull neglect, of some revealed truth of God, or of the meaning of his word? |
A26947 | But may not Christians of several Degrees of Knowledge be in the same Catholick Church? |
A26947 | But may we not be Roman Catholikes though we joyn not with them in this point? |
A26947 | But our first question is, Whether de facto such a thing be? |
A26947 | But some say, if all may use what way they will, what order shall we have? |
A26947 | But suppose he do, what''s that to a succession, while the three first ages are strangers to Popery? |
A26947 | But suppose them furnished with all necessaries, and setting forward; How long will they be in their journey? |
A26947 | But suppose there were, yet we must be resolved whether it be some or all the Italian Bishops that must do it? |
A26947 | But suppose you will be so unreasonable, yet I hope you have your five senses still? |
A26947 | But the Civil power hath been exercised by an Emperour over more then all the Christian world: And why then may not the Ecclesiastical? |
A26947 | But then the doubt remaineth whether there be a Necessity of any certain Number of Bishops? |
A26947 | But then what if laziness or danger deterr them or detain them? |
A26947 | But to conclude, what need we any more, then to find you owning the very doctrine and practise of Innovation? |
A26947 | But to whom? |
A26947 | But were not the Apostles General Officers, and so the Church united in General officers? |
A26947 | But were the Bishops of all the Churches there? |
A26947 | But what Tradition mean you? |
A26947 | But what a loss are we here at? |
A26947 | But what gather you hence? |
A26947 | But what get they by this Hiding of themselves? |
A26947 | But what if I can prove, that even the want of a due proposal is a punishment for their sin? |
A26947 | But what if they find the Pope called the Archbishop of the Catholick Church, or the Universal Bishop? |
A26947 | But what if this were granted? |
A26947 | But what if we grant your conclusion, that[ else they can not be esteemed Protestants] what of that? |
A26947 | But what is it that we are changeable in? |
A26947 | But what is this to another Traditional word of God? |
A26947 | But what is to be said to the pretence of the Necessity of a Judge? |
A26947 | But what manner of men did H. T. imagine he had to deal with, when he puts off his Readers with such an answer as this? |
A26947 | But what need I cite any more, when Dr. Cosin hath done it in a volume purposely? |
A26947 | But what reason is there then that we may not have the same measure from them which they expect? |
A26947 | But when the Papists come to the mention of such passages, what juglings do they use? |
A26947 | But where then is the Certainty of succession? |
A26947 | But wherein? |
A26947 | But who first made them Articles of faith? |
A26947 | But why is it that they must all needs explicitely hold the thirty nine Articles? |
A26947 | But will they stand to the Validity of Proofs from Scripture? |
A26947 | But will they then admit of Proofs from Reason? |
A26947 | But yet Baronius thinks that these are not the same Books that Tertullian and Hierom speak against: and why so? |
A26947 | But( say the Papists) you can allow Princes to be the Heads of the Church: why then not a Pope? |
A26947 | But, what( say they) will you be of the same Church with Nestorians, Eutichians, and other Hereticks? |
A26947 | By what Authority was she otherwise reproved? |
A26947 | By what General Council was she ever condemned? |
A26947 | By what Justice shall all the Catholick Church be obliged by the Decrees of such a General Council? |
A26947 | Can he be a Christian or be saved that believeth not in one of these men? |
A26947 | Can it be expected that this one man should condemn himself? |
A26947 | Can we think by all our Arguments to make any matter plainer to a man then that Bread is Bread, when he seeth and eateth it? |
A26947 | Can you tell us when, and by whom each error was introduced that corrupted the Churches mentioned in the Scripture? |
A26947 | Can you tell us your selves, when many of your doctrines or practices sprung up? |
A26947 | Casuists do, that are cited by the Jansenian in his Mysterie of Jesuitism? |
A26947 | Church: and then whether the Catholick Church and the Roman are of equal extent? |
A26947 | D. In the sixteenth Probleme page 127. he puts another Question, Whether the Law of Nature and Decalogue may be unknown without fault? |
A26947 | Dare they think they are all damned? |
A26947 | Dare you say that one of five hundred, of five thousand, doth explicitely believe all this? |
A26947 | Demand of them whether it be any one whosoever that may Consecrate, or whether this high power be confined to certain hands? |
A26947 | Did Peter many hundred years after his death? |
A26947 | Did he think that we set so much by Luthers, or any mans writings, as by the Bible? |
A26947 | Did not Christ by these words reprehend their seeking of a Supremacy? |
A26947 | Did not the Councils at Constantinople condemn the Doctrine of the second Nicene Council for Image- worship, and the Council at Frankford do the like? |
A26947 | Did not this mans heart tremble or smite him to write so horrid, so impudent a reproach against so many precious Saints of God? |
A26947 | Did not your Pope approve of this Council, when Gregory the first did liken it with the other three to the four Gospels? |
A26947 | Did this Council think that their Decrees were invalid, if the Pope approve them not? |
A26947 | Did we pray or administer the Lords Supper before, and do we not so still? |
A26947 | Did you not smile when you wrote these delusory Questions? |
A26947 | Do I need to tell England of the many treacheries since the Reformation against our Princes? |
A26947 | Do I need to tell you what the Council of Constance did? |
A26947 | Do Papists murder poor Christians by the thousands, and yet not fide divina believe that it is their duty so to do? |
A26947 | Do not your own differing Commentators, Schoolmen and Casuists( on one side at least) dispute voluminously against some Truths of Divine revelation? |
A26947 | Do not your own writers confess this of a man that is Baptized many years after he had Faith and Charity? |
A26947 | Do these men think us so sottish as to place our Religion in these Circumstances? |
A26947 | Do they know our Religion better then we do? |
A26947 | Do they not daily dispute in their Schools among themselves without a Judge? |
A26947 | Do they think we would not as willingly know the truth as they? |
A26947 | Do they think wise men will be made irreligious? |
A26947 | Do we hereby make a new Article? |
A26947 | Do we make a New one now if we reject it? |
A26947 | Do we not all now either stand, sit, or kneel at the hearing of a Sermon, as we please? |
A26947 | Do we not kneel or stand at Prayer as we please? |
A26947 | Do we not read their Books? |
A26947 | Do you doubt whether the Council of Trent were Papists? |
A26947 | Do you give leave to meer school opinions to contradict General Councils? |
A26947 | Do you know now where the Church or Body was that you forsook? |
A26947 | Do you know when they begun? |
A26947 | Do you mean Here, or Throughout? |
A26947 | Do you not at this day divide from all the Christian world, save your selves? |
A26947 | Do you not know that these very words were used to every Presbyter in our Ordination here in England? |
A26947 | Do you not see that they make a meer nothing or mockery of General Councils, any further then they please the Pope? |
A26947 | Do you think General Councils are so stark mad or horridly impious, as to condemn so many Kingdoms with one condemnation, for Heresie? |
A26947 | Do you think God needs the Devils help? |
A26947 | Do you think all the Church is forsaken but you,& c?] |
A26947 | Do you think that Constantine the great was unpardoned, unregenerate and no Christian till he was Baptized? |
A26947 | Do you think the world knoweth not by what inducements you drew a few poor men at Florence to subscribe to a certain union with you? |
A26947 | Do you think they believe these Doctrines themselves? |
A26947 | Dost thou need God in any thing? |
A26947 | Dost thou need a Ruler? |
A26947 | Doth a man change his Religion when he changeth a custome of using Notes? |
A26947 | Doth it follow that Scripture is not a sufficient Rule of our Religion, because Hereticks may pretend to it? |
A26947 | Doth it follow that we must therefore be Papists? |
A26947 | Doth it prove that Constantinople, or Alexandria had no such succession, because the Romanists had it? |
A26947 | Doth not Paul tell us that here we know but in part, and prophesie in part? |
A26947 | Doth this Disputer believe in good sadness, that the Western Churches are all the world, or a sixth part of the world? |
A26947 | Doubtless none: And will they give us a Church form, and center of Unity, meerly of their own brains, upon supposition that it is prudential? |
A26947 | Dr. Goad, and Balcanquall Episcopal Divines to the Synod of Dort, and so England was a part of that Synod? |
A26947 | Durst he thus attempt to rob the Lord of the fruit of his blood? |
A26947 | Eighteen years at Trent would consume a great many of the Bishops: How many even of the Popes own Legates dyed before that Council could be finished? |
A26947 | Eudaemojohan: But what need we more then the Decrees of a Pope and General Council, and the practice of the Church of Rome for so many ages? |
A26947 | For doth not the world know, that the Eastern and Southern Churches, far exceeding the Romanists in number, did deny obedience to the Pope of Rome? |
A26947 | For example, they may ask where God commandeth or instituteth any one of the Sacraments in Scripture? |
A26947 | For first if they say, It must be the Cardinals, ask them, where then was the Pope when there were no Cardinals in the world? |
A26947 | For how could the Church before them have their unanimous consent? |
A26947 | For if Reason be vain, why Reason they to prove its Vanity or invalidity? |
A26947 | For if Satan were divided against Satan, how could his Kingdom stand? |
A26947 | For the subjects be not all named in them; nor the fact- named: And what then have witnesses, and jurors, and judges to do? |
A26947 | For we would ask you, where be all our fore fathers that are dead since the Reformation? |
A26947 | For what can a Judge do but speak or write his mind? |
A26947 | For what man breathing knoweth the secrets of the souls of others, whether they have resisted or not resisted the light? |
A26947 | For where now is the universal Headship? |
A26947 | From what body went she forth? |
A26947 | Further we demand, whether any ignorance or error that is culpable, will stand with Charity and Salvation? |
A26947 | Had you never a word to say to this? |
A26947 | Hath God forbid it? |
A26947 | Hath Hell any greater calumnies then these to fill the mouths or writings of men withall? |
A26947 | Hath it not been so in every age till now? |
A26947 | Hath not the Council at Lateran and Florence decreed that the Pope is above a General Council? |
A26947 | Hath the glory of God any need of a lie? |
A26947 | Hath your way put an End to controversies any more then ours? |
A26947 | Have all Societies, or any Society an Universal Humane Governour? |
A26947 | Have not many such renounced it? |
A26947 | Have we not power to lead about a Sister, a Wife as well as other Apostles, and as the brethren of the Lord and Cephas? |
A26947 | He puts the Question[ Whether Schismatical Presbyters and Bishops do want the Power of Order, or only want Jurisdiction?] |
A26947 | He saith to them that said[ I am of Christ][ Is Christ divided?] |
A26947 | He saith[ Is Christ divided?] |
A26947 | He will say to them, I was hungry and ye fed me not,& c. But where said the Scripture so, that such or such a man fed not Christ? |
A26947 | His first proof( after a few silent names) is from the Council of Nice; And what saith that? |
A26947 | How bitterly are the Articles of the Church of Ireland decryed by the Arminian Bishops since sprung up both in Ireland and England? |
A26947 | How came it to pass that Papists have been discovered in our Armies, and in the several parties in the Land? |
A26947 | How came it to pass, that the Petitions of the Protestant Presbyters of London, and of other Protestants for the Life of the King, could not be heard? |
A26947 | How came we contrived into a war with Scotland and Holland, when we could keep Peace with Spain? |
A26947 | How can a General Council condemn you, or any great part of the Church: for instance the Greeks,& c. If you be not there it s not a General Council? |
A26947 | How can he govern all those Churches in the Dominions of Infidels, that will not endure his Government? |
A26947 | How come so many called Seekers to seem to be at a loss; whether there be any Scripture, Church, or Ministry? |
A26947 | How exceeding filthy, when the most potent, and yet the most sordid whores did rule at Rome? |
A26947 | How know you that faith here contradicteth sense? |
A26947 | How like you all this in a Popish General Council? |
A26947 | How many Churches differed about Easter day? |
A26947 | How many General Councils did the Pope call for six hundred years after Christ? |
A26947 | How many Princes are consederate against them? |
A26947 | How many hundred points do Schoolmen and Commentators charge on one another as Erroneous, among yourselves? |
A26947 | How many hundred thousand pound will it cost before that all can have a lawful summons? |
A26947 | How many must de facto be present, any or none? |
A26947 | How many thousands are studiously contriving the extirpation of the Protestant Churches from the Earth? |
A26947 | How many years must they be travailing from America, Ethiopia, and all the remote parts of the Christian world? |
A26947 | How neer come the Dominicans and Jansenians to us in the points of Predestination, Grace and Free- will? |
A26947 | How neer come to the Scotists to us in sence, about the point of Merit? |
A26947 | How neer comes Cardinall Cajetan to us in the Liberty of dissenting from the Fathers in the Exposition of the Scriptures? |
A26947 | How neer comes Contarenus to us( and many more) in the point of Justification? |
A26947 | How neer comes Gerson to us in the point of Venial and Mortal sin? |
A26947 | How neer doth Dr. Holden come to us in the fundamental point of the Resolution of our faith? |
A26947 | How prove they that only Bishops should be members of a Council, and not Presbyters? |
A26947 | How prove you that? |
A26947 | How ridiculously then do they call for a Judge of Controversies? |
A26947 | How shall we know how long that practice hath continued, without recourse to the writings of the ancients? |
A26947 | How then can they believe in Christs Vicar, or Christs School, or Kingdom, or followers, before they believe in Christ himself? |
A26947 | How will he prove that Peter made these two Patriarchates, and that not as an Apostle, but as an Ordinary Vicar General? |
A26947 | I answer, Is it the Name of Protestants, or their Religion, that you would have us prove a succession of? |
A26947 | I desire to know whether the holy Scripture be matter of faith or not? |
A26947 | I hope they will not deny that Peter had a Wife? |
A26947 | I pray you tell us what General Councils did ever condemn one half of the Heresies mentioned by Epiphanius, Augustine or Philastrius? |
A26947 | I pray you tell us, whether all your own Church do explicitely hold and believe all your Articles? |
A26947 | If Possession, then he that can conquer Rome, and sit down in the chair is Pope: If not possession, what then? |
A26947 | If a man did but recover by degrees from the relicks of his disease, they will not therefore reproach him as mutable? |
A26947 | If all Bishops, or half come thither, what shall their poor flocks do the while? |
A26947 | If any novell contagion shall endeavour to stain not only a part of the Church, but the whole Church alike?] |
A26947 | If any small number of Primates or Patriarcks, how shall we know which and how many? |
A26947 | If but some, which be they? |
A26947 | If by such a call, who must call them? |
A26947 | If it be Reasonable, why then will you go without Reason upon other mens bare words? |
A26947 | If it be a Truth, and no Novelty, I pray you tell us which be Fathers, and which not? |
A26947 | If it be indifferent, what then shall be called sin? |
A26947 | If none, how can the Pope know them? |
A26947 | If not revealed, do they not deserve to be kickt out of the world, for troubling the world so with unrevealed things? |
A26947 | If not, know of them whether a man without Election and Ordination may be Pope: If so, what makes him one? |
A26947 | If not, then no sinner hath sincere Obedience, and can be saved: If yea; then why may not the same be said of faith? |
A26947 | If not, then who shall be saved? |
A26947 | If not, we are free? |
A26947 | If not, why should they be against the releasing of such a man to higher ends, even to save mens souls? |
A26947 | If of some only, why of those more then the rest, if they be not the Essentials distinguishable from the rest? |
A26947 | If one Patriark, or twenty men reject our Communion, what''s that to the Millions of Greek Christians that never rejected it? |
A26947 | If one of us should make so light of Drunkenness, what should we be thought? |
A26947 | If so, then are not all our Corporations true Cities? |
A26947 | If so, then what will you say to John the twenty third, that denyed the life to come, and to those that have been guilty of Heresie? |
A26947 | If so, then whether any Papist can be saved, seeing they understand them not all? |
A26947 | If so, then whether we ought not to believe it all as far as we can understand it? |
A26947 | If the Pope and Clergy have been the keepers of it, have they in all ages kept it to themselves or declared it to the Church? |
A26947 | If the best were not the most Powerful, what would become of the world? |
A26947 | If the eye be dark how shall the body see? |
A26947 | If the people of that Church choose one, and the Clergy by major vote another, and the Cardinals a third, which is the true Pope? |
A26947 | If therefore Bishops succeed Apostles, to what Apostle did Titus succeed? |
A26947 | If they ask, Why then we do draw up Confessions of Faith? |
A26947 | If they be Revealed, are they not Revealed to be believed, and so are de fide? |
A26947 | If they be not twelve, why should one Apostle have a successor, and not others? |
A26947 | If they can not agree about that power that they say must agree them in all things else, what hope of an agreement with them? |
A26947 | If they do, then what is that profession? |
A26947 | If they have Evidence, why may not we know it as well as the Pope? |
A26947 | If they have, then why might not our Reason be valid as well as their Reason which they bring against Reason? |
A26947 | If they will not take this for Proof, how can you dispute with them? |
A26947 | If this be uncertain to them, what can you prove to them, or what way can you devise to deal with them? |
A26947 | If we reject this Novelty, are we Innovators? |
A26947 | If yea, by what bond? |
A26947 | If you are no true Christians your selves, dare you conclude that not one of these are true Christians? |
A26947 | If you ask who it is that presumeth thus to be your Monitor? |
A26947 | If you change a mans mind from the smallest error by dispute, do you take that to be a change of his state from death to life? |
A26947 | If you plead for venial sin, how can you deny a venial unbelief upon venial ignorance? |
A26947 | If you say, the Better part shall be judge: who shall be Judge which is the Better part? |
A26947 | If you would dispute with them, they are presently asking you,[ Who shall be the judge?] |
A26947 | In how few weeks space did the ignorant Irish thus stop the mouths of many thousand Protestants? |
A26947 | In such a case as this, what is there to be done? |
A26947 | Is he no Papist that holds all that is in the Council of Trent, if he be against some School- points not determined, and against the Prelates Pride? |
A26947 | Is he only the Primus Presbyterorum in a presbyterie? |
A26947 | Is it a Reasonable or an Unreasonable course? |
A26947 | Is it a profession of every particular truth that God hath revealed to be believed? |
A26947 | Is it by Law, or Contract? |
A26947 | Is it enough to believe as the Church believes, and not know what in any particular? |
A26947 | Is it enough to believe the formal object of faith( which with us is Gods veracity) without the material? |
A26947 | Is it from a Positive faith, or for not holding the contrary? |
A26947 | Is it not against the daily practice of the Papists to think or say that all disputes and controversies must have a Judge? |
A26947 | Is it not all one? |
A26947 | Is it the lesser number, or the greater, or the better that must be judge? |
A26947 | Is it to those some that know them to be of Divine Revelation? |
A26947 | Is not God exceeding patient, that will suffer such wretches to live on the Earth? |
A26947 | Is not here great diffidence in the Fathers, when they have more confidence in our sayings then their writings? |
A26947 | Is not his Doctrine here given you in his Englished words? |
A26947 | Is not that true faith and all that is essential to Christianity, which doth consist with saving grace or( to use your phrase) with true Charity? |
A26947 | Is not the greater part of Christians in the world, whom you schismatically unchurch, a visible company? |
A26947 | Is not their damnation just, that say, Let us do evill that good may come thereby? |
A26947 | Is not this like the rest of their contradictory imaginations? |
A26947 | Is not this plain English? |
A26947 | Is not this so gross a kind of jugling, that would never down if devout ignorance and implicite faith had not prepared the stomacks of the people? |
A26947 | Is one part of the Essence of the Office given by the Pope, and the rest without him? |
A26947 | Is that a Council where Bishops ought to be and are not? |
A26947 | Is the Court, or Councils of the Land, or the Nobility, Gentry or Army now free from their fraudulent solicitations? |
A26947 | Is the doctrine of Aquinas, Scotus, Gabriel,& c. yea the Council of Trent preserved now more certainly in mens memories, then in writing? |
A26947 | Is the world unlike it self, if all the world have not one King, as every particular Kingdom hath? |
A26947 | Is this a doubt among Papists, that believe Pauls Epistles? |
A26947 | Is this all that we must have a Vice- Christ for? |
A26947 | Is this any thing against us? |
A26947 | Is this equipollent to[ a difference meerly verball?] |
A26947 | Is this the Holiness of the Catholick Church? |
A26947 | Is this the use of all the Canons of their Church concerning Excommunication, and abstention? |
A26947 | It defined that the Son of God is consubstantiall to his Father, and true God And what''s that to Popery? |
A26947 | It s false that we say, He doth not take away, nor blot out our sin, nor make us white as snow: Do not all Protestants in the world affirm all this? |
A26947 | It s one question, Whether sense can infallibly discern Christ in the Sacrament, if he were there, or discern that he is not there? |
A26947 | It was once the custom of your Church to give Infants the Eucharist; who first broke it off? |
A26947 | It was once your practice to Communicate in both kinds: who first denyed the Cup to the Laity? |
A26947 | Judgement then being for Execution, when you ask, Who shall be the Judge? |
A26947 | Know they not that among their own Schoolmen there is the same difference, or in most points the same? |
A26947 | Know you not that the second General Council of Ephesus condemned and excommunicated your Pope? |
A26947 | Know you not that two or three General Councils condemned Pope Honorius as a Monothelite? |
A26947 | Let Godignus be judge, that confesseth the Ethiopians had the Gospel since the Apostles days( and I pray in what age were they Papists?) |
A26947 | Let Raynerius be judge, that saith the Churches of Armenia and others planted by the Apostles were not subject to the Church of Rome? |
A26947 | Look back on their Practises, and see what their Principles proved in the fruits? |
A26947 | Look on their Principles, and see what an aspect they have on Christ, on the Catholick Church, and upon Princes? |
A26947 | May not we and they be both true Churches? |
A26947 | Me thinks you should not ask them, where their Church was before Luther? |
A26947 | Moreover do you not know that the Greeks have condemned you oft? |
A26947 | Much less of the Pope? |
A26947 | Must I needs travail a way that is commonly beset with thieves, because some that go that way do scape them? |
A26947 | Must either Pope John the twenty second, or Pope Nicolas be damned because of the contrariety of their Decrees? |
A26947 | Must the Christian world be at such a vast expence, to maintain so rich and numerous a Clergy for this? |
A26947 | Must you needs know which these Essentials are? |
A26947 | Nay is it not certain by Promise that all such shall be saved? |
A26947 | No more there was but one Temple; Will you therefore have no more? |
A26947 | Nor but one civil Monarch in that Church: Would you have no more? |
A26947 | Not in Natural existence; For where is it? |
A26947 | Now how long must it be, before all these have tidings of a Council, and summons to appear, or send their Delegates? |
A26947 | Now we would fain know whether this was the whole Church morally represented? |
A26947 | Nyssen, and Chrysostom, Austin,& c. make? |
A26947 | O Sir, is it not the holy truth of God that you are about? |
A26947 | O but, say they, would you make men believe that Ethiopians, Armenians, Greeks,& c. are Protestants? |
A26947 | O what a sort of men have we to deal with? |
A26947 | Of Luther, Oecolampadius, Calvin, and who not? |
A26947 | Of a wise man, or of a mad man? |
A26947 | Or Whether the Catholick Church be a Body so United and Governed? |
A26947 | Or are you minded to pick quarrels, that your selves and others may have fewel for the rancour and uncharitableness of your minds? |
A26947 | Or as if the determination of Necessary Circumstances requisite ex natura rei, were not enough for them to do, beside what is written? |
A26947 | Or as if this were not the fittest work for such kind of Rulers, whose Rule is only by Ministerial Guidance? |
A26947 | Or can any man receive the Christian faith or Scriptures, till he first know these good men to be Christs infallible Vicars? |
A26947 | Or did the Pope of Rome, that tooth and nail resisted, and still sought to diminish his Power? |
A26947 | Or doth it follow that there is no other way to health? |
A26947 | Or doth standing, kneeling or sitting make another Religion, or any part of it? |
A26947 | Or for what John 22. alias 23. and John 13. and other Popes were deposed by Councils? |
A26947 | Or forbear loving God many years together, if not all his life? |
A26947 | Or have they not still the same cause and industry as then? |
A26947 | Or in the vast dominions of Heathen and Mahometan Princes, where Christians are dispersed, but you come not neer them? |
A26947 | Or is he the Ruler of a Presbyterie,( they Ruling the people?) |
A26947 | Or is he the sole Ruler of Presbyters and people? |
A26947 | Or is it a profession of some particular Truths only? |
A26947 | Or is it enough to remain Infidels, and only believe that the Church are true Believers? |
A26947 | Or is it like that they believe themselves? |
A26947 | Or is it like to be help that comes from him? |
A26947 | Or it were confined to a Sect or Party, whether Papal or any other, and did not contain all Christians through the world? |
A26947 | Or make it so necessary to people to obey one that they never so much as hear from? |
A26947 | Or might he not to as good purpose have saved his labour, and said nothing of them? |
A26947 | Or need we be put to prove the Negative? |
A26947 | Or one Schoolmaster, as every particular School hath? |
A26947 | Or rather would you make quarrels against your own Confessions? |
A26947 | Or shall the old Rule stand, that every City must have one? |
A26947 | Or should we judge that man in his wits that would believe him? |
A26947 | Or speak falsly with mentall reservations? |
A26947 | Or those that were chosen by the Emperours? |
A26947 | Or was I deeply silent of the particular causes? |
A26947 | Or was it not a great Schism of the Donatists to arrogate that title to themselves, and unchurch so many others? |
A26947 | Or what Chapters he should read each day? |
A26947 | Or what Proof can be admitted, if this be not admitted? |
A26947 | Or what Text he should preach on? |
A26947 | Or what place every Congregation shall meet in? |
A26947 | Or where the Minister shall stand to preach? |
A26947 | Or whether Peter or Paul did ever take such a course as this to plant the Gospel, or build up the Church? |
A26947 | Or whether a man may lawfully lie and calumniate to put by a calumny? |
A26947 | Or whether the Catholick Church be a body so United and Governed? |
A26947 | Or who is the Universal King? |
A26947 | Or who it is that hath been still blowing the fire, and casting all into disturbances for their ends? |
A26947 | Or who it was that would have deposed as well as Excommunicated Queen Elizabeth, and exposed her Kingdoms to the will of others? |
A26947 | Or who it was that wrote against King James his Title to the Crown? |
A26947 | Or who were the Actors of the Hellish Powder- plot? |
A26947 | Reader, do not these men jest with holy things? |
A26947 | Reader, doth not this man give up the cause of the Pope, and say as much against it fundamentally as a Protestant? |
A26947 | Reader, is it not plain English? |
A26947 | Reader, is this Testimony from a Papist like the rest? |
A26947 | Reader, wouldst thou be troubled with any more of these Relations? |
A26947 | Say the Examiners, But what would you do if you were at Rome? |
A26947 | Say unto the house of Israel, Thus saith the Lord God; Are ye polluted after the manner of your fathers? |
A26947 | Saying[ Quid tibi dimisit S. Apostolus? |
A26947 | See here what''s become of the Popish faith? |
A26947 | See now what''s become of the Popish Apostolical Successors among their Bishops? |
A26947 | Shall we sin wilfully after the knowledge of the Truth, because our fathers sinned ignorantly for want of information? |
A26947 | Should not the means be suited to the end? |
A26947 | Should there be an universal Law to determine what day of the week, or what hour of the day every Lecture or occasional Sermon shall be on? |
A26947 | Some will say, If Liberty be desirable, why may not we grant it in England, though Spain, Italy,& c. will not? |
A26947 | Such as I have saith he, that give I to thee: And what was that? |
A26947 | Tell us what year, or by whom the change was made? |
A26947 | Tell us when this Canon and Tradition was first violated by you, and by whom? |
A26947 | The Author of the Image of both Churches maketh a long and subtile perswasive for Liberty of Conscience: But where would he have it? |
A26947 | The Church is Christs subjects, and shall subjects make their own Laws? |
A26947 | The Council which he cites for this, is but a Provincial Council in Spain in the fifth Age: and what''s this to Catholick succession? |
A26947 | The Question or Objection which he undertook to answer was, Whether sense telling us that it is Bread after the Consecration be deceived? |
A26947 | The Tradition of the Catholick Church? |
A26947 | The story of that Infidel Prince is common, that being ready to go to the water to be baptized, stept back, and asked, Where are all my Ancestors now? |
A26947 | The streams can not be perfectly sinless, till the fountain be so: and[ Who can say, I have made my heart clean, I am pure from my sin? |
A26947 | The whole have no need of the Physitian, but the sick: and have you no need of Christ to heal your soul? |
A26947 | Their doctrine corrupteth almost all Morality: What need we fuller clearer proof, then the Jansenian hath given us in his Mysterie of Jesuitism? |
A26947 | Their second is, that thred- bare Question[ Where was your Church before Luther? |
A26947 | There is one Law- giver that is able to save and to destroy: who art thou that Judgest another?] |
A26947 | There may be a Prorex, a Viceking: and why not then a Vicarious Head of the Catholick Church? |
A26947 | They tell us that, All Hereticks do pretend to Scripture, and therefore this can not be the Test of our Religion? |
A26947 | They tell you the Apostles were for them: but how know we that? |
A26947 | This all Protestants that ever I spoke with are agreed in: And dare any Papist deny it? |
A26947 | This is more then Protestants say, And yet will you quarrell? |
A26947 | To endeavour to revive the stupified humanity and Reason of these men: and ask them, Is Religion the work of a man or of a beast? |
A26947 | To what purpose should we speak to them that will not hear? |
A26947 | Was I deeply silent that Grotius would have the causes taken away? |
A26947 | Was it governed all that time, think you, by a General Council? |
A26947 | Was it not the whole faith Essential to Christianity which they confest? |
A26947 | Was there ever a greater rabble of Heresies then before ever a General Council was known? |
A26947 | Was this by Protestants? |
A26947 | We demand also, whether the whole holy Scripture be the word of God? |
A26947 | We desire also to be informed by them, what is the use of the Churches Creed, and why they have used frequently to make confession of their faith? |
A26947 | We must desire the Papists to tell us whether Christianity be any thing or nothing? |
A26947 | We would know whether the matters that their Divines are disagreed in, be Revealed by God, or things unrevealed? |
A26947 | Well I will you now hear whether the Papists or we be the greatest Changlings? |
A26947 | Well, but at least may we not hope that they will stand to the Judgement of the Catholick Church? |
A26947 | Well, but was there ever such a thing at all? |
A26947 | Well: but what is my miscarriage? |
A26947 | Well; but you have a third Question[ By what Authority was she otherwise reproved?] |
A26947 | Were it not a great Schism, think you, if a few Anabaptists should say, We are the whole Church, and all others are Hereticks or Schismaticks? |
A26947 | What Authority had they out of their own Dominion? |
A26947 | What I Must that Church that''s true be visible from Christs time? |
A26947 | What Opinion is it that brings men in England into any great danger at this day? |
A26947 | What abundance of assaults were made on the late King? |
A26947 | What can a Papist say to this, but by making Councils as void of sence, as they feign the holy Scriptures to be? |
A26947 | What complaints made Gildas of the Brittish Church? |
A26947 | What else brought us into a war which ended not till one party was subdued? |
A26947 | What else mean the preservation of those writings and those numerous citations out of them? |
A26947 | What glory is it to them that none ever turned to them but ungodly people? |
A26947 | What horrid things have they spoken of the poor Waldenses and Albigenses, and Bohemians? |
A26947 | What if a Priest shall tell you that the Crow is white, and the snow is black, or that you see not when you know you see, will you believe him? |
A26947 | What if he did not? |
A26947 | What if his Catalogue were true and proved, would it prove the Exclusion, that[ no other Church:] had a succession? |
A26947 | What if many recover and live that eat not only Earth and Dirt, but Hemlock or Spear- wort, or other poysons; must I therefore eat them? |
A26947 | What if one man use an hour- glass in preaching, and another use none? |
A26947 | What if one read a Chapter with spectacles, and another without? |
A26947 | What if those that are supposed to have that authority, shall be otherwise minded? |
A26947 | What if we grant that many of our fore- fathers that dyed Papists are in Heaven? |
A26947 | What is a Papist but as meer a sectary as any that retaineth a name in the Church? |
A26947 | What man could they have named since Augustine, yea since the Apostles dayes, that was more unfit for such a slander then Calvin? |
A26947 | What not of Saint Thomas? |
A26947 | What pains take they to draw Nations to their minds, and to embroil the world in contentions and confusions to attain their ends? |
A26947 | What saith Tradition to this? |
A26947 | What shall we do when some of them consecrate one Pope, and some another, and some a third, which hath fallen out: which of these is the Pope? |
A26947 | What then have they got by all the rest? |
A26947 | What then was the face of the holy Roman Church? |
A26947 | What word of God have they to prove such a Representative Council? |
A26947 | What words of God or man are not capable of being misinterpreted? |
A26947 | What would you have more Sirs? |
A26947 | What would you have more, then such discoveries by themselves? |
A26947 | What would you have truer or plainer? |
A26947 | When I recite his very words? |
A26947 | When all is thus overcome with Novelty, do you make any question whether any thing be new? |
A26947 | When our faith and souls are preciouser things then so boldly to cast upon the trust of a few Delegates so to be chosen and employed? |
A26947 | When the question is, Who shall be corporally punished as an Heretick? |
A26947 | When took you up your Sabbaths fast, for which you have been condemned by a Council? |
A26947 | Whence came it that all the maddest dividing parties had their liberty; and the reproach and envy was most against the united Ministry? |
A26947 | Whence came those motions against the Ministry and Churches into our Councils? |
A26947 | Whence is it that you denominate men fideles, believers with you? |
A26947 | Where doth Paul once name them either the Catholick Church, or the Mistris or Ruler of all Churches? |
A26947 | Where hath it been successively in each age?] |
A26947 | Where is the Church of England now? |
A26947 | Where is there express Scripture for any of this? |
A26947 | Where shall a man that hath eyes find your pretended institution? |
A26947 | Where then is the Necessity of such Councils at such rates? |
A26947 | Where then was the Head, the unity, the form of the Church for 300 years? |
A26947 | Where was the true Church she forsook? |
A26947 | Whether by an hour- glass or without? |
A26947 | Whether he will judge the world or not? |
A26947 | Whether this Essence of Christianity be Knowable or not? |
A26947 | Which is the more notable and glorious Unity? |
A26947 | Which of the Fathers ever writ against her? |
A26947 | Which then is like to be more firm? |
A26947 | Which way hereafter will they prove it? |
A26947 | White asked one of them in Lancashire, who Jesus Christ was? |
A26947 | Who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A26947 | Who can expect any great success of such Proposals, that knows the world? |
A26947 | Who can resist these arguments? |
A26947 | Who did first bring the Asian Churches to celebrate Easter at a season differing from yours? |
A26947 | Who first administred the Lords Supper in one kind only? |
A26947 | Who first brought the Brittains to it? |
A26947 | Who first laid by the standing on the Lords day, and used kneeling? |
A26947 | Who first made it a point of faith to believe that there are just seven Sacraments, neither fewer nor more? |
A26947 | Who first taught men to swear, that they would not interpret Scripture, but according to the unanimous Consent of the Fathers? |
A26947 | Who is it that is the Ruler of all the Colledges of Physitians in the world? |
A26947 | Who is it that is the Universal Chancellor of all the Academics on Earth? |
A26947 | Who knoweth not that Emperours gave such Titles at their pleasure? |
A26947 | Who was the first that brought in the doctrine or name of Transubstantiation? |
A26947 | Who will be at the cost of sending messengers to all these? |
A26947 | Who will not despise Christ that thinks he came on so low a design? |
A26947 | Who will not suspect that Tradesmans weres that chooseth a dark Shop, and refuseth to open his wares in the light? |
A26947 | Who would not be an Infidel, that thinks ten thousand Infidels are saved for one Christian? |
A26947 | Whose company did she leave? |
A26947 | Why because the fourth age was of their mind; And how prove you that? |
A26947 | Why by the testimony of the next age: and where is that testimony? |
A26947 | Why doth not the Pope himself at least condemn these doctrines, if really he disown them? |
A26947 | Why else did never Paul make one word of mention of this Power and honour, nor send other Churches to her to be Governed? |
A26947 | Why may not( on their own grounds) every four or six parishes have one? |
A26947 | Why should we be more foolish for our souls then for our bodies? |
A26947 | Why the third age received it; and how is that proved? |
A26947 | Why then did a General Council accuse or receive accusation and witness against him for the contrary? |
A26947 | Why then did the world never hear of such a man? |
A26947 | Why then did they not retain all these Nations in their unity? |
A26947 | Why then dost thou revoke this? |
A26947 | Why then may not Presbyters in such a case at least Ordain? |
A26947 | Why wilt thou conjoin what God hath separated? |
A26947 | Will the Pope? |
A26947 | Will you confess none, nor beg pardon, or be beholden to Christ to pardon it? |
A26947 | Will you say that here is a change of Religion? |
A26947 | Will you tell us of Luther? |
A26947 | With what face can Papists glory in their Unity, that are the greatest Dividers of the Church on earth? |
A26947 | Would they not accordingly have differed, if they had been sent to a General Council? |
A26947 | Would this perswade his poor Disciples that we all confess, that there are, or were no Christians in the world but Protestants and Papists? |
A26947 | Would you durst lay your cause on this, and put it to the tryal? |
A26947 | Would you have any more of the Popish Changes? |
A26947 | Would you not answer him,[ What is it to me whether Philippi be a true Church or not? |
A26947 | Would you rest on the bare word of one of these men, if it went against Reason? |
A26947 | Writer to me,( recited in his late Book against me)[ Would you not hide your mind or Religion in Spain? |
A26947 | Yea do not men commonly in singing Psalms of Prayer or Praise to God, sit or stand as they please? |
A26947 | Yea if Miracles be so much to be lookt at, why will you not give us leave to observe them? |
A26947 | Yea whether all the Bishops of the African, Asian, and other Churches could and ought to have been there? |
A26947 | Yea who can be himself a Christian, that thinks that he is not bound to be a Christian, because he sees not Miracles? |
A26947 | Yea, whence was it that motions have been made to pull down all the Ministry at once? |
A26947 | You ask us Where was our Church before Luther? |
A26947 | You ask us, Where was that? |
A26947 | You ask, what Church you left? |
A26947 | You know the Albigenses whom you murdered by hundreds and thousands, were long before him? |
A26947 | You may as well say, An Universal Civil Monarch over all the world is best; therefore so it must be: but when will you prove that? |
A26947 | You say so, and they say otherwise: why should we believe you that are a smaller, partial and corrupted part? |
A26947 | You''l say, because the Church or Scripture saith: This is my Body: and that there is no Bread? |
A26947 | Your Agreement and Unity is with none but your own sect: and is this so great a matter to boast off? |
A26947 | [ As your Fathers did, so do yet which of the Prophets have not your Fathers persecuted?] |
A26947 | [ But say the Parliament, What think you? |
A26947 | [ Seeing their General had approved the Book, and judged the things that are there written to be certain, whether they were of the same mind?] |
A26947 | [ therefore Christ may be in the Sacrament and you not discern him by sense] Well: and what''s that to the question? |
A26947 | a thing past and gone, which it is without grace? |
A26947 | and Waldensis and others yet neerer? |
A26947 | and another question Whether sense can infallibly discern Bread and Wine, and know whether they be there? |
A26947 | and are not you as much disagreed about it as we? |
A26947 | and as Rabshakah, to reproach the Israel of God? |
A26947 | and commit ye whoredom after their abominations? |
A26947 | and consequently what a Protestant is? |
A26947 | and for what? |
A26947 | and holdeth all that they call the Decrees of General Councils? |
A26947 | and how is their power proved? |
A26947 | and how the Greeks resented his fact? |
A26947 | and how then shall Christians know what to obey? |
A26947 | and if printing them be proof, their proof is as good: If it be not, what proof shall we have? |
A26947 | and is not this ours? |
A26947 | and is the Pope a Christ? |
A26947 | and say, e. g.[ If Philippi, be a true Church, then England are no true Churches, If it be not, when did it cease to be a true Church?] |
A26947 | and should you thus abuse it, and the souls of men? |
A26947 | and still write books against one another without a Judge? |
A26947 | and that it is long of their own sins that necessary truths do seem improbable to them? |
A26947 | and that they ought themselves to seek after the truth? |
A26947 | and that we do not pray as earnestly for Divine illumination? |
A26947 | and to vilifie his Jewels? |
A26947 | and were they dead and buryed before the first General Council was born? |
A26947 | and what a foolish quarrel is it that they make, who shall be the Interpreter of Scriptures, or Judge of Controversies? |
A26947 | and what a number of Letanies or Liturgies of several ages and Churches they have given us in the Bibliotheca Patrum? |
A26947 | and what a return they made to your Church? |
A26947 | and what death the Patriark dyed? |
A26947 | and what is the Scripture, but the words ut signa, and the sense or matter ut res significata? |
A26947 | and what meaneth the present persecution of them in France? |
A26947 | and what reason have you rather to be of the Protestants, then of any other? |
A26947 | and what should we desire and endeavour for the attaining it? |
A26947 | and when is it that that which is imperfect will be done away, but when that which is perfect is come? |
A26947 | and when was it? |
A26947 | and when? |
A26947 | and where be all those that dyed between the Resurrection of Christ and the appearing of Popery, or the prevailing of it in the world? |
A26947 | and whether these twenty two, or forty one were all the Bishops of the world, or the hundreth part of them? |
A26947 | and which of them is at the greater certainty, firmness, and immutability? |
A26947 | and who first made it an Article of faith? |
A26947 | and who made James Bishop of Jerusalem? |
A26947 | and who shall be Judge whether they, or you be the Catholick Church? |
A26947 | and whom did Timothy succeed? |
A26947 | and whose company? |
A26947 | and why may not any man say, I am Pope? |
A26947 | and yet must not the Shovel or the Beesom be used once in an Age? |
A26947 | are all these no body in your Church? |
A26947 | as much as to say, you must be all united in him: but he saith not[ Is Cephas divided?] |
A26947 | but Whether they are Unbelievers or Heathens or ignorant persons, by a willfull neglect of sufficiently proposed Truth, or not? |
A26947 | but perhaps the distinction unsaith all again? |
A26947 | but what low submissive language doth he use to secular Governors that were capable of overtopping him? |
A26947 | condemned your Pope Marcellinus for Offering to Idols? |
A26947 | dare you say that this was from the beginning? |
A26947 | did Peter or Paul? |
A26947 | did Peter? |
A26947 | for so they call it; What? |
A26947 | have they one Conscience at Rome, and another at Paris? |
A26947 | how long have they sate? |
A26947 | if there were then a Vicar General of Christ at Rome, that it never came into their mind to crave his decision or help, as such? |
A26947 | no super fluous branch cut off? |
A26947 | no weed pulled up? |
A26947 | not of Pope Clement the eighth and the Romane Pontifical? |
A26947 | not of that which is de fide, or consonant to it, and whose contrary is heresie, or savours of Heresies? |
A26947 | not of the Army of School Divines before mentioned? |
A26947 | not of the[ Communis sententia Theologorum:] the common judgement of Divines? |
A26947 | or any text which six of them never expounded; or any text which they do not unanimously agree on? |
A26947 | or are Papists in good sadness, that tell the world that none but the subjects of the Pope can be saved? |
A26947 | or can you be no Heretick till then? |
A26947 | or give the least hint of any such thing? |
A26947 | or how long? |
A26947 | or is this any part of the worship it self? |
A26947 | or may kill both Judge and witnesses to avoid an unjust sentence? |
A26947 | or mention any Pope among them whom the whole world was to take to be their Soveraign Head? |
A26947 | or need we prove the Negative? |
A26947 | or only in every Class ● s or lesser Synod? |
A26947 | or only in every County, or Province? |
A26947 | or rather frame them to the building of their Kingdom? |
A26947 | or summoned to appear? |
A26947 | or that the Church so holdeth? |
A26947 | or that the Pope at least must be acknowledged and obeyed by every Christian soul that will be saved at the Antipodes? |
A26947 | or those that were chosen by Councills? |
A26947 | or was the Council at Laterane( another Representative Catholick Church) in a state of death for holding the Contrary? |
A26947 | or what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
A26947 | or whether those were Popes or not that were chosen by the People? |
A26947 | or which be they? |
A26947 | saith[ I pray you what room hath the Catholick Church now in the habitable world? |
A26947 | seing it is their happiness to have such a Judge of Controversies to keep them all of a mind? |
A26947 | shall all the errors of the Fathers be charged on the Catholick Church, or all your writers errors upon yours? |
A26947 | so are many others as well as he; as all the Apostles were as well as Peter? |
A26947 | so that if the very matter of your Councils be so humane and disordered, what is the Council composed of such? |
A26947 | the Papall party, and the Councill party? |
A26947 | to him, of their misery as if all were lost? |
A26947 | to us, even in the Essential point of difference, about the Original and Title that Rome hath to its supremacy? |
A26947 | we have changed none of the substance of worship: did we baptize before, and do we not so still? |
A26947 | were such an one meet to live on the earth? |
A26947 | what abundance of errors are in your Clementines, and other such writers owned by you? |
A26947 | what dunghills are in their Assemblies? |
A26947 | what else meant the late decision against the Jansenists? |
A26947 | what is matter of faith if Scripture be not? |
A26947 | what is the change? |
A26947 | what would you say to such a fellow that should argue thus concerning other Churches, as these men do of Rome? |
A26947 | when called? |
A26947 | when in the mean they make so little use of it, and place so little confidence in it themselves, but uphold their unity by the Magistrates sword? |
A26947 | where are we then? |
A26947 | where is there ever a word here under this Argument to prove that exclusive part of his Minor? |
A26947 | where? |
A26947 | whether he died and rose again or not? |
A26947 | whether it was no Pope Sergius the third that begot Pope John the twelfth of Marosia? |
A26947 | whether it were not Pope Innocent of whom a Papist wrote this distich? |
A26947 | who wouldst not have us indeed to do the work of secular Rulers, but by doing it to deprave( or marr) it; then which what can be more unhappy? |
A26947 | why not as well to the Anabaptists, or other party, as to the Papists?] |
A26947 | why then should he charge us with denying that which we retain, and publickly read in our Churches as the word of God? |
A26947 | why[ Be not ye called Masters? |
A26947 | will Christ set any on an Impossible work? |
A26947 | will it follow that therefore we ought not to Assemble or administer the Sacrament any where but in Cities? |
A26947 | will sin excuse sin? |
A26947 | will you judge men before they are heard, or their cause known? |
A26947 | with ignorant unlearned people, what may not such Deceivers do? |
A26947 | would you be no better then you are? |
A26947 | yea or ever one day since the Apostles? |
A26947 | you knew the question is, Whether sense( and the intellect thereby) be infallible in judging Bread to be Bread when we see, feel and eat it? |
A26947 | you think you have read or heard it: But how know you that your sense deceived you not? |
A26947 | you will not let us be Judges in our own cause, and why then should you? |
A39566 | & 18. infants have an hearing the spirit opens their ears, quo magistro, quam cito discitur, quod docet? |
A39566 | & c. after he had washed their feet he saies to them: know you what I have done to you? |
A39566 | & c. to particularize more punctually then we? |
A39566 | ( have a care of your shinnes( good now) by all means) do the children of believers fall from it? |
A39566 | ( quid rides? |
A39566 | ( saies he) no nor so much as heard of it,( say they) no? |
A39566 | ( saies the Pope) when you question him for his Dedicative holiness, if so once why not now? |
A39566 | * Whether the magistrate be the minister of Christ, as God onley, or as Mediatour also, I mean God man? |
A39566 | 1. can you blame us therefore if we contend for the right baptism? |
A39566 | 12, 10. and holy i. e. qualitative, though not quantitative, in the same manner, though not the same measure? |
A39566 | 16. verse, who ever believeth not shall be damned, that all infants are certainly damned? |
A39566 | 16. when brought by us against infant baptism) where are the Scriptures that do mention infants, so as to institute their baptism? |
A39566 | 17. that they laid their hands on them, doth not them denote out the very same? |
A39566 | 18. a den of theeves? |
A39566 | 18. and excommunicated, if need be, in case of obstinacy, if under no Ecclesiasticall Government?) |
A39566 | 2. by the halves, saying repent, repent? |
A39566 | 2. which I direct to as a second place wherein we may find it preached? |
A39566 | 22. and also in the Rubrick where it being askt what is required of persons to be baptized? |
A39566 | 22: without gross absurdity having christn''d them all long before he ever preacht to them?) |
A39566 | 3 Why are they not after admitted to the supper? |
A39566 | 4.1, 2, 3, saying in malice and mockage, What do these feeble folk? |
A39566 | ?) |
A39566 | Again you had much need( had you not think you?) |
A39566 | Again, I would ask what warrand they have for dipping, or baptizing garments more then the Papists have for baptizing bells? |
A39566 | Again, who holds or practises such a thing as naked dipping of women and maids? |
A39566 | An deus potius non fuisse? |
A39566 | And Thirdly be taken up again as A. R. and you seem to reason? |
A39566 | And as Peter in his first preaching the praeceptory part of Christs Gospel to the Jews, when they enquired what they should do? |
A39566 | And how no answer, but no answer, Dr. Chamberlain had from Dr. Gouge to this question, Whether the sprinkling of Infants were of God or man? |
A39566 | And lastly whereas Mr. Baxter queries so oft when Mr. Tombs would have such baptized, the set time of whose conversion? |
A39566 | And lastly, whereas he challenges us to shew where ever God pronounced any blessed, and yet took them for none of his visible Church? |
A39566 | And now because you ask how we know they have faith whom we baptize? |
A39566 | And now why tarriest thou? |
A39566 | And what mean you by your Pastors leaving you to take up some other call or imployment? |
A39566 | And what then? |
A39566 | And whereas he saies of infants may they not be called Gods servants from the meer interest of dominion that God hath to them? |
A39566 | Are soules all equal in their Creation, and are souls which are all equal the subject of faith? |
