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 |
---|---|
29929 | ''He was asked by the men that looked over the gate-- Whence come you and what would you have?'' |
29929 | ''Look at the generations of old; did any ever trust in the Lord and was confounded?'' |
29929 | ''Once they had forced Emmanuel out of the Kingdom of the Universe, and why, thought he, might they not do it again?'' |
29929 | Art thou a buyer and do things grow dear? |
29929 | Art thou a seller and do things grow cheap? |
29929 | Art thou to buy or sell? |
29929 | But''how could he tell but that St. Paul, being a subtle and cunning man, might give himself up to deceive with strong delusions?'' |
29929 | Do you know him? |
29929 | Emmanuel would answer,''Is Old Good Deed yet alive in Mansoul? |
29929 | Had he faith? |
29929 | He was asked why he did not go to church? |
29929 | He was crying''in the bitterness of his soul, How can God comfort such a wretch as I am?'' |
29929 | How then shall a man of tender conscience do, neither to wrong the seller, buyer, nor himself in the buying and selling of commodities?'' |
29929 | How was he to be rid of it? |
29929 | How were they to stand? |
29929 | In the midst of changing circumstances the central question remains the same-- What am I? |
29929 | Is it not far more likely that he found all the indulgences which money could buy and the rules of the prison would allow? |
29929 | Is sin divine?'' |
29929 | Lord, shall I honour Thee most by believing that Thou wilt and canst, or him, by believing that Thou neither wilt nor canst? |
29929 | Man Friday on reading it would have asked even more emphatically,''Why God not kill the Devil?'' |
29929 | Oh, how she flies and sings; But could she do so if she had not wings? |
29929 | Pliable, Mr. Obstinate, Mr. Facing- both- ways, Mr. Feeble Mind, and all the rest? |
29929 | The tempter followed me with,"But whither must you go when you die? |
29929 | Then said they,''Have you none?'' |
29929 | Was Bunyan legally convicted or not? |
29929 | Was he elected? |
29929 | Was there any point in which he was better than Judas? |
29929 | What did it mean? |
29929 | What evidence have you for heaven and glory, and an inheritance among them that are sanctified?" |
29929 | What shall I do? |
29929 | What was he that God should care for him? |
29929 | What was it? |
29929 | What will become of you? |
29929 | Who can not recognise the truth of this? |
29929 | Who does not know the miry slough too? |
29929 | Who has not groaned over the follies and idiocies that cling to us like the doggerel verses that hang about our memories? |
29929 | Why had he been picked out to be made a Son of Perdition? |
29929 | _ Town Clerk._ Have you much knowledge of him? |
29929 | _ Town Clerk._ Where did you hear him say so? |
29929 | _ Town Clerk._ Where did you hear him say these things? |
29929 | and what am I to do? |
29929 | what is this world in which I appear and disappear like a bubble? |
29929 | who made me? |
6048 | A wounded spirit who can bear? |
6048 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that he shall dealin judgment"with thee?" |
6048 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
6048 | Was not this man, think you, a giant? 6048 [ 257] How did these sturdy rogues and their fellows make David groan, mourn, and roar? |
6048 | ''And now why tarriest thou? |
6048 | ''And the Lord said, Who shall persuade Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth- Gilead? |
6048 | ''And when thou art spoiled, what wilt thou do? |
6048 | ''Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?'' |
6048 | ''Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?'' |
6048 | ''Are we better than they? |
6048 | ''Are ye able to drink of the cup that I shall drink of?'' |
6048 | ''Be ye not,''saith it,''unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
6048 | ''Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? |
6048 | ''Besides,''quoth the old gentleman,''should the Prince now, as he receives the petition, ask him and say, What is thy name? |
6048 | ''Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'' |
6048 | ''Cut it down, why doth it cumber the ground?'' |
6048 | ''Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish?'' |
6048 | ''For how great is his goodness, and how great is his beauty? |
6048 | ''For if God be for us, who shall be against us? |
6048 | ''Friend, how camest thou in hither?'' |
6048 | ''Hast thou found me,''said Ahab,''O mine enemy?'' |
6048 | ''Hear this, O ye that swallow up the needy, even to make the poor of the land to fail, saying, When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? |
6048 | ''Here see a soul that''s all despair; a man All hell; a spirit all wounds; who can A wounded spirit bear? |
6048 | ''How camest thou in hither?'' |
6048 | ''How camest thou in hither?'' |
6048 | ''How long wilt thou not depart from me, nor let me alone till I swallow down my spittle?'' |
6048 | ''How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity? |
6048 | ''How much more abominable and filthy is man, which drinketh iniquity like water?'' |
6048 | ''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6048 | ''I made a covenant with mine eyes,''said Job,''why then should I think upon a maid? |
6048 | ''If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him''; how then can he be fruitful in the vineyard? |
6048 | ''Is there no place will serve to fit those for hell but the church, the vineyard of God?'' |
6048 | ''Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
6048 | ''Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
6048 | ''Then thou shalt be clear from this my oath''; or,''How shall we clear ourselves?'' |
6048 | ''They set their mouth against the heavens,''& c.''And they say, How doth God know? |
6048 | ''What ailed thee, O Jordan, that thou wast driven back?'' |
6048 | ''What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6048 | ''What, despair of bread in a land that is full of corn? |
6048 | ''What, my son?'' |
6048 | ''Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant?'' |
6048 | ''Who hath woe? |
6048 | ''Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6048 | ''Why hast thou conceived this thing in thine heart? |
6048 | ''Why was I made to hear thy voice,''while so many more amiable and less guilty''make a wretched choice?'' |
6048 | ''Wilt thou,''said Festus to Paul,''go up to Jerusalem, and there be judged of these things before me?'' |
6048 | ''[ 120] Then said Mercy, This is much like to the saying of the Beloved,''What shall be given unto thee? |
6048 | ''or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue?'' |
6048 | ( Heb 7:26) and for depth, it is lower than hell, who can undermine it? |
6048 | 13:5) Then said the guide, Do you hear him? |
6048 | 4:10); and why seekest thou to bring us into the like condemnation? |