A39566 | Are these your Examples of baptizing otherwaies then by dipping? |
A39566 | Are you not ashamed of such a blind businesse as this? |
A39566 | Buried? |
A39566 | But Sirs is it so in earnest in your opinion, that no baptism no hope of salvation? |
A39566 | But Sirs, will this hold a triall think you by the word? |
A39566 | But by what proofs do they confirm they have the true Church? |
A39566 | But if you stand so much on the signification of the word, why do you not drown persons when you baptize them? |
A39566 | But is it so Sirs? |
A39566 | But is it so that 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 signifies in and is so rendred in that place, and many more? |
A39566 | But quorsum haec? |
A39566 | But should you help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord? |
A39566 | But then what simple stuff were this? |
A39566 | But what if this be but a meer Chimaera of these mens coining, how much lesse are we then excused in our non- submission? |
A39566 | But what of this? |
A39566 | But where was your Church then all this while till these latter times? |
A39566 | Can any man forbid water why these should not be baptized, which have received the holy spirit as well as we? |
A39566 | Can you be baptized in a better manner think you then that wherein Iohn baptized Christ, and Philip the Eunuch? |
A39566 | Coventry, Cheapside, Charing,& others? |
A39566 | Daniel was thrown into and taken up out of the Lyons den, does not that shew plainly enough that he was in it? |
A39566 | Did I give, and grant so much? |
A39566 | Did not Philip baptize the Samaritans and the Eunuch? |
A39566 | Do not the infants of unbelievers very often prove believers, and so elect, and precious? |
A39566 | Do you know any thing against the particular infant of an heathen? |
A39566 | Doth not Philip to one that askt him this question, why may I not be baptized? |
A39566 | Easter, Christmas, Whitsunday,& c. didst not thou O Presbyter? |
A39566 | Fifthly, any where viz: at home or abroad, in Inns or other places, as occasion is, but onely or for the most part in your great stone houses? |
A39566 | Fiftly, if as to the time of those two services, the question be askt Quando? |
A39566 | First do you conclude that all the children of believing parents have it now? |
A39566 | First which way come your natural seed, you being but Gentiles in the flesh, to be the seed of Abraham? |
A39566 | First, Risum teneatis amici? |
A39566 | First, Si aliquid quare non quicquid? |
A39566 | First, if we ask( as de subjecto) this question quis? |
A39566 | First, is it so that the command to circumcise infants is vertually a command to us to baptize them? |
A39566 | For First, is there no Medium between being a reprobate, and a present having the holy spirit? |
A39566 | Fourthly, if, as to the quality, special properties, uses, ends and offices of these two dispensations, the question be asked in quale quid? |
A39566 | Go teach all Nations baptizing them, teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I command you, and now why tarriest thou? |
A39566 | God forbid: know ye not that every one that''s baptized into Christ, is baptized into his death? |
A39566 | Good Lord how is the practise of the truth made a reproach unto thy people, and a derision dayly? |
A39566 | Good Sirs, what mean you by this? |
A39566 | He answers, the commission being for all Nations disciples were made in all Countreys; how soone saith he came the word to this Nation? |
A39566 | Here reason demands of you why after baptism you admit not infants to the supper? |
A39566 | Holland, Germany,& c. and bring the word unto us, that we may hear it and do it? |
A39566 | How can a man escape choaking Sirs, if he be put and kept under the water? |
A39566 | How do those men and women that are baptized at years make it appear to those that baptize them, that they have faith and the holy spirit? |
A39566 | How often shall I adjure you the next time you write to write no more then truth at least in matter of fact? |
A39566 | How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? |
A39566 | How you gather from these places a dipping of the whole man over head and under water? |
A39566 | How? |
A39566 | I am sure it was a custome before we were born; how shall our children come to have names, if they be not Christned? |
A39566 | I answer how many and in how short a time does the man mean? |
A39566 | I answer, who doubts of that? |
A39566 | I beseech you Sirs, upon what grounds? |
A39566 | I demand therefore yet once again, what seed of Abraham your infants are, in that thereupon you undertake( as so) to baptize them? |
A39566 | I pray Sirs, what''s become of the odd five and a half? |
A39566 | I reply thus, were not Abraham, Isaac and Iacob their fleshly fathers? |
A39566 | I say what a bald way of arguing is this? |
A39566 | I wonder who baptized Iohn the Baptist, that was the greatest administrator that ever was? |
A39566 | I wonder who those are? |
A39566 | I would know with these new dippers saith Mr. Cook, whether the parties to be doused and dipped may be baptized in a garment, or no? |
A39566 | I''le saie it again that you may consider it, for sure you did not consider what you said when you said it, what children of day old? |
A39566 | Iesus Christ is in you except ye be Reprobates? |
A39566 | If any should ask this question, what hinders why I may not eat the supper? |
A39566 | If it be further askt, how faith is bread in them? |
A39566 | If it be inquired how faith can be said to be in them without their consent? |
A39566 | If it was so? |
A39566 | If under the Law, why not under the Gospel? |
A39566 | If you will have any thing holy with that Ceremonial holiness now, why not every thing that then was so? |
A39566 | Impertinency? |
A39566 | Is it not the work of the spirit to infuse faith? |
A39566 | Is it so Sirs, that the spirit is not tyed to work by means in little children, in the same cases, wherein he works by means in men, and women? |
A39566 | Is not faith a work as well as repentance, and the rest? |
A39566 | Is that Scripture think you intended to infants? |
A39566 | It makes them count the blood of the Covenant an unholy thing, for if it be holy, what need they repeat it? |
A39566 | It s own name? |
A39566 | Just so Sirs, and not a jot otherwise? |
A39566 | Let them gain what they can, whom can they gain? |
A39566 | Let us search, and try, and turn, was there ever any confession of sin without it? |
A39566 | Moreover if the Apostles did lay on hands at years, though Christ in infancy ▪ what if Christ had baptized those infants in infancy also? |
A39566 | Mothers, as well as by the hands of the Pries ● s onely? |
A39566 | Must they not go down to the water( saith he) if they would use it? |
A39566 | No Sirs? |
A39566 | No Sirs? |
A39566 | No certainly, And why not? |
A39566 | No? |
A39566 | No? |
A39566 | Nothing more ordinary then to have words out of their prime signification? |
A39566 | Now if it be the sincerity that is looked after, who knoweth what day or year the child began to be sincere in his profession? |
A39566 | O ye house of Levi is the spirit of the Lord thus streitned? |
A39566 | Quis? |
A39566 | Reason say you? |
A39566 | Rivers, Iordan, Enon, many waters, and why? |
A39566 | Secondly be kept under water to signifie his burial? |
A39566 | Secondly kept under water to signify his burial? |
A39566 | Secondly why do you, or how can you sign them as heirs of the Gospel promise so simply upon that account only? |
A39566 | Secondly( Risum teneatis amici?) |
A39566 | Secondly, Si aliqualitèr, quarè non aequalitèr? |
A39566 | Secondly, all male servants upon the masters single faith, as well as male children on the fathers? |
A39566 | Secondly, are you sure they were infants of believers of whom Christ saies, whoever offends one of these little ones that believe in me? |
A39566 | Secondly, do you know so precisely which infants are Elect, and which Reprobate, as to take upon you to distinguish them by baptism? |
A39566 | Secondly, how doth it appear at all that godly and believing parents children then had faith more usually then children of ungodly parents? |
A39566 | Secondly, how far forth do they make it appear to you? |
A39566 | Secondly, if( as to the nature, matter and essential form or being of the Rites themselves) we ask the question quid? |
A39566 | Secondly, let me ask you, is Gods witness, Gods testimony true, or is it false? |
A39566 | Secondly, what are these littles to the lump? |
A39566 | Secondly, when had they it begotten in them? |
A39566 | Secondly, whereas t is askt what persons are to say or do,( at the administration of laying hands) that they may be found faithful in that point? |
A39566 | Seventhly, if( as to the account and warrant) it be demanded Cur? |
A39566 | Si aliquando quare non nunc? |
A39566 | Sirs where is the blessedness you speak of? |
A39566 | Sirs, let me ask you two questions, first are you sure these are infants indeed? |
A39566 | Sirs, what children of the Jews had faith in their infancy witnessed by Circumcision, were they the children of the believing or unbelieving Jews? |
A39566 | Sirs, what pretty intricate blind bo- beep Divinity is this of yours? |
A39566 | Sixthly, if, as to the administrator, it be ask quibus auxiliis? |
A39566 | Some who are those I trow? |
A39566 | That the Covenant of grace is for substance not two but in all ages one and the same within it self who denies? |
A39566 | There may he washings though, and dippings too, but what needs such a totall dipping as you use? |
A39566 | Therefore S ● rs, how hath Satan bewitched you that you can not believe and obey the truth? |
A39566 | They lose it again when they come to more years, else why are they taught the element of faith? |
A39566 | Thirdly if, as to the place where, we ask the question ubi? |
A39566 | Thirdly, is it any more evident to you that all believers infants are taught of God, then t is that unbelievers infants are taught by him? |
A39566 | Thirdly, on the eighth day onely, and neither sooner nor later, nor one day before it nor behind it? |
A39566 | Thirdly, was Circumcision Gods witness, yea Gods seal to assure men of thus much, that those children to whom it was set had faith? |
A39566 | Thirdly, what judgement do you passe upon believers infants to be the subjects of baptism, rather then other infants? |
A39566 | This is aliud a negato; a plain absurd a berration from the question, which is not whether it be a sin ordinarily to dip naked or no? |
A39566 | Thou tellest us, Suppose the Saints and churches ought to have held fast their administration of ordinances to this day, yet what of that? |
A39566 | To those without? |
A39566 | To which I reply, saith he, where is your Scripture for that? |
A39566 | Totally drowned? |
A39566 | Unless they be baptized in their infancy? |
A39566 | Was not that of Paul spoken of man onely at years? |
A39566 | Well then they were broken off: but why? |
A39566 | Well what if it was so in the primitive times, that total dipping was the custome, must it therefore needs be so now? |
A39566 | What Infants of a day old? |
A39566 | What Sirs is the Gospel, the plain simple gospel, such a maeander as this? |
A39566 | What a strange conceit is this? |
A39566 | What again? |
A39566 | What again? |
A39566 | What again? |
A39566 | What an egregious untruth is there? |
A39566 | What force therefore is in this Argument to conclude against the truth of our way? |
A39566 | What frivolous quibling is all this? |
A39566 | What is that Analogy and Agreement which is between the sign and the thing signifyed in baptism? |
A39566 | What is the result of this discourse, to forbid all disputation with HHHim? |
A39566 | What is this to the present question and position concerning no more inclinablenesse to holy actions in children of Christians, then of infidels? |
A39566 | What pretty Checker work is there in your judgements about one and the same thing? |
A39566 | What prety Gim- cracks are here? |
A39566 | What quarrels and jarres between the Fryers of several orders? |
A39566 | What saith he if we could not prove that the English Church was before Luther, Must it needs follow that the doctrine we hold is untrue? |
A39566 | What still Sirs? |
A39566 | What then? |
A39566 | Where should this bath be prepared? |
A39566 | Where was your Church before Luther? |
A39566 | Whether infants were the true subject? |
A39566 | Whether it be just to load them that still stick to the truth, with the blame of all their blasphemies that go off from it? |
A39566 | Whether sprinkling were the true manner of baptizing? |
A39566 | Whether their profession, since it is possible they may lie, can make it appear infallibly? |
A39566 | Which of all these three are to be found in your aspersion? |
A39566 | Who sees not the weaknesse, the wretchednesse of this consequence? |
A39566 | Why then should not children under the Gospel receive baptism, which the Adversaries confess to be the Seal of the Gospel- Covenant? |
A39566 | Yea Sirs? |
A39566 | Yea Sirs? |
A39566 | Yea say you so? |
A39566 | Yea surely Sirs, why not? |
A39566 | above all men, who so strenuously contends that by the word Kingdoms of this world is meant not in part only, but the whole kingdom? |
A39566 | all the dying infants of unbelievers? |
A39566 | all your skill in Physiogmony can never find it: or can you argue ad negationem habitus, to no holiness in an infidels infant more then in anothers? |
A39566 | and I said what shall I do Lord? |
A39566 | and also concerning a people, that were already baptized with the spirit, asks who can forbid water why these may not be baptized? |
A39566 | and also to what purpose did she perform it? |
A39566 | and are not soules which are all equall in their creation the subject of it? |
A39566 | and as ordinarily believers infants( when they come to years I mean) prove reprobates? |
A39566 | and doth not that imply that else he might not? |
A39566 | and doth not this evince as much for women? |
A39566 | and have not works,& c. whereby onely faith is proved to be true indeed as it is professed, can that faith save him? |
A39566 | and how can they be sent to preach to infants that understand not what is said? |
A39566 | and how can they hear without a preacher? |
A39566 | and how can they preach except they be sent? |
A39566 | and how hear without a Preacher? |
A39566 | and how much more the losse of Christ himself? |
A39566 | and how much more then ours? |
A39566 | and if no analogie why are we said sacramentally in baptism to be buried, and raised? |
A39566 | and if not, why not be satisfied that it was preacht by some at least of Christs Apostles to all baptized believers? |
A39566 | and if so, then must not this unbelieving parent being a Root, have the same kind of holiness the child hath? |
A39566 | and if so, why he blames us more then himself, that, do what we can, so many run to ruin? |
A39566 | and if you do, is this habit innat ● s, acquisitus or infusus, by birth, or begotten in them by frequent acts of holiness, or infused from above? |
A39566 | and is it the consequent that the children of believing parents have it now? |
A39566 | and is not swilling under water a more effectuall way of washing and clensing then sprinkling? |
A39566 | and is that seal of his firm to, i. e, so sure that it can not fail? |
A39566 | and row why tarriest thou? |
A39566 | and so upwards till we come thither, are you able if we ask you who sprinkled you? |
A39566 | and such judgement is as due to one of these as to the other? |
A39566 | and such like how little do these look each like the other? |
A39566 | and suppose liberal and bountiful maintenance, and rich Revenues to be the chief corner stone in their church work? |
A39566 | and that a similitude of Christs death, burial and rising again, to be represented by dipping in water, is signified here? |
A39566 | and the trembling and astonished said Lord what wilt thou have me to do? |
A39566 | and though remote ones, yet were they not their true fathers after the flesh still as much as ever? |
A39566 | and to the company at Cornelius''s house, and Ananias in his to Paul, when he quaeried what he should do? |
A39566 | and what need at all that the Committees be so cumbered with the care of such affairs? |
A39566 | and whether because they all desired to go to heaven, therefore they were at heaven? |
A39566 | and who hath brought up these? |
A39566 | and who him? |
A39566 | and who him? |
A39566 | and who him? |
A39566 | and who him? |
A39566 | and who him? |
A39566 | and who him? |
A39566 | and who him? |
A39566 | and who ordained those that ordained you? |
A39566 | and who them? |
A39566 | and who them? |
A39566 | and who them? |
A39566 | and why not male servants though unbelieving Moores, Turks or Pagans if of believing masters? |
A39566 | and why should not this administration of the covenant in outward ordinances be after the manner of that of old? |
A39566 | and why then? |
A39566 | and yet do these include and comprize infants as much as men at years? |
A39566 | and you Presbyterians where was your Church before Calvin? |
A39566 | are infants of a day old capable of Baptism, that can not so much as be instructed in principles much less be begotten to the true Religion? |
A39566 | are not repentance from dead works, and belief towards God with all the heart, and confession of sins, and calling on God such kind of matters? |
A39566 | are not these priviledges belonging to men, why then( if yours and Mr Marshalls assertion be true) not to infants as well as men? |
A39566 | are the seed of true believers true converts mostly by birth? |
A39566 | are these your doings? |
A39566 | are they not among the number of souls capable to eat, every one pro suo modulo, according to the measure of his eating and digestion? |
A39566 | are they not mercies, administrations, merciful administrations of God, extended to all nations? |
A39566 | are they shut out of the kingdom of heaven? |
A39566 | are we more tied to follow his example in that, then in the dispensation of laying on of hands? |
A39566 | are you able to assign who began our way of baptism first of all in the world, unlesse you begin as high as Iohn the baptist? |
A39566 | are you not then condemned out of your own mouths to perpetual abhorring? |
A39566 | are your Pastors also such Idol shepheards, as it may be supposed now and then will leave their flocks for any other imployment? |
A39566 | as I am sure we can not warrantably, because not congruously, do otherwise? |
A39566 | baptism for the Hot Countryes; and Rantism for the Cold? |
A39566 | baptism, may stand in some proportion to its signatum, as well as the other i. e. circumcision? |
A39566 | because he had told them above that there should come one, that should delude many with lyes? |
A39566 | because the kingdomes of this world are, or else shall be the kindomes of God and Christ? |
A39566 | behold I was left alone, these where have they been? |
A39566 | besides what more to believers than unbelievers infants? |
A39566 | both branded for reprobates? |
A39566 | both which men direct their different doctrines to Mr. Tombes in order to his direction: but how shall that man be resolved? |
A39566 | but if they had none in infancy, then how can you deny but that they had none? |
A39566 | but may they thereupon be called disciples, and be baptized? |
A39566 | but no marvel if the Cat winckt, when both her eyes were out? |
A39566 | but what of that? |
A39566 | but what then? |
A39566 | but whether Rome be that universal Church or no that can not erre? |
A39566 | but whether we ordinarily use that kind of dipping? |
A39566 | by believing: nay the spiritual seed: quid ni? |
A39566 | by fleshly descent? |
A39566 | by whose hands these ordinances are to be administred? |
A39566 | can some scores of well meaning Priests give the denomination of an holy PPriesthood, godly Ministry to those legions of them that lie in wickednesse? |
A39566 | commission plain enough to baptism infants, where all nations are bid to be discipled and baptized? |
A39566 | could that water that toucht his legs while he waded, be more mischievous to him, then the water that washed the blood of his stripes? |
A39566 | creed that God hath promised to be merciful to Godly mens seed in general, in contradistinction to the seed of the wicked? |
A39566 | cu ●? |
A39566 | cui nativitas ei facultas auctrix, nutrix; et quare non nutrimentum? |
A39566 | denies it, with whom how often is it exprest that baptism is the first visible entrance into it? |
A39566 | did he build them upon one part of the foundation, and not on the other part? |
A39566 | did he constitute them partly upon it, and partly beside it? |
A39566 | did he no more then sprinkle, or pour a few drops of water on him? |
A39566 | did not some of you Masters, Provosts, Fellowes of Colledges and such like? |
A39566 | did not ye O Presbyterians? |
A39566 | did you press them to death i th''Press, or lose them i th''Ashes, whetein you had a design to have smothered it all? |
A39566 | do we not in common loquution say the same, while we say sprinkled in a font, or in a Bason? |
A39566 | do you believe in God the Father, and Christ& c. and will you be baptized in this faith? |
A39566 | dost thou forsake the divel? |
A39566 | doth it prove baptism to be the cause of that grosness that often followes, when a person is baptized? |
A39566 | doth our denying baptism to an infant before he dies send him to hell sooner then your delaying it till he be dead? |
A39566 | doth that phrase( I say) they which be of faith signifie believers infants? |
A39566 | drowning, racking, fleaing, stabbing, tearing with hot pincers, and( to use his own phrase) the severest punishments they could devise? |
A39566 | first I wonder how they came by it, sith the word saies faith comes by hearing, and how can there be believing on him of whom they have not heard? |
A39566 | for 42. months, or a 1260 years, as theirs was for 70 years? |
A39566 | for either he was baptized surely, or else he was not, if he was ever baptized at all, who baptized him? |
A39566 | for how does he speak, and that out of these Scriptures we are upon, that we ought thus to be baptized? |
A39566 | for none denies but that it hath, but whether the Pope be at all that head? |
A39566 | for the living to the dead? |
A39566 | for what else can they pretend? |
A39566 | for when he queries who can? |
A39566 | from the Gospel to a law long since ended? |
A39566 | from the living to the dead? |
A39566 | from the substance to the shadow? |
A39566 | from the truth to the type? |
A39566 | have any of the Rulers of the Pharisees believed on him? |
A39566 | have not you the CCClergy? |
A39566 | have ye received the holy spirit since ye believed? |
A39566 | he to infants, and they onely to persons past infancy? |
A39566 | how are thy depths, even thy downright deliveries of soul saving truth in plainess of speech by the mouths of stammerers stark duncery to them? |
A39566 | how can Turks and Pagans infants be saved? |
A39566 | how can they be saved if they die unchristned? |
A39566 | how can they believe on him of whom they have not heard? |
A39566 | how crookedly close do you keep to your own coppy? |
A39566 | how different are they? |
A39566 | how else could they have known it? |
A39566 | how far do they differ? |
A39566 | how far do you fall short of the Jewes in this also? |
A39566 | how farre is he from it as now he stands, whilst he saies plainly he will have no baptism? |
A39566 | how greatly doth your manner of baptism differ from it? |
A39566 | how hear without a preacher? |
A39566 | how is it possible that it should not signifie washing so long as it signifies dipping, dipping being no other then a kind of washing? |
A39566 | how miserably do you your selves misse of hitting right with it here too? |
A39566 | how pretily have you put these terms[ practised by the Church of God] into the very question, and that too as it stands stated beeween us? |
A39566 | how so? |
A39566 | how the bells began to play their parts against our preaching, when you had done, by the appointment of who knows not whom? |
A39566 | how then came it to pass that the most of the Iews and their children sucessively in all generations had not faith when they came to years? |
A39566 | how then dare you aver so peremptorily, so universally that every administration that extendeth to all nations, belongeth to infants as well as men? |
A39566 | how those men and women whom I had baptized did make it appear that they had faith, and the holy spirit? |
A39566 | how will not a poor, marred, mocked, misreputed Saviour, and gospel in any wise down with them? |
A39566 | how will you ever be able to make that good? |
A39566 | i. e. the supper as well as baptism? |
A39566 | i. e. to ungodly mens children as well as to those of godly parents? |
A39566 | if no exemption from a hotter service, why from a colder for the lifes sake? |
A39566 | if not where is then the analogie? |
A39566 | if so, how is it that when they are grown, the children of unbelievers have holiness very often, when as oft the other prove wicked, and have not? |
A39566 | if so, why not to repentance, and self denial also? |
A39566 | if unholy, how do they prophane it? |
A39566 | if unholy, in so saying oh how do you prophane it? |
A39566 | if you must keep so strictly to one and the same subject in circumcision, and baptism, why do you alter the subject your selves? |
A39566 | if you will needs Iudaize at all, why not in all as well as the Pope? |
A39566 | if you will needs utter falsehood in matter of Doctrine? |
A39566 | in as much as there s that required in order to baptisme which infants can no more do, then they can do what''s required to the supper? |
A39566 | in the womb? |
A39566 | in vvhich of all these places dare they allovv us the prime signification of the vvord? |
A39566 | infallibly? |
A39566 | is Christ thus divided? |
A39566 | is he not as holy as the child is, and so as capable of being baptized, and in covenant thereby? |
A39566 | is it not very fit therefore that they should still be used, the Church being yet under age? |
A39566 | is meant of more layings on of hands, when it expresly speaks but of one? |
A39566 | is not innocency in the whole state of infants, even in unbelievers infants as much to the full as in the other? |
A39566 | is not the story of Naamans washing himself seven times in Iordan full enough to our use, because there is no mention of his putting off and on? |
A39566 | is not this the Carpenter?) |
A39566 | is plain, and now why tarriest thou? |
A39566 | is their any worldly imployment to which the Pastors office must give way so to as to cease for its sake, when it comes in place? |
A39566 | is there any more Specimen or shew of holiness in them then in these? |
A39566 | is there any promise of God, whereby he stands ingaged to infuse holiness into these infants in infancy, when he will not infuse it into the other? |
A39566 | is there any such manglements as these to be found there? |
A39566 | little ones literally taken in the sixth? |
A39566 | meaning trow, that therfore it doth not go before it? |
A39566 | men of strife and contention to the whole earth? |
A39566 | must not all people search it? |
A39566 | no: who doub ● s of that? |
A39566 | not one scruple? |
A39566 | now therefore Quid rides? |
A39566 | on baptized believers be ever the more excluded, or the more incuded rather in all likelyhood among the rest? |
A39566 | or I would I knew what you mean by constitution? |
A39566 | or any other part*? |
A39566 | or are all infants of unbelievers reprobate, so that you may accordingly denominate them for such by whole sale as you do? |
A39566 | or believing infants? |
A39566 | or but probably? |
A39566 | or have you not rather taken it for granted from me whether I will, or no? |
A39566 | or if after birth, on what day on the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, or 8th? |
A39566 | or if there were no more then this half an hours reading, how is it you give so large an Account of it here? |
A39566 | or if they can not, can not your Churches see to them a little what they lack? |
A39566 | or in baptism ask, how the baptizer must handle the person baptized, and where he must take hold on him, when he dips him? |
A39566 | or in token of his resurrection to a new life? |
A39566 | or is aspersion an action as answerable to a burial and resurrection, and painting it out as lively as submersion and emersion do? |
A39566 | or may the spirit blow no where, but where thou listest? |
A39566 | or must a man bring you another, and that a better kind of faith to the one, than he had need care for toward the other? |
A39566 | or must they search and find no more truth in it then thou findest? |
A39566 | or not? |
A39566 | or rather by who knows not whom? |
A39566 | or shall the doctrine of Rome be ever the truer because of Antiquitie only? |
A39566 | or that of certainty? |
A39566 | or the Major part of it? |
A39566 | or those thousands Peter promised the holy spirit to, were they all reprobates, because they yet had it not, when he spake to them? |
A39566 | or to prove believers infants to have it exclusively of the infants of unbelievers? |
A39566 | or wast thou set to keep people out from it under lock and key? |
A39566 | or what is it you would have? |
A39566 | or whether Christ hath not more water baptismes then one? |
A39566 | or whether dipping in Rivers be so necessary to baptism, that none are accounted baptized, but those that are dipped after such a manner? |
A39566 | qualis? |
A39566 | quando? |
A39566 | quibus auxiliis? |
A39566 | quid? |
A39566 | return this answer, if thou believest with all thy heart thou mayest? |
A39566 | saiest where is the promise of his coming? |
A39566 | secondly, whether they ever had it if you ask whether they ever had any? |
A39566 | shall the Parliament and their Committees never have their liberty to attend onely, and perfectly the true liberties of the subject? |
A39566 | shall we impute that fault to his being baptized? |
A39566 | shall we think that Peter taught the principles of the doctrine of Christ, all which he was to lay as one foundation among them, by the halves? |
A39566 | shall we think that all Christs ministers descend lineally from the loines of Antichrist? |
A39566 | shall we think that so many learned Orthodox divines would practise it if it were not the truth? |
A39566 | shall we( saith he, for so his sense is) continue in sin, i. e. we that are dead to it, and have been all baptized into Christ in token of it? |
A39566 | sith the cause of all such sacramental locution is because the sacraments are( as Austin saies) pictures of the things signified in them? |
A39566 | so that by the same Reason that we deny one of these to be in them, it may be therefore denied that they have the other? |
A39566 | some people believe therefore all must be baptized, Secondly, had the Jews children faith? |
A39566 | tells us that some branches only were broken off, therfore not infants, It is true all were not broken off, and why? |
A39566 | that have bought it for money? |
A39566 | that have have gotten it by brawling in the law? |
A39566 | that is strange: what parts of Christendome have you lived, or do you live in? |
A39566 | that is worse then all the rest: but I wonder what is if that be not the prime? |
A39566 | that it is a miracle to be dipped and not destroyed, then what a strange man is he to say so? |
A39566 | that of charity? |
A39566 | that there is now no iniquity at all? |
A39566 | that they were all the children of God by faith in Christ: and how doth he prove it that they were so? |
A39566 | that words are oft used out of their prime significations?) |
A39566 | the Apostles themselves? |
A39566 | the Swine ran into the sea, were they not then in it? |
A39566 | the duty and ordinance of baptism? |
A39566 | the first Gospel ministry bap ● ized, were in immediately before they baptized them? |
A39566 | the visible church of Christ or the visible kingdome of the devil believers infants are visibly in before baptism? |
A39566 | the way of faith? |
A39566 | then Sirs why do you not keep close to your command, and by Analogy baptize precisely on the eighth day, but on any other as you see good? |
A39566 | then pray how doth the promise of the Gospel appear to belong one jot more to believers children, then to unbelievers? |
A39566 | therefore is it not rather think you a Civil and Matrimonial then an Ecclesiastical,& faederall sanctity? |
A39566 | therefore why should we not sorrow as those without hope? |
A39566 | they are the children of believers? |
A39566 | they went down both of them unto the water, both Philip and the Eunuch? |
A39566 | till they visibly appear to have them, yet under the Law they were in covenant, and inchurched for all that and why? |
A39566 | to come out of Babilon, and be separate? |
A39566 | to testifie to the world that they had faith? |
A39566 | to the Jaylor asking Sirs what must I do to be saved? |
A39566 | to the parents upon their own faith, to the children upon the parents faith? |
A39566 | to what purpose doth he with such prolixity proceed to prove, what no sober minded man of either party doth deny? |
A39566 | ubi? |
A39566 | unto what then were you baptized( saies he) if at least you have not so much as heard of it? |
A39566 | was he sprinkled into Iordan? |
A39566 | was it set to Ishmael as Gods witness that Ishmael had faith? |
A39566 | watchman what of the night? |
A39566 | we have Abraham to our father? |
A39566 | were there ever such contradictions as these committed to paper before? |
A39566 | were they not the seed of Abraham still, that stood without faith in the old visible Church to the very end of it? |
A39566 | what Commission have any to baptize in that manner? |
A39566 | what a logical lump of artificial non- sense? |
A39566 | what a pittious plaister is here applied to men wounded in conscience, and smarting under the direfull apprehensions of Gods wrath? |
A39566 | what a poor shift is this? |
A39566 | what a strange extraordinary expression is that? |
A39566 | what again Sirs, what again? |
A39566 | what circumcision was, and what your baptism? |
A39566 | what comfort can we have from the Covenant made with, and the promises to our children& c? |
A39566 | what communion, what part hath light with darknsss, Christ with Belial, the Temple of God and Idolators, believers and infidells? |
A39566 | what do you speak suppositively of it still? |
A39566 | what dribling Divinity is this? |
A39566 | what hinders why I may not be baptized? |
A39566 | what hopes of our infant salvation without baptism? |
A39566 | what if the Committee should chance to be Heterodox it self? |
A39566 | what imployment may they lawfully leave their flocks for, with whom they are in fellowship so as to stand Pastors no more among them? |
A39566 | what inveteracy between the C C Clergy of the severall F F Formes of Government? |
A39566 | what is the gleaning to the vintage? |
A39566 | what is the reason that you exclude infants here? |
A39566 | what is the visible sign or form in baptism? |
A39566 | what made Bernard complain that t was laught at among other ridiculosities as praying to, and for the dead? |
A39566 | what made Imperiall lawes, and Synodical cannons enjoin it under such strict penalties? |
A39566 | what man that devotes himself to the comparing of Scripture with Scripture can imagine it? |
A39566 | what more to any then to all? |
A39566 | what never? |
A39566 | what not one way, nor other otherwise, then of old? |
A39566 | what not water enough in nor yet about all Ierusalem to dipp a man over head in? |
A39566 | what ore& ore, and ore again? |
A39566 | what pretty, cutted stuff is here? |
A39566 | what then? |
A39566 | what things persons were specially obliged to by them? |
A39566 | what was specially signified to persons in them? |
A39566 | what was the Scripture given for thee only to look in? |
A39566 | what were the special properties, purposes, uses, ends, and offices of these two several administrations? |
A39566 | what whole Countrey clashes, and consumptions have been made in Germany between the Calvinists and Lutherans? |
A39566 | what will you onely think things, and thrust your thoughts of them as oracles upon all others? |
A39566 | what''s this I trow toward the eviction of the other? |
A39566 | when circumcision, and when your baptism are by right to be dispensed? |
A39566 | when he visiteth what will you answer? |
A39566 | where circumcision was dispensed, and where your selves say baptism ought to be? |
A39566 | where had thy message by the mouth of Paul lesse acceptance then at the university of Athens? |
A39566 | where hath the word now lesse then in the Academies, Christian Academies, seemingly reforming Academies? |
A39566 | where is the Cherub that covereth? |
A39566 | whether God could have chosen, whether he would have been God or no? |
A39566 | whether no other baptizing then that which Christ and the Eunuch had is lawful? |
A39566 | whether the ordinances of Christ, that were in use of old, are of right to be practised still? |
A39566 | whether they have it? |
A39566 | which is as much as to say, whether another water baptism may not serve the turn as well? |
A39566 | which of the two think you doth it expresse, such persons at years onely, as are in the faith, or onely the natural fleshly seed of such? |
A39566 | which shall he cleave to? |
A39566 | who altered the holy Altars, and alienated to other use the holy Altar Clothes? |
A39566 | who but ye O Priests have been in these things more sacrilegi church- robbers, then sacerdotes, or givers of holy things? |
A39566 | who can require these persons to be baptized in water that have received the spirit, and are baptized with the spirit as well as we? |
A39566 | who councel''d away the curious crucifixes? |
A39566 | who hath begotten me these, seeing I have lost my children? |
A39566 | who hath broken the Laws, changed the ordinances, broken the everlasting Covenant, for which a curse now is devouring the earth? |
A39566 | who hath made void Christs commands by their own traditions? |
A39566 | who hath taken away from the sacraments, the right subjects, and manner of administration? |
A39566 | who hath trodden down the holy City? |
A39566 | who have justified the wicked for reward, and taken away the righteousnesse of the righteous from him? |
A39566 | who prophaned the holy Fonts in all the holy Churches and Chappels, because they found the people Idolizing them? |
A39566 | who pul''d away the holy railes from before the sanctum sanctorum in every holy quire where they were stated? |
A39566 | who shall descend into the deep to bring Christ to us from the dead? |
A39566 | who shall go into Scotland and brings us a directory and platform of government from them? |
A39566 | who slew the parsons of the witnesses? |
A39566 | who so far as they incourage us to no more then what there is a written word for, must be heeded by us in these daies, as those Prophets were by them? |
A39566 | who spoiled the holy Cathedrals of their holy Organs, and Popish pipes and pictures? |
A39566 | who would think a mininister should be so moped as to make these two a like warrantable? |
A39566 | whose words shall he take, the Doctors or the Divines? |
A39566 | why baptize you any females, when God commanded males onely to be circumcised? |
A39566 | why else did they both do and desire it? |
A39566 | why even this, if the whole kingdom be the Lords, then infants must unavoidably be members of Christs Church, and if we ask how comes this about? |
A39566 | why more ad negationem baptismi? |
A39566 | why taught in order to the receiving it? |
A39566 | why then do you say sometimes again, that from a holiness which is in both they are co- contributers of holiness to the Infant? |
A39566 | why then not exempted from that for the sake of their incapacity, as well as from other things? |
A39566 | why then( if that be the ground you will needs go upon) must not these be baptized as well as the other? |
A39566 | why they circumcised infants, and why you baptize them? |
A39566 | will it follow that we must follow their fashion in that particular? |
A39566 | will it not appear much more plainly then, that infants are not capable to be made disciples? |
A39566 | will it therefore follow that it is to be omitted, and not made use of at all? |
A39566 | will they fortify themselves against our Orthodox Divines? |
A39566 | will they make an end in a day to reform, which is many a years work for a learned Synod? |
A39566 | will they revive the stones, even the dead bones of old Hereticks, out of the heaps of rubbish that are burnt? |
A39566 | will they sacrifice without a Priest among them? |
A39566 | will you alwaies affirm things so to be, and venture to make them known, and yet confess they can not be known too? |
A39566 | will you bind him to all the infants in Christendome, and barr him from doing any other infants in the world? |
A39566 | will you gather Churches of Christ out of Churches of Christ what rule have you for that? |
A39566 | wilt thou be baptized& c? |
A39566 | would not this grate harshly upon charitable ears? |
A39566 | would the water come up to them in the Chariot any sooner for sprinkling then for dipping? |
A39566 | would the water have come up to them in the chariot any sooner for sprinkling then for dipping? |
A39566 | yea is not preaching an administration to every creature that extends not to infants? |
A39566 | yea who so blind as those that seem to themselves to be the onely Seers both for themselves and others? |
A39566 | yea, when he asks who hath required this at your hands? |
A39566 | yes no doubt, why then were they not broken off before? |
A39566 | yet is it reckoned by you exclusive of infants, and why not Philips also? |
A39566 | you know your people are not all in the faith, why else do you preach to them as prophane to the end you may convert them thereunto? |
A39566 | your trivial new way, or rather no way of baptism? |
A39566 | your very selves acknowledge you can not: if not, why more I wonder ad negationem spiritus? |
A27006 | & 15. that were the stricter about meats, and drinks, and days? |
A27006 | ( 3) What bosom Friend did he ever spare wherein he sound him reprehensible? |
A27006 | ( And what then did the Primitive Church for Three hundred Years?) |
A27006 | ( Though I suppose rather it is otherwise) yet while Men do for peace silence their opinions, who knows what they are? |
A27006 | ( as the Controversie between Basil and the Church of Neocaesarea shews,& c.) And why then may not as much be granted now in England? |
A27006 | ( e) But what if they be suspended, or silenced by Authority? |
A27006 | ( how glad would the Papists be if you could prevail but with a few that most molest them?) |
A27006 | ( i)[ Why not all as well as the greatest part? |
A27006 | ( or second either, or many after?) |
A27006 | 10. and dare you reject a strong Believer upon a doubtful Disputation? |
A27006 | 12. of the Explanation? |
A27006 | 12. or these that Acts 20. prayed at an Oratory, nor the Water destroy the Church? |
A27006 | 14. and 15, and not believe that it bindeth the Church- Rulers as well as the People? |
A27006 | 18 you reslove to censure the scandalous Sinner upon such an offer of Consent as carrieth in the Front of it a plain Refusal of your Discipline? |
A27006 | 25. the reward is adjudged to men on the account of their good works? |
A27006 | 3. Who is it that hath sufficient Light? |
A27006 | 4. Who they be that in England are to exercise this Discipline? |
A27006 | 5. Who can say that the King had an ill End in taking it? |
A27006 | A heinous Crime? |
A27006 | According to your Councils will you be judged of God? |
A27006 | After the Answer to[ What is thy Duty towards God?] |
A27006 | Also, what if Saul gives Commission to his Armour bearer to kill him? |
A27006 | Am I now bound to obey my Parents, or the Law, and Canon? |
A27006 | And I add, hath not Scotland kept out Sects without our Conformity, more effectually than Conformity here kept them out? |
A27006 | And I pray you, are not all the Indians of America, that never heard of Christ, the Members of your Church? |
A27006 | And I scarce approve of your comparative Terms of the Centuries as bad as this is? |
A27006 | And Liberius subscribed to the Arrians, and against Athenasius? |
A27006 | And Ministers are not so impudent as to turn Beggers without Shame? |
A27006 | And after that[ What was promised for you in Baptism?] |
A27006 | And against which of these should you more carefully shut the Door? |
A27006 | And all must avoid us; and how shall we avoid our selves, who sin in all we do? |
A27006 | And are these Instances to prove what you assert? |
A27006 | And are they not as like to be Impartial, who suffer as much by their Judgment, as you gain by yours? |
A27006 | And are you sure that all these poor troubled timerous Souls are worthy of utter ruine as Contemners of Authority? |
A27006 | And as to my suffering such things to be exposed to publick view; can any Man take it ill, that I give him what Mr. Baxter left with me to this end? |
A27006 | And as to the second Question,[ What this Discipline is?] |
A27006 | And by force and stretching, what words may not be well interpreted? |
A27006 | And can I believe that it was none of the Imposers Intention by the Oath, to provide against any of these Opinions? |
A27006 | And can such Churches be of any known Consistency or Concord? |
A27006 | And did it not seem good to the Holy Ghost, and the Apostles, Acts 15. to Impose only necessary things? |
A27006 | And did not Peter and Paul go as safe a way to Heaven as you? |
A27006 | And did not Peter and Paul please God as well without them as you do with them? |
A27006 | And did not the holy Bishops of the East, refuse to surcease their Ministration when they prohibited them? |
A27006 | And do not you see that the People are every where for the Parliament? |
A27006 | And do you cherish it, by saying to us,[ Though you think it a heinous sin to conform, yet do it, or Suffer for your Dissent? |
A27006 | And do you not startle to hear them call their way Strictness, and the other Loosness? |
A27006 | And do you think that to be taught once a Year, or in many Years, is enough to counterwork Sin, the Devil and his Instruments? |
A27006 | And do you, after all your Undertakings and Sufficiency, now bring us so sad an account of your success? |
A27006 | And doth not the Nation know that it was only the old Conformsty which was then questioned, and that the new was not in being? |
A27006 | And for Revenge; what need we fear it when the Parliament may continue till it consent to its Dissolution? |
A27006 | And for the National Church, unless you speak equivocally, they know no such thing: for what is it that is the Constitutive Head of it? |
A27006 | And for the Sword of unjust War, if Violence gives right in one case, why not in another? |
A27006 | And he founded out his Aggravations of this Doctrine; and then cryed to Dr. Bates, what say you Dr. Bates, is this your Opinion? |
A27006 | And here I should propound to the contrary- minded one Question, Whether if a Bishop should command them to stand or sit, they would do it? |
A27006 | And how Scripture which meddles not with the individua should confer Power on him as a fit Medium? |
A27006 | And how close- hunded almost all Men are that are themselves in want? |
A27006 | And how could the wit of Man devise Words more exclusive of all Exceptions, than to say[ It is not Lawful on any pretence whatsoever?] |
A27006 | And how then say you, we would dispence with nothing? |
A27006 | And if Modesty and Self- diffidence do make me refrain from Censures and Corrections and Expunctions, can that be esteemed culpable? |
A27006 | And if a Succession of bare Possession serve, how many Churches have the like? |
A27006 | And if he have power as a Presbyter, why do the Bishop appropriate it to themselves? |
A27006 | And if it be a great sin rashly to Excommunicate one Christian, what is it so to Excommunicate whole Parishes, Cities, Counties, or Congregations? |
A27006 | And if what you say be true, who would not rather far be a meer Catholck Christian, out of all National Churches, than be in them? |
A27006 | And in that case, whether it be Trayterous to say that one side hath his Authority against the other? |
A27006 | And indeed, how can you expect that he who will stand it out to an Excommunication, should be bettered by any ordinary means? |
A27006 | And is he not equally responsible for both? |
A27006 | And is it not a Condemning, or Contradicting God needlesly, to take a Contrary Course? |
A27006 | And is it not a means of working it, as well as the Sacraments; Yea and in the same sort of Causality? |
A27006 | And is it so indeed? |
A27006 | And is not Love the new and great Commandment? |
A27006 | And is not that to operate morally on mind and will accordingly? |
A27006 | And is not this a moral gracious Operation? |
A27006 | And is not this enough? |
A27006 | And is not this the certain regular way? |
A27006 | And is that all the fault( besides the Length forementioned)? |
A27006 | And is the Nonconformist''s Ministry no more necessay? |
A27006 | And is this no Gracious Work? |
A27006 | And is this no grant of federal Grace? |
A27006 | And is this the intolerable Evil, worthy to be avoided at the rate of all our Calamities? |
A27006 | And is this the only healing way? |
A27006 | And it is possible, That Commissions may be contrary( of the same date) who then can know which is the Traytor? |
A27006 | And may it not be so in our case? |
A27006 | And should not a desire to obey God first be cherished? |
A27006 | And that it is a Sin of Disorder where unnecessarily it is done otherwise? |
A27006 | And that the Rebels belied him when they said that they had his Warrant or Commission? |
A27006 | And that the Sessions or Pastor be responsible for Male- Administration or Injury, if proved? |
A27006 | And then, Whether that which is antecedently a Duty by Divine Obligation, be not further so by Self- obligation, when it is vowed with an Oath? |
A27006 | And think you those are Ways of Peace? |
A27006 | And was it ever known that all the Clergy was sworn to such an Anomalous Rabble? |
A27006 | And was not the Case of the Bishops that St. Martin separated from to the Death, like yours, or much fairer? |
A27006 | And was such a putid Falshood fit for a Pulpit, from such Men that never spake one word to my face in their Lives? |
A27006 | And was this, think you, the meaning of the Imposers of the Oath, that it should be left to Men''s Liberty to take an illegal Commission for none? |
A27006 | And what Complaints do fill all the Land? |
A27006 | And what Evidence so notorious which they will not out- face? |
A27006 | And what Matter of Reconciliation would it be to the guilty Papists, when we blame their impious Doctrines that have such a tendency? |
A27006 | And what advantage give you the Infidels, and our own Remnants of Infidelity, to deny the Head by so far denying the Body? |
A27006 | And what did the Parliament''s Army desire more? |
A27006 | And what if it be in the King''s power: Is it not the more reasonable that the King be petitioned to in the Business? |
A27006 | And what if we had done so? |
A27006 | And what shall all these Persons do? |
A27006 | And what sin, say they, can be more heinous, than to break their Vows with God so solemnly, and in such dreadful Expressions, made? |
A27006 | And what then? |
A27006 | And what then? |
A27006 | And what''s all this to the King''s own Act, who took it himself; whom we must also by our Subscription disoblige? |
A27006 | And what''s all this to you? |
A27006 | And when all is done, do they rule alone indeed? |
A27006 | And whether you mean by[ Lawful Power] that which is indeed[ Lawful Power ad hoc] or only[ ad aliud]? |
A27006 | And which of the Parliament''s Souldiers ever saw the Commissions of those whom they Fought against? |
A27006 | And who can but fear that such an universal Sin must be yet more sharply punished, when such a Scourge as this had no better effects? |
A27006 | And who shall be Bishops? |
A27006 | And who shall make that Rule? |
A27006 | And why may it not be so also to the Ministry? |
A27006 | And why should I not add two Propositions for Peace with the Episcopal? |
A27006 | And why should I suspect that any of these worthy persons are less peaceable? |
A27006 | And why they cryed out in our Assemblies, Come down thou Deceiver, thou Hireling, thou Dog; and now never meddle with the Pastors or Congregations? |
A27006 | And will it not be best at last? |
A27006 | And would not covetousness rather make both father and son Conform, that both might have Livings, than the son alone? |
A27006 | And yet must we subscribe our Assent to every word in these Books, or else be Silenced, or Suffer? |
A27006 | And yet would you make us believe that you are against the ruin of it; who will not prevent it at so easie a rate? |
A27006 | And you know it is the Pope whose Succession we are questioning; and which is the Catholick Church that must accept and repute him a true Pope? |
A27006 | And, Do the Innocent Flocks deserve to suffer in their Souls for our Nonconformity? |
A27006 | Are all our Divisions better than the enduring of this? |
A27006 | Are all that are Holy the Rule or Rulers to all others? |
A27006 | Are all the Author of their Communion or not? |
A27006 | Are not the Severals proposed or insisted on, too many for this first Attempt? |
A27006 | Are such as these the occasions of your insulting? |
A27006 | Are the Rural Deaneries think you, without the King''s Authority? |
A27006 | Are these men for us to hold Communion with? |
A27006 | Are they all bound to disobey the King if he should command their Service for the Change of Prelacy into the Primitive Episcopacy? |
A27006 | Are they not great that are directly against Love and Unity, the Soul and Life of the Church of Christ? |
A27006 | Are those in the Eighth Quaere[ no pretences whatsoever?] |
A27006 | Are we our selves the discerning Judges? |
A27006 | Are you certain now? |
A27006 | Are you risen up now so near the Silencers Opinion as that you would have all these Souls untaught and America transplanted into London? |
A27006 | Are you sure that the King may not lawfully endeavour any Reformation? |
A27006 | As the Church or Ministers are Judges, when the Question is[ whether such a Man is to be avoided, rejected, or excommunicated for Heresie or any Sin?] |
A27006 | As to the Reformed Churches Testimony of our Liturgy, shall their very Charity become our Snare? |
A27006 | As to the other Question, Why we dealt not thus by all the Parish, and took them not all for Members without question? |
A27006 | As to the second Question, What hope of Success? |
A27006 | Bilson and Andrews, agree, That we must do the like upon such unjust Prohibitions? |
A27006 | But alas, what is there so false and odious which exasperated factious, malicious Minds will not believe and say of others? |
A27006 | But all these are Laws: And so are those in Reformed Countreys which are against Bishops and Ceremonies: Do you therefore think them not too rigorous? |
A27006 | But are there not enough others that may evince the point in hand besides that? |
A27006 | But can such a person change their own minds and fears, because you give them reason for it? |
A27006 | But hath the Synod or Presbytery a Negative Voice in his punishment, or not? |
A27006 | But how are you satisfied that we may derive our Authority immediately from the Law, if there were no Succession? |
A27006 | But how should he have such Power with a Servant of God? |
A27006 | But how will this stand with Christ''s Catholick Laws? |
A27006 | But how? |
A27006 | But if it were otherwise, is the use of all things contained there lawful? |
A27006 | But if our Infant Baptism were irregular, how will you prove it a Nullity? |
A27006 | But if yet I be mistaken, Shall your National- Church have never a Member Tolerated that is as ignorant and bad as I? |