6048 | A whoremaster, a drunkard, a thief, what are they but the devil''s baits by which he catcheth others? |
6048 | ALL; take it where you will, and in what place you will,''All is profitable'': For what? |
6048 | After this He led them into His garden, where was great variety of flowers; and he said, Do you see all these? |
6048 | After this, she thought she saw two very ill- favoured ones standing by her bedside, and saying, What shall we do with this woman? |
6048 | Again, Did not Moses write of the Saviour that was to come afterwards into the world? |
6048 | Again, How basely do they behave themselves, how unlike are they to win, that think it enough to keep company with the hindmost? |
6048 | Again, Was the man a good man? |
6048 | Again, shall God, who is the truth, Say there is heaven and hell And shall men play that trick of youth To say, But who can tell? |
6048 | Again,''If they hear not Moses and the prophets,''& c. As if he had said, Thou wouldst have me send one from the dead unto them; what needs that? |
6048 | Again,''Is it not yet a very little while, and Lebanon shall be turned into a fruitful field, and the fruitful field shall be esteemed as a forest? |
6048 | Ah, Mind, why didst thou do those things That now do work my woe? |
6048 | Ah, Will, why was thou thus inclin''d Me ever to undo? |
6048 | All our anxious inquiries should be, Is Emmanuel in Heart- castle? |
6048 | All they,''that is, that are in hell, shall say,''Art thou also become weak as we? |
6048 | All this is taught us by the spoons; for what need is there of spoons where there is nothing to eat but strong meat? |
6048 | Also your neighbours are diligent for things that will perish; and will you be slothful for things that will endure for ever? |
6048 | Also, what if she had laid wait round about him, to espy if he was not otherwise behind her back than he was before her face? |
6048 | Also, wouldst thou know what a sad thing it is for any to turn their backs upon the gospel of Jesus Christ? |
6048 | Am I a new creature in Him? |
6048 | Amaziah having sinned against the Lord, he sends to him a prophet to reprove him; but Amaziah says,''Forbear, why shouldest thou be smitten?'' |
6048 | And a new heart and a new man must have objects of delight that are new, and like himself;''Old things are passed away''; why? |
6048 | And again,''When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts?'' |
6048 | And albeit, saith Satan, thou prayest sometimes, yet is not thy heart possessed with a belief that God will not regard thee? |
6048 | And are not all His holy doctrines also stamped with the same Divine sanction? |
6048 | And are not these pleasant sights? |
6048 | And as he went down deeper, he said,''Grave, where is thy victory?'' |
6048 | And canst thou tell me who saves thee? |
6048 | And could you at any time, with ease, get off the guilt of sin,[275] when, by any of these ways, it came upon you? |
6048 | And did he do it before he had need to do it? |
6048 | And did he do thus indeed? |
6048 | And did he not behave himself valiantly? |
6048 | And did none of these things discourage you? |
6048 | And did the Father reveal His Son to you? |
6048 | And did the old man give him money to set up with? |
6048 | And did they make them welcome? |
6048 | And did you ask him what man this was, and how you must be justified by Him? |
6048 | And did you do as you were bidden? |
6048 | And did you endeavour to mend? |
6048 | And did you pray to God that He would bless your counsel to them? |
6048 | And did you presently fall under the power of this conviction? |
6048 | And did you think he spake true? |
6048 | And did you think yourself well then? |
6048 | And did you, said he, when I came up against this town of Mansoul, heartily wish that I might not have the victory over you? |
6048 | And didst thou fear the lake and pit? |
6048 | And do I desire to be found in Him; knowing by the Word, and feeling by the teaching of His Spirit, that I am totally lost in myself? |
6048 | And do the things that truly are divine, Before thee more than gold or rubies shine? |
6048 | And do they in thy conscience bear more sway To govern thee in faith and holiness, Than thou canst with thy heart and mouth express? |
6048 | And do you think that the words of your book are certainly true? |
6048 | And do you think the Lord will sit still, as I may say, and let thy tongue run as it lists, and yet never bring you to an account for the same? |
6048 | And dost thou think that these are but threatenings, or that our King has not power to execute his words? |
6048 | And dost thou think, wast thou there now, that thou art able to wrestle with the judgment of God? |
6048 | And fools hate knowledge?'' |
6048 | And he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding- garment?'' |
6048 | And how did he carry it there? |
6048 | And how did his good wife take it, when she saw that he had no amendment, but that he returned with the dog to his vomit, to his old courses again? |
6048 | And how did you do then? |
6048 | And how do they deceive souls? |
6048 | And how doth God the Holy Ghost save thee? |
6048 | And how if thou shouldst come but one quarter of an hour too late? |
6048 | And how many did Samson slay with the jaw- bone of an ass? |
6048 | And how seldom do they trouble their heads, to have their minds taken up with thoughts of the better? |
6048 | And how then? |
6048 | And how was He revealed unto you? |
6048 | And how were they served that are mentioned in the 13th of Luke,''for staying till the door was shut?'' |
6048 | And if not to think of him, while at a distance, how can you endure to be in his presence? |
6048 | And if our sun seems angry, hides his face, Shall it go down, shall night possess this place? |
6048 | And if they are mute when dealt with by vessels of clay, what will they do when they shall be rebuked by the flames of a devouring fire? |
6048 | And if they shall not escape that neglect, then how shall they escape that reject and turn their back upon''so great a salvation?'' |
6048 | And if thou dost, thou wilt run into the bosom of Christ and of God, and then what harm will that do thee? |
6048 | And if, as unto Solomon, God should Propound to thee, What wouldst thou have? |
6048 | And in the land of peace thou trustedst, then how wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan?'' |
6048 | And is it not reason that they who did this horrid villany, should have their doings laid before their faces upon the tables of their heart? |
6048 | And is it possible it should be forgotten, or that, by it, our joy, light, and heaven should not be made the sweeter to all eternity? |
6048 | And is not this, said he, a shame? |
6048 | And it was so indeed, thought Mr. Badman; was my troubles only the effects of my distemper, and because ill vapours got up into my brain? |