A27006 | But is it the Judgment of the Ancient Church that will serve to degrade or null a Minister of this Age? |
A27006 | But is there no Duty that private Christians owe to one another, for the furthering their Salvation, but only for their several Families? |
A27006 | But now we come to the main matter; What satisfied so many of the intelligent part of the Countrey to side with the Parliament when the War began? |
A27006 | But really, is it not so? |
A27006 | But shall the Synod, or Presbytery carry by Vote, or not? |
A27006 | But the People without Doors talked strangely: Some said, Did you not perswade us that the King was against the Irish Rebellion? |
A27006 | But the other cryed out, Do you not hear now, my Lord, the impudence and unreasonableness of these brazen- faced Villains, that will never be content? |
A27006 | But the other urged,[ Will not all our past Experience warn you? |
A27006 | But were found you any M ● ● k of Concord in my Book, as with any Bishops but the Protestant Bishops and their Followers? |
A27006 | But what are all these Words of mine to the Agreement? |
A27006 | But what do you alledge against me? |
A27006 | But what if the Bishop give me liberty to put in the word[ unlawfully] or to Subscribe only in that sence; may I not then lawfully do it? |
A27006 | But what if there be no Preachers to be had? |
A27006 | But what is the Thought or Word of Man? |
A27006 | But what is this National Church which is so contrary to Christ''s Catholick Church? |
A27006 | But what is this to Rome, any more than to Ierusalem or Alexandria? |
A27006 | But what our likeness to God is, is the Question: Why may it not admit this Explication? |
A27006 | But what will not Ignorance make men say? |
A27006 | But when we have all forsaken our Churches and Offices for peace with you, is all the work done? |
A27006 | But who shall be the Judge? |
A27006 | But will Mr. Lambe regard the Judgment of one that differeth from him as I do? |
A27006 | But with them and you it is the Thing in Controversie, Whether they are lawful Things, or not? |
A27006 | But, if you hold not to this, what shall we do? |
A27006 | By what Law is both Silence and Famine made their due? |
A27006 | Can all Men know you by this to be Christ''s Disciples? |
A27006 | Can not a Bishop lawfully advise the King to do it, if the King ask his Advice? |
A27006 | Can not the Subjects endeavour it if the King command them? |
A27006 | Can not the Subjects petition, and the Parliament speak and vote without him, and petition him also? |
A27006 | Can you certainly say, That the Church- Government is so purely Divine and Perfect, as that no Reformation is either necessary or lawful? |
A27006 | Charity covereth infirmities, and thinketh no evil, and shall we find them( and make them) in our Brethren? |
A27006 | Charity( or Christian Love) and Unity are the great vital Graces of the Christian Church: And oh, how wofully do these Men violate and destroy it? |
A27006 | Christ gathereth, and will you scatter? |
A27006 | Consider what you do? |
A27006 | Contempt of your Authority; and can he then be Saved? |
A27006 | Could not the King have pleased himself without us? |
A27006 | Could you do more to extirpate Episcopacy, than to make it hateful to the People, by making it hurtful? |
A27006 | Dare you deny, that many of your Silenced Brethren Study as hard as you to know the Truth, and have as good Capacity? |
A27006 | Dare you say, That you are not ignorant of plainer and greater things than we suffer about? |
A27006 | Deus Unus est: De Uno Deo Unus est Christus: Qui rebaptizatur jam Christianus fuerat: Quomodo dici potest iterum Christianus? |
A27006 | Did Christ disown them all, and yet was he their Head, and they his Body? |
A27006 | Did all the Gospel Precepts of Love and Holy Communion cease, as soon as Infant Baptism prevailed? |
A27006 | Did he ever say, that your New Subscription, Declaration, Oath, or Re- ordination are Lawful? |
A27006 | Did not one of you tell me, that you thought any Congregation was better to have none, then such as I? |
A27006 | Did not this then confirm the Obligation? |
A27006 | Did not you help to Banish them Five Miles from( not the Court only) but all Cities and Corporations, and Places of their former Ministery? |
A27006 | Did the Ancient Discipline, not enforced by the Sword for 300 years, do less good than yours? |
A27006 | Did the Convocation and Parliament contrive and impose things, which they themselves did judge to be of no use? |
A27006 | Did they ever then subject any Baptism to the Bishop of Rome? |
A27006 | Did they not know that it belongeth to the Prelates, and not to such as we, to deprive Men of their Liberty in praying? |
A27006 | Did they not take as wise a course for the Churche''s concord and the avoiding of Schism, as either the English or Roman Bishops take? |
A27006 | Did you ever see or hear our Reasons to prove that 〈 ◊ 〉 which we took for such? |
A27006 | Do I not cite Downame, and others, as Protestant Bishops, who yet maintain it? |
A27006 | Do any Casuists in the World teach such Doctrine, That a former Oath is null, because some Conveniencies required the taking of a later? |
A27006 | Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the Iudgment Seats? |
A27006 | Do not you startle to hear the Catholick Church called the World? |
A27006 | Do these well consist? |
A27006 | Do they not know into what Poverty London is brought by the late Fire, and want of Trade? |
A27006 | Do they not know that if Parliaments be destroyed, their Lives and Estates are meerly at the Will and Mercy of the Conquerour? |
A27006 | Do we not Teach them not to believe us? |
A27006 | Do we not now see with what Mind he would have gone himself with an Army into Ireland to fight against them? |
A27006 | Do we not see that the English is best? |
A27006 | Do you intend that he shall do it by Consent of his Synod, or a Presbytery; or by his own Power alone? |
A27006 | Do you not confess, that you are not Infallible? |
A27006 | Do you not grant the Cause in Hand? |
A27006 | Do you not hold, That God must be first obeyed, and none against him? |
A27006 | Do you not know that Conformists will not endure us in this private Diligence which you speak of? |
A27006 | Do you now come and tell us, that we have great reason to fear the utter ruin of the Protestant Religion? |
A27006 | Do you really desire that every Congregation may have an able, godly Minister? |
A27006 | Do you suppose your Reader one that never read Church- History? |
A27006 | Do you think that Man that shall say Christ died but for half the Saints themselves, to be ever the better for that strict Opinion? |
A27006 | Do you think that you are now bound to keep this Covenant, and to believe and live according to it? |
A27006 | Do you think this is good arguing? |
A27006 | Do you well know what sort of Ministers are in too many Parishes of England? |
A27006 | Do your Consciences never startle, when you think of Silencing 1800 such Ministers? |
A27006 | Doth any Prince scruple the removing of an intolerable Pilot or Captain from a Ship? |
A27006 | Doth any doubt of it? |
A27006 | Doth he judge Ecclesiastically, who speaketh not a word, nor medleth with the Cause any more than any one in the Congregation? |
A27006 | Doth he not break this Oath, who should endeavour to change the Person Governing, as well as he that would change the Form of Government? |
A27006 | Doth not one, and that a Presbyter declare or publish it? |
A27006 | Doth not the Conscience of your own Frailty, and imperfect Knowledge moderate you? |
A27006 | Doth not the Experience of all Ages prove it past doubt? |
A27006 | Doth not this give the Lie to all our Preaching the contrary to them in the Pulpit? |
A27006 | Doth not your Cause plainly bear an Image contrary to that of God? |
A27006 | Doth their kind of Interest tempt you more than ● our own to partiality? |
A27006 | Doth there need no more to be said for the Ceremonies? |
A27006 | Downame, Stoughton,& c. Oh, how great a Number and how excellent, almost matchless Men? |
A27006 | Durst you have said to whole Countries, Never Assemble to Worship God by Solemn Praises; Never baptize any; Never communicate in the Lord''s Supper? |
A27006 | EUM qui ad Deum so conversum esse professus est, Paganum vocas? |
A27006 | Either it is our Duty to reform, and to recover our Liberties, and relieve our Country, and punish Delinquents, or it is not? |
A27006 | Else what should Men do with Curates, if they must always Read themselves? |
A27006 | Especially where the Maintenance is Publick, and given for the Work, and the Work is for the Publick Good? |
A27006 | Even them that are in Christ Jesus? |
A27006 | God be Merciful to me a Sinner? |
A27006 | Had Christ no Church for One Thousand Two Hundred Years in all the World, that a Christian ought to join with in local Communion? |
A27006 | Had you nothing but[ Suspicion] and[ Opinion] to oppugn? |
A27006 | Hath God need of Lies and Perjury to his Service? |
A27006 | Hath Popery been no better resisted by you in those Places whence you Bunished us? |
A27006 | Have high and low been no better instructed and prefered by you? |
A27006 | Have the Laws of the Land secured any of these to us against your Canons? |
A27006 | Have you been bringing our Religion to no better a pass? |
A27006 | Have you well considered that God''s Unity is the first of his Attributes next his Being? |
A27006 | He askt her, Is it this Man, or that Man, or the other Man, or any there? |
A27006 | Hereupon there was great talk upon the Question, Whether the way of Indulgence, or the way of Comprehension were more desirable? |
A27006 | How could they know these things beforehand? |
A27006 | How few of the Infidels, Socinians, gross Ignorants, or scandalous here in London, are by the Witnesses accused to the Ministers as such? |
A27006 | How is he an Independent Judge where he is no Iudge? |
A27006 | How is he by Office a Teacher, who hath not Authority to Teach? |
A27006 | How many Parishes there be in a Diocess, and Persons in a Parish, who are to be the Objects of this Discipline? |
A27006 | How many Sacraments hath Christ ordained,& c? |
A27006 | How many Sacraments of the Covenant of Grace, hath Christ Ordained in his Church? |
A27006 | How many Thousands in this Land and Scotland never knew of the King''s Declaration against the Covenant? |
A27006 | How many hundred Years did prohibited Pastors teach and guide the Churches? |
A27006 | How much more, under the Gospel, would God have Externals and Modals stoop to the Substance? |
A27006 | How now can Mr. Baxter call those Men that so publish,& c. faithful Friends to Rome? |
A27006 | How ordinarily do you say, That were it not for the Sword and Corporal Penalty, who would care for Excommunication? |
A27006 | How prove you it lawful to Assent and Consent to a doubled 〈 ◊ 〉 that Infants baptized and dying before actual Sin, are saved? |
A27006 | How prove you it lawful to assent and consent to deny Christian Communion to all that are not Confirmed by the Bishop, or willing to be so? |
A27006 | How shall we bear the cryes of poor People for the Bread of Life? |
A27006 | How should such an Attempt be managed? |
A27006 | How tender is Christ of his weakest Members? |
A27006 | How then could all beforehand set a bound how far to go? |
A27006 | How then could that dispense with their Vows, which they never knew of, nor possibly could know of, being in the Parliaments Garrisons or Quarters? |
A27006 | How will you absolve us from our Ordination Vow? |
A27006 | I also ask, Were not Constantius and Valens( tho Erroneous) Lawful Princes? |
A27006 | I ask therefore, must we acknowledge the Pope to be universal Bishop; or must we not? |
A27006 | I conceive they are:: For if Licensed at the time of the Act made, what need any new License? |
A27006 | I differ more from this than all the rest: Is it not enough that the Party may Appeal to the Presbytery? |
A27006 | I have asked them further, Whether a Vow turn not a licet into an oportet? |
A27006 | I have asked them further, Whether they would not call this a Change of Government de specie, or according to the sence of the Act? |
A27006 | I have oft asked the Quakers lately, why they chose the same Ministers to revile, whom all the Drunkards and Swearers rail against? |
A27006 | I look not to live to end a Dispute by Writing, so many are my Infirmities, and are you content to stay so long before you have the benefit? |
A27006 | I looked to have most of the godly Ministers cast out, and what good could be done upon ignorant, vile, uncapable Men? |
A27006 | I never hear one Conformist that saith it all: And why may not one be forborn as well as another? |
A27006 | I told them that either they do intend such a Course or not: If they do, why should they think us criminal for knowing it? |
A27006 | I urged him to tell me what he thought was the Errour of my Mind or Affections, and what he would have me do towards the Cure? |
A27006 | If Agreement be desirable, Which side may more easily, and at a cheaper rate yield and alter, you or we? |
A27006 | If Christ had no Church, then where was his Wisdom, his Love, and his Power? |
A27006 | If God bless out Preaching and Writing to the good of many Souls, doth it not forbid us to repent, or at least make it very hard to us? |
A27006 | If God say to a Father, why didst thou not dedicate this Child to me, and solemnly enter him into Covenant with me? |
A27006 | If Independents may be taken in by us now, why did not you take them in when you were in power? |
A27006 | If Prelacy be as sinful as the Non- Subscribers foregoing Arguments would prove, can it be injustice to save a Man from Sin and Hell? |
A27006 | If Vaux think he must blow up the Parliament, and Ravailliack that he must stab a King, doth this necessitate them? |
A27006 | If Writings will be useful to you, may you not as well read what is written already? |
A27006 | If a Man swear Allegiance to the King to a wrong end, is he not therefore obliged to Allegiance by his Oath? |
A27006 | If a Part, then what Part must it be? |
A27006 | If all Families were ready and willing, how little a part of great Parishes would be taught? |
A27006 | If all these be not Duties, let the question be, Whether any one of them be a Duty? |
A27006 | If in the Church of Rome, the Conscience of a Subject forbid the use of Crucifixes, and Images, and Chrism, and Holy Water,& c. is it therefore they? |
A27006 | If in the right, it is a strange Question, Whether a Man may obey God, that hath the Magistrates leave, till he be enforced by Mens violence? |
A27006 | If it be only the Qualification of Legal Authority, or License, Why will not the giving of that qualifie them? |
A27006 | If it were but the Question, Which is the King''s Governing Will, which the People must obey? |
A27006 | If not — If you do, on what terms do you expect it? |
A27006 | If not, how can you judge so peremptorily of them? |
A27006 | If not, what mean you by such Intimations? |
A27006 | If not, what need had we of all these Disputes with them? |
A27006 | If not, whether you did not unhappily hence collect our Unhappiness? |
A27006 | If not, why should they blame you, or Separate? |
A27006 | If not, why use you the Argument of Antiquity for Episcopacy? |
A27006 | If once the Consciences of the Nation should be so deba ● ched, what good can be expected from them? |
A27006 | If so, doth it not also tye us to the Persons of Church- Governours; seeing they are equally here twisted, and Church- Government preposed? |
A27006 | If so, what his Ends may be in it? |
A27006 | If so, where was the Original? |
A27006 | If so, why will he not confer with me, as well as he hath done with Dr. Gunning? |
A27006 | If the Child shall die one hundred Years old, of what Age shall the old Man be? |
A27006 | If the Council of Basil were the Catholick Church, then you know how Eugenius was reputed; and then where is our Succession? |
A27006 | If the King made it, was he a Member of a Church or not? |
A27006 | If the King that made it was no Member of a Church, then he that is no Member of a Church, may institute a Church Form; but quo jure? |
A27006 | If the former, Where lyeth the danger? |
A27006 | If the former, what''s that to the Roman Church, that is but a( corrupted) Part? |
A27006 | If the whole, then few Ministers or Bishops must be so accepted, for who is known to all Christians in the World? |
A27006 | If there be enough, why did you permit so many drunken, sottish Readers, and so many hundred wicked Livers, which the Church is not well rid of yet? |
A27006 | If there be need of any Reformation, is it not a Covenant against Repentance and Obedience to God, to covenant never to endeavour it at all? |
A27006 | If there were Protestants cast into China, and had the Opportunity as the Jesuits have, what should they do? |
A27006 | If they ask why I Conform not? |
A27006 | If they be, What then? |
A27006 | If they had desired it, how easy had it been for them to have dasht out that one Clause[ or to this Sense]? |
A27006 | If they have, why have so many Families formerly been undone, for such Exercises as these? |
A27006 | If they represent any higher power, What is it? |
A27006 | If they will not, who can help it? |
A27006 | If they would, then why not with us also that are of the same Judgment? |
A27006 | If this were declared, who of all the Parliament''s Army would not take this part of the Oath? |
A27006 | If to all Corporations and Cities( where Churches only were planted at first) why not also to the Villages? |
A27006 | If where Souls need the Number of Twenty or Ten Teachers, all may be forbidden save one, why not that one also? |
A27006 | If you are for such forbidden strictness of Practice, why do you not answer it in your Opinions about Grace? |
A27006 | If you are not against them, why are you against our Desires of encouragement in them? |
A27006 | If you ask, Who is better? |
A27006 | If you ask, Who shall be Iudge? |
A27006 | If you ask, what necessity there can be of Ordination sine manum Impositione? |
A27006 | If you do not, to what sence or purpose is this Answer? |
A27006 | If you join with them, how know you what Religion they are of? |
A27006 | If you say, Why then did you use it? |
A27006 | If you shall say that the Case is not alike betwixt the Succession of Popes and other Bishops: I ask, where''s the difference? |
A27006 | If you think our Nonconformity our Duty, what meaneth your Address to us as such, and your Counsels aforementioned? |
A27006 | If you think their Baptism a Nullity? |
A27006 | In Case that a Man pretend to have the King''s Commission, but doth not shew it me, what am I then to do? |
A27006 | In Transplanting both Moderators and Pastors, should not either their own Consent, or the Presbytery''s, or People''s be made necessary? |
A27006 | In the Litany, instead of Fornication and all other deadly Sin, would it not satisfie thus? |
A27006 | In what Parish of England should a Man expect leave to visit the Sick, when sent for, rather than in St. Martins? |
A27006 | Is Christ in these Saints, or his he not? |
A27006 | Is Provoking, Excommunicating them the way to reconcile the Publick Ministers and Churches? |
A27006 | Is all the Diocesan Frame such, and the Lay- Chancellors Power of the Keys also? |
A27006 | Is any Minister required to give the Sacrament of Christ''s Body and Blood to any unbaptized Person? |
A27006 | Is he no Person? |
A27006 | Is it an honour to be strict Sinners and Destroyers of the Church and Holy Love? |
A27006 | Is it from our State at home? |
A27006 | Is it in the increase of Papists, as to Quality or Number of persons? |
A27006 | Is it likely to be of God which is so pleasing to the Flesh, the Papists and the Devil, as our ceasing to preach the Gospel would be? |
A27006 | Is it not as sinful to Write and Counsel when prohibited, as to Preach? |
A27006 | Is it not the English Form of Church- Government by Diocesans that is here meant; and not some other sort of Episcopacy which is not here? |
A27006 | Is it the King''s Coercive Government of the Church, by the Sword, which is here meant, according to the Oath of Supremacy? |
A27006 | Is it unsafer to give a Preacher leave to utter a few Sentences of the Sacrament at the Delivery, than to Preach a whole Sermon of it? |
A27006 | Is not Christ''s way, and the first Churches, most likely to save the People''s Souls, and yours to damn them? |
A27006 | Is not God''s Worship perfect without our Ceremonies, in its Integrals as well as its Essentials? |
A27006 | Is not a Christ that comes on so low a Design, and settles a Church of so narrow a Space and short Continuance next to no Church? |
A27006 | Is not the Doctrinal Determination about the Saving of Baptized Infants( and other such like) of use to tell us its Doctrine is taken to be true? |
A27006 | Is not the Kalendar and Direction for reading Scripture, of use to tell you what Days to keep, and what Chapters to read? |
A27006 | Is not the Rubrick of use to direct you in the several Offices? |
A27006 | Is not the World much abused when they are told that it is the Presbyterians, that are for excommunicating Princes, and not the Episcopal? |
A27006 | Is not this Christ, in Power and great Glory? |
A27006 | Is not this Christian Filial Duty of Presbyters toward the Bishops their Fathers? |
A27006 | Is not this a groundless, and slanderous insinuation? |
A27006 | Is not this the next Step to Flat Infidelity? |
A27006 | Is not this to make every Minister an Independent, Ecclesiastical Judge? |
A27006 | Is not this true; How much of it do you plainly maintain in this Writing? |
A27006 | Is the Canonical Subscription and Oath of Obedience, and Re- ordination,& c. no more? |
A27006 | Is the Gospel grown so indifferent to you, in Comparison of your 〈 ◊ 〉 indifferent? |
A27006 | Is the Liturgy all that Nonconformists stick at? |
A27006 | Is there not a wise Man among you? |
A27006 | Is there therefore a Disparity because they do alike? |
A27006 | Is this an Odious or Scandalous Request? |
A27006 | Is this norrowness of special loving Communion answerable to the Principles of Universal Redemption and Grace, wherein I suspect you go beyond me? |
A27006 | Is this your account of your undertaken Stewardship? |
A27006 | It is a great Doubt among Casuists, Whether and when the Breach of Humane Laws oblige Men to any other than Humane Penalties? |
A27006 | It is true( except Mr. Fisher, and some few) they were not ejected, but enjoyed their places; And did not you as well as they? |
A27006 | It is well that the Elders Consent is required: but I think it should be the Congregation''s: And what if the Elders dissent? |
A27006 | It was a great Strait that People were in, especially that dwell near any busie Officer, or malicious Enemy( as who doth not?) |
A27006 | It were well worth the knowing what you mean by the Catholick Church, do you mean the whole, or only a Part? |
A27006 | Know you not how much is added since? |
A27006 | Lastly, Whether this following Sense, in which we could take it, be the true sense of the Oath? |
A27006 | Many Parties may Plead one Medium, one Scripture, for contrary Opinions: Are they, Ergo, alike sound and justifiable? |
A27006 | May not a Man be baptized that is not certain that the Gospel is true, if he believe it so far as to venture Life and Soul, and all upon it? |
A27006 | May not a man premeditate a few sentences as well as a sermon? |
A27006 | May not the Church of England be more evidently beautiful, large and safe hereby? |
A27006 | May not the Suspended Preach? |
A27006 | May not the illegitimate Ordainer imponere manus? |
A27006 | May not we crave that necessary things may be secured to us, without being interpreted to seem to insinuate Accusations against you? |
A27006 | Might not a Subject by Arms defend the King, and rescue his Life, against his Will and Commission? |
A27006 | Mr. Baxter was neither ignorant of, nor unconcerned in, nor unfit for such a Work as this; who knew him better than he knew himself? |
A27006 | Mr. Geery that died at the news of the King''s Dearh? |
A27006 | Must one sort of Christians have the Soul of holy Communion without the Body, and carry the Knife naked, while you deny them the Sheath? |
A27006 | Must the People needs have him or none as long as he lives? |
A27006 | Must they needs be damned by thousands, without making any question of it? |
A27006 | Must we be all divided in this Day of Peril, when we are ready to be assaulted by the common Enemy? |
A27006 | Nay, durst you adventure to neglect it your self? |
A27006 | Nay, durst you encourage him to neglect it? |
A27006 | Nay, is any Minister forced or required to give the Sacrament to any notoriously wicked, or prophane Person? |
A27006 | Nay, shall the same Man so long refuse to tell us his Mind, and when he hath done, blame us because we understand it not? |
A27006 | Nay, we had many Church Papists that went not so far? |
A27006 | Nequa suspicio gratiae sit in scribendo? |
A27006 | Now I would know, If lie dying in such a Parish, must I confess my Sin to no Man but such an one as this? |
A27006 | Now all the vain question here is, Which of these two Parties shall be called The Church of England? |
A27006 | Now what do you yet want ad esse Ministri? |
A27006 | Now whether we shall dispute de necessitate ordinationis ad officium verum& legitimum proprie& primario sic dictum,& in foro Dei? |
A27006 | Now which of all these should you join with? |
A27006 | O how holy and blessed a Life, and how easie a Death? |
A27006 | O how little is it that wrathful Enemies can do against us, in comparison of what our sin, and the Justice of God can do? |
A27006 | On this account your Doctors teach the Salvation of Heathens,( Are those of your Church?) |
A27006 | Or Spiritual Government by the Keys? |
A27006 | Or all that is in it? |
A27006 | Or an intolerable Minister from the Church? |
A27006 | Or an intolerable Officer from the Court, though it be to his loss? |
A27006 | Or are these Men as much stricter than Christ, as the Pharisees were about his Converse and the Sabbath? |
A27006 | Or both? |
A27006 | Or can it be every day done, and no one obliged to do it? |
A27006 | Or can not King and Parliament do good by Laws to the Church or Commonwealth, whenever a single Person or a few do suffer by it? |
A27006 | Or do we come to be his Instruments, to give away the Peoples Liberties, and set up that which was begun? |
A27006 | Or do you believe that they meant no more? |
A27006 | Or doth not a Lay- Chancellor exercise the Keys? |
A27006 | Or else if you read a Prayer,& c. Either you determine these things to the Churches hurt, or not? |
A27006 | Or else, that they be resisted, as not Commissioned, because their Commission is unlawful? |
A27006 | Or every shewn Commission to be current, and not surreptitious, though contrary to Law? |
A27006 | Or for Subjects to endeavour it by Petition? |
A27006 | Or from abroad? |
A27006 | Or how far may a good Christian Communicate with such without just Scandal given or taken? |
A27006 | Or how know they what other particular Churches are in their Communion? |
A27006 | Or if it were ex tempore, is he fit to be a Preacher that can not speak a few sentences on so great a subject, with safe and edifying words? |
A27006 | Or if they must beg or live on others Charity, where shall they have it, if they take your Course? |
A27006 | Or if you do, whether they must separate? |
A27006 | Or in Controversies of Religion, who before a General Council? |
A27006 | Or is this a time to join with the Enemies of the Protestant Religion, to draw all the People to forsake them? |
A27006 | Or may he not himself enter by Imposition of Hands, and yet be illegitimate, and his Calling null? |
A27006 | Or of the matter of Canons, than of Civil and Common and Statute Laws? |
A27006 | Or only as ad Officium analogicum secundario& minus proprie in foro tantum ecclesiae sic dictum? |
A27006 | Or that our Authority only is infallible in judging of them? |
A27006 | Or that the English Diocesan Frame may be Sworn to for Obedience? |
A27006 | Or that there would be none to contest against them in the Convocation? |
A27006 | Or to Subscribe to all that is contained in our Book of Ordination? |
A27006 | Or was his Declararation about Ecclesiastical Affairs a sin? |
A27006 | Or were we Consecrated to the Ministry in our Ordination, on that Condition, to preach till forbidden unjustly? |
A27006 | Or what Law did ratifie many Articles of your Visitation Books? |
A27006 | Or what if he had taken down all their Power, and given them a Writ of Ease, and therewith left them, durante vita, their Estates and Honours? |
A27006 | Or what necessity is there of Re- ordination? |
A27006 | Or whether a Vow bind not to a Duty? |
A27006 | Or will you leave out all that you can not prove to have been then used, and that as necessary, as now it is supposed? |
A27006 | Or, if the Law be changed, doth not this Oath still bind us? |
A27006 | Or, is it meant only of Monarchy as such? |
A27006 | Or, that King or Parliament have not power to make, or Endeavour any alteration of your Church- Government, if they had sworn it? |
A27006 | Or, to attempt the just Reformation of the Parish? |
A27006 | Promise and long Practice were plain; was the Repeal also plain? |
A27006 | Publick Pennance — And why not? |
A27006 | Quere, If the whole Synod have no governing Power over its Members, hath the President of that Synod any qua talis? |
A27006 | Quis nescit, primam historiae Legem esse, me quid falsi dicere audeat? |
A27006 | SIR, YOU being so well acquainted with Mr. Baxter, I desire you will please to ask him, whether he be the King''s Chaplain in Ordinary, or not? |
A27006 | SIR, YOur first Question is, Whether the way of Comprehension or Indulgence be more desirable? |
A27006 | Shall Gratitude be thought a Crime, though more copious in the Materials of it, than may every way consist with the stricter Bounds of Accuracy? |
A27006 | Shall Hypocrites be free from Conviction and Condemnation, because wicked Men call the Godly Hypocrites? |
A27006 | Shall Rebells be justified, because some innocent Men are called Rebels? |
A27006 | Shall he have the Communion of the Church, who will rather be cast out of it than repent? |
A27006 | Shall that hinder the Relation or not? |
A27006 | Shall the Presbytery have a Negative Voice in the Ordination, or be Cyphers? |
A27006 | Shall the instructing of the Peoples Souls so much depend on every Word in all these Canons? |
A27006 | Shall we confess a Schismatical Church for a true Church? |
A27006 | Shall we offer such a Sacrifice to him that is most Holy, and this under pretence that we desire to serve him by the preaching of his Gospel? |
A27006 | Should not Bishops be the most skilful and forward to heal, and the most backward to divide or persecute? |
A27006 | Should not Dividers fear least Christ say to them that castoff most of his Holy Members for this Opinion sake, Ye did it unto me? |
A27006 | Should your Sect be judged more visible than the whole Christian World? |
A27006 | So that any Stranger that had but heard and seen all this, would have asked, What Monster of Villany is this Man? |
A27006 | Suppose the Parish- Churches should be no true Churches, is it destructive to particular Churches to join with the Parish- Assemblies? |
A27006 | That God hath made Ecelesiastical Officers the ordinary authoritative Judges of this Question, Who is the qualified Person? |
A27006 | That I would have an acknowledgment that we are true Presbyters and Pastors? |
A27006 | That after the first Question in the Catechism,[ What is your Name?] |
A27006 | That had rather the Church doors were shut up, and we lived like Heathens, than we should Worship God without a Bishops Commands? |
A27006 | That so the Reformation here may have only private Toleration as we have, till some Disorder is said to forfeit it? |
A27006 | The Adult is not to Sign himself, but the Minister who is Christ''s Agent( not so much as asking, wilt thou be signed?) |
A27006 | The Conclusion therefore might be granted without any Decision of the Controversie: For the Question is not, Whether we may swear to do such things? |
A27006 | The Despondencies you mention are unreasonable: Will you conclude you can not suffer, before you are called to Suffering? |
A27006 | The King doth not choose every Rural Dean himself: And is it any more destructive of his Power to do it by the Synods, than by the Diocesan? |
A27006 | The Question about the Marriage, is not An factum valeat? |
A27006 | The Question now is, What we got by procuring this Declaration of the King''s, and how it was accepted by the People? |
A27006 | The first you know they are unfit for: If you think otherwise, would you that your Judgments should have such kind of helps to have set them right? |
A27006 | The great talk at this time was, Who were the burners of the City? |
A27006 | The question is not here, Who is commanded by this Act? |
A27006 | Then it seems the Death of one Bishop, or two or three, doth actually devolve their Charge to another, and who knoweth which other? |
A27006 | There are but these two Questions then before you; What is the Cause of your Trouble? |
A27006 | There is great Controversie in the World, Whether Subjects have a Propriety in their Estates, which is not at the will of Princes? |
A27006 | There was then a Church- Form before the Church of England; And who made that Church usque ad Originem? |
A27006 | Therefore the Question is, Whether this Oath be not contrary to those former Laws, and do not settle the Bishops and Chancellors as fast as the King? |
A27006 | Therefore the old Rhymer said against the Prelates, Christus dixit quodam loco[ Vos non sic] nec dixit joco: Dixit suis: Ergo isti Cujus sunt? |
A27006 | They are undermining the Church and Ministry, and shall we seek peace with such? |
A27006 | They have Multitudes in their Communion that know not what Baptism is, nor to what use, nor who Christ is, whether God or Man? |
A27006 | They said, What were the Lords of England but William the Conquerour''s Colonels? |
A27006 | This is spoken indefinitely of the Presbyterians: Where have I lived? |
A27006 | This may follow[ When was this Name given you?] |
A27006 | Truth and Goodness make Men worthy, but what can they derive from Men? |
A27006 | Twenty Parties may say they are all in the right, doth it follow that they are all so, because they make the same Pretonce to it? |
A27006 | Upon that Supposition we have no Controversie with you; Then what need any of this adoe? |
A27006 | WHETHER may a Christian Magistrate tolerate Liberty of Conscience in Religion and Church Discipline without Scandal? |
A27006 | WHat is your Name? |
A27006 | WHether Particular Churches be of Divine Institution? |
A27006 | Was it a Duty then, and is it unlawful now? |
A27006 | Was it injustice to put down the Abbots? |
A27006 | Was it so when Bishops were cast out heretofore by Emperours or Councils? |
A27006 | Was not Bishop Carleton at the Synod of Dort with them? |
A27006 | Was our Common Prayer used, and necessary to a Pastor''s Liberty, in the first or second Age? |
A27006 | Was that Church unmoveable in Persecution, when the Head of it( Pope Marcellinus) offered Incense to Idols? |
A27006 | Was the Eunuch Acts 8. subjected to the Pope, that only saith[ I believe that Iesus Christ is the Son of God] and was Baptized? |
A27006 | Was there ever such a thing as an Interpretation of the Bible by Apostolical Tradition, without which, no Scripture must be interpreted? |
A27006 | Were it but a meer probability, or possibility, who will have the better of it? |
A27006 | Were it not for entring upon an unpleasing and unprofitable Task, I would ask you, 1. Who that Iuncto of Presbyters was that dethroned the King? |
A27006 | Were not those, that Gildas called no Ministers, such, as too many now, obtruded on the People? |
A27006 | Were such Volumes as our Homili ● s then to be subscribed to? |
A27006 | Were the Cross, Surplice, and Restriction to kneeling in receiving the E ● charist enjoyned by Peter or Paul, or any in the first Age? |
A27006 | Were the Low Countries so far from England that they could not possibly have borrowed a Bishop to Ordain? |
A27006 | Were you certain of this by Gods Word heretofore? |
A27006 | What Act of Parliament ratified your Canons? |
A27006 | What Law imposed Altars, Rails, and the forcing of Ministers to read the Book for Dancing on the Lord''s Days? |
A27006 | What Man can doubt whether all things in the Book were intended for some use or other; though not each part to the same use? |
A27006 | What Man of Worth could or did ever yet absolutely escape being traduced by some or other? |
A27006 | What Mercy did you receive from God in this Covenant of Baptism? |
A27006 | What Nation is there that must not acknowledge the Original from the Sword? |
A27006 | What Party did our Author wholly side with? |
A27006 | What Promise or Certainty of the contrary? |
A27006 | What Qualification is it that that they want? |
A27006 | What Remedy have I, if any will say that I mean Rulers by these words as Silencers and Persecutors? |
A27006 | What Sectary would not be such a Healer? |
A27006 | What a strait is a Man in among People of such Extremes? |
A27006 | What be the Commandments of God, which you have Covenanted to observe? |
A27006 | What did your Godfathers and Godmothers do for you in Baptism? |
A27006 | What hands then is the Church faln into, if it be so used? |
A27006 | What hope is there of Success? |
A27006 | What if I only were faulty? |
A27006 | What if I should grant that all the Fathers would have Bishops to have the sole Power of Ordaining ordinarily, and for Order Sake? |
A27006 | What if a Parliament- man make a Speech, or pass a Vote for it, are you sure that he sinneth? |
A27006 | What if the King should by Commission require some Alterations, or command us to endeavour it, are you sure that we are all bound to disobey him? |
A27006 | What if you lived in a Popish Country, would you swear to obey the Pope in licitis& honestis? |
A27006 | What is required of Persons to be Baptized? |
A27006 | What is so much predicated through all the Gospel? |
A27006 | What is the inward Spiritual Grace? |
A27006 | What is this to the King himself, who took it long after his Father''s Death, over whom no man had a dispensing Power? |
A27006 | What shall God''s Worship and our Congregations do? |
A27006 | What should I tell you of more, who I perceive are made believe the Crow is white? |
A27006 | What should the People in New- England do, if there were not Ministers among the Indians? |
A27006 | What should then be the Reason, that when he hath had any Thoughts tending that way, such Terrors, like a flaming Sword should pierce his Soul? |
A27006 | What tell you them of other Mens Actions? |
A27006 | What that Discipline is which he hath instituted? |
A27006 | What the better were all those for the Laws that were Silenced, or driven into Forreign Lands? |
A27006 | What was become of the Glory of his Redemption, and his Catholick Church, that was to continue to the End? |
A27006 | What was done for you in your Baptism? |
A27006 | What we mean by Anabaptists? |
A27006 | What''s this to all those that took it after the present King had taken it, and published a Declaration for it? |
A27006 | What''s this to all those that took it when the King was dead, and therefore could not dispense with their Oaths? |
A27006 | What? |
A27006 | When Forms of Liturgy came up, had they not divers in the same Empire, and also changed them in particular Churches? |
A27006 | When as the Gospel worketh by the Ear, so the Cross by the Eye and Thought: It is not Grace that the Gospel is to work? |
A27006 | When did we hear of any of them Excomunicate? |
A27006 | When had the Truth a greater, or so great and glorious a Cloud of Witnesses? |
A27006 | When this was done, the next Question was, Who should be Lord General, and what new Officers should be put in, or old ones continued? |
A27006 | When was this Name given you? |
A27006 | When you plead so much for Parish- Churches, are you therein a Nonconformist, and is your Address to your self? |
A27006 | Where Atheists, Infidels, and the most Beastly Sinners are Members of the Church of England? |
A27006 | Where is that Commentary that the World never knew, and yet all must know it that will be saved? |
A27006 | Where then can you imagine any remaining difference? |
A27006 | Whether Christ hath instituted any Church- Discipline? |
A27006 | Whether God doth use to leave any of his Servants to such bitter Temptations when they are about a Service acceptable to him? |
A27006 | Whether I shall eat once or twice a day, or once in two days? |
A27006 | Whether I were best take any Notice of the Offence of the Author of the Sober Word, and say as much to him only as I have here done? |
A27006 | Whether I were best take notice of the Anabaptists Offence? |
A27006 | Whether King and Parliament may not alter it, by altering the Laws? |
A27006 | Whether Licenses Preceding the Act be within the meaning of the Act? |
A27006 | Whether Parliament Men may not lawfully speak and vote for it? |
A27006 | Whether Rulers may alter the Apostolick Institution? |
A27006 | Whether a Bishop be a distinct Order from Presbyter or not, or whether they have power of sole Ordination or no? |
A27006 | Whether he be restrained by the Act of Vniformity to Preach a Funeral Sermon or other occasional Sermon? |
A27006 | Whether in these Synods one shall be Moderator? |
A27006 | Whether it be our Duty to seek Peace with the Anabaptists? |
A27006 | Whether it was not an Episcopal Parliament( forty to one, if not an hundred) that began the War against the King? |
A27006 | Whether may and ought a tender Conscience exercise and use his Liberty and Freedom without Violence inforced by Superiors? |
A27006 | Whether petitioning, or other peaceable means, before allowed by Law, be not[ any endeavour] and a violation of this Oath? |
A27006 | Whether the Admiral and Sea- Captains were not almost all Episcopal Conformists? |
A27006 | Whether the Archbishop of York were not the Parliaments Major General? |
A27006 | Whether the Episcopal Gentry did not more of them take the Engagement( and many Episcopal Ministers) than the Presbyterians? |
A27006 | Whether the General and Commanders of the Army, twenty to one, were not Conformists? |
A27006 | Whether the Major Generals in the Countries were not almost all Episcopal Conformists? |
A27006 | Whether the Parish Assemblies are such? |
A27006 | Whether the Practice of the Church till Cyprian''s time be not a probable Notice to us what was the Apostolical instituted Government? |
A27006 | Whether the Regiment Ecclesiastical by Bishops hath not continued throughout the Christian Church ever since the Apostles, untill Calvin''s days? |
A27006 | Whether the Rubrick should not be mended, where it is,( that the Lessons should be sung in a plain tune) why not read with a distinct voice?) |
A27006 | Whether the Vocation of Bishops be an Order Lawful in it self? |
A27006 | Whether the old Iewish Church had not set Forms of Prayer? |
A27006 | Whether the present Ministry in the Church of England( as it now separated from their lawful Superiors or Bishops) be not Schismatical? |
A27006 | Whether there are not in congregational Churches such things which are not plainly instituted in Scripture? |
A27006 | Whether there be Bread after Consecration? |
A27006 | Whether they in Holland do so, I know not: But if they do, Do you think it well? |
A27006 | Whether this extendeth to the Case of King Iohn, who delivered the Kingdom to the Pope? |
A27006 | Whether was there ever since the Apostle''s days so much as one national Church governed by a Presbytery without a Bishop untill Calvin''s Days? |
A27006 | Whether we did profess that our private catechizing alone did all that Good, without our publick preaching or rather with it? |
A27006 | Whether we must take every Affirmer to have a Commission, if he shew it not? |
A27006 | Whether[ not at any time,& c.] tye us not to disobey the King, if he should command us, by Consultation or Conference, to endeavour it? |
A27006 | Whether[ not lawful] extendeth only to the Law of the Land; or also to the Law of God in Nature? |
A27006 | Whether[ upon any pretence whatsoever] refer not to[ any Commissionated by him] as well as[ to the King] himself? |
A27006 | Which be the Ten Commandments? |
A27006 | Which is the ruling Church? |
A27006 | Who gave you that Name? |
A27006 | Who more endeavoured to keep up Church Communion with them, by Pen, Discourse and Practise, though not exclusively? |
A27006 | Who more sharply handled, and more throughly wrote against, and reprehended total Separation from them than himself? |
A27006 | Who shall supply our Places? |
A27006 | Who then made it? |
A27006 | Who valued their Worth and Learning more than he did? |
A27006 | Whose honour is it that such Men seek? |
A27006 | Why are Infants Baptized? |
A27006 | Why did they never say, You must believe in, or be subject to the Pope of Rome, or you can not be saved? |
A27006 | Why do you not tell us what you stick at?] |
A27006 | Why do you say[ Since the Apostles days,] when you before spoke of the[ General and perpetual practice of the Church]? |
A27006 | Why doth not this Exception lie against such as are Outlawed in the Chancery, as well as against those that are Excommunicated? |
A27006 | Why doth the Ministers stand in Prayer, even in the Sacrament Prayer, while the People kneel? |
A27006 | Why make you not the same Laws about Physicians, that no Man must take any other than such a Sot, if it be his Lot to be appointed him? |
A27006 | Why may not I confess my Sins to more than one? |
A27006 | Why must I tell you whether you may read a Sermon( or Homily) of your own Writing, or another Man''s unto the People? |
A27006 | Why must an Extemporary fancy needs be the Author? |
A27006 | Why not always as well as once a Quarter?] |
A27006 | Why should Preachers be sent to the Americans rather than to St. Martins, St. Giles, and such like places? |
A27006 | Why should it be left to the Bishop''s Will, whether he will restore such a Penitent or not? |
A27006 | Why then are Infants baptized when by reason of ther tender Age they can not perform them? |
A27006 | Why then could it never be procured to have the word[ unlawfully] put into the Act? |
A27006 | Why then did not their Charity or yours shew the weakness of what we took for Proofs, nor ever answer our three last large Writings given in to them? |
A27006 | Why then is it not as meet that one Gesture be used by all in singing Psalms or hearing Sermons? |
A27006 | Why then( by Bishops) from reading the Scripture, or a Licens''d Book or Sermon? |
A27006 | Why what is the Scope of this your Writing, but to prove that we are not Pasters? |
A27006 | Will not common Reason think so by your Words, do they not imply it? |
A27006 | Will not more agree in the Creed, than in Aquinas''s Sums, if it were all true? |
A27006 | Will not your Principles lead to narrowness of holy Charity in Communication of worldly Goods, and destroy Christian Communion in this? |
A27006 | Will you appeal from this Century to those? |
A27006 | Will you do me the Favour as to tell me his Name? |
A27006 | Will you have a Pastor that shall not speak in the Name of the People to God? |
A27006 | Will you yet be guilty of those Men''s Blood?] |
A27006 | Wilt thou be Baptized in this Faith?] |
A27006 | With whom would these Men have held Communion if they had lived in any Age till two hundred Years ago? |
A27006 | Would any be Schismaticks for dissenting from Lay men''s power of the Keys, from Crossing,& c. if there were no such Laws? |
A27006 | Would not a fairer Answer have been better?] |
A27006 | Would not your Words make the ignorant believe that we have the Liberty of the Press, and may do it if we will? |
A27006 | Would they be so unfaithful as to hide a necessary Article? |
A27006 | Would this have been any injury to them? |
A27006 | Would you do as you do, if you loved your Neighbour as your selves, and loved not Superiority? |
A27006 | Would you have a Unity, and do you ever expect such a thing or not? |
A27006 | Would you have all those Ministers take this course that must lye in the Common Goal if they come within five Miles of the Place? |
A27006 | Would you have those Ministers take the Course which you describe, in the Parishes, where the generality of the People must be then untaught? |
A27006 | Would you have us avoid any Scripture or orderly Course, meerly because it is expressed in the Directory? |
A27006 | Written it is not, by Fathers, Popes, or Councils; and if unwritten, in whose Memory is it, and how learnt they it? |
A27006 | Yea, and where the Bishop, and Chancellour are the Judges, and none resisteth or controlleth them? |
A27006 | Yea, is he not come, in Power and great Glory? |
A27006 | Yea, must they needs govern them? |
A27006 | Yea, our own Children? |
A27006 | Yea, to my Friend that is no Priest? |
A27006 | Yea; or if a Convocation commanded it? |
A27006 | You create Impossibilities and Necessities upon your selves by your erronious Consciences? |
A27006 | You may see by that that I speak to Papists, why then would you intimate that it was to Protestant Bishops? |
A27006 | You say the Person well knoweth me( though I know not him) and dare trust himself,& c. why then will he not meet me to debate the Case? |
A27006 | You think our Particulars are too many already, and would you have more? |
A27006 | You would not forbear a Return to God from any gross Sin, for fear of grieving Men: Is not Schism a gross Sin? |
A27006 | Your Followers Souls are by you endangered, while you leave them in their Sin; will it endanger them to tell them of that Danger, and help them out? |
A27006 | Your second Question is, What abatement is desirable for Comprehension? |
A27006 | [ How many Sacraments hath Christ ordained?] |
A27006 | [ The variety of Iudgments:] But you never found the far greater variety among Papists? |
A27006 | a particular Church is therefore the Rule or Ruler to the rest, because it triumpheth over Heresy? |
A27006 | and Who gave you this Name?] |
A27006 | and a retirement into its Communion, called a Returning to the World? |
A27006 | and at how cheap and easy a rate, might I have prevented it? |
A27006 | and consequently an uninterrupted Succession of such Ordination be of the same Necessity? |
A27006 | and depriving so many Thousand Souls of their Ministry? |
A27006 | and for fasting and praying together for the Pardon of their Sins? |
A27006 | and how cometh our Silence and forsaking the Preaching of the Gospel to be our Duty during the need of so many Thousand Souls? |
A27006 | and how long? |
A27006 | and how much greater his quickening Life, that possesseth you with Love to God and Man? |
A27006 | and how was it lost, or changed into Episcopacy, and upon what Grounds or Motives? |
A27006 | and humbly craved his Patience, that I might ask him, How England had ever forfeited that Blessing, and unto whom the Forfeiture was made? |
A27006 | and if it speak de jure, that there should be no other, whether it yield not up the Cause? |
A27006 | and if some said they would have Bishops if they could, it is plain it was but few, for if most had been willing, what hindered them? |
A27006 | and malicious or unjust accusing, which indeed are sins? |
A27006 | and must that be granted you? |
A27006 | and must we repent of all our prohibited Writings to? |
A27006 | and shall not I imitate him? |
A27006 | and that they determined not against supposed Obligations to lower Changes of the Royal Government? |
A27006 | and the Office and work of Presbyters may be changed on pretence that now Bishops can do it without them? |
A27006 | and those true Organized Churches that have only such Ministers? |
A27006 | and to save all the Churches from such Calamity, for some fleshly abatements that follow to a few Persons? |
A27006 | and what Miscarriages will not false Principles and Faction hide? |
A27006 | and what is the Wickedness that he is guilty of? |
A27006 | and what were they Baptized into, but into the Name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost? |
A27006 | and whether his Laws and his Commission may not be contrary? |
A27006 | and whether you will not confess it impossible till one party change their Minds? |
A27006 | and why not to the President of the Association, for Peace? |
A27006 | and with what Authority? |
A27006 | and with what Honour to that Church? |
A27006 | and would not you your self rather submit to a Mass Priest, than to those whom you take for no Ministers at all? |
A27006 | and would you not then draw the People from acknowledging us such? |
A27006 | and yet Presbyters were more in Number than Bishops? |
A27006 | are there able faithful Men enough of your Way? |
A27006 | are they your God? |
A27006 | as that it is disobedience to our Fathers not to consent to their punishment? |
A27006 | at least to procure Unity and Peace in other things, after so long uncharitable Alienations, and doleful Effects of them in the Church and State? |
A27006 | but An fieri debeat? |
A27006 | but how should I prove it? |
A27006 | but preach and write so much as you did against Toleration of them? |
A27006 | but whether we may swear to obey them as our lawful Ordinaries in licitis& honestis? |
A27006 | but whether we may swear to obey those Men in that relation, and to do those things sub formali ratione obedientiae? |
A27006 | but who is obliged by the Covenant or Vow? |
A27006 | by what Persons? |
A27006 | can I honestly wish all undone again? |
A27006 | can they believe without hearing, and hear without preach ● ● ●? |
A27006 | can they do it in Newgate? |
A27006 | can we know Mens Hearts that will not open them to us? |
A27006 | could they help it? |
A27006 | deinde ne quid veri non audeat? |
A27006 | do you think it Lawful to ordain insufficient unmeet Men, if the Law of the Land so command you; what then are Christ''s Laws for? |
A27006 | for my part, I am not now able, must I therefore do nothing? |
A27006 | from the Universal Church in your Communion? |
A27006 | hath this Century, which hath been the only reforming Age, been worse than that before it, whose Corruptions it reformed? |
A27006 | have you sufficiently expressed the accountableness of Churches mutually, in case of Offence from Male- Administration and Church Censures? |
A27006 | he justifieth, and will you be he that shall condemn? |
A27006 | he reconcileth and uniteth, and will you divide? |
A27006 | how easily and safely might you grant them, without any wrong to your Consciences, or the Church? |
A27006 | how much easier is Christ''s Yoke than yours? |
A27006 | how seriously may the Episcopal say to the Presbyterian, it is your Error? |
A27006 | how shall their Rents and Charges be paid? |
A27006 | if we must, why do we not? |
A27006 | in what Place? |
A27006 | is he sharper upon them, then on the Presbyterians, Anabaptists, Prelates, where he thought or found them culpable? |
A27006 | is it a Sin to speak to Two Thousand at once, and a Duty to speak to them one by one, doing that a whole Year, which I can do in an Hour? |
A27006 | is there no Concord to be had with you but by giving up our poor People to such as these again? |
A27006 | must I that have hazarded my Life for many a single Sermon now repent of all? |
A27006 | must we do all this, or else be judged to Damnation by the Sectaries of Rome? |
A27006 | nequa simultatis? |
A27006 | not excepting any Infanfant of Pagan, Turk, or Atheist, or Insidel? |
A27006 | of what continuance? |
A27006 | or are they Respecters of Persons? |
A27006 | or did more intirely search into Affairs? |
A27006 | or do you take the Word[ Church] there also equivocally and improperly? |
A27006 | or how can they be taken for competent Witnesses in any Cause, or Persons meet for human converse? |
A27006 | or how can your Majesty place any Con ● idence in them, notwithstanding the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy which they take? |
A27006 | or how far the Liberty of Conscience therein may be used in observing or not observing them? |
A27006 | or how should those Preachers be regarded by their Auditors that dare wilfully violate their solemn Vows? |
A27006 | or is he not another Person? |
A27006 | or is it the Pastors that needlesly impose these Things, that are the Disturbers of the Church? |
A27006 | or is this good arguing? |
A27006 | or lay under greater Advantages for pious and just Informations? |
A27006 | or one Commission contrary to another? |
A27006 | or the Barons but his Majors? |
A27006 | or the Knights but his Captains? |
A27006 | or what Bonds can be supposed to oblige them? |
A27006 | or what Evil shall they ever after be thought to make Conscience of? |
A27006 | or what is its Authority and Honour? |
A27006 | or whether we were anew to dispute that Point? |
A27006 | or which? |
A27006 | or will not have such God- fathers the sole undertaking Covenanters, but will openly enter their own Children into that Covenant them ● selves? |
A27006 | or will you call his Prayers[ his own] which he puts up by Virtue of his Office, according to God''s Word? |
A27006 | or would you have had all these Ages have laid by all instituted Church Order and Worship? |
A27006 | shall we consent to the Exclusion of Infants from their Churches? |
A27006 | so the Magistrate only is Judge when the Question is,[ whether he be to be corporally punished for Heresie or any Sin?] |
A27006 | that I will not yield to have Gods Church among us unchurched by the Papists, and his Worship cast aside for want of true Ministers? |
A27006 | that can not be: And is he in them, and shall he be used so unkindly, so uncharitably, as to be cast by? |
A27006 | the King promiseth to defend them, and shall separating Protestants pull them down? |
A27006 | the like for the usage of the Cross in Baptism, and the humble posture of Kneeling at the receiving of the blessed Sacrament of the Lord''s Supper? |
A27006 | the poor Peasants are not able to judge of their Titles: And if a Parliament shall not judge for them who shall? |
A27006 | those that support the Ministers, unless they would do it to them that cease Preaching? |
A27006 | to destroy themselves, and the hopes of their Posterity? |
A27006 | to lead Men to Holy Love and Unity with the Catholick Church of Christ? |
A27006 | was it they that petitioned and protested against it? |
A27006 | what Ho ● se I shall ride on? |
A27006 | what Meat I shall eat, and how much? |
A27006 | what Wife I shall marry? |
A27006 | what a Life have I to repent of if this must be my Repentance? |
A27006 | what can he say? |
A27006 | what if it be in a time when Bishops were so Ejected, when you can not prove them guilty of it? |
A27006 | what if one Part repute him a true Minister or Bishop, and the other a false or none, which is very common? |
A27006 | what made them Christians but the Baptismal Covenant? |
A27006 | what may not Pride do? |
A27006 | what then can I take Comfort in of all my Life? |
A27006 | when Honorius was by two or three General Councils condemned for a Heretick? |
A27006 | when will God make them wiser? |
A27006 | which of you shall the ignorant believe? |
A27006 | why did not that Synod desire this Curtesy? |
A27006 | why do we not give them the Right Hand of Fellowship and Brotherhood in the Work of the Lord? |
A27006 | will they not tell us, our Church is invisible, especially when these few Bishops are dead? |
A27006 | without Silencing Men, and forbidding them to endeavour Men''s Salvation( before their Crimes are proved such as render them uncapable of that work?) |
A27006 | would that warrant you to separate from all the rest for my sake? |
A27006 | would you have Men care no more for their Souls than to cast them away upon the Delusion of such Reasonings as these? |
A27006 | yea, Bishop Andrews, whom you name? |
A27006 | yea, and subscribe, that General- councils are not; even in matters of Faith? |
A27006 | — Paganum vocas eum qui Deum Patrem per filium ejus ante eram rogaverit? |
A39574 | & c. Christ is light in the same, sense as we have shewed God is light:* How is that? |
A39574 | ''s Arguments? |
A39574 | ( Fisher) I love Thee not, yet know not Why? |
A39574 | ( O ye Priests) what if ye should ● ee men made to go naked, and sit naked upon your Plush- Pulpit- Cushion? |
A39574 | ( for ad hominem I now urge) how Isaac mistook Iacob for Esau, and Paul wot not that was the High Priest, when he term''d him a whited Wall? |
A39574 | ( for thus cry out Clergy to All people where they preach) when shall it once be? |
A39574 | ( speaking of the Qua:) Do they affirm that all men have the light of reason? |
A39574 | * For are there not two righteousnesses[ of Christ?] |
A39574 | * Why dost thou not write it Holy Sprit? |
A39574 | 1. about this 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 or inspiration of God? |
A39574 | 1.19? |
A39574 | 1.8, where it is said, Let him be accursed that brings other then we have preacht, though we or an Angel from heaven? |
A39574 | 10. yet is there not a Righteousness which man lives in the doing of, that is done in the assistance of another? |
A39574 | 10.18, 19, 20. and what between one that is divinely inspired to speak, and one in whom the Spirit of the Father speaketh? |
A39574 | 10.18? |
A39574 | 11. as things retained in his memory, though some of them fourteen years behinde? |
A39574 | 11. that were among the Corinthians, did he not write of them as things he had by hear- say, and common Report? |
A39574 | 13? |
A39574 | 16 As many as walk according to this Rule, or Canon, do it? |
A39574 | 166. to that purpose, prove in the least any such matter? |
A39574 | 169? |
A39574 | 173? |
A39574 | 1? |
A39574 | 2 What need any personal sanctification of us as to our salvation? |
A39574 | 20.34, 1 King 16.1: the Book of Gad the Seer? |
A39574 | 217, 218. that none must give a Rule to the rest? |
A39574 | 267? |
A39574 | 2? |
A39574 | 3. s. 28? |
A39574 | 3.15, 16, 17. and so to be the onely Rule, Canon, Standard, Touch- stone in all cases? |
A39574 | 330. while ● e are beating your selves about after it, and beating one another about it? |
A39574 | 33? |
A39574 | 34.5 to the end? |
A39574 | 53: who believeth our Report? |
A39574 | 57. the Writing? |
A39574 | 6. that even they were made free from sin? |
A39574 | 6? |
A39574 | 7. entering into holy souls that heed it, makes them friends of God and Prophets? |
A39574 | 7.2, 3. and as Pauls other why d ● st thou? |
A39574 | 85.8, speak peace to his people, and to his Saints? |
A39574 | ? |
A39574 | ? |
A39574 | A good cause why( say I) for there was no room for Reply, but like as Pilate, when he had askt Christ this Question what is truth? |
A39574 | Ab ● aham, who saw his day, before any History, or Letter of your Scripture at all was w ● itt ● n? |
A39574 | Acts 7. as Micah, Stephen, and the seven were? |
A39574 | Against whom do you make a wide Mouth? |
A39574 | Against whom do you sport your selves? |
A39574 | All Preserved to this day that was Written by Holy men, as moved by the holy Spirit? |
A39574 | All Remaining? |
A39574 | All are invited and call''d to come, and call''d freely, fully, without exception, to believe; therefore why not thou? |
A39574 | And are any the Sons of God, save such as led by the Spirit of God? |
A39574 | And are not all Christians bidden to be filled with the Spirit? |
A39574 | And are not all Saints led by it? |
A39574 | And are we not commanded to hear the welbeloved son of God? |
A39574 | And as to the New, Where is that First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, mentioned in the first of those Two that we have? |
A39574 | And did not he himself, before he wrote them in the movings of the spirit, acknowledge them to be the truth himself? |
A39574 | And do not Christs people hear his voice? |
A39574 | And do not the people of God( though you do not) hear what God the Lord himself will speak? |
A39574 | And do you do any lesse, as to outward Adoration, or any more, as to inward and real Observation, towards your Bibles? |
A39574 | And doth he not separate these clearly in mens consciences, the inner world, from each other, calling the light day, and the darknesse night? |
A39574 | And doth not God say, Let there be light, and there is light shining in the da ● kness ●, though the darknesse comprehends it not? |
A39574 | And doth not every one that walks after it walk surely and infallibly, and he that is enlightned by it enlightned infallibly? |
A39574 | And doth not that Spirit of God witness to the spirits of such within them, that they are his children? |
A39574 | And firh ● I. O. sayes, ● Who ● ever came ● to the true knowledge of God by the guidance of this Light? |
A39574 | And he spake before his brethren, and the army of Samaria, and said, What do these feeble Iews? |
A39574 | And he that speaks, sees, writes, acts by it( as all Saints should do, though fallible in themselves) do all this infallibly? |
A39574 | And if any man have it not for his Guide, Leader, Governour in all he doth, as well as his Comforter, is he Christs? |
A39574 | And if there be any varieties now( as there are not a few) are not those very varieties( so many as they are) so many mistakes? |
A39574 | And is Transcription by the Pen more exempted from Errataes then the Presse? |
A39574 | And is not all purity, and love, and victory over the worldly lust,& c. the necessary effect of a true Faith, and of that only and no other? |
A39574 | And is not he that is guided by it, guided infallibly, and every one that is led by it, led infallibly? |
A39574 | And is not he that is moved by it, whether he obey its motions yea or no, moved infallibly into that which is assuredly the Truth and no Lie? |
A39574 | And is not seeing one means of comprehending? |
A39574 | And is that all of the Inspired Scripture, which we now have, and enjoy in our present Bibles? |
A39574 | And is the Revelation the Close of the immediate Revelation of his Will to Holy men, and of his moving them to write it out by his Holy Spirit? |
A39574 | And of what dangerous Consequence is it for you to stand on no surer ground, then that which is so easie to be changed? |
A39574 | And since it was not the Church of Rome( as I freely agree with thee it was not) what Church was it? |
A39574 | And that Epistle of his to the Laodiceans, mentioned, Col. 4.16? |
A39574 | And that is that a mans Righteousness any otherwise then Imaginarily? |
A39574 | And the People to no more then their meer Translation? |
A39574 | And was not Saul also among the Prophets? |
A39574 | And what Errors, Heresies, straglings from the Truth, which is but one, and from the true Light the Scripture calls to? |
A39574 | And what Writing? |
A39574 | And what such difference is there between being led by the Spirit, and guided by the Spirit? |
A39574 | And when Isaiah wrote things of Christ, did he not see his glory? |
A39574 | And whether Good works do justifie? |
A39574 | And who is otherwise that is not in name onely but a Saint or a Christian indeed and truth? |
A39574 | And why so? |
A39574 | And will he reveal his mind to his Prophets, as he did to Amos and others, and will not they go forth and prophesie? |
A39574 | Answ: Art thou a sinner? |
A39574 | Are All men therefore, because gone out without any measure of Light sufficient to guide into the way again? |
A39574 | Are not the Righteousness and the operations of Christ in his Saints the same that were in his own flesh? |
A39574 | Are not the people ever in their sins? |
A39574 | Are not the ● e your doings, thus to pervert the right words and wayes of the Lord? |
A39574 | Are not these as high Titles as ye could give to the 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉, if they were here? |
A39574 | Are there no spirituall men now in the world? |
A39574 | Are there not yet treasures, treasuries of wickedness in the house in the heart of the wicked, and the measure of leannesse, which is abominable? |
A39574 | Are these his doings? |
A39574 | Are they after the flesh? |
A39574 | Are they all utterly lost? |
A39574 | Are they fit for nothing but to be Cashiered and cast out of your Canon by whole sale, by Tradition one from another, without trying them? |
A39574 | Are they not born of the Spirit, and after the Spirit? |
A39574 | Are they not infallible, certain, unchangeable, incorruptible, so that such as are led thereby can not erre, nor be deceived? |
A39574 | Are they not led by it from under the Law, and out of the Letter up into the life, which the Letter speaks of, but it self onely giveth? |
A39574 | Are they( as well as the Spirit is in them) not in the Flesh, but in the Spirit? |
A39574 | Are ye not ashamed to make God not only tyrannical, but hypocritical, and as dissembling as your selves? |
A39574 | Art thou an Author of credit thy self I. O. whose Testimony may be taken for Truth? |
A39574 | Art thou not a loud lyar in this? |
A39574 | Athnack stands in an hundred places as a Boy or Servant? |
A39574 | Behold, if a Fox go upon their wall, will he not break it down? |
A39574 | Beside, say not the Texts afore- cited, that the Spirit convinces the world of Righteousness, as well as of sin and Iudgement? |
A39574 | But Alas, what hope that the work of purging from sin shall ever be done, where its never rightly doing? |
A39574 | But Paul did so, therefore what man can do otherwise? |
A39574 | But alas as thou T. D. sayst p. 53. not more proverbially, then improperly of R. H. I must say properly of thee and thine, who so bold as blind Byard? |
A39574 | But are not the holy matters one thing, and the outward Letters that write of those matters another? |
A39574 | But how shall I know that yet for my self? |
A39574 | But is it so that he intends it to me really and particularly? |
A39574 | But what Light is it you intend? |
A39574 | But what do I talking of not p ● rf ● ct? |
A39574 | But what if the Romish Clergy do hold such a general grace of God? |
A39574 | But what of all this? |
A39574 | But what of all this? |
A39574 | But what of that? |
A39574 | But what of this, are they therefore without the Light that shewed it, and the meanes of the knowledge of it? |
A39574 | But what sayes he here? |
A39574 | But what then my friend? |
A39574 | But what''s what he thinks to other men? |
A39574 | Can it profit him? |
A39574 | Can more be done by any man in discovery of his own folly& nakedness( not to say iniquity and wickedness) to all men then is here by T. D.? |
A39574 | Can not Satan cause a voice to be heard in the air, and so deceive us? |
A39574 | Can the Law in their hearts accuse them doing ill, and not justifie them doing well? |
A39574 | Can we Imagine? |
A39574 | Colossians 3.16? |
A39574 | Come they not by walking in the Spirit, not to fulfill the lusts of the Flesh, but to crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof? |
A39574 | Confoundings are never seen by himself) as not to see? |
A39574 | Did David not say, Let integrity and uprightness preserve me? |
A39574 | Did ever the like toying and trisling piece of Dispotation drop from the hands of men before, as does here from the pens of these professed Disputers? |
A39574 | Did he it not on the account of his retaining that passage in his memory? |
A39574 | Did he not turn men to the Light? |
A39574 | Did he say he should not speake at all, not so much as by his Spirt? |
A39574 | Did he turn them from it; as in that clause( m ● n should have been directed to follow the Light, and not turned from it) ye intimate he did? |
A39574 | Did he write of his own Death and Burial, and of Israels Mourning for him, after he was dead? |
A39574 | Did not God speak in his Prophets, and by them to the men of their several Ages from Moses upwards as well as from Moses downwards? |
A39574 | Divinations? |
A39574 | Do our Modern Doctors dispute thus at the Vniversities? |
A39574 | Do the Texts set by thee in that Section, even all of them together, prove that general ignorant, audacious Assertion of thine? |
A39574 | Do they lead into any iniquity, or uncertainty those that walk after them? |
A39574 | Do they maintain that this light is from Iesus Christ, both as the Authour and restorer of nature? |
A39574 | Do they not as Iohn Baptist did, bear witness to that true Light which enlightaēth every man that cometh into the world? |
A39574 | Do they not by the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the body? |
A39574 | Do they say all this light( within us and without us) is to be hearkened to and obeyed? |
A39574 | Do they say that repaired or reprived nature may be fitly called grace? |
A39574 | Do they, I say, stand in such Counters and Pins,& Pins heads,& Points,& Point Tags,& Childish Toyes and Trash as these? |
A39574 | Do ye know I am one of those few that he intended it to, or of those many to whom not? |
A39574 | Do you not say, and do this, and much more to your 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A39574 | Does he intend it to the most? |
A39574 | Does not God do so, I say, according to your Principles? |
A39574 | Does not the Apostle oppose Faith and Works? |
A39574 | Dost thou teach this for a true Doctrine of Christ, if so, from what Text? |
A39574 | Doth God then more or less move all men by his Spirit, and doth he not move his own people in these dayes by his Spirit? |
A39574 | Doth any good Fountain send forth sweet Water and bitter at the same time? |
A39574 | Doth any one of them respectively prove the particulars thereof, that it is particularly alleadged to? |
A39574 | Doth he mean as ye say he does, when he sayes All, every man, the whole world, and not rather as he sayes himself? |
A39574 | Doth his Standard stand in so little room? |
A39574 | Doth it lead any into any sin, which is transgression of the Law? |
A39574 | Doth it not bring all things to the remembrance of such as are led by it, as all the Sons of God are, that ever Christ spake? |
A39574 | Doth it not guide all such into all truth, and onely into truth, and not into any falshood, delusion, or deceit? |
A39574 | Doth it not rather evidence the very contrary? |
A39574 | Doth it not reveale the great things of God, and by that revelation make them know the things that are freely given them of God? |
A39574 | Doth it not take of Christs and shew it unto them? |
A39574 | Doth not Wisdom say of her self, That in all Ages entering into holy Souls she maketh them friends of God, and Prophets? |
A39574 | Doth not the Lanthorn the Light evidence it self to be the light? |
A39574 | Doth not the Spirit of God bear witnesse to their spirit, that are his children, that they are so? |
A39574 | Doth not the Spirit of God in them I ust against the flesh? |
A39574 | Doth not the Spirit quicken and give them life? |
A39574 | Doth not the difference that is serve us against thee, whilst it s no other then thus, that of the two, the spiritual man is the greater? |
A39574 | Doth not the light manifest it self to be true light, as well as the darkness to be truly darkness? |
A39574 | Doth the Scripture, do the Spirit and the Apostles therein give any order for, or make any such mention in the least of such a matter? |
A39574 | Doth the Spirit there condemn Angelorum alloquia, alias, called by thee Colloquia Angelica, s. 28. all conference with Angels? |
A39574 | First, There''s not all in your Bibles by much, and by how much who knows? |
A39574 | For even as They( whose Testimony who? |
A39574 | For from Generation to Generation, what Fruit is found in the Parish Churches of the Popes Constituting? |
A39574 | For what are all the Ephesian like Glamours, eager Out- cryes, loud Noises of the people here for against the Quakers? |
A39574 | For who ever came to the true knowledge of God by the guidance of this Light? |
A39574 | Greek and Hebrew Texts to a Tittle, without alteration? |
A39574 | Had be any righteousnesse, which he had not receved? |
A39574 | Had he any Righteousness which he had not received? |
A39574 | Had he any righteousness which he had not received? |
A39574 | Had not that been plainer? |
A39574 | Hast thou any more then before thou hadst? |
A39574 | Hath God any other then that infallible spirit? |
A39574 | Hath God prohibited him? |
A39574 | Hath any unrighteous one, while he is yet unrighteous, and before he be made Righteous, a Right to the Kingdom of God? |
A39574 | Have they not all heard? |
A39574 | Have they not that Spirit of Christ? |
A39574 | He disparages the grave Doctors and Commentators that himself so much accounts on; for Qui ● legi ● hae? |
A39574 | He that hath it not dwelling in him, infallibly directing, divinely inspiring him, is he Christs? |
A39574 | Hearken unto me, and let your souls delight in farness, hear and your souls shall live, Why will ye die? |
A39574 | How bear without a Preacher? |
A39574 | How can ye beleive, which receive honour one of another, and seek not the Honour that commeth from God only? |
A39574 | How know we that the Scripture is the Word of God? |
A39574 | How long shall thy vain thoughts lodge within thee? |
A39574 | How may others come to be assured thereof? |
A39574 | How worthlesse and frivolous then? |
A39574 | How would the JEWES dare to Offer such Sacriledge so Vnexpressible? |
A39574 | Humano capiti cervicom pictor Equinam Iungere si vellet Risum Teneatis Amici? |
A39574 | I answer why not? |
A39574 | I answer, why not? |
A39574 | I say can any think Paul such a one, but such as sell themselves to Folly? |
A39574 | I say, is no measure of this in no men? |
A39574 | I say, may not the Reprobates, even in these Nations so plead? |
A39574 | I trow not: yet Heu quam facile est invenire baculum ad caedendum canem? |
A39574 | If I should say soft Wax is not useful to stop hot Ovens with, must it straitway be thrown away? |
A39574 | If not them, why us, who say the same? |
A39574 | If the Ability of the men be granted, yet what security have we of their Principles and Honesty? |
A39574 | If thou ● wilt enter into Life, follow me, and we have forsaken all and followed thee( saith Peter to Christ) What shall we have therefore? |
A39574 | If ye take us as intending so, when we call to the Light, why not them? |
A39574 | In the departure and absence of which, notwithstanding he told them it would be never the worse, but much the better, and more expedient for them? |
A39574 | Is Iohn commanded to write anything in his Booke but what he had seen? |
A39574 | Is all Extant? |
A39574 | Is another? |
A39574 | Is it Closed within so narrow a Corner? |
A39574 | Is it any of these things? |
A39574 | Is it for want of having the Copies of their Writings among them? |
A39574 | Is it for want of power or efficacy in the Letter? |
A39574 | Is it not Spirit, Light, and Life? |
A39574 | Is it not an Epistle of Christ in the table of the heart? |
A39574 | Is it not dead? |
A39574 | Is it not man in his proud mind that comes in with his sic volo, sic Iubeo, so I''le have it, thus it shall be? |
A39574 | Is it not the Words of Christ spoken by the Lord himself alone, which are Spirit and Life? |
A39574 | Is it not very Improbable? |
A39574 | Is it possible there should be any condemnation, where no transgression, but an answering to the Law lent men to live by? |
A39574 | Is it so I. O. indeed as thou sayest? |
A39574 | Is it so indeed Friends, that these so eminently comprehensive terms, All, everyone,& c. signifie no more then some, a few,& c. as aforesaid? |
A39574 | Is not he who is led, guided, acted by the Spirit, moved and carried forth by the Spirit? |
A39574 | Is not that a vain power, and meer fained efficacy, Quae nunquam reduditur in actum? |
A39574 | Is not the very moving of the spirit it self, in which thou ownest they wrote, and the Law of the spirit obliging thereto? |
A39574 | Is one Question? |
A39574 | Is that the whole Book of God, the whole outward Declaration of his Will by the Writings of Holy men at his own motion? |
A39574 | Is that truth in no man which he is to abide in, and which if he abide in it, it will teach him the Will of God? |
A39574 | Is the Gospel, the New Testament no more than such as thou talkest of? |
A39574 | Is the Spirit of God, the light of Christ fallible, as the Letter is? |
A39574 | Is the talking of Angels to men here deeply damned by the Spirit of God as thou dreamest? |
A39574 | Is there any Parish any better mannered then in Ages above? |
A39574 | Is there any medium between these two? |
A39574 | Is there any various Lection, that mistake in Transcribing is not the cause of? |
A39574 | Is there not a Iust man that walketh in his integrity, and that lives in the doing of the Equity? |
A39574 | Is there not a Subjectum in quo, which yet is not P ● r qu ● d, as well as a Subjectum cui? |
A39574 | Is there nought for men to doe, but either they must stare with thee, or else, for fear of they know not what, run stark mad with them? |
A39574 | Is this Syncategorema istud Omnis, the Con- signification of that Adiective All? |
A39574 | Is your Word of God possible to be utterly corrupted? |
A39574 | It s more hard not to see, then it is to see that it is meant of freedome from sin: What should, or can it be meant of else? |
A39574 | Itane? |
A39574 | Itane? |
A39574 | Let that abide in) you,& c. If that ye have heard from the beginning remain( in) you,& c. and what''s that but the anointing the Spirit of God within? |
A39574 | Love Thee I ca n''t, were I therefore to Dy: Know''st Thou not why( O Priest) Thou lov''st not Me? |
A39574 | Lutherans and Calvinists within themselves, and wherefore, but for their divided thoughts upon some few Texts of Scripture? |
A39574 | Moses and the Prophets Writings? |
A39574 | Must not they who leave the darkness, of necessity look to the Light? |
A39574 | Must the JEWES find out an easier way then GOD himself, to leave out Pricks? |
A39574 | Must the most on the account of no Saviours dying for them, but for a very few only, never see the Lords Salvation? |
A39574 | Ne hominem sonat hac tua ceri? |
A39574 | Nevertheless, who hath believed our report? |
A39574 | Non amo( Piscator) nec possum dicere Quare? |
A39574 | None that ye can see cause to sign meliore lapillo, with some better Name then ye vouchsafe them, and standing in the Church then ye allow them? |
A39574 | Nor do we say it does, though he there thinks we do think so; but what of this? |
A39574 | Notes for div A39574-e290630* Quae nam sit tua ipsius sententia de ha ● Questione, an Scriptura 〈 ◊ 〉 verbum Dei? |
A39574 | Now I. O. what meanest thou? |
A39574 | O ye foolish Prophets and foolish People who hath bewitched you that ye should be so reprobate as to the knowledge of the truth? |
A39574 | O''cur as hominum,& c. from whence didst thou fetch this false and foolish piece of faith, save from the old fathomlesse fountain of thy own fancy? |
A39574 | Ob Scriptu ● a est litera mortua spiritus vivificat, quis literae mortua nisi ips ● fi ● mortuus adhaerere velit? |
A39574 | Obj: Oh but we are great sinners, wicked wretches, such as never were the like, multiplying sins, transgressions, is there any hope for us? |
A39574 | Oh thou Seer( that confessest thou wast neither bred nor born a Prophet, but an Herdsman) com''st thou to Prophesie at Bethel? |
A39574 | Only that they were men so, and so, and so ill mannered and qualified, Idolate ● s, Magicians,& c. and what not that''s evill? |
A39574 | Or hath God two spirits to direct his own by at sundry times, one extraordinary and infallible, the other fallible and ordinary? |
A39574 | Or if he had, Would he not have said, See that ye read the Epistle to Timothy? |
A39574 | Or onely out of all sin all such as give up to be guided by it? |
A39574 | Partly the Law and partly the Lust? |
A39574 | Partly to it selfe, and partly to the flesh? |
A39574 | Pellibus exiguis Arctatur Fili usingens? |
A39574 | Pellibus exiguis Arctatur Spirit usingens? |
A39574 | Picasque docuit verba nostra Conari? |
A39574 | Piscator verus vere est nam Piscis Amator, Sed Piscatorem Piscis amare queat? |
A39574 | Quemadmodum enim Ipsi( quorum Testimonium quis? |
A39574 | Question were, Whether Good works be the meritorious cause of our Iustification? |
A39574 | Quid rides( O sacerdos? |
A39574 | Quid sibi vuls tanta terminorum transpositio? |
A39574 | Quis legat haec? |
A39574 | Read and Consider how to every good Work voyd of Iudgement the great Doctors among them do behave themselves? |
A39574 | Relating thou said''st it was, to say a man must fi ● st partake of the Righteousness which justifies, before it can be imputed to him as his? |
A39574 | Rep, What''s all that in proof, that there''s no variation in Copies of the Hebrew and Greek Text, in so ● uch as in Tittles and Iota''s? |
A39574 | Rep. Itane? |
A39574 | Rep. Oh gross, what an absurdity is here, as if that which is in the mouth of a man were not within, but without him? |
A39574 | Rep. Oh the impudency of this man? |
A39574 | Rep. T. D. sayes so but wher''s his proof? |
A39574 | Rep. To which I reply, Who doubts of this? |
A39574 | Rep. We confess these things are said not of some only, but of All men, as they are in the fall, who are All gone out of the way: But what of that? |
A39574 | Rep. What news is this to any but Nevices, that Iesuits in craft use handicraft callings, that under that disguise they may serve Rome? |
A39574 | Rep. What silly stuff is this? |
A39574 | Rep. What then T. D? |
A39574 | Rep. What''s this to the purpose? |
A39574 | Rep. Who doubts of that? |
A39574 | Rep. Who doubts of this but that E ● h m ● n, is the present tense? |
A39574 | Rep. Who would think men should be so blind, unless they wilfully shut their own eyes? |
A39574 | Rep. Why not as well as before the Law was written in an outward Letter at all? |
A39574 | Rep. Why not? |
A39574 | Rep. Why so T. D? |
A39574 | Rep. Why so? |
A39574 | Risum tenoatis A- cade- mici? |
A39574 | S. 1. the infallible direction of the spirit of God? |
A39574 | SIc O sic Quantas, pate ● asque Quotas, Quasque Tu, plenas Babilone Totas, Haud Tibi, at Sancto cuicung; Notas, Bestia Potas? |
A39574 | Scripture: how easie is it to see the dangerous Consequents of contending for various Lections? |
A39574 | See ye not then that by works a man is justified, and not by Faith onely? |
A39574 | See, what a heavy Rout here is among the Divines about one Iod or Iota? |
A39574 | Shall We imagine so or so? |
A39574 | Shall not the uncircumcision, which is by nature, if it fulfill the Law, judge thee, who by the Letter a ● d Circumcision dost transgress the Law? |
A39574 | Si nescis cur non? |
A39574 | Si quis seu Quaerit Quare? |
A39574 | Suppose that true he assur''d thee of: what then? |
A39574 | That God hath given out a perfect Revelation of his Will: Which who doubts of? |
A39574 | That seek deep to hide their Counsel from the Lord, whose works are in the dark, and they say who seeth us? |
A39574 | That the Apostles were not the Speakers of what they delivered, but the Spirit in them? |
A39574 | That were to Render doubtful your undoubted Divine Original of what you have? |
A39574 | The Scripture is a dead letter, the Spirit quickens, who but he that''s dead will adhere to a dead letter as his Rule? |
A39574 | The grand Question, about which his Quarrell with the Quake ● s is, is, Whether Christ as an Efficient doth enlighten all men, yea, or nay? |
A39574 | The house of Jacob is the Spirit of the Lord so straitned? |
A39574 | Therefore is not the Lanthorn the Light? |
A39574 | These are Written that ye might be''eeve, and have Life; as if he should say, Here''s enough, what need more? |
A39574 | They shall not know neither see till we come in the midst among them, and slay them and cause the work to cease? |
A39574 | Thou meanest sure, for there the Word, Scriptures, is named, but what of that? |
A39574 | True, but why is it? |
A39574 | Tu Dominus, Tu vir, aut Doceas nos, quid sibi vuls santa blateratio& mugitus,& c. what means such a bl ● ating and bellowing out for the letter? |
A39574 | Verumne? |
A39574 | Walk they not in the same spirit? |
A39574 | Was it not meer Men in their Imaginations? |
A39574 | Was it not the business of the Apostles, to direct men to follow the Light, when they were sent to turn men to the Light? |
A39574 | Was not Abraham and others justified by works? |
A39574 | Was not their common Preaching- work, and their common Writing- work all one, as to the choice of Words wherein they declared? |
A39574 | Was there no more of the Old Testament Scripture, then the Apocrypha, and that which is commonly counted to the Canon? |
A39574 | Was there not Identity and perfect exact likenesse to it self in every Text, Term, and Tittle of Scripture when''t was written? |
A39574 | Was there not some few in every age, in whom the Spirit bare a testimony, and by whom to the blind world also of little truth? |
A39574 | We have not the 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 of Mo? |
A39574 | We will not venture our lives upon Mountebanks, and will we our souls upon deceivers? |
A39574 | Were they not conceived in them by the Holy Spirit? |
A39574 | Were they not divinely Inspired? |
A39574 | Were they such as could never see them, meerly for want of Light to shew them? |
A39574 | Were they that were to be turned to the Light in that very Call they had from the Apostles to turn to it, turned from it? |
A39574 | What I. O. is that which is not said to be good for all things, thereupon said to be good for nothing? |
A39574 | What Light is it you intend? |
A39574 | What Redemption from the and curse the effects of sin while sin the cause thereof rests on us unremoved? |
A39574 | What Salvation from sin whiles sin remaines? |
A39574 | What Spirit was to take the guidance of his people, if his own infallible spirit were not to continue with them for ever? |
A39574 | What Whirle- pools, and Whirle- gigg, and Whimseyes, and Gimcracks are here? |
A39574 | What Witness have we to our Assertion? |
A39574 | What a piece of Idem per Idem is this, wherein the self same thing that is to be proved, is Argumentatively urged in proof of it self? |
A39574 | What a wicked and Adulterous Generation of men is this? |
A39574 | What an absurdity is in all the Accents, not one excepted? |
A39574 | What did the promise of Christ fail to his own because of the worlds unbelief? |
A39574 | What dreaming, what darkness and confusion is here? |
A39574 | What have they not suffered? |
A39574 | What mean''st thou else by those& the like phrases in the places above p ● ● ● ted at? |
A39574 | What shall we try Light and Da ● kness by, but by the Light? |
A39574 | What should he Charge the Colosians so much to look after that for? |
A39574 | What then do the Quakers deny Gods unchangeablenesse in his Decree? |
A39574 | What thinkest thou of such parts and parcels of thy so called Canon as are each of them written in two several places or books of thy Bible? |
A39574 | What''s this in proof of the Scriptures being powerful to save the soul, which is the end of thy alledging it? |
A39574 | When I behold the Heavens, Moon, and Stars, the work of thy fingers, Lord, think I, what is man( saith he) that thou visitest him? |
A39574 | When he gives the word himself( as he doth in these dayes into the mouths of Babes) how great must be the company of those that publish it? |
A39574 | When shall it once be? |
A39574 | When the Lord hath spoken, who can but prophesie? |
A39574 | Whence came this whiffe and whimzy within the Circumference of thy Figmentitious Fancy? |
A39574 | Whence hast thou these fancies of thine? |
A39574 | Where are all these, and sundry more Scriptures( some as, and some more Antient then Moses) of which I will not now speak particularly? |
A39574 | Where are the eyes of these men that they ca n''t see? |
A39574 | Where are the wise men? |
A39574 | Where are they? |
A39574 | Where there various Readings of one Text to be found in the Writing, as given out from God at first? |
A39574 | Where''s th Scribe, where''s the Disputer of this world for the Scriptures, that he can not see the Scriptures themselves he is so scraping for? |
A39574 | Where''s the Prophecy of Enoch, spoken of Iude 14. out of whose Prophesie the Iewes can tell you more then ye wot of from that of Iude? |
A39574 | Whereas they say the Light within is sufficient, if obeyed, our Question is, Whether it be sufficient to make men obey it? |
A39574 | Whether all have the actuall knowledge of the mystery of the Gospel in the light yea or no? |
A39574 | Whether every man that cometh into the World be enlightned by Christ? |
A39574 | Whether he owned it and the Rest as Canonical, or no? |
A39574 | Whether th ● r ● be any true Believers who are not perfect? |
A39574 | Whether were the Prophets and Apostles, that have added so many books since those prohibitions, justly reproveable and accursed as Lyars? |
A39574 | Whether[ Our] Good works are the meritorious cause of Our Iustification? |
A39574 | Which overcomes not the world? |
A39574 | Who can ever live and not sin? |
A39574 | Who can understand his errors? |
A39574 | Who denies but that God gives out his will certainly, sufficiently to all men? |
A39574 | Who leads thee into the vain Imaginations of these things, but thy own and other mens( well nigh innumerable, and invincible) inventions? |
A39574 | Who sees not the blindness, weakness, folly, nakedness, and falsity of this argument? |
A39574 | Who shall ponere obicem, put a stop to them, and impose upon all others his Thoughts, that things are so or so? |
A39574 | Who told thee this Toy, which thou preachest out for positive Truth? |
A39574 | Who was it? |
A39574 | Why did Christ preach himself while he was on earth, if the people had sufficient light before? |
A39574 | Why did he send his Apostles to preach through the world, if the p ● ople had sufficient light before? |
A39574 | Why did he set Pastors and Teachers in his Church, if all have a sufficient light within them? |
A39574 | Why did not the world believe in Christ even generally before his coming, if Reason was then a sufficient light? |
A39574 | Why did ye not, seeing ye had a Quarrell at them, publish every inch of all I. F. his Answers to the 8 Queries ye have set down? |
A39574 | Why do the Quakers go up and down teaching men their own doctrines, if all men have sufficient light already? |
A39574 | Why do they cry out against us, as being in darkness, when all men have sufficient light in them? |
A39574 | Why not? |
A39574 | Why sayest thou from Moses downward,& c. as if he had never done so before till then? |
A39574 | Why was it given to some, and not to others to know them? |
A39574 | Why what man did they ever speak with, that is a Christian, that denieth it? |
A39574 | Why will ye die people? |
A39574 | Will God esteem any just, clean and pure before, I say before so much as in order of nature he hath justified them by his Spirit? |
A39574 | Will it kill them if they break it, and kill them if they obey it also? |
A39574 | Will they Sacrifice? |
A39574 | Will they fortifie themselves? |
A39574 | Will they make an end in a day? |
A39574 | Will they pray for more Light and Grace, or not, if not, they are impiously proud; if yea then it seems they have not yet light and grace sufficient? |
A39574 | Will they revive the stones out of the heaps of the Rubbish that are burnt? |
A39574 | Wilt thou argue from one to all? |
A39574 | Wilt thou gain one grain of ground against us by it, if we should give and grant thee to read it thy own wrested way, as we will not? |
A39574 | Wilt thou not cease to pervert the right wayes of the Lord? |
A39574 | Wilt thou not then I. O. say of the first Transcribers of the Scriptures, that the were infallible and divinely inspired? |
A39574 | Witness be taken for us against himself; yea, what need we further Witness? |
A39574 | Would you not think him a fool to fall a thanking himself, never thinking on the man that first set him up? |
A39574 | Ye blind Guides, did not Paul( as he was sent to that end as that Text declares) turn men from the darkness only? |
A39574 | Ye fools and blind, Is this your liberal, universal rich Gospel to the whole world? |
A39574 | Yea, how frivolously foolish art thou in the uttering of thy self? |
A39574 | [ ● aSenus recte quidem sed et etiam de te fabula O Parochialis Sacerdos] What is in their conclave but pollicy? |
A39574 | a lesser as well as a greater, a later as well as one more ancient? |
A39574 | a prescribing to men their hearts lusts, as their rule? |
A39574 | about it now: Is the sense and meaning of that Term( in us)( not in us) but( in another) not( in our persons) but( in Christ?) |
A39574 | and a fit measure to correct, and authoritatively to examine and determine those Originals by? |
A39574 | and are these equal Termes? |
A39574 | and because thou askest in whose hearts? |
A39574 | and by whom among us is this denyed? |
A39574 | and can there possibly be a bad, false faith, where there are truly good works, and an holy life? |
A39574 | and does not the Sun as well shews it self to a man to be the Sun, as it shews a dark Cloud or smoak not to be it? |
A39574 | and how did Christ preach by his Spirit in Noahs dayes, if there was no Christ then come? |
A39574 | and if a minute, why not an how? |
A39574 | and if the fate and fault of falsity and mistake to some, why not to all? |
A39574 | and if they lived without the Letter to God, is it as impossible to do so now, as to live bodily without food? |
A39574 | and if thou justifie them, art thou not one with them? |
A39574 | and in Translators as well as Transcribers? |
A39574 | and is ashamed to call them Brethren, who are not ashamed to be Brethren in iniquity? |
A39574 | and is not every spiritual man a Prophet, or more then a Prophet? |
A39574 | and must it be taken for Granted, that I say it s not good to Seal with, or that its useful for nothing? |
A39574 | and my self upon this question, Whether the Scripture be the Word of God or no? |
A39574 | and shall I count them pure with their wicked Ballances( faith God) and with the bag of deceitful weights? |
A39574 | and shall we think that men uninspired, as thou confessest the Scripture Transcribers were, could possibly do any more then they could do? |
A39574 | and so( caeteris paribus, the same means attended to) why not a month, a year, and years, many as well as few? |
A39574 | and the meer writing and every tittle of it to be called the Word of God? |
A39574 | and what hath Riches with all our vaunting brought us? |
A39574 | and where is that Spirit and Light? |
A39574 | and who doubts, or denies but that the Word in the heart was written, as well as preached and testified to by writing, as well as by word of mouth? |
A39574 | and who in iniquity, can stand before him? |
A39574 | and who knoweth us? |
A39574 | and who were those others that knew them not? |
A39574 | and why beholdest thou, thou hypocrite? |
A39574 | and will he now have none in his own Church of the Seed of David himself? |
A39574 | and ● all the enmity is to be slain, and not any of it accepted, or to be reconciled for ever? |
A39574 | and( in thy own words to Rome, so) I to thee, propound, what Scripture was this, or where was this deed of Trust made unto them? |
A39574 | are Christ and his Spirits works of lesse or worse merit in one time place and person then another? |
A39574 | are not all these so neer kin, that he who is agomenos, is pheromenos? |
A39574 | are not various Lections various Lections, where ever they are found whether in a more ancient, or in a later Copy? |
A39574 | are these his doings? |
A39574 | are these wayes so equal as God sayes his wayes are? |
A39574 | are they ever the lesse various Readings, because in Copies, which thou callest novell, private, and obscure? |
A39574 | as everlasting, as infinite as of old, and of as infinite value, every where as it is any where? |
A39574 | as if they actively entred no more than stocks and stones into the services they were set on work in? |
A39574 | as to Name and Thing; The Word of God, and what? |
A39574 | as to the rest, what if David did exclude himself? |
A39574 | at the Kings Chappel? |
A39574 | because he sayes it( in presenti) will it follow that they were Sinners( in presenti?) |
A39574 | before the two- single Persons of Iacob and Esau were born, or had done either good or evil? |
A39574 | between such a one as is pheromenos upo tou pneumatos, and one ag ● menos, or to whom the Spirit of the Lord is odegos, or egoumenos? |
A39574 | but just tyed to the individual words brought to them as immediately by inspiration, as the matter, or Word of God it self they wrote of? |
A39574 | but what follows hence? |
A39574 | by imputation onely, never by inherence? |
A39574 | by men moved meerly with love of mony, and hope of gain? |
A39574 | by that Clause, if any various Readings shall be gathered, where no mistake can be discovered as their Cause, they deserve to be considered? |
A39574 | by whom? |
A39574 | call ye to, and write of; but if ye believe not the Writing ye so write for, how shall ye believe in the light? |
A39574 | calls the light and truth there? |
A39574 | canst thou tell us any of this thou talkst on? |
A39574 | complyance in their several Superstitions with either the Iews or Turks Respectively? |
A39574 | denies that the Gentiles had been at all enlightned by Christ, unles you mean as God, quoth he, and say I, what should we mean else? |
A39574 | dicam tibi Quare? |
A39574 | do not his words( which are heard from his own mouth) do good to him that walketh uprightly by them now as well as in former dayes? |
A39574 | does he intend the Salvation to all as really as ye pretend he does in the universal extent and proffer, or to s ● me only? |
A39574 | dost not thou then instead of light walk in obscurity, instead of brightness in darkness it self? |
A39574 | dost thou not grope for the wall yet like the blind, as if thou hadst no eyes and stumble at noon- day as in the night? |
A39574 | doth God, who works the believers works in them, work works that are not perfect, but imperfect? |
A39574 | doth not divine a lye] are the best and most effectual means of bringing men to Repentance; but where is the Repentance hoped for? |
A39574 | doth not the Scripture call to beleeve and walk in the Light and Spirit, and not in the darkness, and in the flesh? |
A39574 | doth they think men will part with the possession of Truth upon so easie Terms, that they will be cast from their inheritance by divination? |
A39574 | dreamingly divines? |
A39574 | dreams? |
A39574 | dressing out in( what should I call it?) |
A39574 | even that which before they wrote to them at all was nigh in their heart, and in their mouth that they might do it? |
A39574 | expressely affirm''d it? |
A39574 | for if thou judg them ridiculous, why dost thou alledge them in so serious a Case as thou dost? |
A39574 | for the living to the dead? |
A39574 | for the money he had given him, and now hath? |
A39574 | for the perfecting of the Saints, for the work of the Ministry, for the edifying of the Body of Christ: How long? |
A39574 | for we affirm not that, but whether all have some measure of that same light that shines from Christ, the light of the world, yea or nay? |
A39574 | from the Rabbies mouths, or Gods own? |
A39574 | hast thou any more infallible security against the mis- transcription of them All, then thou hast against the mis- transcription of some onely? |
A39574 | have been put? |
A39574 | have we of their principles and honesty? |
A39574 | hidden or unknown Writings, that no such notice shall be ● aken of, as of the other? |
A39574 | himself give us instan ● es enough of variety of Lection, to the assuring us of the falsenesse of his first Assertion? |
A39574 | his Doctrines? |
A39574 | how childish they are in serious things? |
A39574 | how do evil men and seducers war worse and worse, dec ● iving, and being deceived? |
A39574 | how easie is it then to sore- see that it must melt afore the fire of the Spirit? |
A39574 | how excellent is thy Name? |
A39574 | how much deceitfulnesse, froth, venome, smoke, nothing is in their Disputations? |
A39574 | how seriously they do of nothing? |
A39574 | if an hour, why not a day? |
A39574 | if so, was not Iohn hereupon accursed, that wrote more Scriptures of it after Paul was dead by a new Revelation, not the same? |
A39574 | impannels as his Jury to judge the case in question, whether the Letter outward writing or Scripture is the spiritual Light or Word of God yea or nay? |
A39574 | in flesh would go away? |
A39574 | in proof of that your sigment say so? |
A39574 | in that Ali ● nation none seeks God; Are All then without any of that true Light, wherein God is to be found of such as will seek him in it? |
A39574 | in that Body of his whereof he is the head, as in that Person which was the head of his body? |
A39574 | in their Iesuists and Casuists but jugglihg? |
A39574 | in their counsell but deceit? |
A39574 | in their meeting there) to this purpo ● e, whether they would do such despite unto the Scripture, which they say is their Rule and the Word of God? |
A39574 | in which way the Bible comes out lyable to the common fate of all other Books, as to matter of falsification by misprinting? |
A39574 | intends by this quotation? |
A39574 | into, and ● ayest( on thy own head) they were slated in were, whether Our Good Wor ● s are the meritorious cause of our Iustification? |
A39574 | is every new Revelation, and new writing, by way of Revelation of the old Gospel, a new Gospel? |
A39574 | is it not rather most unreasonable in thy self, to account it otherwise? |
A39574 | is it not within in the heart where the flesh and darkness dwells which lust against it? |
A39574 | is it so I O. indeed? |
A39574 | is not Christ God, and his light the light of God, and his Spirit and Word, the Spirit and Word of God before Christs coming? |
A39574 | is there a necessity that they who now have it, and now sin must needs have it, and must needs sin till they dye? |
A39574 | is there not acceptance, boldness, and confidence toward him, as there is fear, terrour, wrath, and condemnation from God where it doth condemn? |
A39574 | is whether the Scripture be( in essereali& cognoscibili) the Word of God or no? |
A39574 | it is against the corruptions in Copies of so great Antiquity, as two or three hundred years, should not be numbred among others that are much elder? |
A39574 | it was hid from some, and the knowledge of it given so some, not to others; but who were these some to whom given, when not to others? |
A39574 | left then on their sides to help themselves with? |
A39574 | make that way? |
A39574 | many Millions have looked on, as Theirs, with such high account, that for the whole Wor ● d ● ther would not be deprived of it? |
A39574 | me that gave him whereon to live, or himself who lavish''t it? |
A39574 | might it not be done by men who heeded not the inspirations of the Spirit? |
A39574 | min tu istud ais? |
A39574 | must it needs import another thing then the Spirit to say the sword of the Spirit? |
A39574 | must not the Spirit blow where it lifts without thy leave, or acquainting thee, first, who art no Prophet, with what he will do? |
A39574 | must thou needs be so obstreperous in Print against her for it? |
A39574 | must we believe? |
A39574 | nec clam? |
A39574 | nec cum scrobe? |
A39574 | no, no, let us answer as Peter, Lord, to whom shall we go? |
A39574 | not one of which make one jot of mention of the Letter, Text, or any Tittle thereof at all? |
A39574 | nusquam? |
A39574 | of his Letter to Gaius, were no other then the first of those Three Recorded? |
A39574 | of such as do evil that they are good in the sight of the Lord, and he delighteth in them, or where is the God of judgement? |
A39574 | of which, which of the two or the three was the Scribe, though we beleeve Paul to be( under God) the chief Authour, who knows? |
A39574 | or Davids, and the Spirits? |
A39574 | or any one that''s owned by them in their Ministry, prescribe mans own counsel, imagination, or hearts lust, to him as their Rule? |
A39574 | or did he not design them to the same Spiritual Ends, and Renowned Uses with their fellows? |
A39574 | or if he will, will any wise men of God become so foolish with him? |
A39574 | or is it so, that they will not see how they turn that very Text upside down, they would seem to take their Tattle out of? |
A39574 | or leave the wayes of darkness, and not walk in the way of the Light? |
A39574 | or repents so far as to reach so much as hope that he shall live without sin till he dyes? |
A39574 | or say any where that the Spirit is the principle, but the letter it self the Rule of our obedience? |
A39574 | or some infallible ground of certainty, that they were guided to write every word by divine inspiration? |
A39574 | or the seat or place of residence for the Scripture as upon the Exchange in London are pillars and places upon which hang Tables and Proclamations? |
A39574 | or what ground hast thou thus to forbid the Spirit of the living God? |
A39574 | or when? |
A39574 | or where liv''d it, or by what name or Title, beside that generall blind people- confounding name of Church, dost thou call it? |
A39574 | ours is not; Is your Foundation, Rule,& c. so rotten, such a Nose of Wax? |
A39574 | out of the works of the flesh, which in and by the light are manifest, into the fruits that it self brings forth? |
A39574 | out of their Mount Seir, Watchman, What of the night? |
A39574 | p. 22. that righteousnesse, which Paul calls his own was not Christs? |
A39574 | plainly what thou meanest by that peeping and muttering out of thy minde? |
A39574 | prescribe that unto men as their Rule, which God counts their Curse; and what''s that? |
A39574 | prove any such thing? |
A39574 | prove it? |
A39574 | quid testibus ad extra ad convincedum? |
A39574 | quid verbis opus est cum Ipsa loquitur? |
A39574 | quis legit haec? |
A39574 | saith it not that the Spirit is both? |
A39574 | saith it so seems to him) that so to imagine, and so on deliberation to Assert, borders on Atheism? |
A39574 | sayes are necessary to sanctifie and make meet) as dung, loss, imperfect, impertinent, unprofitable and useless as filthy Rags? |
A39574 | sayes it is? |
A39574 | sayes nay, we say yea: Who shall be judge? |
A39574 | sayes they do? |
A39574 | sayes, un- inspired men? |
A39574 | sayest thou this of thy self, or did others tell it thee of the Scripture? |
A39574 | shall we go after such Masters and leave Christ? |
A39574 | siccine se gerunt ministri lucis sicut vosmet vos geritis O ministri literae? |
A39574 | so now among Iews and Christians, there are those that read these every first day; but what''s the issue of all the reading of their outward Writings? |
A39574 | some Holy mens Writings, some of Pauls Epistles, and not othersome? |
A39574 | such a pleading it to be the true light, which it doth but plead for? |
A39574 | such a striving to have it stiled the light? |
A39574 | talks of, is descended perhaps at the hundreth hand, through the hands of who knows what unskilful, careless, forgetful Scribes or Transcribers? |
A39574 | tantaene a nimis caelestibus irae? |
A39574 | tell what they were, and that they were but of certain Apiculi, or smaller Tittles? |
A39574 | that God by your doctrine is( doctrinally) made a Respecter of persons? |
A39574 | that Tohu Vabohu? |
A39574 | that enlighten every man that cometh in the world, shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life? |
A39574 | that of sprinkling, and Ordinances for Tribes, and maintenance, as his Priests do? |
A39574 | that the Letter is no where called dead? |
A39574 | that were adversaries to the True Israel of God? |
A39574 | the Book of Ahijah? |
A39574 | the Book of Iasher? |
A39574 | the Book of Iddo? |
A39574 | the Book of Iehu the Prophet? |
A39574 | the Book of Shemaiah? |
A39574 | the Law of God in their minds, which is spiritual, lusting in them against the flesh, though they are carnal? |
A39574 | the Repentance it is the means of? |
A39574 | the Scripture is a dead letter, it s the spirit that quickneth: who but he that''s dead himself will look for life from a dead letter? |
A39574 | the Scriptures? |
A39574 | the Traditions of men? |
A39574 | the Writing or Letter is the Rule or no? |
A39574 | the chiefest Treasure the Church of God hath for many years enjoyed? |