6048 | And look, did not I tell you? |
6048 | And must we be all alone? |
6048 | And now had he had a heart to do for Mansoul, what could he do for it or wherein could he be profitable to her? |
6048 | And sayest thou so, my dear? |
6048 | And shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive be delivered? |
6048 | And she said, Come, James, canst thou tell me who made thee? |
6048 | And she''shall be glad for them''; for what? |
6048 | And suppose they were the truly godly that made the first assault, can they be blamed? |
6048 | And the Lord said unto him, Wherewith? |
6048 | And the scorners delight in their scorning? |
6048 | And then he answers himself:''Is not destruction to the wicked, and a strange punishment to the workers of iniquity?'' |
6048 | And then what doth he get thereby but loss and damage? |
6048 | And then,''what profit hath he that hath laboured for the wind?'' |
6048 | And was that all? |
6048 | And was this all? |
6048 | And what can our pretended giants do or say in comparison of these? |
6048 | And what canst thou earn a day? |
6048 | And what company shall we have there? |
6048 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
6048 | And what did Badman do after his wife was dead? |
6048 | And what did they say else? |
6048 | And what did you do then? |
6048 | And what did you do then? |
6048 | And what did you reply? |
6048 | And what did you say to him? |
6048 | And what else? |
6048 | And what else? |
6048 | And what good will my vanities do, when death says he will have no nay? |
6048 | And what harm will that do thee? |
6048 | And what is it that makes you so desirous to go to Mount Zion? |
6048 | And what revenge hast thou in thy heart against every thought of disobedience? |
6048 | And what said Faithful to you then? |
6048 | And what said he then? |
6048 | And what said he then? |
6048 | And what said the neighbours to him? |
6048 | And what saw you else in the way? |
6048 | And what sayest thou to thy perverting, knowingly, the right purport and intent of the law? |
6048 | And what than fire? |
6048 | And what the son of my vows? |
6048 | And what was the other thing? |
6048 | And what was the reason you did not? |
6048 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6048 | And when a man is down, you know, what can he do? |
6048 | And when the hand of the rulers are chief in a trespass, who can keep their people from being drowned in that trespass? |
6048 | And whereabout does he dwell? |
6048 | And whereas you ask me, Whither away? |
6048 | And who can contradict him? |
6048 | And who then shall dare to blame this our age consumed; or say that our years be cut off? |
6048 | And who with him again but they? |
6048 | And who with them but Mr. Badman? |
6048 | And whose be the sheep that feed upon them? |
6048 | And whose portrait is Bunyan describing here? |
6048 | And why candlesticks, if they were not to hold the candles? |
6048 | And why did you not bring them along with you? |
6048 | And why might they not be a type of gospel sermons? |
6048 | And why should a man so carelessly cast away himself, by giving heed to a stranger? |
6048 | And why so? |
6048 | And why? |
6048 | And wilt thou not regard? |
6048 | And with that she plucked out her letter,[28] and read it, and said to them, What now will ye say to this? |
6048 | And without this, what is to be seen in the church of God? |
6048 | And you are sure he was of this opinion? |
6048 | And you ungodly children, how are your ungodly parents that lived and died ungodly, now in the pains of hell also? |
6048 | And''will ye weary my God also?'' |
6048 | And, By what means have you so persevered therein? |
6048 | And, How got you into the way? |
6048 | And, Sir, you, as all our neighbours know, are a very observing man, pray, therefore, what do you think of them? |
6048 | And, in reason, how could it be otherwise? |
6048 | And, listening still, she thought she heard another answer it, saying-- For why? |
6048 | And, moreover, my brother, thou talkest of ease in the grave; but hast thou forgotten the hell, whither for certain the murderers go? |
6048 | And, said Christiana to Mr. Great- heart, Sir, will you do as we? |
6048 | And, therefore, what need have they that one should be sent unto them in another way? |
6048 | And,''Will ye rebel against the king?'' |
6048 | Are his feet shod with the Gospel of peace? |
6048 | Are his loins girt about with truth? |
6048 | Are his ministers slothful in tendering this unto you? |
6048 | Are my prayers lost? |
6048 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6048 | Are not the seven churches in Asia called by name of candlesticks? |
6048 | Are these"spirits of just men made perfect"-the angel- ministering spirits which are sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? |
6048 | Are they not all of equal authority? |
6048 | Are they not death without, and unbelief within? |
6048 | Are they the glorified inhabitants of the Celestial City? |
6048 | Are we now almost got past the Enchanted Ground? |
6048 | Are we truly convinced of sin, and converted to Christ? |
6048 | Are you a married man? |
6048 | Are you a married man? |
6048 | Are you come out of it? |
6048 | Are you going to the heavenly country? |
6048 | Are you not sorry for what you have done? |
6048 | Are you so hasty? |
6048 | Art become freakish? |
6048 | Art bound for hell, against all wind and weather? |
6048 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6048 | Art thou a buyer, and do things grow dear? |
6048 | Art thou a fish, O man, art thou a fish? |
6048 | Art thou a seller, and do things grow dear? |
6048 | Art thou convinced that she is nothing more? |
6048 | Art thou got into the right way? |
6048 | Art thou in Christ''s righteousness? |
6048 | Art thou not a graceless wretch? |
6048 | Art thou not planted by the water- side? |
6048 | Art thou resolved to follow me? |
6048 | Art thou resolved to strip? |
6048 | Art thou therefore discharged and unladen of these things? |
6048 | Art thou to buy or sell? |
6048 | Art thou troubled with cross children, cross relations, cross neighbours? |
6048 | Art thou unladen of the things of this world, as pride, pleasures, profits, lusts, vanities? |
6048 | Art[ thou] resolved to follow me? |
6048 | As he saith again, Am I not an apostle? |
6048 | As if he should say, what need have they that one should be sent to them from the dead? |
6048 | As yet despise you the offers of peace, and deliverance? |
6048 | As yet will ye refuse the golden offers of Shaddai, and trust to the lies and falsehoods of Diabolus? |
6048 | Ask the rich man spoken of in the ensuing treatise, who was the fool-- he or Lazarus? |
6048 | At last there came a grave person to the gate, named Good- will, who asked who was there? |