A39574 | the entirenesse of the Text to a Tittle at''t was at first, dost thou not say this as thou dost twenty things more, meerly on thy own head? |
A39574 | the light, and Spirit of God within) abomination unto God? |
A39574 | the things written of, which the Scripture sayes are in the heart, one thing, and the Scriptures that write of those things another? |
A39574 | the very literall sense of which is exclusive of all sin and defilement, and strictly expressive of doing no iniquity at all? |
A39574 | their affected speech, looks, carriage, but a desire to hide their falshood? |
A39574 | thence conclude that a corruptible Letter copied out by corrupt mens hands[ as the Scripture is at this day] may be so stiled also? |
A39574 | they are) I am gross and Popish in affirming that Good Works deserve Iustification? |
A39574 | they tell us the Analogy of their Faith, even so) when we ask them what are ye to try the Scriptures by, whether they are of God or no? |
A39574 | though ministred sometimes by man at the motion of his Spirit? |
A39574 | to have added to, and altered our termes, and wronged us by misconstructions? |
A39574 | to use several of them as his Prophets? |
A39574 | tthat the Life should be the reward of the standing, and the Curse the reward of the sinning, happiness and blessing he felt in the one way,? |
A39574 | twice over cited, and allowed two votes in this Section, vote either of those particulars it is cited for? |
A39574 | verborum ista tua mutatio, mussitatio, mangonizatio,& c. supradicta? |
A39574 | vere nihil but a mongrel? |
A39574 | very falsely expoundest of Moses, the Prophets and Apostles Writings) this who ● ● ● ● ies? |
A39574 | vve stand just before God by any unclean thing, by dung, and filthy rags? |
A39574 | walk they not in the same steps, which that Spirit of God in them treads out for them? |
A39574 | was it the Letter or the Light, the Scripture or the Spirit of God it self? |
A39574 | was it your( what should I call it?) |
A39574 | was it, because now more revealed, then so hidden, as not at all revealed to any Ages above? |
A39574 | was not Christs? |
A39574 | was this; Whether in this life the Saints attain to a state of perfection, or freedome from sin? |
A39574 | was written, wherein it is said, Ye shall not adde to the word I command you, neither shall you diminish from it? |
A39574 | were the other a Common Salvation to them all? |
A39574 | were these all guilty of sin and condemnation? |
A39574 | what Fools, what Sots as to such a divine Work as the Gospel? |
A39574 | what a Horrible bundle of blindness is here? |
A39574 | what a hidden heap of Hocus p ● cus? |
A39574 | what a weak, crooked, crazy piece of conception of Scripture in this of thine? |
A39574 | what abominable grossnesse is here? |
A39574 | what childishnesse, lightnesse? |
A39574 | what end of fruitlesse Contests, what various and pernicious Senses to contend about? |
A39574 | what follows hence? |
A39574 | what idle arguing is here? |
A39574 | what ignorance is this? |
A39574 | what no where? |
A39574 | what proof at all is there in all this such a way? |
A39574 | what were they to try the Spirits and the Prophets by? |
A39574 | where it s said, Without Faith it is impossible to please God: And how shall they believe in him, of whom they have not heard? |
A39574 | where lyes the consequence of thy Argument to mine, more then to thy own complyance with that Popish Cardinall? |
A39574 | where the Disputer of this world? |
A39574 | whether OUR good works are the meritorious cause of our justification? |
A39574 | whether he dies among them, or departs from them to a bigger booty? |
A39574 | whether we are not iustified by Christ with in us? |
A39574 | which is the Word of God, and the sharp soul- searching, heart- piercing, living, life- giving Word that is here spoken of? |
A39574 | which of these two is the Rule or touchstone of trial? |
A39574 | who contradicteth them in this? |
A39574 | who denyeth it of any but Idiots and Infants? |
A39574 | who in so many places Confesses he gives men but his Thoughts? |
A39574 | who reads and expounds as I. O. does? |
A39574 | who that is born of God doth not see T. D. to be a strict pleader for loosenesse, and endeavourer to uphold the D ● vills Kingdom? |
A39574 | whom thou so accusest? |
A39574 | whom you quarrel with as deniers of the Scriptures? |
A39574 | whose turning of things upside down, shall be esteemed as the Potters clay? |
A39574 | whose words must be taken? |
A39574 | why Impossible to corrupt them All? |
A39574 | why all this we maintain as well as they: do they say that all this light( within us and without us) is to be hearkened to and obeyed? |
A39574 | why must it be improper so to say? |
A39574 | why what man did they ever speak with that''s a Christian;[ no Christians indeed say I, but too many Antichristians] that denyeth it? |
A39574 | will he before he hath washt and sanctified them? |
A39574 | will it therefore follow, that all men, in case they come to his light, are not enlightened by Christ in some measure to know it? |
A39574 | will not pride it self then be brought down, as well as other sins, and Humility alone be Exalted? |
A39574 | will they fortifie themselves? |
A39574 | will they make an end in a day? |
A39574 | will they revive the stones out of the heaps of rubbish which are burnt? |
A39574 | will they revive the stones out of the rubbish, and build and fortifie in a day? |
A39574 | will they sacrifice? |
A39574 | wilt thou believe thy self if not others? |
A39574 | wilt thou bind, limit and forbid them so to so, who 〈 ◊ 〉 unlimitedly here declarest that God is willing to afford and grant no more? |
A39574 | without crying out of them as deniers of the Scriptures to be the Word of God, which your very selves are forced to confess to the Truth of? |
A39574 | works be the meritorious cause of our justification? |
A39574 | would have them) as Impudent Boasters, any more then them of old? |
A39574 | yea, he came to the Scribes of old by his Light, not outward person only, to that end, yet they had not the Light of Life; why so? |
A39574 | † Quis expedivit psittaco suum 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A39574 | ● r ● t otum? |
A39574 | 〈 ◊ 〉 what is all this Adoratory ado, thou makest, about? |
A27016 | & c. Do you love to be flattered into Hell? |
A27016 | 1. and that he that touched them did touch the apple of his eye? |
A27016 | 10, 16. what enemy, what policie, what power can endanger him, that God will save and hath undertaken for? |
A27016 | 14 ▪ They labour hard; but for what? |
A27016 | 18, 19. and let the sufferers imitate him in the submissive part,[ Wherefore doth my Lord pursue after his servant? |
A27016 | 20, 21, 22,& c.[ How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity, and the scorners delight in scorning, and fools hate knowledge? |
A27016 | 27. and shall those escape that scorn his service? |
A27016 | 27. and that he will break them with a Rod of iron, and dash them in pieces like a Potters vessel? |
A27016 | 3. and what would we have more? |
A27016 | 36. and didst thou think he would give thee leave to make them the scorn and off- scouring of the world? |
A27016 | 4. when the ungodly world shall know, that Holiness was the most Honourable State? |
A27016 | 9. Who then shall be the Judge? |
A27016 | ? |
A27016 | Alas self- destroyers, what do you mean? |
A27016 | All the question is whether you are willing? |
A27016 | And I would know, Whether you pretend to any honesty and Conscience, or not? |
A27016 | And are horses, and kine, and oxen, think you, greater Riches then the Guard and Ministration of the Angels of God? |
A27016 | And are not the poor and sorrowful there their equals? |
A27016 | And are not these men of Base dishonourable spirits? |
A27016 | And are not your bodies for their service? |
A27016 | And are the torments of Hell so small and tolerable, that thou thinkest a holy life too dear a means for to prevent them? |
A27016 | And are these Honest men that are the factors of Satan the great deceiver, in cheating themselves and others into Hell? |
A27016 | And are these Honest? |
A27016 | And are these cruel persons honest men? |
A27016 | And are you afraid of altering this course of life, and turning to God, lest it should make you mad? |
A27016 | And are you that never saw those daies, to be believed before them that saw them? |
A27016 | And are you yet unresolved, whether Godliness be the most Pleasant Life? |
A27016 | And art thou so unnatural as to be ungodly, and deny him thy love, and care, and service, that hath made thee? |
A27016 | And can a man be merry to hear such mirth as this? |
A27016 | And can an inhabitant of this world have a more honourable imployment then to serve the Lord? |
A27016 | And can that man much value the pleasure of ungodly men, that doth fore- see this end? |
A27016 | And can the soul of man be guilty of greater unfaithfulness or treachery? |
A27016 | And can there be more on earth bestowed on man, then to be made partakers of the Divine nature? |
A27016 | And can you be too careful for eternity? |
A27016 | And can you believe that your life is more Honourable then theirs? |
A27016 | And can you find in your hearts to lay such a stombling block as this in the way of your miserable acquaintance, to keep them from salvation? |
A27016 | And consider I pray you, What a Quietness it is that you have, before you are troubled by the Godly? |
A27016 | And dare you charge God with errour, or encouraging Pride? |
A27016 | And darest thou impute such foolish tyrannie to the God of heaven? |
A27016 | And darest thou say he doth too much? |
A27016 | And darest thou say that Christ came to do us harm? |
A27016 | And darest thou say that this was needless? |
A27016 | And darest thou thus openly play his part? |
A27016 | And do not heathens confess this by the light of nature: And hath not thy tongue confest it many a time? |
A27016 | And do you indeed think this so sad a business? |
A27016 | And do you know any other day that is fitter? |
A27016 | And do you not know that it is worse to be without holy affections to the God that made you, and the Christ that bought you? |
A27016 | And do you not pretend your selves to believe in Christ? |
A27016 | And do you not profess to take the ten Commandments for the Law of God, which all men should obey? |
A27016 | And do you not say your selves that you are Christians? |
A27016 | And do you think it is a grievous tedious work, for a needy soul to beg of God, that is so ready to relieve him? |
A27016 | And do you think it lawful before God, for any one that can but master you, to do the like by you? |
A27016 | And do you think men that have tryed it, would so long after more and more, if it were not pleasant? |
A27016 | And do you think that sin is so lovely a thing that a man can not live merrily without it? |
A27016 | And dost thou think in thy conscience that the flesh is better worthy of thy Love, and care, and labour ▪ then the Lord? |
A27016 | And doth not Christ command his servants also to Rejoyce? |
A27016 | And doth not thy conscience yet bear witness that it is thy duty? |
A27016 | And first, whereas you say you are not sure of a Life hereafter, I demand of you, Whether you are sure that there is no such life? |
A27016 | And hast thou devoted all thou hast to him with thy self, to be used according to his Will? |
A27016 | And hath not God most plainly and frequently in his Word commanded thee a holy life? |
A27016 | And have the wicked any such attendance for their security? |
A27016 | And how Pleasant is it to understand all the Helps, Encouragements and Comforts that God hath provided for us in our way? |
A27016 | And how can that be an Honest man, that Loveth not Go ● … well as his fleshly lusts and pleasures? |
A27016 | And how can you escape if you neglect so great salvation? |
A27016 | And how justly do they perish that will follow you? |
A27016 | And how long a time must you pay for this in hell? |
A27016 | And how wicked is that Heart as well as Blind, that is so averse to God and Holiness? |
A27016 | And if God despise thee, what honour is it to thee to be stout- hearted and high in thy own conceit, and to live applauded by thy self and others? |
A27016 | And if God were not the Author of the Scripture, how come so many clear and notable Prophesies of it to be fulfilled? |
A27016 | And if Heaven seem a place of toyle and trouble to you, how just will it be that you are everlastingly shut out? |
A27016 | And if Heaven will not afford us pleasure, whence shall we expect it? |
A27016 | And if the Reproach of Christ be greater Riches then all yours, What then is his Life, and Love, and Benefits? |
A27016 | And if this be indeed thy judgement of thy self, I demand, Whether or no thou be content to be used as a Beast? |
A27016 | And if thou know him not by Faith, nor cleavest to him by unfeigned Love, how canst thou pretend to have his Image? |
A27016 | And if thou love it not, why canst not thou more quietly be without it? |
A27016 | And if you be against the keeping our Covenants with God, should you not be against the making them? |
A27016 | And if you say,[ What is all this to me, any more then to the ungodly world, on whom the wrath of God abideth?] |
A27016 | And in good sadness, dost thou take Heaven to be the worst place? |
A27016 | And indeed what will they all do more then dung to procure you the favour of God, or the pardon of your sins? |
A27016 | And is Holiness so hateful or grievous a thing to thee, that thou wilt venture on Hell it self to avoid it? |
A27016 | And is all too little for sin and the Devil, and all too much for thy soul and God? |
A27016 | And is he safe that is in the Devils power? |
A27016 | And is it God that perswadeth you that his Word is false? |
A27016 | And is it lawful before God for others to do so by you? |
A27016 | And is it not a most unreasonable thing for a man that hath no saving grace and holiness at all, to cry out against excess of holiness? |
A27016 | And is it not a sad prospect to a man that believeth the Word of God, and the life to come, to look upon such a distracted world? |
A27016 | And is it not more pleasant to know these things, then to possess all the vain delights of the earth? |
A27016 | And is it not more unnatural to deny compassion to your selves in your own necessity? |
A27016 | And is it not pitty that such infinite delights should be set before men, and they should lose them all for want of a Heart and appetite to them? |
A27016 | And is it not the basest injustice and dishonesty to give these to thy flesh, and deny them to him, and think his service an unnecessary thing? |
A27016 | And is it not worth all our care& labour to look after them? |
A27016 | And is it unpleasant to pray to a bounteous God, in our necessity, and that for the best and pleasantest things? |
A27016 | And is it your sport to abuse the Lord? |
A27016 | And is not Translating( whether by Voice or Writing) a part of that preaching or explication? |
A27016 | And is not a certain Title to a Lordship or a Kingdom, a greater Treasure then the possession of a straw? |
A27016 | And is not that an impious heart then, which speaketh thus, or is thus affected, and that an impious life that manifesteth it? |
A27016 | And is not the reason thousand times stronger for our souls? |
A27016 | And is one mans judgement more regardable then a hundred, yea, many hundred? |
A27016 | And is such a transitory life as this, more worthy of your care and greatest diligence, then life eternal? |
A27016 | And is that an Honest man that would rather cast off Father or Mother then cast off his filthy sins? |
A27016 | And is that an honest man that professeth himself a Lyer, and taketh all men to be so too? |
A27016 | And is the Worst more Pleasant to thee then the Best? |
A27016 | And is this a desirable or rational kind of mirth? |
A27016 | And is this it that worldlings make such a stir for? |
A27016 | And is this the case? |
A27016 | And is this your Covenant- keeping? |
A27016 | And might you not on this ground also account Christ himself the troubler of the world, as much, and a thousand times more then us? |
A27016 | And must Paul, and Peter, and the holyest on earth, still seek to grow and labour to be more holy? |
A27016 | And now who is it that was troublesom, and the cause of evil? |
A27016 | And now, poor worldling, what is all your Gain and Riches in comparison of the least of these? |
A27016 | And really do you think if we could speak with Angels or departed Souls, that they would not consent with God and all Believers in their Testimony? |
A27016 | And shall a blind and wretched worm come after, and dare to contradict him, and unsay all this, and say, What needs so much ado? |
A27016 | And shall a loytering Rebell that hath wasted so much of his little time, cry out, What needs so much ado? |
A27016 | And shall men called Christians take the very Infidels for Puritanes, and be worse then Heathens? |
A27016 | And shall we regard the judgement of such men? |
A27016 | And should not all thou hast be employed for him? |
A27016 | And should not your souls then have more of your care and diligence, then corruptible flesh that must turn to dirt? |
A27016 | And so you should say,[ How sweet is Holiness, when it is so troublesome to those that have it, so much as to fear lest they have it not? |
A27016 | And that he that loveth and serveth God most, doth yet come exceeding short of his duty? |
A27016 | And that the best is still too bad? |
A27016 | And the presence of Satans image upon thy soul? |
A27016 | And therefore how should they be fit to tell you, what Good is in the way of God, which they never travelled in? |
A27016 | And this shews that Holiness is most lovely in his eyes: or else why should he be so much troubled, when he doth but doubt whether he be Holy or not? |
A27016 | And were not the Scriptures presently translated according to the use of the Churches? |
A27016 | And what Thoughts should so rejoyce the soul as the thoughts of our abode with Christ for ever? |
A27016 | And what abundant pleasure then hath a Believer? |
A27016 | And what are all your Treasures to this Treasure? |
A27016 | And what are the wheels of your watch or clock made for, but to shew you the hour of the day? |
A27016 | And what but sin was the cause of their captivity, and present desolation? |
A27016 | And what can be a fitter object of such great content, then to be a member of Christ, and an heir of heaven? |
A27016 | And what comfort can the fore- thoughts of life everlasting afford a soul in a state of sin, that is passing to everlasting misery? |
A27016 | And what contention can there be where these Rules are practised? |
A27016 | And what do we but endeavour to obey them? |
A27016 | And what do we but practice that which you profess? |
A27016 | And what else will speak a word against a Holy life, but the Devil, the flesh and wicked men? |
A27016 | And what is all the Riches of this world, to this Heavenly Treasure, the Spirit of the Lord? |
A27016 | And what is it that you quarrel with the godly for? |
A27016 | And what makes them be so much together, if there be not Love among them? |
A27016 | And what would they not do to promote it, which they could do? |
A27016 | And when all these are laid aside, how poor and lean a service is it, that is left you to perform to him? |
A27016 | And when the living God hath told the world his mind and will, shall a sinful man stand up and say, I am wiser then my Maker? |
A27016 | And where shall we find comfort if not in God? |
A27016 | And whether is it like that God should reveal his mind to them, or unto wicked wretches? |
A27016 | And whether it be Credible, that Goodness and Obedience to the Lord, should be the constant certain way to mens undoing, loss or misery? |
A27016 | And whether it be the Godly or the Ungodly, that are the Troublers of the world? |
A27016 | And which dost thou think is liker Christ, the holy or the unholy? |
A27016 | And which of these Societies is liker to be happy? |
A27016 | And which of these are in the safer state? |
A27016 | And which part is it? |
A27016 | And which think you was in the right, the Prophet or the King? |
A27016 | And who cares then for the dishonours of all the wicked of the world? |
A27016 | And who gave you these hopes? |
A27016 | And who shall condemn when it is Christ that justifieth? |
A27016 | And who would have their Riches on such terms? |
A27016 | And why do you make them the scorn of your continual malice? |
A27016 | And why hath he appointed Pastors and Teachers for his Church, if this be all the good they do? |
A27016 | And why is this foretold them? |
A27016 | And why should he be so desirous of thy soul, if thou hadst none to lose? |
A27016 | And why should not all men hold it if it were true? |
A27016 | And why should not the shame of sin be more loathed then the undeserved shame of honesty? |
A27016 | And why should we believe you when we see that you judge clean contrarily for your bodies, then you do for your souls? |
A27016 | And will any be so foolish as to conclude from thence, that Riches are more uncomfortable then beggery? |
A27016 | And will it prove better indeed to you at the end? |
A27016 | And will not the everlasting fruit of it trouble you more? |
A27016 | And will you cast away the only supports of your soul, and sink when the day of suffering comes? |
A27016 | And will you confirm this slander of the Devil and his instruments? |
A27016 | And will you go against the light of humane Nature it self? |
A27016 | And will you grudge to pass through sufferings to glory, and to fow in tears that you may reap in joy? |
A27016 | And will you profess to Believe these things, and yet say they are naught, or that it was never a good world since they were regarded and practised? |
A27016 | And will you run from ● … ven and damn your selves, and know that you do so? |
A27016 | And will you say that Godliness is unpleasant, because it makes a man sorrow for his ungodliness? |
A27016 | And will you say that Holiness is unpleasant, because men would so fain have more of it? |
A27016 | And wilt thou needs thy self decide the case? |
A27016 | And would you have him yet do more to testifie his dislike of sin? |
A27016 | And would you have us believe you, when you contradict your selves? |
A27016 | And would you wish me to believe such ignorant men as you, before the God of Heaven that contradicteth you? |
A27016 | And yet can not Necessity make you cast away your sins, and take up a Holy and Heavenly life? |
A27016 | And yet dare a fleshly negligent sinner, reproach the diligent seeking of God, and take it for a needless thing, and say, What needs all this ado? |
A27016 | And yet dare you delay another day before you make so Necessary a change? |
A27016 | And yet in a case as clear in it self, and much more clear, how few do we prevail with? |
A27016 | And yet will you at the same time reproach them for being too strict and fearful to offend? |
A27016 | And yet will you say that it was a better world when there was less of this? |
A27016 | And yet wilt thou say, that its long of God, or Scripture, or Religion, that the world is naught? |
A27016 | And yet would you make us believe that you are as good as they, and that Religion makes men worse? |
A27016 | And yet wouldst thou have such men come shorter? |
A27016 | And yet wouldst thou have them be such odious hypocrites, as to think they serve God too much already, while they confess that they come so short? |
A27016 | And ● herefore though in the general notion of Delight they all ageee; yet materially what abundance of ends and gods have carnal men? |
A27016 | Another saith, Can not you keep your Religion to your selfe; and be Godly with moderation, as your neighbours be? |
A27016 | Are not Sacraments sweet to you? |
A27016 | Are not other things Needful in their places? |
A27016 | Are not other things also Needfull in their places? |
A27016 | Are not the multitudes of Veins and Arteries in your Bodies, united in the trunks and roots? |
A27016 | Are not these the Atheists seconds; even next to them that deny that there is any God, or that blasphem ● him? |
A27016 | Are not those that Believe the Life to come of Holyer lives( for the generality) then those that do not? |
A27016 | Are the thoughts of God, of Christ, of Heaven sweet to you? |
A27016 | Are these Honest men that provoke God to forsake the Land, and are the vermine and destroyers of our peace and happiness? |
A27016 | Are they better that are likest Christ, or they that are most unlike him? |
A27016 | Are they not wiser then you, and a few drunkards that have scarce wit enough to do the Devils service without such sottishness as shames his cause? |
A27016 | Are we all by our Baptismal Vow engaged to a needless thing? |
A27016 | Are you Brutists in opinion? |
A27016 | Are you agreed then that God shall be your Judge? |
A27016 | Are you careful and conscionable, humble and holy in your lives? |
A27016 | Are you for Commodity? |
A27016 | Are you heartily willing to forsake your sins, and overcome the things of which you so complain? |
A27016 | Are you not ashamed to see the servants of the Devil and the world so jocund, and your selves so sad that serve the Lord? |
A27016 | Are you not sure that Christ and his benefits are yours? |
A27016 | Are you not told that you have your good things here? |
A27016 | Are you wiser then all these? |
A27016 | Are you yet resolved to seek this One thing with the chiefest of your desires, and care, and labour, or are you not? |
A27016 | Are your Graces weak? |
A27016 | Are your afflictions great? |
A27016 | Art thou Devoted to God without reserve, as being not thine own but his? |
A27016 | Art thou better then God, that it should be called dishonesty to wrong thee, and no dishonesty to wrong him, or deny him that which is his own? |
A27016 | Art thou mere subjected to his Authority, and observant of his Laws and Government, then of mans? |
A27016 | Art thou not afraid of some sudden vengeance from the Lord, for thus making thy self his open enemy, and contradicting him to his face? |
A27016 | Art thou not his creature? |
A27016 | As if she had said,[ Is it a fit thing that both thy self and all this company should be unprovided for, and have neither meat no ● drink? |
A27016 | As if you had changed for the worse, or would make men think so? |
A27016 | Ask but a dying man, whether fleshly pleasure or Godliness be the sweeter thing? |
A27016 | Ask them then which is the better part? |
A27016 | BUt I know you will say,[ Alas, what need you exhort us to spiritual pleasures and consolations? |
A27016 | Be not offended if I speak yet plainlyer to you; for in a case so lamentable, how can we be too plain or serious? |
A27016 | Because we are against sin? |
A27016 | But What is that wickedness, and in whom? |
A27016 | But above all, how Pleasant is it to know by faith, the life that we must live with God for ever? |
A27016 | But are not outward things also necessary: Must we not have food and rayment? |
A27016 | But are you sure to continue the life you have? |
A27016 | But do they do this of themselves, or doth God command it them? |
A27016 | But do we not see that the main Divisions of the world are about Religion? |
A27016 | But do you not give too great occasion to ignorant spectators to judge otherwise? |
A27016 | But had you rather have Hell then God and Glory? |
A27016 | But have you used the Means to make it s ● ● to you, and to be well- resolved? |
A27016 | But how cometh it to pass that men will make no wiser a choice? |
A27016 | But how different is the case of the renewed upright soul? |
A27016 | But how would they abhorr such a motion as this? |
A27016 | But if Sacraments be so pleasant, why then( saith a disconsolate soul,) have I found no more pleasure or comfort in them? |
A27016 | But if all these witnesses will not serve you, what shall we say to you? |
A27016 | But if they all as with one heart and mouth do cry down sin, and cry up Holiness, why should you then refuse their Testimony? |
A27016 | But if you do not, why will you not hearken to the servants of the Lord, and joy ● with them? |
A27016 | But if you would have the number of the godly to be greater ▪ why do you not increase it by your joyning with them? |
A27016 | But is it so with the ungodly? |
A27016 | But is nothing necessary but this One? |
A27016 | But is your wickedness your excuse? |
A27016 | But it is but a few that are of so strict a mind and life; and shall none be saved but these few? |
A27016 | But suppose them as bad as malice doth imagine: Is that any reason why both they and you should not be better? |
A27016 | But the question is, Whether it be this Puritanical precise way of serving God which only deserves the name of Holiness? |
A27016 | But to the soul that hath God for his security, what can be dangerous? |
A27016 | But to what end should I cite more words of Scripture, for a point which all the Scripture proveth? |
A27016 | But what can there be of any weight to prohibit a sincere Believer from seasonable spiritual rejoycing? |
A27016 | But what have you that are ungodly, to answer against all the terrours of the Law? |
A27016 | But what if it prove true,( as nothing more true) will you sit still, and lose it for you know not what? |
A27016 | But what is the cause of it? |
A27016 | But what saith the Holy- Ghost now to this question? |
A27016 | But what should we do to get into those hearts, to search your sores, and work the cure? |
A27016 | But who is it long of that you have still such fears? |
A27016 | But who then shall be Judge? |
A27016 | But why do you not tell what you have, as well as what you want? |
A27016 | But yet if all this will not satisfie you, I will come yet lower: Who is it that you would have to be Judge or Witness in th ● … case? |
A27016 | But you suppose that the Miracles and facts can only be known by a Divine belief of the History? |
A27016 | But you will aske, Whence is it then that we have the foresaid instunces? |
A27016 | But you''l ask perhaps,[ When a Sermon and other worldly business fall out at once, are we alwayes bound to hear the Sermon?] |
A27016 | But( saith Writer) If God had means that the Scripture should be a Law to all, he would not have writ it in a language which they understand not?] |
A27016 | But( saith he) Can the Miracles confirm the Scripture, when it is the Scripture that reports the Miracles? |
A27016 | But( saith the impious person) why make they such a difference between themselves and other men? |
A27016 | Can a man of so many promises be unsafe? |
A27016 | Can he deserve the name of a sober man, that will sell his salvation for so short, so small, so filthy a pleasure as sin affordeth? |
A27016 | Can not a Statute tell you what Parliament made it, and what matters of fact were the occasion, and also what shal be your duty upon pain of death? |
A27016 | Can not you spare your friends, your sports, your bravery, your wealth and other carnal accommodations? |
A27016 | Can not you tell how to leave your sensual pleasures? |
A27016 | Can the flesh afford you any thing so delightful? |
A27016 | Can you blow hot and cold? |
A27016 | Can you both Love and Hate, both Honour and Scorn, the Image of God? |
A27016 | Can you call these by the name of Happiness, without renouncing your Reason and Experience? |
A27016 | Can you deny it? |
A27016 | Can you fo ● shame say, that the later were the best? |
A27016 | Can you for shame say that you Love God above all, and yet have more pleasure in prating over a pot of Ale, then in speaking reverently of God? |
A27016 | Can you go on in security, in negligence and worldliness, when you hear of your Necessity, that you must change, or you are lost for ever? |
A27016 | Can you imagine that there is more evil in your infirmities and sufferings, then there is good in God, and happiness in Heaven? |
A27016 | Can you say truly, as before the searcher of hearts, that it is he that hath had your hearts? |
A27016 | Canst thou find in thy heart thus to dishonour and wrong the God whom thou so much esteemest, and the grace which thou so much desirest? |
A27016 | Canst thou possibly give God more then is his due? |
A27016 | Christ saith that this is The One thing needful: And the Serpent saith, It is more ado then needs: and What needs all this ado? |
A27016 | Christ was a diligent preacher himself, and dare you accuse him for it? |
A27016 | Condemn the breaches of his Laws and spare not; but will you therefore condemn the keeping of them? |
A27016 | Consider also, What a lamentable hinderance you are hereby to the conversion and salvation of souls? |
A27016 | Could this be feigned? |
A27016 | Could you but ask many thousands that are now in misery,[ How came you to choose so unhappy a way?] |
A27016 | D ● st thou not deal exceeding unthankfully and unequally with God? |
A27016 | Dare any of you speak out and say, that earth is better then heaven, or sin then grace, or temporal pleasure then eternal happiness? |
A27016 | Dare any one of you say that you are wiser then the All- knowing God? |
A27016 | Dare any one of you say that you have not heard that which should resolve a sober considerate man? |
A27016 | Dare you harbour such a purpose? |
A27016 | Darest thou say in thy heart or with thy tongue, that sin and sensuality is better? |
A27016 | Darest thou say that Christ doth more then needs, in his Intercession for us with the Father now in Heaven? |
A27016 | Did God make them believe that they shall die like beasts that have no further to go, nor any other life to live? |
A27016 | Did God make them unreasonable, or give them understandings uncapable of things of such high concernment? |
A27016 | Did God never warn them by a Sermon, or 〈 … 〉, to prepare for the life which they must live for ever? |
A27016 | Did God never ● ● ll them that after this life there is another, where they must live in endless joy or torment? |
A27016 | Did God send you hither on no better an errand than to kindle and blow the fire of his wrath, and fall into it when you have kindled it? |
A27016 | Did not the Ministers of Christ preach the same doctrine to the world then, in the several languages of the Nations where they came? |
A27016 | Did not the sorcerrers in Egypt work Miracles? |
A27016 | Did not this holy Prophet find it a Pleasant work to Praise the Lord? |
A27016 | Did you ever well consider of this? |
A27016 | Do I need to tell thee, as Nathan did David, that[ Thou art the man?] |
A27016 | Do I not see how dear they are to one another? |
A27016 | Do I not see that they are ten times more liberal to relieve each other in distress, then you are? |
A27016 | Do not Church Constitutions do the same? |
A27016 | Do not we see that they are sober, when some of you are drunken? |
A27016 | Do not you call your selves Christians your selves? |
A27016 | Do not you profess the Articles of the Christian Belief? |
A27016 | Do they speak any mo ● e of the everlasting torments, the worm that dyeth not, the fire that is unquenchable, then Christ himself hath done? |
A27016 | Do we devise these sayings? |
A27016 | Do we not see the contrary in the open fruits? |
A27016 | Do we trouble you with our Preaching, and praying, and our stir for heaven? |
A27016 | Do you believe that Jesus Christ did rise again from the dead, or not? |
A27016 | Do you believe this now, or do you not? |
A27016 | Do you consent to this, or not? |
A27016 | Do you despise the righteous, and justifie the wicked? |
A27016 | Do you exercise faith, as well as feeling, in judging of the benefit of Sacraments? |
A27016 | Do you faithfully endeavour to exercise Faith, Repentance, Love and all Sacramental Graces in the use of the ordinances? |
A27016 | Do you fear Reproach? |
A27016 | Do you fear persecution or death from the hands of cruel violence? |
A27016 | Do you fear the power and rage of enemies? |
A27016 | Do you hear any contendings? |
A27016 | Do you hurt your selves like careless children, and then blame God for bidding you,[ Take heed?] |
A27016 | Do you indeed Love and Honour the Image of God? |
A27016 | Do you know that heaven is the only happiness, and yet will you seek this world before it? |
A27016 | Do you know what is Best for you, and will not h ● ● ● it? |
A27016 | Do you not desire the conversion of your carnal friends, and all about you? |
A27016 | Do you not expect to receive the spiritual benefits, just as the Papists do receive the Bread? |
A27016 | Do you not fear every hour, lest death arrest you, and bring you to the prison of the bottomless pit? |
A27016 | Do you not find the whole Scripture dividing all the world into two ranks, the godly and the ungodly? |
A27016 | Do you not hear how they rail at us for your sakes that are vicious and ungodly, and tell us that you are the fruit and shame of our Ministry? |
A27016 | Do you not see how they labour after more grace? |
A27016 | Do you not see what lamentable work prosperity, victories, honour, and worldly wealth and power have made in the world? |
A27016 | Do you plead against Holiness, and for a careless and ungodly life? |
A27016 | Do you say that their Honour will make them proud? |
A27016 | Do you see any thing like a difference among us all? |
A27016 | Do you sell your Saviour with Judas for a little money; and change your part in God and Glory, for the brutish pleasures of sin for a season? |
A27016 | Do you take them to be Honest men that are common cheaters, or deceivers, and that in matters of greatest value? |
A27016 | Do you talk of better things then God, or of higher things then Heaven? |
A27016 | Do you think it is for Nothing that the holy servants of the Lord, do stiek so close to him, and labour so constantly in his work? |
A27016 | Do you think our Delight is not more then yours? |
A27016 | Do you think that a cruel unmerciful man, or a loving and merciful man is the more honest? |
A27016 | Do you think that a perfidious unfaithful man, or a faithful man that will not be hired to break his word, is the honester man? |
A27016 | Do you think that an unnatural man is an Honest man? |
A27016 | Do you think that an unpleasant tedious life that doth consist in such employment? |
A27016 | Do you think that he is an honest man that is unthankful? |
A27016 | Do you think that man is an Honest man, that will deny you your due, and rob you of all that is your own? |
A27016 | Do you think that the Belief of another life, is needful or useful, to the well governing of this world, or not? |
A27016 | Do you think that the Communion of Saints, is to be turned into a rabble of impiety? |
A27016 | Do you think that the discourse of Learned men, about Arts and Sciences, History and the like, is not more pleasant then your idle talk? |
A27016 | Do you think that there is any thing more worth your care, and time, and labour, or can you more profitably lay it out? |
A27016 | Do you think there is any man in love with sorrows? |
A27016 | Do you want recreation? |
A27016 | Do ● t thou think the world will be much better to thee, for the time to come than hitherto it hath proved? |
A27016 | Dost thou believe that spirits in borrowed shapes have oft appeared unto men, and in voio ● s spoaken to them, to draw them to sin, or to perdition? |
A27016 | Dost thou know the man on earth that is most precise, and holy, and diligent for God? |
A27016 | Dost thou know what a life it is that thou accountes ● an unnecessary toil? |
A27016 | Dost thou not confess that we are all sinners? |
A27016 | Dost thou not feel the importunity of his Temptations? |
A27016 | Dost thou not plainly renounce thy Covenant, and faith, and duty, when thou renouncest a holy life as a thing unnecessary? |
A27016 | Dost thou sit there like a child of God, and like an heir of Heaven, and a co- heire with Christ? |
A27016 | Dost thou think that Heaven is not worthy of the labour; that is bestowed for it by the holyest Saints on earth? |
A27016 | Dost thou think, or darest thou say, that the bloody death, and holy life of Jesus Christ were more then needs in order to thy salvation? |
A27016 | Doth he not command them to live in the most delightful works of Love and Joy and thankful mention of his mercies? |
A27016 | Doth he not freely offer you his help? |
A27016 | Doth it anywhere speak against any thing that is Good? |
A27016 | Doth it beseem him now to dwell in grief, and refuse consolation, that must in a few dayes be swallowed up with Joy? |
A27016 | Doth not God command men to fast and mourn? |
A27016 | Doth not all this justifie the exercise of Discipline, and condemn the neglect of it? |
A27016 | Doth not conscience say, O but what if there should be a Hell for the ungodly? |
A27016 | Doth not the world grow sweet to you, and your condition or expectations, and your thriving state, more plesant to you then heretofore? |
A27016 | Doth not thy heart tell thee that then thou shalt be of another mind? |
A27016 | Doth that sorrowful heart, and that dejected countenance become one that must live with Christ for ever, in such resplendent glory as thou must do? |
A27016 | Doth thy flesh deserve all thy care and labour, and is this God unworthy of it, and dost thou call his service a needless work? |
A27016 | Especially when it is but a healing sorrow, preparing for remission, and not a sorrow joyned with despair, as theirs will be that die impenitently? |
A27016 | Even a few tears, and complaints, and prayers? |
A27016 | Exhortation: What course will you take for time to come? |
A27016 | For a guilty soul to pray to God that is so ready to forgive him? |
A27016 | For if he Govern us, it is by Laws, and Judgement: And if by Laws, which are they? |
A27016 | For is not that lost, and worse a thousand times then lost; that is spent in crossing the End that it is given for? |
A27016 | For it is only the Godly that give God his own, when the ungodly rob him of it: Hast thou not thy Life, and Time, and Maintenance from God? |
A27016 | For what is it that all our Sermons plead for but Holiness in order to Everlasting Happiness? |
A27016 | For who can conquer him? |
A27016 | For who denyeth this? |
A27016 | For would he be thought better then he takes God himself to be? |
A27016 | Go to any Godly man, and ask him which of these wayes he hath found by experience to be best? |
A27016 | Go to the wisest ablest Ministers, and aske them which is the better part? |
A27016 | God hath sent you into this world but on one errand, even to make sure of everlasting life, and will you neglect that one? |
A27016 | Gods truth causeth that Impress on the mind of man, which you call his Imaginations: For where should Truth be received, but in the mind? |
A27016 | Good or Evil? |
A27016 | HAving fully shewed you[ What Godliness is] I now beseech thee, Reader, to enquire, Whether this described case be thine? |
A27016 | Had they never heard how hard at last it will prove for them to kick against the pricks? |
A27016 | Had you not rather be rich, though for a time you know it not, then to live in certain continual want? |
A27016 | Had you rather have sin then Christ and Holiness? |
A27016 | Hadst thou better helps and means of Knowledge? |
A27016 | Hadst thou none to make the football of thy contemptuous sport, but the sons of God, the spouse of Christ, yea his members, and the heirs of heaven? |
A27016 | Hast thou not thy Reason, and thy Affections, and all thy faculties from him? |
A27016 | Hast thou prayed for it day and night? |
A27016 | Hast thou read and meditated and studied more? |
A27016 | Hath God made them believe that they shall dwell here for ever, and never die? |
A27016 | Hath God promised his Spirit to comfort you that are wicked in your sin? |
A27016 | Hath God shut up their souls in desperation, so that it is in vain to seek, or trouble themselves for that of which there is no hope? |
A27016 | Hath this One had your chiefest care and labour, and have you chosen rather to neglect all other things then ● is? |
A27016 | Have the dust or bones of the Carkasses of Voluptuous sinners, any comfort or benefit now, by all the pleasure of their former sin? |
A27016 | Have you Houses, and Towns and Countreys at command? |
A27016 | Have you Kingdoms and Dominions? |
A27016 | Have you been running so long, and know not ● ● what is the prize that you have run for? |
A27016 | Have you been ● ● sie all your daies till now, and know not about what or why? |
A27016 | Have you forgot the ● ● and that you have been so long going on? |
A27016 | Have you indeed lived in the world as men that believe that One thing is necessary? |
A27016 | Have you no better work in the world to do, then to prepare your selves a place in hell? |
A27016 | Have you not a thousand fold more to set your tougues on work? |
A27016 | Have you not immortal souls to save or lose? |
A27016 | Have you sin? |
A27016 | Have you the true understanding of the use of Sacraments? |
A27016 | He hateth their faults much more then you: but will you therefore hate their goodness? |
A27016 | He hath given you one lesson to learn, even to please him and to save your souls, and will you not learn and remember that one? |
A27016 | He hath not faith to feed on Christ: But to a lively faith, what sweet ● ness doth such a Feast afford? |
A27016 | He hath shewed us, what is good: and what doth he require of us, but to do justly, and love mercy, and walk humbly with our God? |
A27016 | He hath trusted you with one thing, and will you cast away that one? |
A27016 | He is ours that can do all things: What then should we fear? |
A27016 | He is ours that hath all things: What then can we need? |
A27016 | He is ours that knoweth all things: Who then can overreach us, or undo us by deceit? |
A27016 | He that is under his displeasure, or he that is his delight? |
A27016 | He that spared not his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how shall be not with ● i ● ▪ also freely give us all things? |
A27016 | He will Deliver them and Honour them? |
A27016 | He will not bear with it in the Greatest Princes; how then shall Perfidious subjects scape? |
A27016 | Hearken whether they complain of their Humility or their Pride? |
A27016 | How Pleasant a thing must it needs be to know things of so high a Nature? |
A27016 | How Pleasant is it to know the blessed Son of God, and to behold the face of his Fathers Love that is revealed in him as his fullest Image? |
A27016 | How Pleasant is it to know the nature and frame of the Church of Christ which is his Body, and to know the difference and use of the several members? |
A27016 | How Pleasant is it to know the works of his Creation? |
A27016 | How are we unpeaceable? |
A27016 | How blind and wicked is the heart that can find more pleasure in sin than holiness? |
A27016 | How busie is he to fill them with fears and doubtings? |
A27016 | How camest thou man to thy knowledge, that thou thinkest thy self wiser then me, and all the Pastors of the Church? |
A27016 | How can he be an Honest man that Believeth not his maker? |
A27016 | How can that be done, that God hath resolved shall not be? |
A27016 | How can they judge of a state that they were never in, and of a way that they never went? |
A27016 | How can you find pleasure in the greatest good, while you take it for an evil? |
A27016 | How can you for shame beg of God to glorifie you, when you take the Glory that he hath promised for a misery? |
A27016 | How canst thou expect to be admitted into Heaven, that takest it for so bad a place? |
A27016 | How cunningly and diligently will he argue against their peace and comforts? |
A27016 | How easily could I spare the Pleasures of the flesh, and leave those husks to swine to feed on? |
A27016 | How glad would men be to be told what shall besall them to the last hour of their lives? |
A27016 | How hard do many even ungodly persons study to know the mysteries of Nature? |
A27016 | How is it in our choice? |
A27016 | How is it that Printing and Writing were not found out? |
A27016 | How is it that you observe not that your very reproaches do confute themselves? |
A27016 | How knowest thou but death is ready to strike, while thou art eating, or drinking, or talking, or sleeping? |
A27016 | How many mornings have you risen to your labour, and how many dayes and years have you spent in it, and now it is all lost? |
A27016 | How many of you have cause to weep and howl, for your approaching miseries, even then when you are glorying in your prosperity? |
A27016 | How many thoughts and fears, and cares, have possessed and pestred your minds, and now they are all lost? |
A27016 | How many thousands of them have been fain to give up their bodies to Tormentors, and their lives to the devouring flames? |
A27016 | How plain are the Articles of our Faith and the ten Commandments? |
A27016 | How punctually doth David, and Isaiah( 53 ▪) describe the sufferings of Christ, and Daniel foretell the very year? |
A27016 | How say you? |
A27016 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? |
A27016 | How short a while is the cup at your mouthes? |
A27016 | How subtilly will he question all our Evidences? |
A27016 | How sweet are thy words unto my tast? |
A27016 | How sweet is it to be exercised in the word of God? |
A27016 | How sweet unto their souls is the remembrance of kindness? |
A27016 | How then can we be miserable? |
A27016 | How then dare you do that which is so like to such blaspheming? |
A27016 | How will you be saved, when you refuse the only Saviour? |
A27016 | How will you bear poverty, or reproach, or injuries? |
A27016 | How, and why, and when he made the world, and all that is therein? |
A27016 | I add this as supposing you will say[ What are all these benefits to me, unless I were sure that I were indeed in the Covenant?] |
A27016 | I come now to the principal part of my message to you; but will you indeed entertain it, if it prove it self to be from God? |
A27016 | I confess I am a weak and ignorant man; but is the sottish ungodly quarreller any wiser then I am? |
A27016 | I demand of thee, whoever thou art that Readest these words, Whether thou know of any man on earth that thou thinkest to be a wiser man then thy self? |
A27016 | I disswade you not from seasonable moderate sorrows: But should not your joy be much greater, as long as the cause of it is much greater? |
A27016 | I further aske, Whether you would be alone of this brutish Opinion, or would you have all others of your mind? |
A27016 | I have told you of the Pleasantness of the Duties of Holiness, which are to be performed more directly toward God? |
A27016 | I know a better way then this? |
A27016 | I know you will say,[ God forbid, we hope better, we intend no such thing] But alas the question is not, What you intend, but what you are doing? |
A27016 | If God be thy trouble, what then is fit to be thy delight? |
A27016 | If God can not put sufficient Honour on those that are Related to him, tell us, who can? |
A27016 | If Godliness be naught, then Heaven is naught, where there is nothing else; And then take it not ill to be shut out? |
A27016 | If Necessity, your own Necessity, and so great Necessity to so great an End, will not prevail with you, What will? |
A27016 | If Time be worth Nothing, your Lives are worth Nothing: And why should a man desire to Live for Nothing? |
A27016 | If a day in the Courts of God be so delightful, what is ten thousand millions of ages in the Court of Glory? |
A27016 | If a drunkard Love God for giving him his drink, and a Whoremonger Love God for strenthening him in his lust, will you call this Honesty? |
A27016 | If a little in us imperfect worms be hated by thee, how wouldst thou hate the perfect Holiness of God? |
A27016 | If any, in what then will you place it, and whence will you expect it, if not from God in a holy life? |
A27016 | If by Power or by Policy they would rob you of your Portion, they can not do it: For which way should they do it? |
A27016 | If he be for us, who shall be against us? |
A27016 | If he be too precise that imperfectly obeyeth God, what will you say of God himself that commandeth more then any of us all performeth? |
A27016 | If he will sin against God, and sell his salvation for his sin, can you think he should more regard any man, how dear soever? |
A27016 | If it be only the circumstances,( as Whether we should receive the Lords Supper standing, or kneeling, or sitting? |
A27016 | If it be secret, how do you know it? |
A27016 | If it be, why do you not imitate them in that? |
A27016 | If not, how can you follow those temptations? |
A27016 | If the Question were, Whether Light or Darkness be the Better ▪ Whether a dead corps be better then a Living man? |
A27016 | If the Scripture be not the Word of God, How could it tell us of the making of the world, and such like things, which none but God alone could tell? |
A27016 | If this be true that the world is so bad, which part is it of the world that you mean? |
A27016 | If this were the hour of thy death, would all the profits or pleasures of thy life, be any comfort to thee, or make thy death a whit the easier? |
A27016 | If thou have no grace, whence is it that thou so much desirest it? |
A27016 | If we do but cross you in the way to Hell, we trouble you, and we break the peace? |
A27016 | If we have not another life to look after, then what are we but beasts that perish? |
A27016 | If yet you are not resolved which is the Better part and way, to whom do you desire to referr it? |
A27016 | If yet you know not the better part, to whom will you appeal? |
A27016 | If you are not, why do you complain of them? |
A27016 | If you did but know that one of your poor neighbours should certainly be a King, would you not presently honour him, even in his rags? |
A27016 | If you do believe it, then what need you further testimony to prove the doctrine to be of God? |
A27016 | If you do, then upon what ground is it possible for you to be honest? |
A27016 | If you do, will you yet go on? |
A27016 | If you grant that we are made for God that made us( as nothing more sure) then How is it that God can be our End if there be no life but this? |
A27016 | If you know it, how is it secret? |
A27016 | If you offer him gold, will it do any more then if you offered him so much dirt? |
A27016 | If you should, how vile would you appear? |
A27016 | If you think this worst in your Societies on earth, what do you but renounce it? |
A27016 | If you were debating the case with a sensual wretch, would you not tell him that Holiness is a state of greater pleasure then his sin? |
A27016 | If you were so used your selves, by one whose lives or estates you had preserved, would you not say,[ What an unworthy wretch is this? |
A27016 | If you were to die this hour, will it be any lasting comfort to you, that you have laboured to be Rich or Honourable, or that you have attained it? |
A27016 | If your son or servant speak against your service, but as you do against Gods, what would you think of their affections? |
A27016 | In hearing or reading it with serious meditation? |
A27016 | In our places and measure we should imitate him in this: Can you come into any house or company, and find nothing to say or do for God? |
A27016 | In the prevailing deepest thoughts of their hearts, they set most by the pleasures of this world; Why else is their Heart most towards them? |
A27016 | In their hunting and hawking, di ● ing and carding, drinking and revelling, feasting and dancing how little of God or heaven is on the sinners mind? |
A27016 | In what respect is the Needful thing but One? |
A27016 | In worldly matters, how quick- sighted, how resolute, how active is Necessity? |
A27016 | Is Loving God the way to be mad? |
A27016 | Is he not thy Father that hath bought thee? |
A27016 | Is he our Soveraign Lord, having by Creation and Redemption the right of Ruling us, and shall we scorn them that will be Ruled by him? |
A27016 | Is he the safer that is hated by the God of heaven, or he that is most dearly loved by him? |
A27016 | Is he worthy the name or reputation of a wise man, that hath not wit enough to scape eternal fire? |
A27016 | Is is not you that are so Covetous and worldly that you have nothing for the poor, and no time to spare for the work that you were made for? |
A27016 | Is it Christ or you, think you, that is mistaken in the value of them? |
A27016 | Is it God on whom you pretend to trust? |
A27016 | Is it Good or Evil? |
A27016 | Is it Honoured by you? |
A27016 | Is it all, or some? |
A27016 | Is it because they have done their work already, and having made sure of heaven, have time to turn themselves to other matters? |
A27016 | Is it care, and fear, and anguish of mind that God commandeth you? |
A27016 | Is it grievous for a child to speak to his Father? |
A27016 | Is it much and fervent prayer that is the preciseness or too much ado that you make question of? |
A27016 | Is it not an unquestionable duty to grow in grace? |
A27016 | Is it not as plain a case to a man of judgement,[ Whether Holiness, with Everlasting joys, be better then fleshly pleasures with damnation?] |
A27016 | Is it not because it requireth so much goodness, and telleth you that none of the unconverted ungodly shall be saved? |
A27016 | Is it not better to have health with those mistaken fears, then to live in sickness? |
A27016 | Is it not easie to say so by a Job, or a Samuel, or by Christ himself, if saying so may serve turn, and a wicked tongue may pass for proof? |
A27016 | Is it not for serving God, and because they will not be as bad as others? |
A27016 | Is it not of Truth and Weight? |
A27016 | Is it not the graceless miserable sort of men, that cry out, What needs all this ado? |
A27016 | Is it not then unreasonable when you have troubled your selves, to blame your physicion for troubling you in order to a cure? |
A27016 | Is it not to like a worldly fleshly life better then a Holy life? |
A27016 | Is it not to think well of sinful pleasures, and to think more hardly of the wayes of God? |
A27016 | Is it not unconceivable and unspeakable mercy? |
A27016 | Is it not with good reason? |
A27016 | Is it not you that have so little Charity that you even hate men for Loving and serving God, and seeking diligently to save their souls? |
A27016 | Is it not you your selves that make the complaint that are the men that make the world so bad? |
A27016 | Is it only to know how to shift a little for the commodities of the world? |
A27016 | Is it our perswading or hindring you from sin that troubleth you? |
A27016 | Is it reason and equity that you should look at sin only, and not at grace? |
A27016 | Is it so great a sin to shut up the bowels of compassion against our brother in his need? |
A27016 | Is it so much preaching and hearing Sermons that thou quarrellest with? |
A27016 | Is it the Godly, or the Ungodly? |
A27016 | Is it the holy observation of the Lords day that is the preciseness that you can not away with? |
A27016 | Is it the meeting of divers neighbours together( distinct from Church- meetings) that you question? |
A27016 | Is it the reading of the Scripture that is the Puritanism or too much ado that you blame? |
A27016 | Is it the strictness of mens lives in forbearing sin, and not doing as their neighbours do, in rioting and vain recreations, and delights? |
A27016 | Is it thy malignant, or worldly, or drunken, and ungodly friend? |
A27016 | Is musick unpleasant, because it delighteth not the deaf? |
A27016 | Is not a temperate meal more pleasant then a gluttonous surfet, that is worse to the feeling of the glutton the next day? |
A27016 | Is not common food that costeth not much, and kindleth no troublesom itch in a mans appetite, more pleasant then enticing costly dainties? |
A27016 | Is not sin grown sweet to you? |
A27016 | Is not that man at the heart against the Lord, that reproacheth his serious diligent servants, and counts his work a needless thing? |
A27016 | Is not the Question[ Whether God or the Creature, Holiness or Sin, Earth or Heaven, Short or Everlasting pleasures should be preferred?] |
A27016 | Is not the prayer of a beggar heard as soon as of a Lord or Gentleman? |
A27016 | Is not the very flesh of Christ safe? |
A27016 | Is not this the case between us now? |
A27016 | Is not thy wisdom less to his, then a glow- worms light is to the Sun? |
A27016 | Is that your Reason to be penny wise and pound foolish; to be wise to do evil, and to have no knowledge to do good? |
A27016 | Is the case so doubtful that they can not be resolved in it? |
A27016 | Is the creature pleasant to thee, and God unpleasant? |
A27016 | Is their godliness and care of their salvation necessary, or not? |
A27016 | Is there a greater plague then Hell to threaten? |
A27016 | Is there any device or shift of wit, that can procure your escape? |
A27016 | Is there any greater Reward to be promised? |
A27016 | Is there any power or interest of men or Angels that can procure your escape? |
A27016 | Is there but one way Pleasing unto God, and but one way that leadeth to salvation, and must that one way be the common scorn? |
A27016 | Is there here any more Churches then one? |
A27016 | Is there none wiser then your selves that you may learn of, as Mary did of Christ? |
A27016 | Is there not a better cure for Melancholy here among the servants of the Lord, then in an Ale- house, or in the company of transgressors? |
A27016 | Is there not an all sufficient Physicion of souls at hand? |
A27016 | Is there not in thy own Conscience, at least sometimes, some fears yet left of a life to come? |
A27016 | Is there, think you, a greater Necessity of your sin then of your salvation? |
A27016 | Is this the breaking of your Peace? |
A27016 | Is this your Honesty? |
A27016 | Is this your praying? |
A27016 | Is your pleasure gone, if you may not injure the God that made you? |
A27016 | It is but as yesterday since your houses had other Inhabitants, and your Towns and Countries other Inhabitants, and where are they all now? |
A27016 | It is he that Justifieth: Who then shall condemn them? |
A27016 | It is he that sendeth the spirit to sanctifie us: It is he that prayeth that we may be sanctified by the truth? |
A27016 | It is the work of the Holy Ghost to illuminate and sanctifie men, and do you think that he doth us hurt? |
A27016 | It not the Tree one, that hath many branches? |
A27016 | Judge now whether the Places and Times are not Best that are most Godly? |
A27016 | Know ye not your own selves how that Jesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates? |
A27016 | Lastly, How can that be worst on earth, that is so good in Heaven? |
A27016 | Let God be Judge, let Christ be Judge; Who can, who dare refuse this Judge? |
A27016 | Many cast away their souls for Riches, and Honours, and carnal accommodations; but who would do it for poverty, sickness, or disgrace? |
A27016 | May I not have more joy in sickness with a promise, then the ungodly without a promise in their health? |
A27016 | May not men of various complexions be of one Society? |
A27016 | May not the History confirm the doctrine, and that doctrine oblige us to our duty? |
A27016 | May you have Christ, and Pardon, and Everlasting life, and will you not have them? |
A27016 | Methinks you should rather argue on the contrary side,[ How sweet is Health, when the fear of losing it is so troublesom? |
A27016 | Moreover I demand of you, What is the End of man and all these special faculties, if there be no life for him after this? |
A27016 | Moreover I demand of you, Whether you take God indeed to be the Governour of this world, or not? |
A27016 | Moreover I would know of you, Whether you think that there is any other world, which spiritual inhabitants do possess? |
A27016 | Moreover, do you think that he is an Honest man that is an enemy to the publike Good? |
A27016 | Moreover, if yet you would have more witness, shall those be heard that have tryed both states; the state of Sin, and the state of Holiness? |
A27016 | Much more if with the hopes of Life, he had the hopes of all the felicities of Life, and of the perpetuity of all these? |
A27016 | Must good and bad, must Ministers and raging Hereticks give in their testimony against you, and yet will you not be satisfied and come in? |
A27016 | Must he make a Holy Law for the Government of the world, and shall the obeying of it be derided? |
A27016 | Must we not by lawfull means avoid reproach and poverty in the world? |
A27016 | My Knowledge that is but little, hath cost me almost forty years hard study? |
A27016 | My next Question is, Whether you think that God should be Loved, and Obeyed, or not? |
A27016 | My second Question is,[ Who it is that shall be Judge between us in this debate? |
A27016 | Nay how could the dispersed persecuted Christians destroy the writings of their reigning enemies? |
A27016 | No more then a hungry man will ask, How prove you that it is my duty to eat every day? |
A27016 | Nor none that need a quickening word, to mind them of their everlasting state? |
A27016 | Not a tongue then shall say, What needs all this ado for heaven? |
A27016 | Not whether it be your desire that everlasting death should be the wages of sin, but whether it be the Law and unchangeable will of God? |
A27016 | Now the Question is, Which of these three are in the right? |
A27016 | Now when the delusions of prosperity are gone, which do men most relish? |
A27016 | O could I but be taken up with the Love of God, how easily could I spare the Pleasure of the flesh? |
A27016 | O death where is thy sting? |
A27016 | O grave where is thy victory? |
A27016 | O how welcome are converted sinners to the God of mercy? |
A27016 | O that I were further from my former sinful fleshly state? |
A27016 | O what a Life should that man live? |
A27016 | O what a case is that man in that hath so many thousands sins to answer for? |
A27016 | O what a precious treasure might I here open, to shew you the safety of true believers? |
A27016 | O what would the damned give for such an offer? |
A27016 | O what would you your selves give another day for such an offer, if you now neglect it? |
A27016 | O ● is it fit that all should be laid on me, even more then I can do, while she sits hearing with the Disciples? |
A27016 | Observe the complaints of penitent souls, whether it be their present Godliness or their former ungodliness, which they lament? |
A27016 | Oh England, hadst thou none to make the foot- ball of thy scorn, but the servants of the most High God? |
A27016 | Oh foolish nation, hadst thou none to deride and make thy by- word but Christ himself? |
A27016 | One saith, What need all this ado? |
A27016 | One thing is needful; the Good part is that one; and this is tendred to you by the Lord: What is it then that you do make choice of? |
A27016 | Open the Books of the wisest men, and see which side it is that they are on? |
A27016 | Or are you hardened to perdition? |
A27016 | Or at least, have you not been negligent in the review and after improving of the Ordinances? |
A27016 | Or can the most sanctified person do any more, if he were perfect? |
A27016 | Or canst thou bear the wrath of God Almighty? |
A27016 | Or dare you stifle those thoughts and motions that would tend to better purposes? |
A27016 | Or do we not shew them you in the Scripture? |
A27016 | Or for that which is a matter of no delight? |
A27016 | Or if I had lost the love of all men, and could say[ that I shall everlastingly enjoy the Love of God?] |
A27016 | Or is it any great matter that you are called to lose, for the obtaining of 〈 … 〉 that you are not sure of? |
A27016 | Or is it not to know the way to life eternal? |
A27016 | Or is it the frequent meditating on such high and holy things? |
A27016 | Or love him more then he deserveth? |
A27016 | Or rather doth not sin and the world even brutifie you, and make you lay by the use of your reason, and live as if you knew not what you know? |
A27016 | Or rather is not the Just man the Honest man, that will give every man his own? |
A27016 | Or rather, have 〈 … 〉 not drowned their reason in sensuality, and wilfully poiso ● … th malicious aversness to God and Holiness? |
A27016 | Or serve him more faithfully then th ● ● art bound, and he is worthy of? |
A27016 | Or should you make light of it? |
A27016 | Or that it was not worth ten thousand times more? |
A27016 | Or that others should be Godly? |
A27016 | Or then a sick man will say, How prove you that I am bound to seek to the Physicion, to go or send to his house, and to look after him? |
A27016 | Or what Beauty is in the face of Christ and Glory, which they never had an eye of faith to see? |
A27016 | Or what Gain is in the Heavenly Treasure ▪ which they never traded for? |
A27016 | Or what if some of those that you reproach, are mistaken in some point, and 〈 ◊ 〉 that to be a sin that is none? |
A27016 | Or what if you think it to be no sin which they scruple? |
A27016 | Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
A27016 | Or what sweetness is in the Hidden Manna, which they never tasted? |
A27016 | Or who can take us out of his hands? |
A27016 | Or will any but a brain- sick person hearken to such shameless men as these? |
A27016 | Or will you blame him that cares for his salvation, to make as sure of it as he can? |
A27016 | Or would God lend to any man his Power to confirm a false doctrine to the world? |
A27016 | Or would you be believed when you say, that your hearts are set on Heaven, when you have more delight in talking of any earthly trifle? |
A27016 | Or wouldst thou have others judge better of thee then thy self? |
A27016 | Reader, our business is but to enquire, What it is that is Best for Man to set his heart on and seek after in his Life, and Enjoy for ever? |
A27016 | Refuse not then the best Commodity? |
A27016 | Seeing you have more cause of joy then sorrow, should you not distribute your affections proportionably as there is cause? |
A27016 | Shall Heathens, Jews, and Infidels be Judges? |
A27016 | Shall half a dozen desperate apostates of ungodly lives, seem wiser to you then all the world? |
A27016 | Shall it be highest in your mouthes, and lowest in your hearts and lives? |
A27016 | Shall it have the first place in your prayers, and the last in your labours? |
A27016 | Shall these fellows come in at the end of the world, and call the Apostles and all the Churches of all ages Puritanes, for keeping holy the Lords day? |
A27016 | Shall they confess their failings, and reproach those that endeavour to avoid the like? |
A27016 | Shall we appeal to the very Things themselves, and to the daily experience of the world? |
A27016 | Should a man going up the sleepest hill, when it is for his life, be afraid of going too fast? |
A27016 | Should not he have all that is Lord of all? |
A27016 | Should nothing restrain them but want of Power to overcome you? |
A27016 | Should we not endeavour to imitate our pattern? |
A27016 | So have I. Hast thou had any private way of Learning that no man knoweth? |
A27016 | So many ungodly men as there are, so many Ends and Interests: And how then can there be a Possibility of Unity? |
A27016 | Sodome had one Lot, and his family in it Well? |
A27016 | Some by- matters you may easily forget or over- look: but can you do so by your end, which hath been your chiefest care and business? |
A27016 | Storms may arise that may affright us: but how quickly will they all be over? |
A27016 | Tell me, thou that blasphemest the holy commands of thy Creator? |
A27016 | That is not content to wrong the Lord, but would have others wrong him also? |
A27016 | That other things have all stooped unto this One, and served under it? |
A27016 | That they and all ungodly men are Partial in the case, and 〈 … 〉 unfit to be witnesses, or Judges? |
A27016 | That this One thing hath been more esteemed by you, than all the world besides? |
A27016 | The Question is, Whether they are True or false Imaginations? |
A27016 | The first is, Whether thou art willing to know the Truth, and resolved to choose the best part when thou knowest it? |
A27016 | The publike worship being all thus sweet, how sweet are the Lords days, these holy seasons that are wholly consecrated to this work? |
A27016 | The use that Satan would have you make of these very words is, to go away with more dejection, and to say,[ What a wretch am I? |
A27016 | Then judge thy self whether a Holy or a worldly life be better? |
A27016 | They are Blind by nature, and more blind by customary sin: And must a Blind man be your Judge or witness, in a case of everlasting moment? |
A27016 | They are diligent seekers; but for what? |
A27016 | They are still doing; but what are they doing? |
A27016 | Think not that a Judas in Christs family will Justifie you for making a scorn of his family, and persecuting his disciples? |
A27016 | This Covenant in question that engageth you to God, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost? |
A27016 | This, or to this purpose, would the answer of an experienced person be, if you should ask him, Which is the better way? |
A27016 | Thou knowest not but a Commission is gone out for death to strike thee in thy next recreation, or fit of mirth? |
A27016 | Thou wilt take any medicine to cure but the gowt or stone, if once thou have felt them? |
A27016 | Thy unresolvedness proves thee blind and partial, and very much forsaken by the spirit of light: And should such a one be judge? |
A27016 | To all Eternity it shall be partly left to the judgement of thy Conscience, whether sin or Holiness be better? |
A27016 | To run up and down for I know not what, and to leave that undone that you were created and redeemed for? |
A27016 | W ● … men refuse, and obstinately against all perswasions refuse a Holy life, if they took it practically to be Best for them? |
A27016 | Was it Lot, or was it Sodom? |
A27016 | Was it Noah or the world of the ungodly that brought down the flood? |
A27016 | Was it not enough that God was sleighted by them, and his service turned out of doors, but it must be made a by- word? |
A27016 | Was it only that thou mightest eat, and drink, and sleep, and go up and down, and fill up a room among the living? |
A27016 | Was there any one Language then that all the world understood? |
A27016 | Weary of your meat, and drink, and bed; weary to hear talk of that which now doth seem so sweet? |
A27016 | Were Christianity exemplified in the lives of Christians, how excellent a state would it appear? |
A27016 | Were they no Laws which the Romans wrote in Latin, for the Government of all the Nations of the Roman World? |
A27016 | What Covenant have you broken? |
A27016 | What Glory can be equal to the Glory of our interest in God, and of our being his people, and doing his work, and having his presence? |
A27016 | What King so tyranical as would require his subjects on pain of death to go pick straws against the wind? |
A27016 | What a comfort is it that the offended Majesty will accept a sacrifice at our hands, and enter a treaty of Peace with the offendours? |
A27016 | What a deluded distracted sort of people are the ungodly? |
A27016 | What a heap of gadding ants should we see, that do nothing but gather sticks and straw? |
A27016 | What a load to press you down to Hell? |
A27016 | What a shame is this to thy Understanding and thy Will? |
A27016 | What a stir do they make, alas poor souls, for they know not what? |
A27016 | What a weariness is it? |
A27016 | What abundance of miserable sinners be in the world, that are almost at Hell already? |
A27016 | What abundance of promises are there to the obedient? |
A27016 | What are all Gods Ordinances worth, if this be the fruit of them? |
A27016 | What are the Benefits which man hath given thee in comparison of his? |
A27016 | What art thou? |
A27016 | What but a promise can comfort them that are short of the possession? |
A27016 | What can the Prince of darkness say to our discomfort, which we may not answer by Arguments from Christ? |
A27016 | What can you say against this offer? |
A27016 | What comforting words hath he spoken to us in the Gospel? |
A27016 | What conquerable difficulties will it not overcome? |
A27016 | What course then will you take for the time to come? |
A27016 | What differences do you know among us? |
A27016 | What differences or contentions do you see among them in this Town or Parish? |
A27016 | What do Temptations prevail with you to do? |
A27016 | What do they choose, t ● ● ● refuse the Needful, Better part? |
A27016 | What do they find that lose the Lord? |
A27016 | What do they get that miss of Heaven? |
A27016 | What do we need which we have not a promise of? |
A27016 | What excellency hath the understanding of these singular men, that it should be so valued above all others? |
A27016 | What fair excuses had Saul for his breaking the Vow and Covenant with the Gibeonites? |
A27016 | What form of Church Government is best ● by Diocesane Bishops, or by all the Pastors? |
A27016 | What good do you with them? |
A27016 | What greater honour can man on earth be advanced to? |
A27016 | What hast thou done for thy knowledge that I have not done? |
A27016 | What hast thou which thou didst not receive?] |
A27016 | What have you but the gleanings of our harvest? |
A27016 | What have you done in all your life- time, that should make a wise man judge you Reasonable? |
A27016 | What high things doth the poorest Christian know? |
A27016 | What high, and excellent, and necessary things doth Grace acquaint the Christian with? |
A27016 | What if Saints from Heaven would come down and dwell among you here on earth? |
A27016 | What is it but to provide for, and please their flesh? |
A27016 | What is it for, but for your deliverance, that are Satans captives at his will? |
A27016 | What is it that Necessity seemeth not sufficient to justifie with the most? |
A27016 | What is it that causeth thee to lament the want of it, and walk so heavily, but because thou art so much in doubt of it? |
A27016 | What is it that fin and the world will do for men? |
A27016 | What is it that so many thousand Books are written for, but for Holiness? |
A27016 | What is it that you are offended at in the servants of the Lord? |
A27016 | What is it that you quarrel with the Law of God for? |
A27016 | What is it under the Sun that is everlasting? |
A27016 | What is the Gospel worth, if the reading, and preaching, and practising of it, do make the world worse, and only trouble men? |
A27016 | What is the Pleasure of your wealth to this? |
A27016 | What is there in holy prayer that should grieve or weary us? |
A27016 | What is there yet remaining then that you quarrel with as too much preciseness? |
A27016 | What is ● … ter that the One thing needful is no more regarded? |
A27016 | What it is that is set against it, and by fleshly minds, preferred before it? |
A27016 | What labour will it not endure, if it have but the encouragement of hope? |
A27016 | What men are they, that dare entertain such horrid and unreasonable suggestions? |
A27016 | What natures, what sinful hearts have you, that must have such pleasures? |
A27016 | What need there all this stir for Heaven? |
A27016 | What one that separateth from any Ordinance of publick Worship? |
A27016 | What say you now? |
A27016 | What say you then, will you accept of this offer of mercy while it may be had, and close with Grace, while Grace would save you, or will you not? |
A27016 | What say you to all this? |
A27016 | What say you, will you or will you not? |
A27016 | What say you? |
A27016 | What say your Consciences, Sirs, to this Question? |
A27016 | What should I do with my Reason and Knowledge, or any faculty above a beast, if I had no higher a work and end then beasts? |
A27016 | What should restrain Armies from Rapes and Cruelty, that may do it unpunished? |
A27016 | What then can be culpable? |
A27016 | What then is the loss of so many years? |
A27016 | What then is the matter that few attain the greatest good, and few will scape the greatest misery? |
A27016 | What then is the matter that the One thing needful is no more regarded? |
A27016 | What then ● s left to take off a reasonable creature, from minding and preferring its own everlasting great concernments? |
A27016 | What think you of all the godly able Ministers of Christ that are now alive, or ever were? |
A27016 | What think you, is not the case here plain enough? |
A27016 | What was Peter and Paul, and the rest of the Apostles, but poor despised men in the world, that travailed about to preach the Gospel? |
A27016 | What will you do when sickness makes you weary of them? |
A27016 | What will you do? |
A27016 | What will you say of them, when pain disgraceth them, and convinceth you of their insufficiency to stand you in any stead? |
A27016 | What wisdom is it to look high and carry it gallantly in the world, when you know not but vengeance may overtake you the next hour? |
A27016 | What worse is humane nature capable of? |
A27016 | What would you have us call that man that would live in such imployments as these, and yet would be accounted wise or honourable? |
A27016 | What would you think of such a man? |
A27016 | What, are you Christians? |
A27016 | When all their former pomp and splendour, will be turned into perpetual shame and sorrows, then where is the Honour of the ungodly world? |
A27016 | When did any Jew complain of such a thing? |
A27016 | When do they urge them to read, or consider, or conferr of the things that concern their everlasting life? |
A27016 | When he entreth into a house, he is presently at work in teaching poor souls the way to God; Or else how could Mary have been imployed in hearing him? |
A27016 | When he was to leave the world, how carefully did he provide for the comfort of his Disciples? |
A27016 | When the Jews offered their lame deceitful sacrifices, and said,[ Behold what a weariness is it?] |
A27016 | When we know you can not save us harmless: and will not answer for us before the Lord? |
A27016 | When you hear, Thou fool, this night shall they require thy soul, and then whose shall these things be? |
A27016 | Whence are wars, but from the lusts that war in your members? |
A27016 | Where am I then? |
A27016 | Where are the Books that ever any one of them wrote to disprove any of these Miracles? |
A27016 | Where now are their sumptuous houses and attendance? |
A27016 | Where then are their flatterers? |
A27016 | Where were your wits when a lump of flesh was preferred before immortal souls? |
A27016 | Whether a cottage for a day, or a Rich habitation for term of life be better? |
A27016 | Whether a sick man were better take an unpleasing medicine that would cure him, or a pleasant poyson that would kill him? |
A27016 | Whether do you think the company and discourse of Christ, and his Prophets and Apostles, or of your merry companions, should be the more delightful? |
A27016 | Whether he were better pay a little to the Physicion, or dye to save his money? |
A27016 | Whether it be God or the flesh; this world or Heaven? |
A27016 | Whether now they had not rather they had spent their time in the most careful seeking for Everlasting life, then in doing as they have done? |
A27016 | Whether now they had rather be the Holyest Saints, or such as they have been? |
A27016 | Whether one sweet cup with shame and beggery all thy life after, or one bitter draught with perpetual prosperity, should be rather chosen? |
A27016 | Whether that Prince be wise that will sell his Kingdom for a cup of wine, or for childrens rackets? |
A27016 | Whether we should pray publickly without Book, or on the Book? |
A27016 | Which hath had the life of your affections and endeavours? |
A27016 | Which of them was your end? |
A27016 | Which then is most desirable? |
A27016 | Who boweth to them, and calleth them Right Honourable and Right Worshipfull any more? |
A27016 | Who can be such a stranger to the world, as not to see that this as the case of the greatest part of men? |
A27016 | Who can forbid us by familiar discourse to exercise our charity, in minding poor regardless sinners of the life to come? |
A27016 | Who is it that is admitted into the Tabernacle of the Lord, and who shall dwell in his holy hill? |
A27016 | Who shall condemn us? |
A27016 | Who troubled Israel, and made them fly before their enemies, but one Achan? |
A27016 | Who would do any thing comparatively, that believed not a Reward and Punishment hereafter? |
A27016 | Who, thinkest thou, will have the better bargain in the end? |
A27016 | Whom will you choose to be your Cousellor? |
A27016 | Why Sirs, What is it that Godliness doth, that it should be taken for the Troubler of the world, when ungodliness is taken for your peace? |
A27016 | Why do men follow after wealth, or pleasure, or credit in the world, but because they take it to be Best for them? |
A27016 | Why do they set so light by Holiness, and Christ and Heaven, b ● … cause they apprehend them not to be Best for them? |
A27016 | Why do you give God such good words, and prefer your sin when you have done, before him? |
A27016 | Why do you speak so ill of sin and the world, and yet chuse them to the loss of your salvation? |
A27016 | Why do you speak so well of Christ and Heaven, and yet refuse them? |
A27016 | Why dost thou make so much ado for it? |
A27016 | Why dyedst thou not many years ago? |
A27016 | Why else do they choose them, and refuse to Live a Holy life? |
A27016 | Why else do they desire in times of danger that they were in the case of the Servants of the Lord? |
A27016 | Why else must their sufferings be so many? |
A27016 | Why hast thou thy Reason and understanding, but to know and serve the Lord? |
A27016 | Why have they no delight in God? |
A27016 | Why is a knife made keen, but to cut with? |
A27016 | Why is it, thinkest thou, that God sustaineth thee? |
A27016 | Why keep you Holy days in remembrance of the dead Saints, and say that the world in the worse for the living Saints? |
A27016 | Why make you such a stir for that which is nothing worth? |
A27016 | Why not the soul of man, as well as those spirits that in assumed shapes have made their appearances unto man? |
A27016 | Why should not this, I say be sweeter to them, then all the fleshly pleasures in the world? |
A27016 | Why then do Infidels and Brutists say, that Religion is but the device of men for the Governing of the world? |
A27016 | Why then do you hate them, and seek to destroy them? |
A27016 | Why then do you live as if you were more miserable then before? |
A27016 | Why then what is? |
A27016 | Why what greater madness can you fear then this? |
A27016 | Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him? |
A27016 | Will any that comes thither repent that they obtained it at so dear a rate? |
A27016 | Will it do you any harm that others should be saved? |
A27016 | Will it not grieve you to think that you should have so great a hand in mens damnation, even since you are returned to God your selves? |
A27016 | Will it not requite them to the full? |
A27016 | Will not such gripes of conscience be a hellish torment of themselves, and an intolerable vexation, if thou hadst no more? |
A27016 | Will not this serve turn to convince thee that a Holy life, should be undertaken for a meer Possibility of Heaven, if we had no more? |
A27016 | Will preaching against your wickedness make you wicked? |
A27016 | Will such silly Gain as the world affords you, do so much with you as it doth: and shall not the Heavenly inheritance do more? |
A27016 | Will you all agree upon a Holy life, if I prove it past all doubt to be the Honestest? |
A27016 | Will you blame a man that loves God, to be afraid of that which he suspecteth may offend him? |
A27016 | Will you credit Satan and Sin so much, as to perswade men by your practice, that sin affordeth more pleasure and content then Holiness? |
A27016 | Will you dye the more comfortably for any of this? |
A27016 | Will you entice men to believe him? |
A27016 | Will you go mourning so inordinately to Heaven, when others go so merrily to Hell? |
A27016 | Will you go on to trouble your selves about Many things, and neglect the One thing needful as you have done? |
A27016 | Will you go to the Multitude and put it to the vote, not only among Christians, but throughout the world? |
A27016 | Will you go to 〈 … 〉 and know whither you are going? |
A27016 | Will you hang them that take your Own from you? |
A27016 | Will you have any pleasure at all, or will you have none? |
A27016 | Will you make your selves such pictures of unhappiness? |
A27016 | Will you run from God, from Christ, from Grace, from mercy, from Scripture, from the godly, and from Heaven it self for fear of being mad? |
A27016 | Will you run to Hell to prove your selves to be in your wits? |
A27016 | Will you say, heaven is best, and yet seek the world before it; and not let it have the best of your affections and endeavours? |
A27016 | Will you say,[ What a hurtful thing is this Repentance?] |
A27016 | Will you take that for the better part, which he calls better? |
A27016 | Will you then think thus, and yet can you now afford to cast away twenty or thirty years upon Nothing? |
A27016 | Will you venture your selves upon the Possibility of such an Endless Loss and Torment, which now you might on reasonable terms escape? |
A27016 | Wilt thou fight against heaven? |
A27016 | Wilt thou kick against the pricks? |
A27016 | Wilt thou lie in bed and work out thy salvation? |
A27016 | Wilt thou not take it ill to be called or judged a Beast by another? |
A27016 | Wonderful, that so much madness and wickedness can enter into the mind and heart of man, as to let go all this Glory for a toy? |
A27016 | Would he make so much ado about it, to keep thee from the believing it, and seeking it, if there were not a Heaven for thee to find? |
A27016 | Would not such words as these be called impious, by every Christian that should hear them? |
A27016 | Would the Churches of the world have been planted by pretended Miracles that never were? |
A27016 | Would you have Christ speak plainer to to you: or closelyer apply it, that you may perceive he speaks to you? |
A27016 | Would you have the Riches of the Saints yet further opened to you? |
A27016 | Would you know who? |
A27016 | Would you not be looking behind you, and afraid of allmost every man you see, lest he came to apprehend you? |
A27016 | Would you not laugh at him that were a Prince but for a day, and must be the scorn of the world to morrow? |
A27016 | Would you rather have your Portion where you must stay but a few days, then where you must dwell for ever? |
A27016 | Would you taste of the sweetest life on earth? |
A27016 | Would you think that this would save his life? |
A27016 | Would you wish a man that hath lived so long in sin and misery, to have no sorrow for it at his return? |
A27016 | Wouldst thou be a happy man or no ● ▪ Wouldst thou have Joy or Sorrow? |
A27016 | Wouldst thou be my Lawyer, and refuse to read my Evidences, and study my case? |
A27016 | Wouldst thou have him do more then everlastingly to damn unconverted sinners, to prove that he is no friend or cause of sin? |
A27016 | Wouldst thou have no man regard thy Propriety, or Life any more then a Beast is to be regarded? |
A27016 | Yea what it is that is preferred by ungodly men before it? |
A27016 | Yea, and if we will not cast away our souls everlastingly for company? |
A27016 | Yea, if I prove that there is no man truly Honest in the world, that is not truly Godly? |
A27016 | Yea; 〈 ◊ 〉 that while we day by day entreate you to the contrary? |
A27016 | You Love your lives too much, and yet will you so contemptuously cast them away? |
A27016 | You are born and new born for Gods honour: and will you thus dishonour him before the world? |
A27016 | You are leaving Earth, and stepping into Eternity, and where then should you lay up your Riches? |
A27016 | You come not to a meer receiving but to a Work Have your souls been adorned with the wedding garment? |
A27016 | You could live merrily your selves before your Conversion, while you served sin: And will you walk so dejectedly now you have repented of it? |
A27016 | You have friends, but will they dwell with you here for ever? |
A27016 | You have health, but how soon will you consume in sickness? |
A27016 | You have houses, but how long will you stay in them? |
A27016 | You have life, but how soon will it end in death? |
A27016 | You say, You are not sure that there is a life to come? |
A27016 | You say, You know not whether there be a Hell for ungodly men, or no: But what if it prove true( as certainly it will) where are you then? |
A27016 | You will not take a little poyson; nor would you feel a little of hell: Why then should we not avoid the least sin so far as we are able? |
A27016 | You will say,[ Do we not see the contrary in the sadness of their faces, and hear it in their sad lamenting words?] |
A27016 | You would be loth so long to resist the sanctifying work of the Spirit: And why should you not be loth to resist its comforting work? |
A27016 | [ And what is the Hope of the Hypocrite though he hath gained, when God taketh away his soul? |
A27016 | [ Are they not all ministring spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? |
A27016 | [ Behold I am vile, what shall I answer thee? |
A27016 | [ Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the Son of her womb? |
A27016 | [ Do you thus requite the Lord, O foolish people and unwise? |
A27016 | [ Have ye not read the Scriptures?] |
A27016 | [ How amiable are thy Tabernacles O Lord of hosts? |
A27016 | [ How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? |
A27016 | [ I pray you Brethren, do not so wickedly] What said they to him? |
A27016 | [ If thou do well, shalt thou not be accepted? |
A27016 | [ Know ye not that they which run in a race, run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
A27016 | [ Say not thou, What is the Cause that the former dayes were better then these? |
A27016 | [ Thou shalt Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and soul, and might?] |
A27016 | [ Wherefore do ye spend your money for that which is not bread, and your labour for that which satisfieth not? |
A27016 | [ Wherefore, saith the Lord, do you spend money for that which is not bread: and your labour for that which satisfieth not? |
A27016 | [ Who would set the briers and thorns against me in battel? |
A27016 | [ Why hast thou troubled us? |
A27016 | a little meat, and drink, and pleasure? |
A27016 | and How miserable a life is it to be ungodly, when it is so grievous to the servants of Christ, even once to fear lest they are ungodly?] |
A27016 | and Whether a Scripture- form or another be better? |
A27016 | and Whether a continued speech, or versicles, anthems, and oft- repeated words and sentences be better? |
A27016 | and a more honourable state then to walk with God? |
A27016 | and about which hath been the chief business that you have most carefully and diligently carryed on? |
A27016 | and again Rejoyce, and always to rejoyce? |
A27016 | and all then as fresh as at the first day? |
A27016 | and at what you want only, and not at what you have received? |
A27016 | and can his word do more with thee, t ● en the word of any mortal man, or then the violence of thy lusts and passions? |
A27016 | and commanded them to tire themselves in vain? |
A27016 | and count them Honest that deal worse with God? |
A27016 | and cross the comforting workings of the spirit? |
A27016 | and darest thou perswade them to do less? |
A27016 | and deceived in a matter of everlasting consequence? |
A27016 | and do you come hither for a meeting with the Lord Jesus Christ? |
A27016 | and do you look such prayers should be accepted, which you hate and speak against your selves? |
A27016 | and do you not delight in the communion of God and of his Saints? |
A27016 | and extenuate all Gods comforting mercies? |
A27016 | and fasten on them entangling doctrines, or disquieting principles? |
A27016 | and for the Gospel that offereth you everlasting life? |
A27016 | and for the Ministry of your Pastors that would teach you the way of life? |
A27016 | and hast thou not all that thou art and hast from him? |
A27016 | and hath such a load of guilt upon his soul? |
A27016 | and have you not thought that all was done when you had received? |
A27016 | and hear how they complain that they are no better? |
A27016 | and hear what he will say to thee? |
A27016 | and how bitter is sickness and death, when the very fear of them is so grievous?] |
A27016 | and how dear one other week of sinful pleasure may cost thy soul? |
A27016 | and how delightful a work is it from day to day to magnifie his name? |
A27016 | and how did they take it? |
A27016 | and how easie doth it make his labour and his suffering? |
A27016 | and how many more are for us, then against us? |
A27016 | and how shall they hear without a Preacher?] |
A27016 | and how should it work, but by cogitation? |
A27016 | and how sweetly and familiarly they converse together, and joyn in prayer and holy exercises, and conferr about their everlasting state? |
A27016 | and how unspeakably dreadful will be their misery? |
A27016 | and if he justifie us, who shall condemn us? |
A27016 | and if this were not the chief concernment of thy soul, why should thy chief enemy so much regard it? |
A27016 | and if thou give him all, dost thou give him any more then what is his own? |
A27016 | and in the greatest necessity? |
A27016 | and is your wilfulness your innocency? |
A27016 | and loving the world and fleshly pleasures the way to be wise? |
A27016 | and must we not labour and provide it, and take care for our families, and follow our callings? |
A27016 | and of pleasing your flesh for a little time, then of pleasing the Lord, and scaping everlasting misery? |
A27016 | and seek to hide the Love of God, and dishonour the blood and grace and covenant of Christ? |
A27016 | and shall such a one as thou say, What need I be any more holy? |
A27016 | and shall we grudge at that necessary moderate affliction that saveth us from the like overthrows? |
A27016 | and should perish by choosing the lowest vanities before them? |
A27016 | and so many terrible threatnings of the Law in force against him? |
A27016 | and so much worse, as not to be endured in your thoughts and affections in comparison of them? |
A27016 | and so of many others? |
A27016 | and that all Sciences and Arts are of so late invention, and as it were, but in their youth? |
A27016 | and that hath but a few more dayes to live, till thou take possession of these endless joyes? |
A27016 | and that have gone both wayes; and therefore are able to speak to us by experience? |
A27016 | and that he and his Disciples did work those many uncontrolled Miracles, or not? |
A27016 | and that the wiser any man is, the more miserable he must needs be? |
A27016 | and that there are not creatures also there for excellency and Number incomparbly beyond the inhabitants of this lesser lower world? |
A27016 | and that they are seeking heaven when you are seeking the world? |
A27016 | and that without it subjects would not be Ruled? |
A27016 | and that would rather forsake his chiefest friend, then forsake his vices? |
A27016 | and the Church into a swine- stye? |
A27016 | and the crums that fall from the childrens table? |
A27016 | and the freeness and fulness of the Promise here sealed? |
A27016 | and then where is thy sport and mirth? |
A27016 | and think that so much Holiness will make it troublesom? |
A27016 | and this in the very age and place where all these things might easily be confuted if untrue? |
A27016 | and thy most diligent service to be too much? |
A27016 | and to be used and ruled by them? |
A27016 | and to call a holy, heavenly life, a needless toyl? |
A27016 | and to cast perplexing thoughts into their minds? |
A27016 | and to despise, forsake or abuse the Lord? |
A27016 | and to keep as far from the brink of hell as he able? |
A27016 | and to press towards perfection as men that have not yet attained it? |
A27016 | and to say, I have no pleasure in them? |
A27016 | and use Gods means to overcome them? |
A27016 | and we can do nothing of our selves? |
A27016 | and what an attractive to win the ignorant to embrace the motions of salvation? |
A27016 | and what comfortable relations hath he put us into? |
A27016 | and what do you resolve? |
A27016 | and what is thy word, that we should regard it before the Word of God? |
A27016 | and what is worst, and yet will keep it? |
A27016 | and what power shall prevail against us? |
A27016 | and what profit should we have if we pray unto him? |
A27016 | and what was their honour but to be the Holy Servants of the Lords? |
A27016 | and when the trouble and dung of a transitory world, was more esteemed then God and endless Glory? |
A27016 | and when they have done, will you say it is long of them and their Laws that men are robbed and murdered? |
A27016 | and whether Saints or careless sinners were the wiser? |
A27016 | and whether that Holiness which all these are appointed for, can be a vain and needless thing? |
A27016 | and whether you can discern by their care and labours that they understand what is the One thing necessary? |
A27016 | and which comes behind, and hath but the leavings of the other? |
A27016 | and which is first sought? |
A27016 | and which is it that they would own? |
A27016 | and which is no comfort, but terrour in the review, and which leaveth no fruit, but grief and disappointment? |
A27016 | and which to choose? |
A27016 | and whose then are all those things that thou hast provided?] |
A27016 | and why have we so much ado with them, to bring them to a heavenly mind and life, and all in vain? |
A27016 | and why must they daily bear the Cross? |
A27016 | and why will you not consent to let them go? |
A27016 | and with a great deal of care, and cost, and stir, to labour for damnation, as if you were afraid of losing it? |
A27016 | and would sell his friend, or the Commonwealth, for a little gain, or pleasure, even for a whore, or for drunkenness or such like things? |
A27016 | and would you have us all as faithless and dishonest, even with God? |
A27016 | and yet refuse to come up in your choice and lives to the doctrine of Heathens and Infidels? |
A27016 | are not his friends, his spouse and beloved safe? |
A27016 | are not the members of his Body safe? |
A27016 | as if he had made a world, and set them upon a needless work? |
A27016 | as if it were their fault that they are unwilling to be faulty? |
A27016 | as if you had nothing to do but gape? |
A27016 | as plain to a wise man as any of those that I mentioned before? |
A27016 | as the Waldenses, Bohemians, French and others nearer us? |
A27016 | as whether a Kingdom be better then a Jayle, or Gold then dirt, or health then sickness? |
A27016 | because we are not such as you, and will not do as you do, and be of your opinion, and forsake our Lord to keep you company? |
A27016 | but served the Devil with those very mercies that would have saved him? |
A27016 | but what will you have hereafter when this is gone? |
A27016 | darest thou thus openly resist God to his face? |
A27016 | do they long to do themselves a Mischief, and the greatest Mischief in the world? |
A27016 | do we not fall much short of those that we should imitate, rather then do too much in preaching? |
A27016 | do you know that God is best for you, and yet will you fly from him? |
A27016 | for a Loving soul to converse with God, when there is a mutual complacency between them? |
A27016 | for what have I done? |
A27016 | hath he not made thee and established thee?] |
A27016 | have I deserved this usage at his hand?] |
A27016 | have we free- will or power to chuse the better part? |
A27016 | have we free- will? |
A27016 | have you any just exceptions against the testimony of these Experienced men? |
A27016 | have you yet taken warning by the Judgements of the Lord? |
A27016 | he that believeth that there is no God( as Atheists do) or he that believeth that God is a Lyar, which is to be no God and worse? |
A27016 | his Grace and Glory? |
A27016 | how happy then were all the world? |
A27016 | how then can any easier sentence be past upon your choice? |
A27016 | how will you meet approaching death, if you feed your doubts of your salvation and of the Love of God in Christ, which must corroborate you? |
A27016 | if God be against thee, thou art no where safe? |
A27016 | in the accepted time? |
A27016 | is God no better in thine eyes, then a filthy brutish sinful pleasure? |
A27016 | is God worse then the creature, and Heaven then earth? |
A27016 | is a little fleshly ease or mirth? |
A27016 | is it not because it is so strict, and forbiddeth sin, and threatneth damnation for it? |
A27016 | is the approbation of the eternal God so small a matter in thy eyes, that the scorn of a fool can weigh it down, or move the ballance with thee? |
A27016 | is this all your thanks to God for a Christ when you are lost by sin? |
A27016 | made of nothing? |
A27016 | might you have an Everlasting life, and will you preferre a few dayes fleshly pleasure? |
A27016 | nor none more ignorant whom Charity requireth you to teach? |
A27016 | nor scarce any room, to think or speak of the life to come? |
A27016 | nor wit enough to forbear laying hands upon himself, and doing all this against his own soul? |
A27016 | of the abundant Love that is here set forth? |
A27016 | of their Faith, or their unbelief? |
A27016 | or are you not? |
A27016 | or are you weary of the presence of your dearest friend? |
A27016 | or doth it anywhere command you any thing that is bad? |
A27016 | or for want of a little care in seeking it? |
A27016 | or he that laid up his treasure in Heaven, and there set his heart, and sought for the never fading Crown? |
A27016 | or much the less? |
A27016 | or of things that nearlyer concern you, then the matters of everlasting consequence? |
A27016 | or rather he that is a common benefactor? |
A27016 | or rather[ What an odious crime was it that must be so repented of?] |
A27016 | or should I not be the common scorn? |
A27016 | or so desirous to deceive thee, and deprive thee of salvation, if there were none for thee to lose? |
A27016 | or that a Cham in the Ark, or the sin of Noah will warrant you to make them as bad as the destroyed world, whom God had done so much to save? |
A27016 | or that earth will prove a better reward to thee then Heaven? |
A27016 | or that his hopes and meanings would prove him ever the wiser man? |
A27016 | or that would choose one day of mirth and pleasure, though he knew it would fill the rest of his life with pain and misery? |
A27016 | or that you had your glut of sensual delights; and a merry life as to the fleshly pleasure as long as it would last? |
A27016 | or the Devil that doth deceive you? |
A27016 | or the drink in your bellies? |
A27016 | or the harlot in your embracements? |
A27016 | or the wealth of the world in your Possession? |
A27016 | or to answer against all the accusations of your consciences? |
A27016 | or to comfort you against the remembrance of your approaching misery? |
A27016 | or to mis ● ead them into some perplexing ways? |
A27016 | or to prove that there is a Life to come? |
A27016 | or unwilling to live a joyful life? |
A27016 | or what condition( while he keeps close to God) can be unsafe? |
A27016 | or what evil is in my hand? |
A27016 | or what good do they do you? |
A27016 | or what imperfection can there be in our Felicity?] |
A27016 | or whose witness it is that you will take for currant?] |
A27016 | so that the Makers and facts shall give force unto the Law, and yet the Law reveal the makers and facts? |
A27016 | the carnal and the spiritual? |
A27016 | the children of God, and the enemies of God? |
A27016 | the converted and unconverted? |
A27016 | the delights that mend us and further our salvation, or corrupting pleasures that drown men in perdidition? |
A27016 | the earthly- minded and the heavenly- minded? |
A27016 | the healing or the wounding pleasures? |
A27016 | the heirs of heaven, and the heirs of hell? |
A27016 | the justified and unjustified? |
A27016 | the pardoned and unpardoned? |
A27016 | the quickening or the killing mirth? |
A27016 | the regenerate and unregenerate? |
A27016 | the sanctified and unsanctified? |
A27016 | the servants of God, and of the Devil? |
A27016 | the wholsome or the poysonous sweet? |
A27016 | their confidence or their distrust? |
A27016 | their repentance or their hardness of heart? |
A27016 | though dissembling lips are ashamed to profess it? |
A27016 | to prate against serving God too much? |
A27016 | to strip you naked, and to make pack- horses of you, and use you as their slaves? |
A27016 | was it Lot or the Sodomites that brought down from heaven the fire of vengeance? |
A27016 | what should he do more? |
A27016 | what though you are not suddenly cured? |
A27016 | when you should abstain from all appearance of evil? |
A27016 | which side think you were they on that laid down their lives for the cause of Christ? |
A27016 | why is he so eager to draw thee unto sin, if sin be not hurtful to thee? |
A27016 | will not men be perswaded to choose that which they know is best for them? |
A27016 | will they contrive their own destruction? |
A27016 | will you kill your self?] |
A27016 | will you not freely give us leave to take Gods judgements or Word before yours? |
A27016 | would they all have given up estates and lives upon an evident lye? |
A27016 | would you not be glad if you could further it? |
A26981 | & c. And doth God make Laws chiefly for the good of Oxen, or for Men? |
A26981 | & c. Do you not know that precepts of rites and ceremonies, give place to necessity and precepts of Charity, and self preservation? |
A26981 | ( And who are they that presume against him, to censure or cast out the meanest of such?) |
A26981 | ( For if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he take care of the church of God?) |
A26981 | ( Hath a Pharisee nothing worse than Non- conformity to his ceremonies and traditions? |
A26981 | ( How conscionably then should bad Oaths be avoided and good ones kept?) |
A26981 | ( Now that he ascended, what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? |
A26981 | ( some for Miracles, or Tongues, and the sincere for Sanctification:) If not, you are none of Christs: If yea, then by what means did you receive it? |
A26981 | ( you will not say it:) or was it by hearing the Gospel of Faith? |
A26981 | 10 And I said, What shall I do, Lord? |
A26981 | 10 Jesus answered and said unto him, Art tho ● a master of Israel, and knowest not these things? |
A26981 | 11, 12, Wherefore? |
A26981 | 12 If I have told you earthly things, and and ye believe not, how shall ye beleve if I tell you of heavenly things? |
A26981 | 12. Who is he that durst thus break the Law? |
A26981 | 13. Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge amongst you? |
A26981 | 18 Then answered the Jews, and said unto him, what sign shewest thou unto us, seeing that thou doest these things? |
A26981 | 2 But why did he pay for Peter and not the rest? |
A26981 | 2. Who be they that must exhort one another? |
A26981 | 21 And they asked him, What then? |
A26981 | 22 Then said they unto him, Who art thou that we may give an answer to them that sent us? |
A26981 | 22. Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? |
A26981 | 26 And they that heard it, said, Who then can be saved? |
A26981 | 29. Who is weak, and I am not weak? |
A26981 | 3 And when they wanted wine, the mother of Jesus saith unto him, They have no wine 4 Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee? |
A26981 | 31,& c. I forgave thee a great debt, and shouldest not thou forgive a little one? |
A26981 | 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect? |
A26981 | 34. Who is he that condemneth? |
A26981 | 35. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
A26981 | 38 Then Jesus turned and saw them following, and saith unto them, What seek ye? |
A26981 | 39 Or When saw we thee sick or in prison and came unto thee? |
A26981 | 4 Nicodemus saith unto him, How can a man be born when he is old? |
A26981 | 4. Who art thou that judgest another mans servant? |
A26981 | 4. Who shall call them? |
A26981 | 4. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorifie thy Name? |
A26981 | 46,& c. Dost thou know who they be that I esteem as my Mother and brethren? |
A26981 | 5. Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
A26981 | 5. Who then is Paul? |
A26981 | 50 Jesus answered, and said unto him, Because I said unto thee I saw thee under the fig- tree, beleivest thou? |