6048 | At that Pliable began to be offended, and angrily said to his fellow, Is this the happiness you have told me all this while of? |
6048 | Aye, but Lord, what wilt thou do to quench their thirst? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou consider? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear what a striving there is between the vine- dresser and the husbandman, for thy life? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, fruitless Christian, do not thine ears tingle? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, fruitless professor, hast thou heard all these things? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, hast thou heard all these things? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, hast thou subscribed, hast thou called thyself by the name of Jacob, and surnamed thyself by the name of Israel? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, what fruit hast thou? |
6048 | Barren fig- tree, what sayest thou? |
6048 | Barren professor, dost thou hear? |
6048 | Be patient then, my brethren; but how long? |
6048 | Be ruled by me, and go back; who knows whither such a brain- sick fellow will lead you? |
6048 | Behold, I was left alone, these, where had they been?'' |
6048 | Besides, the great things that he desired, were to be delivered from going to hell, and who would, willingly? |
6048 | Besides, was the gospel so freely, so frequently, so fully tendered to thee, and yet hast thou rejected all these things? |
6048 | Brother, said Christian, what shall we do? |
6048 | But I have let myself to another, even to the King of princes; and how can I, with fairness, go back with thee? |
6048 | But I know you have made strong objections against him; prithee, what can he say for himself? |
6048 | But I, poor I, how shall I get thither? |
6048 | But Mr. Bunyan replied: Sin doth distinguish a man from a beast; is sin therefore the gift of God? |
6048 | But alas, what thief, what tyrant, what devil is there that may not conquer after this sort? |
6048 | But all these will fail you; for what think you? |
6048 | But all this while, where''s he whose golden rays Drives night away and beautifies our days? |
6048 | But am I daunted? |
6048 | But are the other righteousnesses of no use to us? |
6048 | But are there no dissuasive arguments to lay before such, to prevent their future misery? |
6048 | But art thou blind? |
6048 | But as to the intercession of Christ, who can come in to help upon the account of such innocency or worth? |
6048 | But at the end of all this promised pardon for a million of years-- what then? |
6048 | But be the candles down, and scattered too, Some lying here, some there? |
6048 | But can you imagine how the people of the corporation were taken with this entertainment? |
6048 | But canst thou not now repent and turn? |
6048 | But could the house of Lebanon, though a fortified place, assault Damascus? |
6048 | But could they persuade any to be of their opinion? |
6048 | But did none of them follow you, to persuade you to go back? |
6048 | But did not Mr. Badman marry again quickly? |
6048 | But did not the neighbours take notice of this alteration that Mr. Badman had made? |
6048 | But did they take from him all that ever he had? |
6048 | But did this young Badman accustom himself to such filthy kind of language? |
6048 | But did you never give an occasion to men to call you by this name? |
6048 | But did you not come by the house of the Interpreter? |
6048 | But did you not see the house that stood there on the top of the hill, on the side of which Moses met you? |
6048 | But did you not, with your vain life, damp all that you by words used by way of persuasion to bring them away with you? |
6048 | But did you take his counsel? |
6048 | But did you tell them of your own sorrow, and fear of destruction? |
6048 | But did you, said he, when you were at a stand, pluck out and read your note? |
6048 | But do kings use to die for captive slaves? |
6048 | But do not bad masters condemn themselves in condemning the badness of their servants? |
6048 | But do you think Mr. Badman would have been so base? |
6048 | But do you think that the men that do thus, do think that they do so vilely, so abominably? |
6048 | But do you think these men saw the strength of the Jews now? |
6048 | But first, do you know which of the Badmans I mean? |
6048 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
6048 | But for what cause? |
6048 | But had one not need to walk with a guard, and to have a sentinel stand at one''s door for this? |
6048 | But had the maid no friend to look after her? |
6048 | But his father would, as you intimate, sometimes rebuke him for his wickedness; pray how would he carry it then? |
6048 | But how are your neighbours for quietness? |
6048 | But how camest thou in this condition? |
6048 | But how can a man be sorry for it, that has neither sight nor sense of it? |
6048 | But how could he be naked, when before he had made himself an apron? |
6048 | But how could he so quickly run out, for I perceive it was in little time, by what you say? |
6048 | But how did it happen that you came out of your country this way? |
6048 | But how did they make that out? |
6048 | But how do you think to get in at the gate? |
6048 | But how dost thou prove that? |
6048 | But how doth God the Father save thee? |
6048 | But how doth it happen that you come so late? |
6048 | But how if this path should lead us out of the way? |
6048 | But how is it that you came alone? |
6048 | But how is this resented? |
6048 | But how much more now? |
6048 | But how much more then when he comes To grapple with thy heart; To bind with thread thy toes and thumbs,[4] And fetch thee in his cart? |
6048 | But how must this be done, but as we take them off with the snuffers, and put them in these snuff- dishes? |
6048 | But how shall I be ascertained that I also shall be entertained? |
6048 | But how shall we do to see some of them? |
6048 | But how should a poor soul do to run? |
6048 | But how will this man die? |
6048 | But how? |
6048 | But how? |
6048 | But if He parts with His righteousness to us, what will He have for Himself? |
6048 | But if he had done as you have supposed, what had he done worse than what he hath done already? |
6048 | But if they should not, ask them yet again If formerly they did not entertain One CHRISTIAN, a Pilgrim? |
6048 | But if thy God thou wilt not hearken to, What can the swallow, ant, or spider do? |
6048 | But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe my words?'' |
6048 | But is it asked how are we to see that that is invisible, or to imagine bliss that is past our understanding? |
6048 | But is it not a good heart that hath good thoughts? |
6048 | But is it not a shame for a man to defile himself with that vice which he rebuketh in another? |