A26981 | 7. Who goeth a warfare at any time at his own charges? |
A26981 | 700, till 1400, think that God owned and guided so wicked a sort of Men? |
A26981 | 8,& c. N. How punctually was this foretold? |
A26981 | 9 Nicodemus answered and said unto him, How can these things be? |
A26981 | 9, 10 And why did he( and Isaac and Jacob) sojourn there in Tents as strangers? |
A26981 | A little thou perswadest,& c. Note, It is uncertain whether he spake this seriously as inclining to believe in Christ? |
A26981 | A man clothed in soft raiment? |
A26981 | A prophet? |
A26981 | AM I not an apostle? |
A26981 | Again, think you that we excuse our selves unto you? |
A26981 | Alass poor woman, hast thou not greater matter than Ceremony, even the Place of Worship to mind? |
A26981 | Am I a Stranger to you? |
A26981 | Am I not the rightful disposer of my own? |
A26981 | Am I the Messenger and Preacher of Man, or of God? |
A26981 | Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth? |
A26981 | And Christ found the Samaritans and Jews at the Debate, Whether in this Mountain, or at Jerusalem, men ought to worship? |
A26981 | And Herod said, John have I beheaded: but who is this of whom I hear such things? |
A26981 | And I answered, Who art thou, Lord? |
A26981 | And I fell unto the ground, and heard a voice saying unto me, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
A26981 | And I heard, but I understood not: Then said I, O my Lord, what shall be the end of these things? |
A26981 | And I said, Who art thou, Lord? |
A26981 | And I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, Who is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof? |
A26981 | And I, brethren, if I yet preach circumcision, why do I yet suffer persecution? |
A26981 | And Jesus answered and said to him, What wilt thou that I should do to thee? |
A26981 | And Jesus answered and said, while he taught in the temple, How say the Scribes that Christ is the son of David? |
A26981 | And Jesus answering said unto him, seest thou these great buildings? |
A26981 | And Jesus answering spake unto the lawyers and Pharisees saying, Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath- day? |
A26981 | And Jesus answering, said unto them, Suppose ye that these Galileans were sinners above all the Galileans, because they suffered such things? |
A26981 | And Jesus answering, said, O faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you, and suffer you? |
A26981 | And Jesus answering, said, were there not ten cleansed? |
A26981 | And Jesus asked him, saying, What is thy name? |
A26981 | And Jesus immediately knowing in himself, that vertue was gone out of him, turned him about in the press, and said, Who touched my cloathes? |
A26981 | And Jesus knowing their thoughts, said, Wherefore think ye evil in your hearts? |
A26981 | And Jesus looked about and saith to his disciples, How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God? |
A26981 | And Jesus said to him, Friend, wherefore art thou come? |
A26981 | And Jesus said to him, Why callest thou me good? |
A26981 | And Jesus said to them, Can the children of the bride- chamber fast, while the bridegroom is with them? |
A26981 | And Jesus said to them, Can the children of the bride- chamber mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them? |
A26981 | And Jesus said to them, I also will ask you one thing, which if you tell me, I ● likewise will tell you, by what authority I do these things? |
A26981 | And Jesus said to them, See ye not all these things? |
A26981 | And Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good? |
A26981 | And Jesus said, Are ye also yet without understanding? |
A26981 | And Jesus said, Who touched me? |
A26981 | And Jesus saith to them, How many loaves have ye? |
A26981 | And Jesus stood before the governour, and the governour asked him, saying, Art thou the king of the Jews? |
A26981 | And Jesus stood still and called them and said, What will ye, that I shall do t ● you? |
A26981 | And Jesus, when he came out, saw much people, and was moved with compassion toward them, because they were as sheep not having a shepherd? |
A26981 | And John, calling unto him two of his disciples, sent them unto Jesus, saying, Art thou he that should come, or look we for another? |
A26981 | And Philip ran thither to him, and heard him read the Prophet Esaias, and said, Understandest thou what thou readest? |
A26981 | And Pilate answered and said again unto them, What will ye then that I shall do unto him whom ye call the king of the Jews? |
A26981 | And Pilate asked him again, saying, Answerest thou nothing? |
A26981 | And Pilate asked him, Art thou the king of the Jews? |
A26981 | And Pilate asked him, saying, Art thou the King of the Jews? |
A26981 | And Simon Peter stood and warmed himself: They said therefore unto him, Art not thou also one of his disciples? |
A26981 | And a certain ruler asked him, saying, Good Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? |
A26981 | And all the people were amazed, and said, Is not this the son of David? |
A26981 | And all they that had heard them, laid them up in their hearts, saying, What manner of Child shall this be? |
A26981 | And another said, is it I? |
A26981 | And answered them saying, Which of you shall have an ass or an ox fallen into a pit, and will not straightway pull him out on the sabbath- day? |
A26981 | And are all Judges of the Princes due? |
A26981 | And are none pardoned and saved but the Circumcised? |
A26981 | And as John fulfilled his course, he said, Whom think ye that I am? |
A26981 | And as Paul was to be led into the castle, he said unto the cheif Captain, May I speak unto thee? |
A26981 | And as for me, what need I suffer much, if I could conform to the Judaism which these Men would impos ●? |
A26981 | And as he sate on the mount of Olives, his disciples came to him privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? |
A26981 | And as they bound him with thongs, Paul said unto the centurion that stood by, Is it lawful for you to scourge a man that is a Roman, and uncondemned? |
A26981 | And as they departed, Jesus began to say to the multitude concerning John, What went ye out into the wilderness to see? |
A26981 | And as they went on their way, they came unto a certain water: and the eunuch said, See, here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized? |
A26981 | And as they were afraid and bowed down their faces to the earth, they said unto them, Why seek ye the living among the dead? |
A26981 | And as they were loosing the colt, the owners thereof said unto them, Why loose ye the colt? |
A26981 | And behold they cried out, saying, What have we to do with thee, Jesus thou Son of God? |
A26981 | And behold, a certain lawyer stood up, and tempted him, saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternall life? |
A26981 | And behold, one came and said to him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do that I may have eternal life? |
A26981 | And brought them out, and said, Sirs, what must I do to be saved? |
A26981 | And can not he with a word rebuke all popular and tyrannical rage against his Church? |
A26981 | And certain of the Pharisees said unto them, Why do ye that which is not lawfull to do on the sabbath- days? |
A26981 | And cried with a loud voice, and said, What have I to do with thee, Jesus, thou Son of the most high God? |
A26981 | And cried, when they saw the smoke of her burning, saying, What city is like unto this great city? |
A26981 | And did he remember what he saw there? |
A26981 | And do they revolt to worse than Paganism? |
A26981 | And do you think it is from true Zeal that their Wars arise? |
A26981 | And do you think that the Messiah will indulge your sin, and come to promote your carnal interest? |
A26981 | And doth it not silence and shame the wrangling Logicians, and shew the Folly and utter Impotency and Vanity of their Learning? |
A26981 | And doth not he himself foretel their dreadful punishment? |
A26981 | And had God no better End herein than their Destruction? |
A26981 | And hath this One God contradicted his Promises by his Law? |
A26981 | And have ye not read this scripture? |
A26981 | And he answered and said unto them, What did Moses command you? |
A26981 | And he asked him, What is thy name? |
A26981 | And he asked his Father, How long is it ago, since this came to him? |
A26981 | And he asked the Scribes, What question ye with them? |
A26981 | And he asked them, How many loaves have ye? |
A26981 | And he beheld them, and said, What is this then that is written, The stone which the builders rejected, the same is become the head of the corner? |
A26981 | And he called him, and said unto him, How is it that I hear this of thee? |
A26981 | And he came to Capernaum, and being in the house, he asked them, What was it that ye disputed among your selves by the way? |
A26981 | And he cometh to the Disciples, and findeth them asleep, and saith unto Peter, What, could ye not watch with me one hour? |
A26981 | And he cometh, and findeth them sleeping, and saith to Peter, Simon, sleepest thou? |
A26981 | And he fell to the Earth, and heard a voice saying unto him, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
A26981 | And he said to her, What wilt thou? |
A26981 | And he said to them, But whom say ye that I am? |
A26981 | And he said to them, What would ye that I should do for you? |
A26981 | And he said to them, Why are ye so fearful? |
A26981 | And he said unto him, Man, who made me a judge, or a divider over you? |
A26981 | And he said unto them the third time, Why, what evil hath he done? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, Can ye make the children of the bride- chamber fast, while the bridegroom is with them? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, How is it that ye sought me? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, How say they that Christ is Davids Son? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, Unto what then were ye Baptized? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, What manner of communications are these that ye have one to another, as ye walk, and are sad? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, What things? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, When I sent you without purse, and scrip, and shoes, lacked ye any thing? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, Where is your faith? |
A26981 | And he said unto them, Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts? |
A26981 | And he said, How can I, except some man should guide me? |
A26981 | And he saith to him, Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment? |
A26981 | And he saith to him, Why callest thou me good? |
A26981 | And he saith to them, Are ye so without understanding also? |
A26981 | And he saith to them, Is it lawful to do good on the sabbath- day, or to do evil? |
A26981 | And he saith to them, Know ye not this parable? |
A26981 | And he saith to them, Whose is this image and superscription? |
A26981 | And he saith to them, Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? |
A26981 | And he sighed deeply in his spirit, and saith, Why doth this generation seek after a sign? |
A26981 | And he spake a parable unto them, Can the blind lead the blind? |
A26981 | And he taught, saying unto them, Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? |
A26981 | And he thought within himself, saying, What shall I do, because I have no room where to bestow my fruits? |
A26981 | And he trembling and astonished, said, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? |
A26981 | And he turned unto the woman, and said unto Simon, seest thou this woman? |
A26981 | And he was in the hinder part of the ship asleep on a pillow, and they awake him and say to him, Master, carest thou not that we perish? |
A26981 | And here the sixth doubt is coincident, what is the Whore? |
A26981 | And his disciples answered him, From whence can a man satisfie these men with bread herein the wilderness? |
A26981 | And his disciples asked him, saying, What might this parable be? |
A26981 | And his disciples asked him, saying, Why then say the scribes that Elias must first come? |
A26981 | And his disciples said to him, Thou seest the multitude thronging thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me? |
A26981 | And his disciples say to him, Whence should we have so much bread in the wilderness as to fill so great a multitude? |
A26981 | And how absurd is it to think that God is a God, that is, a merciful Governour, to no more in the World, than that little sorry People of the Jews? |
A26981 | And how hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born? |
A26981 | And how is the Case now altered? |
A26981 | And how little should we know whether one from the Dead were a Devil, or a credible Messenger? |
A26981 | And how shall Men Preach the Mysteries of Salvation, that are not called and sent of God, by his Qualifications and Commission? |
A26981 | And how shall they believe in him of whom they have never heard? |
A26981 | And how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? |
A26981 | And how shall they hear without a preacher? |
A26981 | And how shall they hear, if no one tell them, or preach to them? |
A26981 | And how shall they preach except they be sent? |
A26981 | And how should I know which that one must be? |
A26981 | And how then can the same that say they believe the Resurrection of Christ, deny the Resurrection of the Dead, and the Life hereafter? |
A26981 | And if I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your sons cast them out? |
A26981 | And if any man ask you, Why do ye loose him? |
A26981 | And if any man say to you, Why do ye this? |
A26981 | And if as Jews you be kind to Jews, or praise, honour and love those of your own Sect or Party or Opinion, what bad men or Heathens do not the like? |
A26981 | And if it was so given thee, why art thou puft up and boastest, as if it had been deserved, or was from thy self? |
A26981 | And if really any of you are wiser than others, who gave thee that wisdom which maketh the difference? |
A26981 | And if the World shall be judged by you, are you not meet to decide your own little Differences? |
A26981 | And if the ear shall say, Because I am not the eye, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body? |
A26981 | And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? |
A26981 | And if the ten Horns signifie not precisely just ten, why should the seven? |
A26981 | And if the world shall be judged by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters? |
A26981 | And if they were all one member, where were the body? |
A26981 | And if ye do good to them which do good to you, what thank have ye? |
A26981 | And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another mans, who shall give you that which is your own? |
A26981 | And if ye lend to them of whom ye hope to receive, what thank have ye? |
A26981 | And if ye salute your brethren onely, what do you more than others? |
A26981 | And it came to pass as he was alone praying, his disciples[ were with him:] and he asked them, saying, whom say the people that I am? |
A26981 | And many of them said, He hath a devil, and is mad, why hear ye him? |
A26981 | And may we not also expect Angels help? |
A26981 | And now why tarriest thou? |
A26981 | And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these which are arayed in white robes? |
A26981 | And ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan hath bound, lo these eighteen years, be loosed from this bond on the sabbath- day? |
A26981 | And runing under a certain Island which is called Clauda we had much work to come by the boat? |
A26981 | And said to him, Art thou he that should come, or do we look for another? |
A26981 | And said to him, Hearest thou what these say? |
A26981 | And said to them, what will ye give me, and I will deliver him unto you? |
A26981 | And said unto them, Why sleep ye? |
A26981 | And said, Where have ye laid him? |
A26981 | And saying, Sirs, why do ye these things? |
A26981 | And saying, Where is the promise of his coming? |
A26981 | And shall not God avenge his own elect, that cry day and night unto him, though he bear long with them? |
A26981 | And shall not uncircumcision, which is by nature, if it fulfil the law, judge thee, who by the letter and circumcision dost transgress the law? |
A26981 | And shall we not Believe and Hope for the Perpetuity of Glory? |
A26981 | And she went forth, and said unto her mother, What shall I ask? |
A26981 | And should they do so by Prayer and Hearing, what a Torment and Slavery would they make of Religion, by their Errour? |
A26981 | And some of the Pharisees which were with him, heard these words, and said unto him, Are we blind also? |
A26981 | And some of them said, Could not this man which opened the eyes of the blind, have caused that even this man should not have died? |
A26981 | And spake unto him, saying, Tell us by what authority doest thou these things? |
A26981 | And the Lord said, Whereunto then shall I liken the men of this generation? |
A26981 | And the Pharisees came to him, and asked him, Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife? |
A26981 | And the Pharisees said to him, Behold, why do they on the sabbath- day that which is not lawful? |
A26981 | And the Prophets are dead: whom makest thou thy self? |
A26981 | And the angel said unto me, Wherefore didst thou marvel? |
A26981 | And the brethren immediately sent away Paul and Silas by night unto Berea? |
A26981 | And the disciples came and said to him, Why speakest thou to them in parables? |
A26981 | And the eunuch answered Philip, and said, I pray thee, of whom speaketh the Prophet this? |
A26981 | And the evil Spirit answered and said, Jesus I know, and Paul I know; but who are ye? |
A26981 | And the governour said, Why, what evil hath he done? |
A26981 | And the high priest arose, and said ● ● ● o him, Answerest thou nothing? |
A26981 | And the high priest stood up in the midst, and asked Jesus, saying, Answerest thou nothing? |
A26981 | And the next whether the name belong to a single person, or to a state, or policy, or party? |
A26981 | And the people asked him; saying, what shall we do then? |
A26981 | And the scribes and the pharisees began to reason, saying, Who is this which speaketh blasphemies? |
A26981 | And the souldiers likewise demanded of him, saying, And what shall we do? |
A26981 | And then how are we still bound to take up the Cross, and suffer with and for Christ? |
A26981 | And therefore as he died for Sin, he causeth us to die to Sin; and how then shall we live in it that are dead to it? |
A26981 | And they answered and said unto him, Where, Lord? |
A26981 | And they asked him, saying, Master, but when shall these things be? |
A26981 | And they asked him, saying, Why say the Scribes, that Elias must first come? |
A26981 | And they asked them, saying, Is this your son, who you say was born blind? |
A26981 | And they began to be sorrowful, and to say unto him, one by one, Is it I? |
A26981 | And they brought it, and he said to them, Whose is this Image and superscription? |
A26981 | And they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them, that dwell on the earth? |
A26981 | And they reasoned with themselves, saying, If we shall say from heaven, he will say to us, Why did ye not then believe him? |
A26981 | And they reasoned with themselves, saying, If we shall say, from heaven, he will say, Why then believed ye him not? |
A26981 | And they reasoned with themselves, saying, if we shall say, From heaven, he will say, Why then did ye not believe him? |
A26981 | And they said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulchre? |
A26981 | And they said one to another ▪ Did not our heart burn within us, while he talked with us by the way, and while he opened to us the scriptures? |
A26981 | And they said unto him, Where wilt thou that we prepare? |
A26981 | And they said, Is not this Jesus, the Son of Joseph, whose Father and Mother we know? |
A26981 | And they said, Is not this Joseph''s son? |
A26981 | And they said, We can? |
A26981 | And they said, What is that to us? |
A26981 | And they said, What need we any further witness? |
A26981 | And they say to him, Shall we go and buy two hundred penny- worth of bread, and give them to eat? |
A26981 | And they say unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? |
A26981 | And they that sat at meat with him, began to say within themselves, who is this that forgiveth sins also? |
A26981 | And they that stood by, said, Revilest thou Gods high Priest? |
A26981 | And they took him, and brought him unto Areopagus, saying, May we know what this new doctrine, whereof thou speakest, is? |
A26981 | And they were all amazed and marvelled, saying one to another, Behold, are not all these which speak, Galileans? |
A26981 | And they were all amazed, and spake among themselves, saying, What a word is this? |
A26981 | And they were all amazed, and were in doubt, saying one to another, What meaneth this? |
A26981 | And they were all amazed, insomuch, that they questioned among themselves, saying, What thing is this? |
A26981 | And they were astonished out of measure, saying among themselves, Who then can be saved? |
A26981 | And they were exceeding sorrowfull, and began every one of them to say to him, Lord, is it I? |
A26981 | And they which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one, beginning at the eldest, even to the last? |
A26981 | And they worshipped the dragon which gave power unto the beast, and they worshipped the beast, saying, Who is like unto the beast? |
A26981 | And thinkest thou this, O man, who judgest them which do such things, and dost the same, that thou shalt escape the judgment of God? |
A26981 | And through thy knowledge shall the weak brother perish, for whom Christ died? |
A26981 | And to live in mutual displeasure, how sad and tempting a Condition will that be? |
A26981 | And to whom sware he that they should not enter into his rest, but to them that believed not? |
A26981 | And upon this came his Disciples and marvelled that he talked with the Woman: yet no man said, what seekest thou? |
A26981 | And v. 9. by being accepted of him as the height of our Ambition when we die? |
A26981 | And was it not by Doing by Faith, or a Faith causing Obedience that Rahab was justified? |
A26981 | And wenr again into the judgment- hall, and saith unto Jesus, Whence art thou? |
A26981 | And were they worse than Heathen Idolaters and Infidels, and must three or four parts of the World be put to death? |
A26981 | And what Mystery was there in so gross Iniquity, as for Simon to call himself God the Father,& c. any more than to have seen Hacket or a Bedlam rave? |
A26981 | And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? |
A26981 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
A26981 | And what could the Jews do through all the Empire, being contemned Vagabonds, but by way of Rabble tumult, which the Roman Power restrained? |
A26981 | And what good doth that do them? |
A26981 | And what is that Policie, that is the formal constitution of the first Beast? |
A26981 | And what more can be hoped for by man? |
A26981 | And what other sight of the Father canst thou expect? |
A26981 | And what shall I more say? |
A26981 | And what will compensate the loss of the Soul? |
A26981 | And what''s all this to the Roman Pope? |
A26981 | And when Jesus knew it, he saith to them, Why reason ye because ye have no bread? |
A26981 | And when Peter saw it, he answered unto the People, Ye men of Israel, why marvel ye at this? |
A26981 | And when he had thus spoken one of the officers which stood by, stroke Jesus with the palm of his hand, saying, Answerest thou the high priest so? |
A26981 | And when he looked on him, he was afraid, and said, What is it, Lord? |
A26981 | And when he was come in, he saith unto them, Why make ye this ado, and weep? |
A26981 | And when he was come into Jerusalem all the City was moved, saying, Who is this? |
A26981 | And when he was come into the House, the blind men came to him: and Jesus saith to them, Believe ye that I am able to do this? |
A26981 | And when he was come into the house, Jesus prevented him, saying, What thinkest thou Simon? |
A26981 | And when he was come into the house, his disciples asked him privately, Why could not we cast him out? |
A26981 | And when the messengers of John were departed, he began to speak unto the people concerning John, What went ye out into the wilderness for to see? |
A26981 | And when the seven among four thousand, how many baskets of fraqments took ye up? |
A26981 | And when they had blindfolded him, they stroke him on the face, and asked him, saying, Prophesie, who is it that smote thee? |
A26981 | And when they had found him on the other side of the Seas, they said to him, Rabbi, when camest thou hither? |
A26981 | And when they had set them in the midst, they asked, By what power, or by what name have ye done this? |
A26981 | And when they saw him, they were amazed; and his mother said unto him, Son, Why hast thou thus dealt with us? |
A26981 | And when they were come to Capernaum, they that received tribute money, came to Peter and said, Doth not your Master pay tribute? |
A26981 | And when we were all sallen to the Earth, I heard a voice speaking unto me, and saying in the Hebrew tongue, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
A26981 | And whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me? |
A26981 | And where else now should we desire to be? |
A26981 | And whereas they say, It was but the Day and the Hour, and not the Year, that he knew not? |
A26981 | And wherefore have they not attained it? |
A26981 | And whether it was done in a day or two? |
A26981 | And whether the case of Antichrist be here much, or at all, medled with? |
A26981 | And which of you with taking thought can add to his stature one cubit? |
A26981 | And which way did they hear it, but by the Apostles, as from Christ; whose words the Evangelists have not omitted? |
A26981 | And while they yet believed not for joy, and wondered, he said unto them, Have ye here any meat? |
A26981 | And who can in Gods name proclaim the Word of Reconciliation as his Messenger, who is not authorized by him so to do? |
A26981 | And who is he that will harm you if ye be followers of that which is good? |
A26981 | And who is sufficient for these things? |
A26981 | And who is the dangerous Lyer, but he that denyeth that Jesus is the Christ; and consequently, denyeth the Father? |
A26981 | And who may not easily know that a Pope, and such a Council called General, are not the Western Visible Church, real or representative? |
A26981 | And who was so likely to do this as Paul? |
A26981 | And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? |
A26981 | And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye, but perceivest not the beam that is in thy own eye? |
A26981 | And why call ye me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say? |
A26981 | And why do you distrustfully care for cloathing? |
A26981 | And why do you separate from Popery? |
A26981 | And why should this seem an incredible thing to you? |
A26981 | And why should we think then that the Gnosticks are meant more than they? |
A26981 | And why stand we in jeopardy every hour? |
A26981 | And why take ye thought for raiment? |
A26981 | And you should be all Saints your selves? |
A26981 | And, Why did he kill him? |
A26981 | Angels Love is but a Copy of God''s Love, And shall we distrust, fear, and flie from Love it self? |
A26981 | Are all apostles? |
A26981 | Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not one of them is forgotten before God? |
A26981 | Are not the Uncircumcised pardoned and blessed also? |
A26981 | Are not two Sparrows sold for a farthing? |
A26981 | Are not we justly suffering for it, when he unjustly suffereth, being innocent? |
A26981 | Are not you my Witnesses? |
A26981 | Are not[ the Powers that be] all that have present Possession? |
A26981 | Are they Hebrews? |
A26981 | Are they all conjurers too? |
A26981 | Are they none of God''s Ministers who are a Terror to Good Works? |
A26981 | Are they not all ministring spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of Salvation? |
A26981 | Are they utterly forsaken and cast off? |
A26981 | Are we better than they? |
A26981 | Are we strong enough to overcome him, or to bear the Wrath of the Almighty? |
A26981 | Are ye not much better than they? |
A26981 | Are ye not then partial in your selves, and are become judges of evil thoughts? |
A26981 | Are ye so foolish? |
A26981 | Are you aware indeed that wrath is coming upon you? |
A26981 | Are you the Men that boast of Wisdom? |
A26981 | Art not thou that Egyptian which before these days madest an uprore, and leddest out into the wilderness four thousand men that were murderers? |
A26981 | Art thou Elias? |
A26981 | Art thou a good Teacher who sufferest thy Disciples to break Gods law? |
A26981 | Art thou bound unto a wife? |
A26981 | Art thou called being a servant? |
A26981 | Art thou come hither to torment us before the time? |
A26981 | Art thou come to destroy us? |
A26981 | Art thou greater than our father Abraham which is dead? |
A26981 | Art thou loosed from a wife? |
A26981 | Art thou that Prophet? |
A26981 | Art thou the Christ? |
A26981 | As Ahahs Court h ● d one Obadiah, so even the Jewish Rulers had a Jos ● ph and a Nico ● emus? |
A26981 | As if Paul had been crucified for you, or you baptised into his Name? |
A26981 | As it is written, How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things? |
A26981 | As to any thing that I did in the Council let them witness what they can against me? |
A26981 | Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ? |
A26981 | Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelivers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
A26981 | Because it entereth not into his heart, but into the belly, and goeth out into the draught, purging all meats? |
A26981 | Behold Israel after the flesh: are not they which eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar? |
A26981 | Behold, they that wear soft cloathing are in kings houses? |
A26981 | Believest thou not that God the Father is so in me and I in him, as that he appeareth to the world by me? |
A26981 | Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
A26981 | Believest thou this? |
A26981 | Bread: What did he Bless? |
A26981 | But Christ said, If the Devil have a Kingdom, he hath wit to preserve it; Is it the Devils work to ▪ do good to mens Souls and Bodies? |
A26981 | But Festus willing to do the Jews a pleasure, answered Paul, and said, Wilt thou go up to Jerusalem, and there be judged of these things before me? |
A26981 | But God said unto him, Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided? |
A26981 | But I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not? |
A26981 | But I say, Did not Israel know? |
A26981 | But I say, Have they not heard? |
A26981 | But Jesus said to them, Ye know not what ye ask: Can ye drink of the cup that I drink of, and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with? |
A26981 | But Jesus said unto him, Judas, betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss? |
A26981 | But John forbad him saying, I have need to be baptized of thee, and comest thou to me? |
A26981 | But Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him and said, Lord, doest thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? |
A26981 | But Paul said unto them, They have beaten us openly uncondemned, being Romans, and have cast us into Prison; and now do they thrust us out privily? |
A26981 | But Peter said, Ananias, why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the holy Ghost, and to keep back part of the price of the land? |
A26981 | But Pilate answered them, saying, Will ye that I release unto you the king of the Jews? |
A26981 | But are not Women prone to this, tho they be not Devoted to Chastity and Church- Service? |
A26981 | But are these two Articles enough to Salvation? |
A26981 | But art not thou a vain man, that knowest not that Faith is but a dead Opinion, uneffectual to justifie and save, if it be uneffectual to Works? |
A26981 | But can not Men distinguish between obeying the Law of Innocency or of Moses, and obeying the Law of Faith and Grace? |
A26981 | But have not the Jews had notice of the Gospel, when it was first preached to them, and rejected by them? |
A26981 | But he answered and said to him that told him, Who is my mother? |
A26981 | But he knowing their hypocrisie, said to them, Why tempt ye me? |
A26981 | But he perceived their craftiness, and said unto them, Why tempt ye me? |
A26981 | But he that did his neighbour wrong, thrust him away, saying, Who made thee a Ruler, and a Judge over us? |
A26981 | But he willing to justifie himself, said unto Jesus and who is my neighbour? |
A26981 | But how is this number of 25 received as a Badge by reprobates? |
A26981 | But how then can you hold that the whole Visible Church was never the Seat, or Society of Antichrist, in any one age? |
A26981 | But how then shall the scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it must be? |
A26981 | But if our unrighteousness commend the righteousness of God, what shall we say? |
A26981 | But if thy eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness: If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness? |
A26981 | But if while we seek to be justified by Christ, we our selves also are found sinners, is therefore Christ the minister of sin? |
A26981 | But if you prove filthy and corrupt your selves, what or who shall be salt to you, for your recovery? |
A26981 | But if you should lose sound Doctrine, and Christianity, what then shall season you? |
A26981 | But is not the World excusable then in their sin, for want of preaching? |
A26981 | But it was a present effect of the Spirit? |
A26981 | But lo, he speaketh boldly, and they say nothing to him: Do the Rulers know indeed, that this is the very Christ? |
A26981 | But may not Christian Rulers and Prelates silence Ministers, though the Jewish might not? |
A26981 | But may not Church Rulers silence Ministers? |
A26981 | But must they not be forborn, if Men forbid them? |
A26981 | But now I am going to him that sent me, and though it be on your business and for your interest, you ask me not whither and for what I go? |
A26981 | But now I go my way to him that sent me, and none of you asketh me whither goest thou? |
A26981 | But one in a certain place testified, saying, What is man, that thou art mindful of him: or the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
A26981 | But oportet Mendacem esse Memorem, Why then do your Historians charge them to have been against Infant- Baptism? |
A26981 | But remember what you have formerly suffered for Christ: Will you lose all that? |
A26981 | But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? |
A26981 | But the other answering, rebuked him saying, Doest not thou fear God, seeing thou art in the same condemnation? |
A26981 | But the righteousness which is of faith, speaketh on this wise, Say not in thy heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? |
A26981 | But their Scribes and Pharisees murmured against his disciples, saying, Why do ye eat and drink with Publicans and sinners? |
A26981 | But they have not all obeyed the Gospel: for Esaias saith, Lord, who hath believed our report? |
A26981 | But were they such indeed? |
A26981 | But what if Christian Rulers forbid it? |
A26981 | But what if Rulers forbid us to meet daily for such Exhortation? |
A26981 | But what if Violence or Prisons restrain us? |
A26981 | But what if it be a Son? |
A26981 | But what is all this to the Popes of Rome? |
A26981 | But what saith it? |
A26981 | But what saith the answer of God unto hm? |
A26981 | But what then was the Baptism he used before his Resurrection, if men were not to be told, and to profess that he was the Christ? |
A26981 | But what think you? |
A26981 | But what was their Heresie, how can we know better than by your bloody Laws against them? |
A26981 | But what went ye out for to see? |
A26981 | But what went ye out for to see? |
A26981 | But what went ye out to see? |
A26981 | But what went ye out to see? |
A26981 | But what, doth it follow, that all Gods Promises to the Jews of a Saviour had taken no effect, because the most of them believe not? |
A26981 | But what, doth it hence follow, that God is unjust, for making such an unmerited difference? |
A26981 | But what? |
A26981 | But what? |
A26981 | But when Jesus perceived their thoughts, he answering said unto them, What reason ye in your hearts? |
A26981 | But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this wast? |
A26981 | But where are these Judges and Gentlemen now? |
A26981 | But whereto shall I liken this generation? |
A26981 | But which of the angels said he at any time, Sit on my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool? |
A26981 | But which of you by taking thought can add one cubit to his stature? |
A26981 | But why did he not Baptize them? |
A26981 | But why dost thou judge thy brother? |
A26981 | But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith without works is dead? |
A26981 | But with whom was he grieved forty years? |
A26981 | But ye have a custom, that I should release unto you one at the passover: will ye therefore that I release unto you the king of the Jews? |
A26981 | But you may say, Why then doth not this Preaching convert more of the Jews? |
A26981 | But you must take the contentious and chargeable way of Publick Judicatures, and that before Infidels, that are unjust, and will deride you? |
A26981 | By many such reasons I suspect that the Questions,( who is the Beast? |
A26981 | Can a fig- tree, my brethren, bear olive- berries? |
A26981 | Can any Law be better than Gods? |
A26981 | Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the holy Ghost as well as we? |
A26981 | Can you think it a rewardable thing, as of any special worth, to take it patiently when you are beaten for your faults? |
A26981 | Canst thou procure us Bread from Heaven as Moses did? |
A26981 | Come see a man, which told me all things that ever I did: Is not this the Christ? |
A26981 | Cometh this blessedness then on the circumcision only, or on the uncircumcision also? |
A26981 | Conscience I say, not thine own, but of the others: for why is my liberty judged of another mans conscience? |
A26981 | Consider how God himself confuteth your over- valuing rich men, and vilifying the poor: Is it not mostly of the poor that your Churches consist? |
A26981 | DAre any of you having a matter against another, go to law before the unjust, and not before the saints? |
A26981 | DO we begin again to commend our selves? |
A26981 | David therefore calleth him Lord, how is he then his Son? |
A26981 | David therefore himself calleth him Lord, and whence is he then his son? |
A26981 | Did Christ Profess Repentance for the Remission of Sins? |
A26981 | Did I make a gain of you by any of them whom I sent unto you? |
A26981 | Did I make a gain of you, by any of them whom I sent unto you? |
A26981 | Did Paul persecute with a good Conscience? |
A26981 | Did Titus, or the Brother whom I sent to you, make a Gain of you? |
A26981 | Did not Christ drink with them after his resurrection? |
A26981 | Did not God command you not, to murder, and them to Preach his word? |
A26981 | Did not Moses give you the law, and yet none of you keepeth the law? |
A26981 | Did not Nicodemus and Joseph wrap his body in Spices at his Burial? |
A26981 | Did not you bring his blood upon your selves? |
A26981 | Did the Ten Tribes pray for it, who were carried away by the Assyrians and Idolators put in their Country? |
A26981 | Did we not all agree in Mind and Practice? |
A26981 | Did you murder none till they were Baptized? |
A26981 | Didst thou not know that it was to God who knew thy heart? |
A26981 | Do Angels rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner? |
A26981 | Do I need, as some others, to be recommended to you by other Mens Letters? |
A26981 | Do I not bring with me the Proof of mine Apostleship? |
A26981 | Do I now preach the Doctrine of Men, on Mans Authority, to please Men; or the Word of God, by his Authority, to please him? |
A26981 | Do I speak this as a Man pleading his own Interest? |
A26981 | Do but answer me from your own Experience: Have you not received the Spirit your selves? |
A26981 | Do not Christ''s and the Apostles words nearly concern us? |
A26981 | Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgment seats? |
A26981 | Do not they blaspheme that worthy name, by the which ye are called? |
A26981 | Do not they that eat of the Sacrifices of the Jews, thereby profess Worship to the God they sacrifice to? |
A26981 | Do not ye judge them that are within? |
A26981 | Do they not blaspheme the name of Christ, and reproach your Religion? |
A26981 | Do we not join in a professed Reception of these, communicated to us by Christ? |
A26981 | Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie? |
A26981 | Do we then make void the law by saith? |
A26981 | Do ye look on things after the outward appearance? |
A26981 | Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world? |
A26981 | Do ye not know that they which minister about holy things, live of the things of the temple? |
A26981 | Do ye not yet understand, neither remember ye the five loaves of the five thousand, and how many baskets ye took up? |
A26981 | Do ye think that the scripture saith in vain, The spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envie? |
A26981 | Do you judge by Mens outward Appearance and Ostentation, and judge of me by the meanness of my Garb, and Bodily Stature, and Aspect? |
A26981 | Do you not all know our common imperfection of Knowledge, and that we have no authority for such Judgment or Contempt? |
A26981 | Do you think God will judge you meet for Heaven, that were false in your use of earthly things? |
A26981 | Do you think to scape the wrath that is coming on you, by an hypocritical Repentance, and the Ceremony of Baptism? |
A26981 | Dost thou know thy self while thou so judgest others? |
A26981 | Dost thou know whom thou persecutest and why? |
A26981 | Dost thou not discern how plainly the Scripture confuteth thee? |
A26981 | Doth Adultery dissolve Marriage? |
A26981 | Doth God take care for oxen? |
A26981 | Doth St. Paul determine here either of the Species or Individually, who it is that hath the Highest Power? |
A26981 | Doth a fountain send forth at the same place sweet water and bitter? |
A26981 | Doth he say worse against Christ himself? |
A26981 | Doth he thank that servant because he did the things that were commanded him? |
A26981 | Doth it encourage Men to Impenitency or Disobedience, to tell them, that God doth predestinate Men to repent, and obey, and be saved? |
A26981 | Doth not Christ here cross his own Law, by calling them Fools and Blind? |
A26981 | Doth not God say it in his Law? |
A26981 | Doth not all this proceed according to his Will? |
A26981 | Doth not even nature it self teach you, that if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him? |
A26981 | Doth our law judg any man before it hear him, and know what he doth? |
A26981 | Doth this Text justifie usury? |
A26981 | Doth this much convince thee? |
A26981 | Else what shall they do which are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at all? |
A26981 | FRom whence come wars and fightings among you? |
A26981 | For all sorts of Animals have been mastered by Man: But the Tongue of another who can master? |
A26981 | For do I now perswade men, or God? |
A26981 | For he knew that for envy they had delivered him? |
A26981 | For how can we believe that Christ died and rose, but we must also believe the Resurrection of those that are the departed Members of Christ? |
A26981 | For if I make you sorry, who is he then that maketh me glad, but the same which is made sorry by me? |
A26981 | For if the casting away of them, be the reconciling of the world, what shall the receiving of them be, but life from the dead? |
A26981 | For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battel? |
A26981 | For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory, why also am I yet judged a sinner? |
A26981 | For if they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry? |
A26981 | For if ye love them that love you, what reward have you? |
A26981 | For if ye love them which love you, what thank have ye? |
A26981 | For rulers are not a terror to good works but to the evil: wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? |
A26981 | For the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand? |
A26981 | For unto which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? |
A26981 | For we are saved by hope: But hope that is seen, is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? |
A26981 | For what Gifts of the Spirit poured out among you? |
A26981 | For what account doth the Scripture give us of his Righteousness? |
A26981 | For what else was it that made them Bagauds, but our iniquities, and the dishonesty( or naughtiness) of Judges? |
A26981 | For what glory is it, if when ye be buffetted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? |
A26981 | For what have I to do to judge them also that are without? |
A26981 | For what if some did not believe? |
A26981 | For what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
A26981 | For what is it wherein ye were inferiour to other churches, except it be that I my self was not burdensom to you? |
A26981 | For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoycing? |
A26981 | For what is that Hope, and Joy, and Crown, for which I labour so hard, and suffer so much? |
A26981 | For what knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband? |
A26981 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? |
A26981 | For what need a man Pardon, who des ● rveth not Punishment? |
A26981 | For what saith the Scripture? |
A26981 | For what shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
A26981 | For whether is greater, he that sitteth at meat, or he that serveth? |
A26981 | For which of you intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first, and countteth the cost, whether he have sufficient to finish it? |
A26981 | For while one saith, I am of Paul, and another, I am of Apollos, are ye not carnal? |
A26981 | For while you divide into Factions for your several Teachers, are ye not so far Carnal? |
A26981 | For who hath known the mind of the Lord, or who hath been his counsellor? |
A26981 | For who hath known the mind of the Lord, that he may instruct him? |
A26981 | For who hath pried into God''s secret Counsels, or known his Mind, further than he hath opened it to him? |
A26981 | For who maketh thee to differ from another? |
A26981 | For, if I by grace be a partaker, why am I evil spoken of for that for which I give thanks? |
A26981 | Forasmuch then as God gave them the like gift as he did unto us who believed on the Lord Jesus Christ, what was I that I could withstand God? |
A26981 | God also bearing them witness, both with signs and wonders, and with divers miracles, and gifts of the holy Ghost, according to his own will? |
A26981 | God forbid: for then how shall God judge the world? |
A26981 | Grace therefore must have the Glory of our Justification: For who can boast that he hath it by Innocency? |
A26981 | Had Paul made Men believe that Christ should come again in that very Age, what a Delusion would it have been to the Churches? |
A26981 | Had any cause then to accuse me of Levity and Falshood in my Promises, as if my Word were not to be credited? |
A26981 | Hast thou faith? |
A26981 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
A26981 | Hath not my hand made all these things? |
A26981 | Hath not the Scripture said, that Christ cometh of the seed of David, and out of the town of Bethleem, whence David was? |
A26981 | Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel to honour, and another to dishonour? |
A26981 | Hath the unformed Matter an antecedent right to any subsequent shape or use? |
A26981 | Have I been so long with you and hast thou not seen and known me? |
A26981 | Have I committed an offence in abasing my self that you might be exalted, because I have preached to you the gospel of God freely? |
A26981 | Have all the gifts of healing? |
A26981 | Have any of the Rulers, or of the Pharisees believed on him? |
A26981 | Have they not all foretold that Christ must thus suffer, and then enter into the heavenly glory, where is his Throne, where he is to reign? |
A26981 | Have we not power to eat and to drink? |
A26981 | Have we not power to lead about a sister, a wife as well as other apostles, and as the brethren of the Lord, and Cephas? |
A26981 | Have ye suffered so many things in vain? |
A26981 | Having eyes see ye not? |
A26981 | He answered him and saith, O faithless generation, how long shall I be with you, how long shall I suffer you? |
A26981 | He answered them, I have told you already, and ye did not hear: Wherefore wo ● ld ye hear it again? |
A26981 | He answered, and said, Who is he, Lord, that I might believe on him? |
A26981 | He deeply groaned in grief for their obdurateness, and said, Have not this kind of men had signs enough to convince them? |
A26981 | He now knew that his Persecution was from exceeding madness, when yet before he took it for his duty? |
A26981 | He said to them, An enemy hath done this: The servants said to him, Wilt thou then that we go and gather them up? |
A26981 | He said unthem, Have ye received the holy Ghost since ye believed? |
A26981 | He said unto him, What is written in the law? |
A26981 | He said unto them, But whom say ye that I am? |
A26981 | He saith to him again the second time, Simon son of Jonas, lovest thou me? |
A26981 | He saith to him, which? |
A26981 | He saith to them, How many loaves have ye? |
A26981 | He saith unto him the third time, Simon son of Jonas, lovest thou me? |
A26981 | He that hath seen me, hath seen the Fathet: and how sayest thou then, Shew us the Father? |
A26981 | He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things? |
A26981 | He then lying on Jesus breast, saith unto him, Lord, who is it? |
A26981 | He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit, and worketh miracles among you, doth he it by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? |
A26981 | Hear me, as if I beg''d it of you, with tears on my knees? |
A26981 | Heaven is my throne, and Earth is my foot- stool: What House will ye build me, saith the Lord? |
A26981 | Here we may see what resisteth Reformation in the Church of Rome? |
A26981 | Here, say some Protestants, we answer the question, Where was your Church before Luther? |
A26981 | His disciples say unto him, Master the Jews of late have sought to stone thee, and goest thou thither again? |
A26981 | How came the People to go about Jericho seven days, and the Walls to fall, but because they believed and trusted the Promises of Almighty God? |
A26981 | How can ye believe who receive honour one of another, and seek not the honour which cometh from God only? |
A26981 | How comes the Cup twice mentioned? |
A26981 | How contrary are these? |
A26981 | How dare you do this, when Heathens are unjust, and will deride you? |
A26981 | How doth the Description verse 3. agree with Heathens and Persecutors? |
A26981 | How durst they have ventured into, and through the Red Sea, but that they believed God, that he would there deliver them by that Miracle? |
A26981 | How earnest did these persons seem in following Christ? |
A26981 | How far is all Power of God, and how far of Men? |
A26981 | How great a Mercy is it to live eight and thirty years under Gods wholsome discipline? |
A26981 | How great is the number that go on the two sides of Uncharitableness here reproved; especially on that which is largeliest insisted on? |
A26981 | How greatly should he be reverenced and obeyed by man, whom wind and seas, and all creatures must obey? |
A26981 | How happy did you then think your selves in the Comfort of the Gospel? |
A26981 | How is Conscience bound by Mans Laws? |
A26981 | How is God called a Father to wicked Prodigals? |
A26981 | How is it that ye have no faith? |
A26981 | How is it then, brethren? |
A26981 | How is our Obedience made the Rock that we build on? |
A26981 | How it would stand with Pauls great hast to Congregate all the Bishops of Asia? |
A26981 | How little a thing was that in comparison of Saving Grace and Glory? |
A26981 | How little cause then have such to doubt whether God will receive them? |
A26981 | How little know Men of the Mind of God? |
A26981 | How many Offices of Piety and Charity would be unperformed? |
A26981 | How many Thousand Persecute Christ, in his cause, and Servants, on pretences of Faith, Religion, Order, and Enmity to Sin? |
A26981 | How many hot Persecutions of Christians after that, do all Church- Histories describe, in another manner than Simon''s Pranks? |
A26981 | How much more are we meet to decide these Worldly Strifes? |
A26981 | How much more are ye better then the fowls? |
A26981 | How much more things that pertain to this life? |
A26981 | How much then is a man better than a sheep? |
A26981 | How near then is it now to an end, 1684 after? |
A26981 | How poor a price is all the profit and pleasure of this life, to hire a man by sin to lose his salvation, or what can make up that mans loss? |
A26981 | How shall all Kings from the Antipodes, or over all the Earth meet? |
A26981 | How shall we justly try Spirits, or spiritual pretences? |
A26981 | How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein? |
A26981 | How should we finish our course with joy? |
A26981 | How then are miserable Persecutors like to scape, when Heaven and Earth pray against them? |
A26981 | How then doth he now see? |
A26981 | How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? |
A26981 | How then would he have the Christians know whom to obey? |
A26981 | How then? |
A26981 | How think ye? |
A26981 | How unexcusable was this man if he had been proud, or worldly, or careless of his everlasting State? |
A26981 | How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out? |
A26981 | How was it then reckoned? |
A26981 | How? |
A26981 | I Say then, Hath God cast away his people? |
A26981 | I am come to send fire on the earth, and what will I, if it be already kindled? |
A26981 | I am not wiser than the Revealer of these things, in naming such as he here speaketh of; why are not the Names here given us sufficient? |
A26981 | I ask them that contradict this; Did Gods Word come out from you, or from intrusted Apostles? |
A26981 | I command thee, that art a guilty Sinner, to be sinless? |
A26981 | I desired Titus, and with him I sent a brother: did Titus make a gain of you? |
A26981 | I perceive thy question implyeth accusation: Who is the Accuser? |
A26981 | I say then, Have they stumbled that they should fall? |
A26981 | I will e''re long ascend up visibly to Heaven: And will not that prove that I came from Heaven? |
A26981 | I ●: What did he Break? |
A26981 | IT''s a Doubt oft put, How it could be that Gods Spirit should inspire Men with Tongues or Prophecy, and yet not tell them when and how to use them? |
A26981 | If Christ must pray so much, what need we? |
A26981 | If David then call him Lord, how is he his Son? |
A26981 | If Faith was imputed for Righteousness to Abraham, will it not be so to all that have it? |
A26981 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
A26981 | If Satan also be divided against himself, how shall his kingdom stand? |
A26981 | If a son shall ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give him a stone? |
A26981 | If after the manner of men I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me, if the dead rise not? |
A26981 | If all were of one Office, Stature, Complexion, or degree of Grace or Knowledge, who would be Rulers, and who Subjects? |
A26981 | If an Angel be so dreadful, what will God be to the wicked? |