6048 | But is it not a wonder they got not from him his certificate, by which he was to receive his admittance at the Celestial Gate? |
6048 | But is not this a shame for them that are such? |
6048 | But is this the common custom of princes? |
6048 | But let us return again to Mr. Badman; had he any children by his wife? |
6048 | But may my sin be forgiven? |
6048 | But met you with no opposition before you set out of doors? |
6048 | But must this wall, I say, consist chiefly in outward glory, in the glory of earthly things? |
6048 | But now, what thing is that which is greater than his body, save the altar, his Divinity on which it was offered? |
6048 | But now, when didst thou feel the power of this first part of the Scripture, the law, so mighty as to strike thee dead? |
6048 | But of what? |
6048 | But pray how can you tell that he did not care for the company of such? |
6048 | But pray tell me, Did you meet nobody in the Valley of Humility? |
6048 | But pray, Sir, what other sign have you by which you can prove that Mr. Badman died in his sins, and so in a state of damnation? |
6048 | But pray, Sir, where was it that Christian and Faithful met Talkative? |
6048 | But shall they be my God, or shall I have Of them so foul and impious a thought, To think that from the curse they can me save? |
6048 | But show me something out of the Word against it, will you? |
6048 | But some love not the method of your first; Romance they count it, throw''t away as dust, If I should meet with such, what should I say? |
6048 | But still when a fresh dish was set before them, they would whisperingly say to each other, What is it? |
6048 | But surely I may begin this time enough, a year or two hence, may I not? |
6048 | But to accept of grace, especially when it is free grace, grace that reigns, grace from the throne, how sweet is it? |
6048 | But to come to the second question, that is, Why these twelve angels are said to stand at the gate? |
6048 | But to slight grace, to do despite to the Spirit of grace, to prefer our own works to the derogating from grace, what is it but to contemn God? |
6048 | But was he not afraid of the judgments of God that did fly about at that time? |
6048 | But was not this man, think you, a giant, a pillar in this house? |
6048 | But were you not afraid, good Sir, when you saw him come out with his club? |
6048 | But what an entrance into life is here? |
6048 | But what answer hath God prepared for these objections? |
6048 | But what are they? |
6048 | But what are we to understand in gospel days, by going out of the house of the Lord, for or by sin? |
6048 | But what can be the end of those that are proud in the decking of themselves after their antic manner? |
6048 | But what could they say for themselves, why they came not? |
6048 | But what did she do to you? |
6048 | But what did you think when he fetched you down to the ground at the first blow? |
6048 | But what do we talk of them? |
6048 | But what do you mean by Mr. Badman''s breaking? |
6048 | But what doth he get in this world, more than travail and sorrow, vexation of spirit, and disappointment? |
6048 | But what followed? |
6048 | But what fruit doth God expect? |
6048 | But what ground had he for his so saying? |
6048 | But what have they got by all they have done, either against the head or body of the same? |
6048 | But what have you met with? |
6048 | But what have you seen? |
6048 | But what have you to show at that gate, that may cause that the gate should be opened to you? |
6048 | But what is all this to the DEAD world-- to them that love to be dead? |
6048 | But what is ankle- deep to that which followeth after? |
6048 | But what is the meaning of this? |
6048 | But what is the second thing whereby you would prove a discovery of a work of grace in the heart? |
6048 | But what judgments do you mean? |
6048 | But what more false than such a conclusion? |
6048 | But what needs that? |
6048 | But what of that? |
6048 | But what saith the Word of God? |
6048 | But what saith the scripture? |
6048 | But what shall I now do, saith the sinner? |
6048 | But what should be the reason that such a good man should be all his days so much in the dark? |
6048 | But what should he mean by that? |
6048 | But what then? |
6048 | But what then? |
6048 | But what was it that made you so afraid of this sight? |
6048 | But what was the cause of your carrying of it thus to the first workings of God''s blessed Spirit upon you? |
6048 | But what was this curse? |
6048 | But what were the chargers a type of? |
6048 | But what were the tongs a type of? |
6048 | But what were these chains a type of? |
6048 | But what were these golden spoons a type of? |
6048 | But what were they used about the candlestick to do? |
6048 | But what were those instruments a type of? |
6048 | But what will not love do? |
6048 | But what will they do when the axe is fetched out? |
6048 | But what will they do with her? |
6048 | But what''s the bush, whose pricks, like tenter- hooks, Do scratch and claw the finest lady''s hands, Or rend her clothes, if she too near it stands? |
6048 | But what, then, must we understand by these lavers, and by this sacrifice being washed in them, in order to its being burned upon the altar? |
6048 | But when did you give him such a rebuke? |
6048 | But when shall this be? |
6048 | But when will that be? |
6048 | But whence must this come? |
6048 | But where is she? |
6048 | But where is the fruit of this repentance? |
6048 | But who are they that must thus be feared? |
6048 | But who is it that can live by grace? |
6048 | But who understands this, who believes it? |
6048 | But who, quoth he, do you think this is? |
6048 | But why are the ungodly held forth under the notion of a rich man? |
6048 | But why did he not come through? |
6048 | But why did not you look for the steps? |
6048 | But why did not young Badman run away from this master, as he ran away from the other? |
6048 | But why do you put in these cautionary words, They must not sell always as dear, nor buy always as cheap as they can? |
6048 | But why is it said, Let him''dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue?'' |
6048 | But why must the instruments be laid upon the tables? |
6048 | But why should they be so set against him, since they also despise the way that he forsook? |
6048 | But why stand off? |
6048 | But why standest thou thus at the door? |
6048 | But why wilt thou seek for ease this way, seeing so many dangers attend it? |
6048 | But why, good Sir, do you sigh so deeply; is it for ought else than that for the which, as you have perceived, I myself am concerned? |
6048 | But why, may some say, do you make so homely a comparison? |
6048 | But why, or by what, art thou persuaded that thou hast left all for God and Heaven? |
6048 | But why? |