A26981 | If any ask what the new earth shall be for? |
A26981 | If he condescend to limit this Soveraign Diet, who shall limit it, and how? |
A26981 | If in heaven, was it not a wrong to him to come thence? |
A26981 | If it were true, that they, and some at Rome were, what''s that to all the Churches? |
A26981 | If not, doth it not make for the sleepy inactivity of Souls departed? |
A26981 | If not, how was he capable of Johns Baptisme? |
A26981 | If of others, would they not be burned or damned if they should persevere, in their Hypocritical dead Profession? |
A26981 | If of the sincere, do they fall away to Damnation? |
A26981 | If others be partakers of this power over you, are not we rather? |
A26981 | If so, were they not all forgiven, seeing he was always heard? |
A26981 | If the dead rise not, and Christ rose not, what hope have you of Salvation from sin and death? |
A26981 | If the foot shall say, Because I am not the hand, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body? |
A26981 | If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing? |
A26981 | If there be what shall we do? |
A26981 | If therefore ye have not been faithfull in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches? |
A26981 | If these must be in hell with Devils, where will oppressours, persecutors and murderers be? |
A26981 | If thou be a bad man thy self, and guilty of worse than thou preachest against, who will believe thee, or expect good fruit from so bad a man? |
A26981 | If thou hast seen me, thou hast seen the notifying appearance of the Father? |
A26981 | If thou wouldst have us believe in thee, convince us yet by further Miracles? |
A26981 | If we have sown unto you spiritual things, is it a great thing if we shall reap your carnal things? |
A26981 | If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons: for what son is he whom the Father chasteneth not? |
A26981 | If ye had known me, ye should have known my Father also? |
A26981 | If ye then be not able to do that thing which is least, why take ye thought for the rest? |
A26981 | If you love not his visible Image, how can you love the invisible God? |
A26981 | If you say, Why were these Prophecies written, if not to be understood? |
A26981 | Ignorant man? |
A26981 | In his humiliation his judgment was taken away: and who shall declare his generation? |
A26981 | In the same hour, said Jesus to the multitude, Are ye come out as against a thief with swords and staves to take me? |
A26981 | Indeed our Dignity is unknown to the unbelieving World; for they knew not Christ to be the Son of God, and how then should they know us? |
A26981 | Instead of enquiring, How many? |
A26981 | Is Christ divided? |
A26981 | Is God unrighteous, who taketh vengeance? |
A26981 | Is Obedience to go as far as Subjection? |
A26981 | Is all this an Universal Empire, and was Rome the Whore for 700 years, or not? |
A26981 | Is any among you afflicted? |
A26981 | Is any man called being circumcised? |
A26981 | Is any merry? |
A26981 | Is any sick among you? |
A26981 | Is he not also of the Gentiles? |
A26981 | Is he the God of the Jews only? |
A26981 | Is it by the Law of Moses, or any Law which justifieth Men because they sinned not against it, nor deserved death? |
A26981 | Is it lawful for us to give tribute unto Cesar, or no? |
A26981 | Is it necessary or lawful to keep a day as holy in remembrance of Christs birth? |
A26981 | Is it not Fanaticism to talk of Fellowship with God, or Communion either? |
A26981 | Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with my own? |
A26981 | Is it not like a mocking of them? |
A26981 | Is it not then thy manifest error, to think that thy Knowledge, and condemning Sin in- others will justifie and save thee, that livest in Sin? |
A26981 | Is it not your Conversion and Salvation, which before Christ at his coming will be my Joy? |
A26981 | Is it not your certain Duty? |
A26981 | Is it so, that there is not a wise man among you? |
A26981 | Is no Power to do wrong ordained of God? |
A26981 | Is not Christ in Heaven as merciful and sufficient for Soul and body, as he was on Earth? |
A26981 | Is not Christ the Rock? |
A26981 | Is not a meer wordy Profession an unprofitable thing to your selves, as well as to others? |
A26981 | Is not he that sitteth at meat? |
A26981 | Is not our Communion in the Lords Supper, in Wine and Bread blessed, a common Reception Sacramentally of the Blood and the Body of Christ? |
A26981 | Is not the Gospel- Priesthood then, in Conformity to Christ, to be Kingly, and above all Kings, under Christ the King? |
A26981 | Is not the Prayer of the Wicked abominable? |
A26981 | Is not this the carpenter, the Son of Mary, the brother of James and Joses, and of Judas and Simon? |
A26981 | Is not this the way to make Antip ● ● o baptists, or Antibaptists, and keep Men from Christianity? |
A26981 | Is patience, and Forbearing, an ● Forgiving a strange thing to you? |
A26981 | Is pride and vain pampering fit for such a body? |
A26981 | Is the Law guilty of my sin and death? |
A26981 | Is the law sin? |
A26981 | Is the law then against the promises of God? |
A26981 | Is there unrighteousness with God? |
A26981 | Is thine eye evil because I am good? |
A26981 | It is above Sixteen hundred years since Simon was revealed, and yet Christ is not come; How then is that made an Occasion of Mens delayed Expectation? |
A26981 | It is excluded: By what law? |
A26981 | It is long of your own unbelief and perverseness that they could not cure him: how long shall I work miracles among you before you will believe? |
A26981 | It s a pitiful sight to see poor ignorant People, in obedience to Rulers, Persecuting Christ, to their own Destruction? |
A26981 | It''s vain to ask, how could he go when his feet was bound? |
A26981 | Jesus answered him, If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil: but if well, why smitest thou me? |
A26981 | Jesus answered him, Sayest thou this thing of thy self, or did others tell it thee of me? |
A26981 | Jesus answered him, Wilt thou lay down thy life for my sake? |
A26981 | Jesus answered them, Do ye now believe? |
A26981 | Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your Law, I said, Ye are gods? |
A26981 | Jesus answered them, Many good works have I shewed you from my Father; for which of those works do ye stone me? |
A26981 | Jesus answered, Are there not twelve hours in the day? |
A26981 | Jesus heard that they had cast him out: and when he had found him, he said unto him, Doest thou believe on the Son of God? |
A26981 | Jesus saith to them, Have ye understood all these things? |
A26981 | Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? |
A26981 | Jesus saith unto him, Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known me, Philip? |
A26981 | Jesus saith unto him, If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? |
A26981 | Jesus saith unto them, Come and dine, And none of the Disciples durst ask him: Who art thou? |
A26981 | Jesus therefore knowing all things that should come upon him, went forth, and said unto them, Whom seek ye? |
A26981 | Jesus took this occasion to describe John to the people; saying, What went you to John in the Wilderness to see? |
A26981 | Judas saith unto him, not Iscariot, Lord, how is it that thou wilt manifest thy self unto us, and not unto the world? |
A26981 | Judge in your selves: is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered? |
A26981 | KNow ye not, brethren,( for I speak to them that know the law) that the law hath power over a man as long as he liveth? |
A26981 | King Agrippa, believest thou the Prophets? |
A26981 | Know ye not that Christ will commit that Honour to his Saints, with him to judge the World of the Ungodly? |
A26981 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? |
A26981 | Know ye not that they which run in a race, run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
A26981 | Know ye not that we have no Head of the Church but Christ? |
A26981 | Know ye not that we shall judge angels? |
A26981 | Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the spirit of God dwelleth in you? |
A26981 | Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ? |
A26981 | Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death? |
A26981 | Likewise also, was not Rahab the harlot justified by works, when she had received the messengers, and had sent them out another way? |
A26981 | Luke reciteth the pedegree of Joseph, and Matthew of Mary Q. Whence had Luke that part of the pedegree that is not written in the Scripture before? |
A26981 | May places now be temples dedicated to Holy worship? |
A26981 | May the Woman put away her Husband for Adultery? |
A26981 | May we give none mere Tribute, Custom, Fear, or Honour, than their due? |
A26981 | Must Church- Government cast out all Ministers who believe not such an unproved Assertion? |
A26981 | Must I give none more than the Value of their Work deserveth? |
A26981 | Must not the more excellent Ministry of a durable Gospel, by which God giveth Men his Spirit, be more glorious? |
A26981 | Must they further chuse what Miracles they shall have? |
A26981 | Must we not forgive men, unless they confess and repent? |
A26981 | N. And will pride, revenge, gluttony, drunkenness, or fornication, then make him a saver that loseth his soul by them? |
A26981 | N. Had Christ, as Man, need of an Angels strengthening? |
A26981 | N. Have not we Sinners more need to break our sleep for secret Prayer? |
A26981 | N. He came to save us, and not himself, till his Resurrection: How glad would his Enemies shortly be to be saved by him? |
A26981 | N. How do the Papal Clergy read this, that hate, revile, silence, and ruine or burn such? |
A26981 | N. How vile a thing will less than four days, shew the body of man to be? |
A26981 | N. Nothing is so bad that ignorant wicked men may not do? |
A26981 | N. O how little Conscience do most Christians, even the Religious make of this command of Christ? |
A26981 | N. Rejecting the greatest Mercy, and Gospel- light, deserveth the greatest punishment in Hell: What then will become of Persecutors? |
A26981 | N. Sure the inordinate desire to be rich must needs signifie unbelief: Can men seek that which they believe maketh their salvation almost impossible? |
A26981 | N. The Cross of Christ was the great scandal to all? |
A26981 | N. What is it that the ignorant Rabble will not say and do against the best of men, when men called Sacred and Great encourage them? |
A26981 | N. Why did Christ tell that to this woman, which he forbad others to tell abroad? |
A26981 | Nathaneel saith unto him, Whence knowest thou me? |
A26981 | Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
A26981 | Neither the seven loaves of the four thousand, and how many baskets ye took up? |
A26981 | Nevertheless, what saith the scripture? |
A26981 | Nevertheless, when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth? |
A26981 | Night and day praying exceedingly that we might see your face, and might perfect that which is lacking in your faith? |
A26981 | No, this is utterly shut out: By what Law? |
A26981 | Nor is Revelation from Heaven necessary to notifie the Person: For who but Fanaticks now pretend to that? |
A26981 | Nor yet a pompous Gallant in gay cloaths? |
A26981 | Not as Cain, who was of that wicked one, and slew his brother: and wherefore slew he him? |
A26981 | Not for his own sin, for he had none besides his original sin: Not for his Parents; for God punisheth not one for anothers sin? |
A26981 | Not now as a servant, but above a servant, a brother beloved, specially to me, but how much more unto thee, both in the flesh and in the Lord? |
A26981 | Note Was the Spirit in Paul and in them contrary? |
A26981 | Note, All this tells us what sin is? |
A26981 | Note, How contrary to this reviling and destro ● ing all these sorts? |
A26981 | Note, It appeareth by this that the Gospel had been received before Paul''s coming thither, in the Italian Country about Rome? |
A26981 | Note, It s strange that they accused not the People of Sedition or Rebellion or a Ryot? |
A26981 | Note, This was the blaspheming of the Holy Ghost: what can convince men who when they see all this done, will say, The Devil doth it? |
A26981 | Note, We have men seemingly wise now, that would say, Why did Christ speak so unadvisedly as to give occasion to such accusers? |
A26981 | Note; And shall not we obey him? |
A26981 | Note; Are Angels our fellow- servants? |
A26981 | Note; Do they so, that ruin, hunt and destroy such, and better men? |
A26981 | Note; Do you think that Paul then was for introducing all the vast body of the Popish Canons, and all their corrupt Traditions and Ceremonies? |
A26981 | Note; How can Men be such visible Examples to many hundred Flocks that never knew them? |
A26981 | Note; How dear are the Souls of the meanest to a faithful Minister, and how lovely when converted? |
A26981 | Note; What need then have we to pray? |
A26981 | Now Moses in the law commanded us, that such should be stoned: but what sayest thou? |
A26981 | Now if Christ be preached that he rose from the dead, how say some among you, that there is no resurrection of the dead? |
A26981 | Now if the fall of them be the riches of the world, and the diminishing of them the riches of the Gentiles, how much more their fulness? |
A26981 | Now if thou didst receive it, why dost though glory, as if thou hadst not received it? |
A26981 | Now is my soul troubled; and what shall I say? |
A26981 | Now the first day of the feast of unleavened bread, the disciples came to Jesus, saying, where wilt thou that we prepare for thee to eat the passover? |
A26981 | Now therefore are we all here present before God, to hear all things that are commanded thee of God? |
A26981 | Now therefore there is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to law one with another: why do ye not rather take wrong? |
A26981 | Now therefore why tempt ye God, to put a yoak upon the neck of the Disciples, which neither our Fathers nor we were able to bear? |
A26981 | Now when they heard this, they were pricked in their heart, and said unto Peter, and to the rest of the apostles, Men and brethren, what shall we do? |
A26981 | O death, where is thy sting? |
A26981 | O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things? |
A26981 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
A26981 | O how differently doth sin appear in the hour of flattering temptation, and when conscience is throughly wakened? |
A26981 | O how terrible will it at last prove to Persecutors, that they have kickt with their bare feet against the Pricks or Thorns of Gods displeasure? |
A26981 | O then what need have proud Persecutors to be cast down, and how great a mercy to them it may prove? |
A26981 | O then, what doth Sin deserve? |
A26981 | O what a motive is this to Charity? |
A26981 | Of how little credit is the judgment of blinded wicked Men, of Gods Servants? |
A26981 | Oh what Love do we owe to Angels, Who so much love us? |
A26981 | One of the servants of the high Priest,( being his kinsman whose ear Peter cut off) saith, Did not I see thee in the garden with him? |
A26981 | Or I onely and Barnabas, have not we power to forbear working? |
A26981 | Or any Person better than Christ? |
A26981 | Or by your Letters to be recommended to other Churches? |
A26981 | Or can not God strengthen you now, when you should be grown stronger? |
A26981 | Or did it come to you only, that you contradict the Churches? |
A26981 | Or have ye not read in the law, how that on the sabbath days the priests in the temple profane the sabbath, and are blameless? |
A26981 | Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye, and behold a beam is in thine own eye? |
A26981 | Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? |
A26981 | Or if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? |
A26981 | Or is all such ordained by him? |
A26981 | Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? |
A26981 | Or should the Church be moved to Constancy, Patience and Comfort, chiefly, sixteen hundred Years after, because a Million of Jews were killed then? |
A26981 | Or those eighteen upon whom the tower in Siloe fell, and slew them, think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwelt in Jerusalem? |
A26981 | Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
A26981 | Or what power hast thou to judge or anathematize another, any further than truly to tell men whom Christ will judge and cast away? |
A26981 | Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
A26981 | Or whether all be spoken only of the things below, of which the superior World hath no real similitude, but by fiction? |
A26981 | Or will you anticipate God''s Judgment, and tempt Men out of the fear of sinning by your fallible censures or contempt? |
A26981 | Or will you set Paul against Christ? |
A26981 | Or, Who shall descend into the deep? |
A26981 | Or, it is commonly held that all punishment is for sin: How could that be in this man? |
A26981 | Or, was the Heathen Religion but one of Heathen Rome''s own Heads? |
A26981 | Or, was the Pope''s wounded Head in being before him? |
A26981 | Or, why dost thou set at nought thy brother? |
A26981 | Others said, How can a man that is a sinner, do such Miracles? |
A26981 | Others said, These are not the words of him that hath a devil: Can a devil open the eyes of the blind? |
A26981 | Others said, this is the Christ: But some said, shall Christ come out of Galilee? |
A26981 | Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory? |
A26981 | Perhaps you''ll say, How shall we know Sin, but by the Law? |
A26981 | Peter said to him, What if my brother do often sin to my injury or scandal, and be often thus admonished; how oft must I forgive him? |
A26981 | Peter said unto him, Lord, why can not I follow thee now? |
A26981 | Peter said, We have consented to thy termes, and forsaken All, and followed thee: What shall be our reward? |
A26981 | Peter seeing him, saith to Jesus, Lord, and what shall this man do? |
A26981 | Peter was grieved, because he said unto him the third time, Lovest thou me? |
A26981 | Pilate answered, Am I a Jew? |
A26981 | Pilate said to them, What shall I do then with Jesus which is called Christ? |
A26981 | Pilate saith unto him, What is truth? |
A26981 | Pilate saith unto them, Shall I Crucifie your King? |
A26981 | Pilate then went out unto them, and said, What accusation bring you against this man? |
A26981 | Pilate therefore said unto him, Art thou a king then? |
A26981 | Psalm is cited, which tell us how Gods Works do preach him to all the World,& c. And on the other side, How shall they hear without a Preacher? |
A26981 | Psalmes?) |
A26981 | Publication raised Envy, and caused Christ to withdraw into the Wilderness: what wonder if our Hearers indiscretion hurt us? |
A26981 | Remember ye not, that when I was yet with you, I told you these things? |
A26981 | Salt is good: but if the salt hath lost its saltness, wherewith will ye season it? |
A26981 | Salt is good: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be seasoned? |
A26981 | Say I these things as a man? |
A26981 | Say not in thy Heart, Who shall ascend into Heaven,( or how can we know Gods Will, that never were in Heaven? |
A26981 | Say ye of him whom the Father hath sanctified, and sent into the world, Thou blasphemest: because I said, I am the Son of God? |
A26981 | Saying, Did not we straitly command you, that you should not teach in this name? |
A26981 | Saying, Let us alone, what have we to do with thee, thou Jesus of Nazareth? |
A26981 | Saying, Let us alone, what have we to do with thee, thou Jesus of Nazareth? |
A26981 | Saying, What shall we do to these men? |
A26981 | Saying, What think ye of Christ? |
A26981 | Saying, What wilt thou that I should do unto thee? |
A26981 | Seest thou how faith wrought with his works, and by works was faith made perfect? |
A26981 | Shall all the V ● lgar be made Judges of the Princes Right? |
A26981 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formeth it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
A26981 | Shall they trust their Crowns to Deligate Subjects? |
A26981 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
A26981 | Shall we give, or shall we not give? |
A26981 | Shall we provoke God by that which in the Second Commandment, and often, he hath told us, he will be a jealous Avenger of? |
A26981 | Shew me a penny: whose image and superscription hath it? |
A26981 | Shew me the tribute money? |
A26981 | Should not I do more for a lost Sinner, than you would do for a lost Sheep? |
A26981 | Simon Peter said unto him, Lord, whither goest thou? |
A26981 | So after he had washed their feet, and had taken his garments, and was set down again, he said unto them, Know ye what I have done to you? |
A26981 | So he called every one of his lords debtors unto him, and said unto the first, How much owest thou unto my lord? |
A26981 | So if you speak not intelligibly to the Hearers, what the better are they? |
A26981 | So likewise you, except ye utter by the tongue words easie to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? |
A26981 | So that all that remaineth in controversie will be, Who instituted this middle Order of Presbyters after Scripture times? |
A26981 | So when they had dined, Jesus saith to Simon Peter, Simon Son of Jonas, lovest thou me more then these? |
A26981 | Suppose ye that I am come to give peace on earth? |
A26981 | THen said the high Priest, Are these thing so? |
A26981 | Take no thought therefore, saying, what shall we eat? |
A26981 | Tell me therefore, which of them will love him most? |
A26981 | Tell me, ye that desire to be under the law, do ye not hear the law? |
A26981 | That is, What is Forgiving the sin but forgiving the punishment of it? |
A26981 | That its wordly covetous men, who are most to be suspected to be Traytors to the Church, as Judas was against Christ for[ for what will ye give me?] |
A26981 | That the saying of Esaias the Prophet might be fulfilled, which he spake, Lord who hath believed our report? |
A26981 | The History of Lyars are stufft with lies: And how can Strangers and Posterity know who were the Lyars? |
A26981 | The Pharisees demanded, when the Kingdom of God should come? |
A26981 | The Pharisees therefore said among themselves, perceive ye how ye prevail nothing? |
A26981 | The Pharisees therefore said to him? |
A26981 | The baptism of John, was it from heaven, or of men? |
A26981 | The baptism of John, was it from heaven, or of men? |
A26981 | The baptism of John, whence was it? |
A26981 | The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? |
A26981 | The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? |
A26981 | The first generall difference is, whether it signifie the name of a Man properly, or only some other mark that belongeth to him, called his name? |
A26981 | The great point of our Controversie now is, Whether Christ rose from the Dead? |
A26981 | The man is supposed to confess God, and consequently his duty to him, and to mean in his question, What good works must I do towards others? |
A26981 | The neighbours therefore, and they which before had seen him that he was blind, said, Is not this he that sate and begged? |
A26981 | The people answered and said, thou hast a devil who goeth about to kill thee? |
A26981 | The people answered him, We have heard out of the law, that Christ abideth for ever: and how sayest thou, the Son of man must be lift up? |
A26981 | Then Christ shall pronounce this sentence on the Faithful, Come,& c. N. O comfortable words,[ Come,] Whither? |
A26981 | Then Festus, when he had conferred with the Council, answered, Hast thou appealed unto Cesar? |
A26981 | Then Jesus answered and said, O faithless and perverse generation; how long shall I be with you, how long shall I suffer you? |
A26981 | Then Jesus saith unto them Children, have ye any meat? |
A26981 | Then Judas, answered and said, Master is it I? |
A26981 | Then Paul answered, What mean ye to weep, and to break mine heart? |
A26981 | Then Peter said unto her, How is it that ye have agreed together, to tempt the Spirit of the Lord? |
A26981 | Then Peter said unto him, Lord, speakest thou this parable unto us, or even to all? |
A26981 | Then Pilate entred into the judgment- hall again, and called Jesus, and said unto him, Art thou the king of the Jews? |
A26981 | Then Pilate said unto them, Why, what evil hath he done? |
A26981 | Then Simon Peter answered him, Lord to whom shall we go? |
A26981 | Then answered the Jews, and said unto him, Say we not well that thou art a Samaritan, and hast a devil? |
A26981 | Then answered them the Pharisees, are ye also deceived? |
A26981 | Then asked he them again, whom seek ye? |
A26981 | Then asked they him, what man is he, that said unto thee, Take up thy Bed, and walk? |
A26981 | Then came Peter and said to him, Lord how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? |
A26981 | Then came also Publicans to be baptized, and said unto him, Master, what shall we do? |
A26981 | Then came his disciples, and said to him, Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended, when they heard this saying? |
A26981 | Then came the Jews round about him, and said unto him, How long dost thou make us to doubt? |
A26981 | Then came the disciples to Jesus apart and said, Why could not we cast him out? |
A26981 | Then came the officers to the cheif Priests and Pharisees, and they said unto them, Why have ye not brought him? |
A26981 | Then certain Philosophers of the Epicureans, and of the Stoicks, encountred him: and some said, What will this babbler say? |
A26981 | Then gathered the chief Priests and the Pharisees a councel and said, what do we? |
A26981 | Then said Jesus to the twelve, will ye also go away? |
A26981 | Then said Jesus to them, I will ask you one thing, Is it lawful on the sabbath- days to do good, or to do evil? |
A26981 | Then said Jesus unto Peter, Put up thy sword unto the sheath: the cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it? |
A26981 | Then said Mary unto the angel, How shall this be, seeing I know not a man? |
A26981 | Then said he to another, And how much owest thou? |
A26981 | Then said he to the multitude, that came forth to be baptized of him, O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? |
A26981 | Then said he, unto what is the kingdom of God like? |
A26981 | Then said one unto him, Lord, are there few that be saved? |
A26981 | Then said some of them of Jerusalem, is not this he whom they seek to kill? |
A26981 | Then said the Jews among themselves, whither will he go, that we shall not find him? |
A26981 | Then said the Jews, Will he kill himself? |
A26981 | Then said the lord of the vineyard, What shall I do? |
A26981 | Then said they all, Art thou then the Son of God? |
A26981 | Then said they to h ● m again, What did he to thee? |
A26981 | Then said they to him, Where is thy Father? |
A26981 | Then said they to him, what shall we do, that we may work the works of God? |
A26981 | Then said they unto him, Where is he? |
A26981 | Then said they unto him, Who art thou? |
A26981 | Then saith Pilate unto him, Speakest thou not unto me? |
A26981 | Then saith the Damsel that kept the door, unto Peter, Art not thou also one of this mans disciples? |
A26981 | Then saith the Woman of Samaria unto him, how is it that thou beinq a Jew askest drink of me, vvhich am a Woman of Samaria? |
A26981 | Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee hungry and fed thee? |
A26981 | Then sought they for Jesus, and spake among themselves, as they stood in the Temple, What think ye, that he will not come to the feast? |
A26981 | Then the Governour answered and said to them, Whether of the two will ye that I release unto you? |
A26981 | Then the Pharisees and ● cribes asked him, Why walk not thy disciples according to the tradition of the elders, but eat bread with unwashed hands? |
A26981 | Then the cheif Captain came near and took him, and commanded him to be bound with two Chains; and demanded who he was, and what he had done? |
A26981 | Then the chief captain came, and said unto him, Tell me art thou a Roman? |
A26981 | Then the chief captain took him by the hand, and went with him aside privately, and asked him, What is that thou hast to tell me? |
A26981 | Then the high priest rent his cloathes, saying, He hath spoken blasphemy, what further need have we of witnesses? |
A26981 | Then the steward said within himself, What shall I do? |
A26981 | There is a Lad here which hath five Barley Loaves and two small Fishes: but what are they among so many? |
A26981 | There is one Law- giver, who is able to save, and to destroy: who art thou that judgest another? |
A26981 | Therefore came I unto you without gainsaying, assoon as I was sent for: I ask therefore for what intent ye have sent for me? |
A26981 | Therefore if the uncircumcision keep the righteousness of the law, shall not his uncircumcision be counted for circumcision? |
A26981 | Therefore in the resurrection, whose wife of them is she? |
A26981 | Therefore in the resurrection, whose wife shall she be? |
A26981 | Therefore said the Disciples one to another, hath any man brought him ought to eat? |
A26981 | Therefore said they unto him, How were thine eyes opened? |
A26981 | Therefore when they were gathered together, Pilate said to them, Whom will you that I release to you? |
A26981 | They answered and said unto him, art thou also of Galilee? |
A26981 | They answered him, We be Abrahams seed, and were never in bondage to any man: how sayest thou? |
A26981 | They answered, and said unto him, thou wast altogether born in sins, and doest thou teach us? |
A26981 | They boast that they are Hebrews, Israelites, Abraham''s Seed, and Ministers of Christ: And am not I so too? |
A26981 | They said therefore to him, What sign shewest thou then, that we may see and believe in thee? |
A26981 | They said therefore, What is this that he saith, A little while? |
A26981 | They said unto him, Rabbi,( which is to say, being interpreted, Master) where dwellest thou? |
A26981 | They say unto the blind man again, What sayest thou of him, that he hath opened thine eyes? |
A26981 | They that seek first Provision for their own Flesh, do live but for a Body that will rot in the Grave; and where then is the Fruit of their Life? |
A26981 | Thine own nation, and the chief Priests have delivered thee unto me: What hast thou done? |
A26981 | Thinkest thou, that I can not n ● ● pray to my father, and he shall presen ● ● y give me more than twelve legions of angels? |
A26981 | This Moses whom they refused, saying, Who made thee a ruler and a Judge? |
A26981 | This onely would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? |
A26981 | Tho they presumed not to ask him why? |
A26981 | Thomas saith unto him, Lord, we know not whither thou goest: and how can we know the way? |
A26981 | Thou that abhorrest idols, dost thou commit sacrilege? |
A26981 | Thou that makest thy boast in the law, through breaking the law dishonourest thou God? |
A26981 | Thou that preachest, a man should not steal, dost thou steal? |
A26981 | Thou that saist, a man should not commit adultery, dost thou commit adultery? |
A26981 | Thou therefore which teachest another, teachest thou not thy self? |
A26981 | Thou wilt say then unto me, Why doth he yet find fault? |
A26981 | Thy Thanksgiving is a good Work; but what is another or the Church the wiser for it? |
A26981 | To ask, what had become of Peter, if he had dyed in this Sin? |
A26981 | To what use then was the Law given? |
A26981 | Transubstantiation is the grossest part of the first, and that is a Novelty? |
A26981 | V. Hath the Universal[ every Soul] no Exception? |
A26981 | V. What is his Mark received, and what his name, and what is the number of it received? |
A26981 | VVhether this be not good evidence of many Elders then at Ephesus alone? |
A26981 | WHat advantage then hath the Jew? |
A26981 | WHat is meant here by Powers? |
A26981 | WHat shall we say then, that Abraham our Father, as pertaining to the flesh hath found? |
A26981 | WHat shall we say then? |
A26981 | WHy do we read so much in the scriptures[ of the Obedience of Faith]? |
A26981 | Was it by the Works of the Law? |
A26981 | Was it for any foreseen sin that he would after commit, or for his original sin or for any sin of his Parents? |
A26981 | Was it not Doing in Faith, or a Faith that caused working Obedience, by which Abraham was justified, who was the Father of the Faithful? |
A26981 | Was not Abraham our father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar? |
A26981 | Was that then which is good made death to me? |
A26981 | Was this an absolute Prayer of Christ? |
A26981 | Watch ye and pray lest ye enter into temptation? |
A26981 | We know not now in what manner God will make known things to us there: Whether in seeing him, we shall see all things? |
A26981 | We see here what cold comfort companions in sin will give a man in misery or despair? |
A26981 | Were any unbelievers such? |
A26981 | Were they extemporary Prayers, or long Liturgies and forms? |
A26981 | What Vsury is it which Christ by this Parable seemeth to countenance? |
A26981 | What a novel monster the fiction of Transsubstantiation is? |
A26981 | What a safe way of usury hath Christ taught all Believers? |
A26981 | What are the Limits of their Power? |
A26981 | What are your commands against God? |
A26981 | What better work for the Sabbath- day, than to save life? |
A26981 | What doth it profit, my brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have not works? |
A26981 | What else can be meant v. 6, 8. by being absent from the Lord while we are in the Body, and being absent from the Body, and present with the Lord? |
A26981 | What folly were it in us Christians to choose a Religion and course of life, for which we are in continual danger from the malignant World? |
A26981 | What fruit had you then in those things whereof you are now ashamed? |
A26981 | What great happiness doth it signifie to say, All that I have is thine? |
A26981 | What hath the Fornicator, the Drunkard, the Glutton, the Worldling, the Ambitious, Proud, and Oppressors, for all, but the base portion of a Beast? |
A26981 | What if God willing to shew hi wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much long- suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction? |
A26981 | What if the Rulers forbid Church- Assemblies, or at least inferiour edifying Converse? |
A26981 | What if the most be Heathens and Mahometans, and most Christians Hereticks in each others account? |
A26981 | What is it that makes the ground called Good before the receiving of the word? |
A26981 | What is it then? |
A26981 | What is it therefore? |
A26981 | What is it which these witness against thee? |
A26981 | What is meant by Resistance? |
A26981 | What is my reward then? |
A26981 | What is that Labour for the everlasting Life which God requireth of us? |
A26981 | What is the Image of the Beast? |
A26981 | What is the Sentence of a Worm, a Sinner, and a blinded Enemy to be set against Gods Sentence? |
A26981 | What is the Whore? |
A26981 | What is the binding of the Dragon, and the thousand years reign, and resurrection, and where? |
A26981 | What is[ It] but that before- named? |
A26981 | What joy should the coverted themselves then have in it? |
A26981 | What manner of man is this? |
A26981 | What manner of saying is this, that he said, ye shall seek me, and shall not find me: and where I am, thither ye can not come? |
A26981 | What must we do for it? |
A26981 | What need then have we in the approach of death and great sufferings? |
A26981 | What proof there is of Metropolitane Churches singlularly named in those days? |
A26981 | What say I then? |
A26981 | What sayest thou of thy self? |
A26981 | What shall I say to you? |
A26981 | What shall therefore the Lord of the vineyard do? |
A26981 | What shall we say then? |
A26981 | What shall we say then? |
A26981 | What shall we say then? |
A26981 | What shall we then conclude from this unbelief and punishment of the Jews? |
A26981 | What shall we then say to these things? |
A26981 | What sort of Debt is sinful? |
A26981 | What then are the Limits of our Obedience to Men? |
A26981 | What then is here meant, and to be done for Unity? |
A26981 | What then is that Qualification of my Service which God will specially reward? |
A26981 | What then was the Gospel which they were sent to preach, and which he preached? |
A26981 | What then? |
A26981 | What then? |
A26981 | What then? |
A26981 | What then? |
A26981 | What then? |
A26981 | What then? |
A26981 | What therefore shall the lord of the vineyard do unto them? |
A26981 | What think ye? |
A26981 | What use is Christ of to you? |
A26981 | What will ye? |
A26981 | What would not Devils do against us, if God should permit them? |
A26981 | What 〈 ◊ 〉 which these witness against thee? |
A26981 | What''s become of the promise of it, which you so long awed men with? |
A26981 | What''s meant by Subjection? |
A26981 | What, and when, and where, is the Army against the Holy City, and the Wars at Armageddon? |
A26981 | What, and when, and where, is the New Jerusalem? |
A26981 | What, have ye not houses to eat and to drink in? |
A26981 | What, know ye not that he which is joyned to an harlot, is one body? |
A26981 | What, know ye not that your body is the temple of the holy Ghost, which is in you, which ye have of God? |
A26981 | What, or who is he that condemneth those whom Almighty God doth justifie? |
A26981 | What? |
A26981 | When I brake the five loaves among five thousand, how many baskets full of fragments took ye up? |
A26981 | When I therefore was thus minded, did I use lightness? |
A26981 | When Isaac and Jacob both ignorantly preferred the younger before the elder; how could that be said to be done by Faith, which they understood not? |
A26981 | When Jesus came into the coasts of Cesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I the Son of man am? |
A26981 | When Jesus had lift up himself and saw none but the woman, he said to her where are those thine accusers? |
A26981 | When Jesus heard it, he said to them, They that are whole, have no need of the physitian, but they that are sick? |
A26981 | When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the Woman? |
A26981 | When all denied, Peter, and they that were with him, said, Master, the multitude throng thee, and press thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me? |
A26981 | When he saw Jesus, he cried out, and fell down before him, and with a loud voice said, What have I to do with thee, Jesus, thou Son of God most high? |
A26981 | When he was in circumcision or in uncircumcision? |
A26981 | When his Disciples heard it, they were exceedingly amazed, saying, Who then can be saved? |
A26981 | When is Provision for the Flesh unlawful? |
A26981 | When saw we thee a stranger and took thee in? |
A26981 | When the Temple should be Destroyed? |
A26981 | When the World should End? |
A26981 | When the men were come unto him, they said, John Baptist hath sent us unto thee, saying, Art thou lie that should come, or look we for another? |
A26981 | When they therefore were come together, they asked of him, saying, Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom- to Israel? |
A26981 | When they which were about him, saw what would follow, they said unto him, Lord, shall we smite with the sword? |
A26981 | Where is boasting then? |
A26981 | Where is the wise? |
A26981 | Where is then the blessedness you spake of? |
A26981 | Where is there any proof of that? |
A26981 | Where is thy Father: Is not Joseph thy father? |
A26981 | Where must they meet? |
A26981 | Where shall all these things be done? |
A26981 | Where should I be but in my Fathers House, about his work? |
A26981 | Where was Lazarus''s soul while he was dead? |
A26981 | Where was the Soul of this maid( and Lazarus) after death? |
A26981 | Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow: for what is your life? |
A26981 | Wherefore then gavest not thou my money into the bank, that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury? |
A26981 | Wherefore then serveth the law? |
A26981 | Wherefore? |
A26981 | Whether Cesar had true right to demand it? |
A26981 | Whether Paul that stayed two or three years at Ephesus did Preach through all Asia from house to house, warning every one night and day with tears? |
A26981 | Whether if this withered hand had been their own, they would have plotted to kill him, that would have cured them by a Miracle, as a sabbath Breaker? |
A26981 | Whether is easier to say, Thy sins be forgiven thee, or to say, Rise up and walk? |
A26981 | Whether is it easier to say to the sick of the palsie, Thy sins be forgiven thee: or to say, Arise, take up thy bed and walk? |
A26981 | Whether it be an act of the understanding, or will, or both? |
A26981 | Whether it be lawful to pay tribute to Cesar, as being an owning of his power? |
A26981 | Whether it be meant of Paul''s laying on his Hands for the former, or the latter? |
A26981 | Whether it be the Gift of the Ministry, and its proper Necessaries, that is here meant, or the foregoing Gift of the Holy Ghost? |
A26981 | Whether men would imprison us for it? |
A26981 | Whether of them two did the will of his father? |
A26981 | Whether the Albigenses and Waldenses were their Successors? |
A26981 | Whether the Dragon, Beast, or false Prophet, or Whore, be the special Antichrist? |
A26981 | Whether these Bagaudae were Christians, seeing it is said that they never resisted their Persecuting Princes, but used only Prayers and Tears? |
A26981 | Which all are to perish with the using) after the commandments and doctrines of men? |
A26981 | Which also said, Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? |
A26981 | Which do I serve, and seek to please? |
A26981 | Which now of these three, thinkest thou, was neighbour unto him that fell among the theeves? |
A26981 | Which of the Prophets have not your Fathers persecuted? |
A26981 | Which of the ● to ● ● the man for his Neighbour, and dealt as a Neighbour with him? |
A26981 | Which of you convinceth me of sin? |
A26981 | Which when Jesus perceived, he said to them, O ye of little faith, why reason ye among your selves, because ye have brought no bread? |
A26981 | Whiles it remained, was it not thine own? |
A26981 | Who are the two Witnesses? |
A26981 | Who art thou that darest arrogate this Judgment? |
A26981 | Who art thou, a sinful man, that thou presumest to judge and condemn Gods Servants? |
A26981 | Who can forgive sins, but God alone? |
A26981 | Who can oblige him to recompense by his Gifts, or hath any thing but what God giveth him? |
A26981 | Who hath hardened himself against him and hath prospered? |
A26981 | Who is it but rich men that oppress you by tyranny, and draw you, like Malefactors, before their Courts of Judicature? |
A26981 | Who is the first Beast? |
A26981 | Who is the second Beast? |
A26981 | Who said, Canst thou speak Greek? |
A26981 | Whose Faith was it? |
A26981 | Why Luke would not tell us so? |
A26981 | Why all Asia is called a Church in the singular number when we never find the Churches of Judea, Gallatia, or any other Country so called one Church? |
A26981 | Why askest thou me? |
A26981 | Why do thy disciples transgress the traditions of the elders? |
A26981 | Why do we not desire their company more, than that of this wicked World? |
A26981 | Why do ye not rather suffer your selves to be defrauded? |
A26981 | Why do ye not understand my speech? |
A26981 | Why do you think you merit by your fasting? |
A26981 | Why doth Christ mention none of the Commandments of the first Table? |
A26981 | Why doth Satan accuse Saints, day and night, to God, who never receiveth his false Accusations? |
A26981 | Why doth not Christ recite the Commandments in their true order? |
A26981 | Why doth not Paul comfort them with the mention of the Souls Immortality and Happiness before the Resurrection of the Body? |
A26981 | Why doth this man thus 〈 ◊ 〉 blasphemies? |
A26981 | Why have you not learnt of Christ to put up Injuries, and let go your Right, rather than violate the Laws of Love and Peace? |
A26981 | Why left he Egypt to go into a Foreign Land and Wilderness, and after fearlesly faced a wrathful King, when he spake from God? |
A26981 | Why should forced Expositions darken this? |
A26981 | Why should we fear that which God ▪ s Decree and Grace have made impossible? |
A26981 | Why should you set up a higher Dominion over one another, than I have exercised over you? |
A26981 | Why stand ye here all the day idle? |
A26981 | Why the Churches of all Asia are summoned as the Church of Ephesus? |
A26981 | Why there is no word of making some one the Ruler of all the rest as their Bishop? |
A26981 | Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred pence, and given to the poor? |
A26981 | Will good words cloath the naked, or feed the hungry? |
A26981 | Will he go to those Jews who are dispersed abroad the World, or what meaneth he? |
A26981 | Will he go unto the dispersed among the Gentiles, and teach the Gentiles? |
A26981 | Will his words have more Light and Power than God''s Word hath? |
A26981 | Will importunity prevail with a wicked Judge? |
A26981 | Will it justifie a Thief to Preach against Stealing, or an Adulterer to Preach against Adultery, or the Sacrilegious to abhor Idols? |
A26981 | Will it not be an ill bargain to gain all the world for a short time to the flesh, and lose ones own Soul and its happiness for ever? |
A26981 | Will it not be endless thus to convince and judge all the world? |
A26981 | Will teaching others justifie thee, who teachest not thy self? |
A26981 | Will the Law justifie thee, that condemnest thy self by breaking it while thou boastest of it? |
A26981 | Will ye also be his Disciples? |
A26981 | Will ye make Christ, who is our common Head and Saviour, to be the Head of a Faction? |
A26981 | Will you join the Temple of God and Idols together? |
A26981 | Will you judge of my Design contrary to my Practice? |
A26981 | Will you lose all the sufferings which you have undergone? |
A26981 | Wilt thou die in sin? |
A26981 | Wilt thou kill me, as thou didst the Egyptian yesterday? |
A26981 | With whom was God so displeased, as Grief here signifieth? |
A26981 | Wot ye not what the scripture saith to Elias? |
A26981 | Would you rule as greater than I? |
A26981 | Ye adulterers, and adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
A26981 | Ye are the salt of the earth; but if the salt have lost its savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
A26981 | Ye did run well, who did hinder you, that ye should not obey the truth? |
A26981 | Ye fools and blind: for whether is greater, the gift, or the altar that sanctifieth the gift? |
A26981 | Ye fools, did not he that made that which is without, make that which is within also? |
A26981 | Ye have heard his blasphemy, what think ye? |
A26981 | Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the skie, and of the earth: but how is it, that ye do not discern this time? |
A26981 | Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
A26981 | Ye shall be made free? |
A26981 | Ye shall know them by their fruits: Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
A26981 | Yea why do you not gather it from the nature of duty and sin, and of the Justice of God? |
A26981 | Yea, and why even of your selves judge ye not what is right? |
A26981 | Yea, that hath almost all the contraries? |
A26981 | Yet by so doing he made it his Body? |
A26981 | Yet you despise the poor, whom God himself chuseth and honoureth: And doth not your own experience and suffering condemn you? |
A26981 | You boast of the Law and the Prophets, and the expected Messiah: But which of the Prophets, did not your Fathers persecute? |
A26981 | You will overthrow your selves and not it, if it be of God: Its madess to fight against him? |
A26981 | Your glorying is not good: Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump? |
A26981 | [ Blessed is he that cometh in the Name of the Lord?] |
A26981 | [ What advantageth it me if the dead rise not?] |
A26981 | [ Who is able to make War with the Beast?] |
A26981 | a man clothed in soft raiment? |
A26981 | a prophet? |
A26981 | a reed shaken with the wind? |
A26981 | am I not free? |
A26981 | and after it was sold, was it not thine own power? |
A26981 | and all their Inquisitors to vomit up ther blood and gain? |
A26981 | and are not his sisters here with us? |
A26981 | and do ye not remember? |
A26981 | and do you question that which converted you? |
A26981 | and having ears, hear ye not? |
A26981 | and how shall they hear, without a preacher, and how shall they Preach, unless they be sent? |
A26981 | and is there not one Man among you wise enough to judge of the Differences of Christians? |
A26981 | and may it say, Why hast thou made me thus, and not in a nobler form for higher use? |
A26981 | and tell it to any? |
A26981 | and they being afraid, wondred, saying one to another? |
A26981 | and they which wait at the altar, are partakers with the altar? |
A26981 | and to what are they like? |
A26981 | and to whom hath the arm of the Lord been revealed? |
A26981 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
A26981 | and what false Expectations and Religious Duties would it have enticed them to? |
A26981 | and what hast thou that thou didst not receive? |
A26981 | and what hast thou which was not freely given thee without desert? |
A26981 | and what profit is there of circumcision? |
A26981 | and whence came they? |
A26981 | and where, and when killed? |
A26981 | and whereunto shall I resemble it? |
A26981 | and whether he said true or false? |
A26981 | and who are my brethren? |
A26981 | and who is Apollos? |
A26981 | and who is the Antichrist?) |
A26981 | and why not called Simonians, as well as Nicolaitans? |
A26981 | and will not importunate prayer prevail with God to do Justice for his chosen, praying people? |
A26981 | and with what body do they come? |
A26981 | and ▪ Quo jure? |
A26981 | and, How it''s proved that they had Power so to do? |
A26981 | are all prophets? |
A26981 | are all teachers? |
A26981 | are all workers of miracles? |
A26981 | are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
A26981 | are not you my work in the Lord? |
A26981 | are we stronger then he? |
A26981 | art thou come to destroy us? |
A26981 | because I love you not? |
A26981 | because he deserved not death by Sin? |
A26981 | but where are the nine? |
A26981 | came the word of God out from you? |
A26981 | can faith save him? |
A26981 | can he enter the second time into his mothers womb, and be born? |
A26981 | come they not hence, even of your lusts, that war in your members? |
A26981 | do I by all this conclude, that God hath broken his Covenant with Abraham and utterly cast off the People of Israel? |
A26981 | do all interpret? |
A26981 | do all speak with tongues? |
A26981 | do not even the Publicans so? |
A26981 | do not even the Publicans the same? |
A26981 | either a vine figs? |
A26981 | for who can be such a Light in the World, that is not taught and gifted by the Father of Lights? |
A26981 | for who hath resisted his will? |
A26981 | from heaven, or of men? |
A26981 | have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord? |
A26981 | have ye your heart yet hardened? |
A26981 | having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh? |
A26981 | how readest thou? |
A26981 | if the whole were hearing, where were the smelling? |
A26981 | knowest thou not that I have power to Crucifie thee, and have power to release thee? |
A26981 | let him not become uncircumcised: is any called in uncircumcision? |
A26981 | must the Parents deny him Food? |
A26981 | no not one that shall be able to judge between his brethren? |
A26981 | not a toy like a shaken Reed? |
A26981 | o ● how knowest thou, O man, whether thou shalt save thy wife? |
A26981 | of Christs Sacrifice, Obedience, Promise, Pardon, Heaven? |
A26981 | of himself, or of some other man? |
A26981 | of their own children or of strangers? |
A26981 | of whom do the kings of the earth take custom or tribute? |
A26981 | of works? |
A26981 | or Kings and Priests to be the same? |
A26981 | or came it unto you only? |
A26981 | or despise ye the church of God, and shame them that have not? |
A26981 | or do I seek to please men? |
A26981 | or how? |
A26981 | or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish, giv ● him a serpent? |
A26981 | or naked and cloathed thee? |
A26981 | or need we, as some others, epistles of commendation to you, or letters of commendation from you? |
A26981 | or saith not the law the same also? |
A26981 | or the things that I purpose, do I purpose according to the flesh, that with me there should be yea, yea, and nay, nay? |
A26981 | or were ye baptized in the name of Paul? |
A26981 | or what is the place of my rest? |
A26981 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
A26981 | or what shall we drink? |
A26981 | or wherewithall shall we be cloathed? |
A26981 | or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? |
A26981 | or who is he that gave thee this authority? |
A26981 | or why look ye so earnestly on us as though by our own power or holiness we had made this man to walk? |
A26981 | or why talkest thou with her? |
A26981 | or, to have life freely given him, which is his due for the Merit of his Work? |
A26981 | other some, He seemeth to be a setter forth of strange Gods? |
A26981 | perceive ye not yet, neither understand? |
A26981 | shall I come unto with a rod, or in love, and in the spirit of meekness? |
A26981 | shall I praise you in this? |
A26981 | shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? |
A26981 | shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect? |
A26981 | shall they not both fall into the ditch? |
A26981 | shall we continue in sin that grace may abound? |
A26981 | shall we sin because we are not under the law, but under grace? |
A26981 | so am I: Are they ministers of Christ? |
A26981 | so am I: are they Israelites? |
A26981 | so am I: are they the seed of Abraham? |
A26981 | such be not in Wildernesses but in Kings houses: you''l say A Prophet? |
A26981 | that the idol is any thing, or that which is offered in sacrifice to idols is any thing? |
A26981 | that they should call for more Miracles when they newly came from seeing one? |
A26981 | to save life, or to destroy it? |
A26981 | to save life, or to kill? |
A26981 | to separate us from Gods love to us, and our thankful return of love to him? |
A26981 | walked we not in the same spirit? |
A26981 | walked we not in the same steps? |
A26981 | was Paul crucified for you? |
A26981 | was it not with them that had sinned, whose carcases fell in the wilderness? |
A26981 | what Signs and Miracles have other Churches excelled you in? |
A26981 | what dost thou work? |
A26981 | what hath my Government of you been, but to do you good, by Doctrine, Love, and good Example, without force? |
A26981 | what hatred, false accusations, worldliness, pride, cruelty and contention? |
A26981 | what new doctrine is this? |
A26981 | what work have Domination, unnecessary Canons and Censures made in the Christian Churches these 1300 years? |
A26981 | when saw we thee thirsty and gave thee drink? |
A26981 | when the time will quickly come? |
A26981 | whence then hath this man all these things? |
A26981 | where is the disputer of this world? |
A26981 | where is the scribe? |
A26981 | which is Babylon? |
A26981 | who Teachers, and who Learners? |
A26981 | who can forgive sins but God onely? |
A26981 | who is able to make war with him? |
A26981 | who is offended, and I burn not? |
A26981 | who is this Son of man? |
A26981 | who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit therereof? |
A26981 | whom seekest thou? |
A26981 | whose son is he? |
A26981 | why are they then baptized for the dead? |
A26981 | why go ye about to kill me? |
A26981 | will you drive me from among you by your unbelief, to go to others? |
A26981 | wist ye not that I must be about my Fathers business? |
A26981 | 〈 … 〉 ● ● ● z ● bub cast out devils, by 〈 … 〉 ● ● ● en cast them out? |