6048 | But will it not be counted a trespass against the Lord of the city whither we are bound, thus to violate His revealed will? |
6048 | But will you promise me to mend? |
6048 | But ye ungodly fathers, how are your ungodly children roaring now in hell? |
6048 | But you saw more than this, did you not? |
6048 | But you will say, How doth the law kill and strike dead the poor creatures? |
6048 | But, I pray, what, and how many, were the things wherein you differed? |
6048 | But, I pray, will you tell me why you ask me such questions? |
6048 | But, I say, why is it repeated? |
6048 | But, Sir, said she, what is this pill good for else? |
6048 | But, Sir, said the old gentleman, how could you guess that I am such a man, since I came from such a place? |
6048 | But, Sir, was not this it that made my good Christian''s burden fall from off his shoulder, and that made him give three leaps for joy? |
6048 | But, good neighbour Wiseman, be pleased to tell me who this man was, and why you conclude him so miserable in his death? |
6048 | But, mother, what is it like? |
6048 | But, my good companion, do you know the way to this desired place? |
6048 | But, pray Sir, while it is fresh in my mind, do you hear anything of his wife and children? |
6048 | But, pray, what said my Lord to my rudeness? |
6048 | But, pray, why do you ask me this question? |
6048 | But, said Christian, are there no turnings nor windings, by which a stranger may lose his way? |
6048 | But, said Christian, will your practice stand a trial at law? |
6048 | But, sluggard, is it not a shame for thee To be outdone by pismires? |
6048 | But, you will say, What needs all this ado, and why is all this time and pains spent in speaking to this that is surely believed already? |
6048 | Can a loving husband abide to be always from a beloved spouse? |
6048 | Can a man believe in Christ and not be hated by the devil? |
6048 | Can any think that God should take That pains, to form a man So like himself, only to make Him here a moment stand? |
6048 | Can any think that trees are the things taken care of here? |
6048 | Can darkness agree with light? |
6048 | Can he make a profession of this Christ, and that sweetly and convincingly, and the children of Satan hold their tongue? |
6048 | Can his heart now endure, or can his hands be strong? |
6048 | Can it be imagined that those''that paint themselves did ever repent of their pride?'' |
6048 | Can there now be any thing more plain? |
6048 | Can these teach him to manage his knowledge well? |
6048 | Can you behold every one that he is proud, and abase him, and bind their faces in secret? |
6048 | Can you call for the waters of the sea, and cause them to cover the face of the ground? |
6048 | Can you cast all, and rest all, upon the love of Christ? |
6048 | Can you count the number of the stars, or stay the bottles of heaven? |
6048 | Can you not do as your neighbours do, carry the world, sin, lust, pleasure, profit, esteem among men, along with you? |
6048 | Can you not stay and take these along with you? |
6048 | Can you not tell how you knocked? |
6048 | Can you remember by what means you find your annoyances, at times, as if they were vanquished? |
6048 | Can you stop the sun from running his course, and hinder the moon from giving her light? |
6048 | Canst thou commend thyself''to every man''s conscience in the sight of God?'' |
6048 | Canst thou live in the water; canst thou live always, and nowhere else, but in the water? |
6048 | Canst thou read this, O thou wicked sinner, and yet go on in sin? |
6048 | Canst thou say, from blessed experience,''His flesh is meat indeed, and His blood is drink indeed?'' |
6048 | Canst thou think of this, and defer repentance one hour longer? |
6048 | Christiana and her sons? |
6048 | Come, Samuel, are you willing that I should catechise you also? |
6048 | Come, neighbour Pliable, how do you do? |
6048 | Come, pr''ythee bird, I pr''ythee come away, Why should this net thee take, when''scape thou may? |
6048 | Come, said Christiana, will you eat a bit, a little to sweeten your mouths, while you sit here to rest your legs? |
6048 | Come, tell me, do you keep it from the dust, Yea, wind it also duly up you must? |
6048 | Consider thus with thyself, Would I be glad to have all, every one of my sins to come in against me, to inflame the justice of God against me? |
6048 | Consider thus, Would I be glad to have all, and every one of the ten commandments, to discharge themselves against my soul? |
6048 | Could it remove from the place on which God had set it? |
6048 | Cry, why so? |
6048 | Cumber- ground, how many hopeful, inclinable, forward people, hast thou by thy fruitless and unprofitable life, kept out of the vineyard of God? |
6048 | Cut him down, why cumbereth he the ground? |
6048 | Dark- land, said the guide; doth not that lie up on the same coast with the City of Destruction? |
6048 | Did Formalist and Hypocrite turn off into bye ways at the foot of the hill Difficulty, and miserably perish? |
6048 | Did Giant Slay- good intend me this favour when he stopped me, and resolved to let me go no further? |
6048 | Did He bleed for sins? |
6048 | Did I call him before an atheist? |
6048 | Did I ever exclaim, in the agony of my spirit,"What must I do to be saved?" |
6048 | Did I ever feel a deep concern about my soul? |
6048 | Did I ever see my danger as a sinner? |
6048 | Did I say, our Lord had here in former days his country- house, and that He loved here to walk? |
6048 | Did Ignorance, who perished from the way, say to the pilgrims,''You go so fast, I must stay awhile behind?'' |
6048 | Did Mistrust and Timorous run back for fear of the persecuting lions, Church and State? |
6048 | Did any of them know of your coming? |
6048 | Did ever God tell thee thou shalt live half a year or two months longer? |
6048 | Did ever God tell thee thou shalt live half a year, or two months longer? |
6048 | Did ever any of your carnal acquaintance take knowledge of a difference of your language and conduct? |
6048 | Did good men then go to see him in his last sickness? |
6048 | Did he break his leg then? |
6048 | Did he intend, that after he had rifled my pockets, I should go to Gaius, mine host? |
6048 | Did he often carry it thus to her? |
6048 | Did not Haman lead Mordecai in his state by the hand of anger? |
6048 | Did not I direct thee the way to the little wicket- gate? |
6048 | Did not the Shepherds bid us beware of the flatterers? |
6048 | Did not we tell thee of these things? |
6048 | Did she desire thee to come with her to this place? |
6048 | Did she talk thus openly? |
6048 | Did they show wherein this way is so dangerous? |
6048 | Did we not run, ride, labour, and strive abundantly, if it might have been, for the good of thy soul, though now a damned soul? |
6048 | Did we not see, from the Delectable Mountains, the gate of the city? |
6048 | Did we not sound an alarm in thine ears, by the trumpet of God''s word day after day? |
6048 | Did we not tell thee sin would damn thy soul? |
6048 | Did we not tell thee that they who loved their sins should be damned at this dark and gloomy day, as thou art like to be? |
6048 | Did we not tell thee that without conversion there was no salvation? |
6048 | Did we not venture our goods, our names, our lives? |
6048 | Did you cry me mercy so long as you had hopes that you might prevail against me? |
6048 | Did you hear no talk of neighbour Pliable? |
6048 | Did you meet with no other assault as you came? |
6048 | Did you never read, that''the dragon persecuteth the woman?'' |
6048 | Did you then so well know his life? |
6048 | Didst thou never hear of the intolerable roarings of the damned ones that are therein? |
6048 | Didst thou never hear or read that doleful saying in Luke 16, how the sinful man cries out among the flames,''One drop of water to cool my tongue?'' |
6048 | Do I look alone to Christ for righteousness, and depend only on Him for holiness? |
6048 | Do I renounce my own righteousness, as well as abhor my sins? |
6048 | Do I see that all other ways, whether of sin or self- righteousness, lead to hell? |
6048 | Do I study to please Him, as well as hope to enjoy Him? |
6048 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?'' |
6048 | Do n''t you hear a noise? |
6048 | Do n''t you remember how undaunted they were when they stood before the judge? |
6048 | Do not most rather seek to push away our feet from taking hold of the path of life, or else lay snares for us in the way? |
6048 | Do they drink wine in bowls? |
6048 | Do they live in pleasures, and spend their days in wealth? |
6048 | Do they think that God can not be even with them? |
6048 | Do they think they shall know themselves then, or that they shall rejoice to see themselves in that bliss? |
6048 | Do we indeed see Christ by the eye of faith? |
6048 | Do we know the manner and temper of their King? |
6048 | Do we think that the prophet prophesieth here against trees, against the natural cedars of Lebanon? |
6048 | Do you count them pure with the wicked balances? |
6048 | Do you find this? |
6048 | Do you know him, then? |
6048 | Do you know who they are, whence they come, and what is their purpose in setting down before the town of Mansoul? |
6048 | Do you mean, how came I at first to look after the good of my soul? |
6048 | Do you not find sometimes, as if those things were vanquished, which at other times are your perplexity? |
6048 | Do you not remember that one of the Shepherds bid us beware of the Enchanted Ground? |
6048 | Do you not thereby intimate that a man may sometimes do so? |
6048 | Do you not think sometimes of the country from whence you came? |
6048 | Do you not yet bear away with you some of the things that then you were conversant withal? |
6048 | Do you see yonder hill? |
6048 | Do you so run? |
6048 | Do you so run? |
6048 | Do you so run? |
6048 | Do you think that I am such a fool as to think God can see no further than I? |
6048 | Do you think that that maid''s master would have been troubled at the loss of her, if he had not lost, with her, his gain? |
6048 | Do you think that you are stronger than he? |
6048 | Do you think those will ever come thither? |
6048 | Do''st not behold the net? |
6048 | Does Christ dwell in my heart by faith? |
6048 | Does he take the shield of faith, and helmet of salvation? |
6048 | Does he take the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God? |
6048 | Dost not thou see that thou art called a thief and a robber, that hast either climbed up to, or crept in at another place than the door? |
6048 | Dost thou believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6048 | Dost thou believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6048 | Dost thou bring forth fruit unto God? |
6048 | Dost thou continually neglect to come to Christ, and usest arguments in thine own heart to satisfy thy soul with so doing? |
6048 | Dost thou count all things but poor, lifeless, empty, vain things, without communion with him? |
6048 | Dost thou count his company more precious than the whole world? |
6048 | Dost thou delight to sin against plain commands? |
6048 | Dost thou examine thyself whether thou be in the faith or no, having a command in Scripture so to do? |
6048 | Dost thou give diligence to make thy calling and election sure, because God commanded it in Scripture? |
6048 | Dost thou hear, barren fig- tree? |
6048 | Dost thou hear, barren professor? |
6048 | Dost thou in deed and in truth believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6048 | Dost thou know whether the day of grace will last a week longer or no? |
6048 | Dost thou love to be talking of him-- and also to be walking with him? |
6048 | Dost thou slight and scorn the counsels contained in the Scriptures, and continue in so doing? |
6048 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul His fingers with thee? |
6048 | Dost thou walk like one that is bought with a price, even with the price of precious blood? |
6048 | Dost thou''bear about in thy body the dying of the Lord Jesus?'' |
6048 | Doth he entreat you, for fear of you? |
6048 | Doth his company sweeten all things-- and his absence embitter all things? |
6048 | Doth it not suit many a feeble mind? |
6048 | Doth she not speak very smoothly, and give you a smile at the end of a sentence? |
6048 | Doth she not wear a great purse by her side; and is not her hand often in it, fingering her money, as if that was her heart''s delight? |
6048 | Even Judas could as boldly ask,''Master, is it I''who shall betray Thee? |
6048 | Everybody will cry up the goodness of men; but who is there that is, as he should, affected with the goodness of God? |
6048 | Examine again, Dost thou labour after those qualifications that the Scriptures do describe a child of God by? |
6048 | Examine, Dost thou stand in awe of sinning against God, because he hath in the Scriptures commanded thee to abstain from it? |
6048 | Farther, if all be true that this man hath said, how comes it to pass that the subjects of Shaddai are so enslaved in all places where they come? |
6048 | Fearing, that came on pilgrimage out of his parts? |
6048 | For how can a man repent of that of which he hath neither sight nor sense? |
6048 | For if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and sinners appear? |
6048 | For my part, I am out of charity with myself; who then should be in love with me? |
6048 | For of what should a man repent? |
6048 | For should the saints enjoy all this But for a certain time, O, how would they their mark then miss, And at this thing repine? |
6048 | For what am I thus tormented? |
6048 | For what bondage greater than to be kept in blindness? |
6048 | For what did you bring yourself into this condition? |
6048 | For what journey, I pray you? |
6048 | For what portion of God is there,''for that sin,''from above, and what inheritance of the Almighty from on high?'' |
6048 | For when, thinks the enemy, will these fools be so desirous to sit down, as when they are weary? |
6048 | For wherein can grace or love more appear than in his laying down his life for us? |
6048 | For who can endure a boar in a vineyard; a man of sin in a holy temple; or a dragon in heaven? |
6048 | For who doth not perceive, but when those that sit aloft are vile, and corrupt themselves, they corrupt the whole region and country where they are? |
6048 | For who is prouder than you professors? |
6048 | For''what good is there to the owners thereof, saving the beholding of them with their eyes?'' |
6048 | Friend, whither away? |
6048 | Friends, Solomon saith, that''The desire of the slothful killeth him''; and if so, what will slothfulness itself do to those that entertain it? |
6048 | From what? |
6048 | GREAT- HEART, What could they say against it? |
6048 | Gentlemen, whence came you, and whither go you? |
6048 | God''s people wish well to the souls of others, and wilt not thou wish well to thy own? |
6048 | Good morrow, my good neighbour, Mr. Attentive; whither are you walking so early this morning? |
6048 | Had he not also now hold of the shield of faith? |
6048 | Had he then such a good trade, for all he was such a bad man? |
6048 | Had you ever any talk with him about it? |
6048 | Had you no talk with him before you came out? |
6048 | Had you not thoughts of leaving off praying? |
6048 | Has He given it to thee, my reader? |
6048 | Has he on the breastplate of righteousness? |
6048 | Has he that need of you, that we are sure you have of him? |
6048 | Has the enmity of the human heart by nature changed? |
6048 | Hast been among the thieves? |
6048 | Hast thou a wife and children? |
6048 | Hast thou an heart to be sorry for this wickedness? |
6048 | Hast thou any lease of thy life? |
6048 | Hast thou any lease of thy life? |
6048 | Hast thou been digg''d about and dunged too, Will neither patience nor yet dressing do? |
6048 | Hast thou fruit becoming the care of God, the protection of God, the wisdom of God, the patience and husbandry of God? |
6048 | Hast thou given thyself to the Lord? |
6048 | Hast thou that''godly sorrow''that''worketh repentance to salvation, not to be repented of?'' |
6048 | Hast thou valued sin at a higher rate than thy soul, than God, Christ, angels, saints, and communion with them in eternal blessedness and glory? |
6048 | Hast thou''renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in craftiness?'' |
6048 | Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and hell? |
6048 | Hath Jesus performed righteousness to cover us, and spilled blood to wash us? |
6048 | Hath he been digging about thee? |
6048 | Hath he been dunging of thee? |
6048 | Hath it not hindered many in their pilgrimage? |
6048 | Hath not Moses told them the danger of living in sin? |
6048 | Have they at no time, think you, convictions of sin, and so consequently fears that their state is dangerous? |
6048 | Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
6048 | Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
6048 | Have they not had my ministers and servants sent unto them and coming as from me? |
6048 | Have we the faith of this? |
6048 | Have you any more things to ask me about my beginning to come on pilgrimage? |
6048 | Have you felt the alarm in your soul under a sense of sin and judgment? |
6048 | Have you lost any of your cattle, or what is the matter? |
6048 | Have you these? |
6048 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6048 | Having these to look to, what should stagger our faith, or deject our hope? |
6048 | He asked again if they had aught to say for themselves, why the sentence that they confessed that they had deserved should not be passed upon them? |
6048 | He asked me if I had a family? |
6048 | He asked them, Why? |
6048 | He knocked, therefore, more than once or twice, saying--"May I now enter here? |
6048 | He loved to live high, but his hands refused to labour; and what else can the end of such an one be but that which the wise man saith? |
6048 | He ran away, you say, but whither did he run? |
6048 | He that feareth not to be burned in the fire, how will he fear the heat of weather? |
6048 | He that hath his word shall then speak it faithfully, for''what is the chaff to the wheat? |
6048 | He that opened stepped out after him, and said, Thou trembling one, what wantest thou? |
6048 | He that was in darkness, or he that was in light? |
6048 | He that was in everlasting joy, or he that was in everlasting torments? |
6048 | He that was in hell, or he that was in heaven? |
6048 | Hence David said again,''Whom have I in heaven but thee?'' |
6048 | Hence see what it is to grieve the Spirit of God: for He only is the Comforter: and if He withdraws His influences, who or what can comfort us? |
6048 | His song was this: The Lord is only my support, And he that doth me feed; How can I then want anything Whereof I stand in need? |
6048 | Honest asked his landlord, if there were any store of good people in the town? |
6048 | Honest asked, why it was said that the Saviour is said to come''out of a dry ground''; and also, that''He had no form or comeliness in him?'' |
6048 | Honest( when they were all sat down) asked Mr. Contrite, and the rest, in what posture their town was at present? |
6048 | Honest, interrupting of him, said, Did you see the two men asleep in the arbour? |
6048 | How are all things out of order? |
6048 | How believe you, as touching the resurrection of the dead? |
6048 | How came that about, since you were now reformed? |
6048 | How came that about? |
6048 | How came you to think at first of so doing as you do now? |
6048 | How camest thou by the burden at first? |
6048 | How can such poor women as we hold out in a way so full of troubles as this way is, without a friend and defender? |
6048 | How did he break it? |
6048 | How do they seek to stifle them? |
6048 | How do you know that these sayings are true? |
6048 | How do you know that? |
6048 | How do you mean? |
6048 | How dost thou believe? |
6048 | How dost thou show before men the truth of thy turning to God? |
6048 | How doth God the Son save thee? |
6048 | How far do you think he may be before? |
6048 | How far is it thither? |
6048 | How far may such an one go? |
6048 | How far might they go on in pilgrimage in their day, since they notwithstanding were thus miserably cast away? |
6048 | How hard are these things? |
6048 | How he carried it? |
6048 | How is it now? |
6048 | How is it, then, that thou art so quickly turned aside? |
6048 | How is it, then, that thou hast run away from thy king? |
6048 | How long must this be my state? |
6048 | How long? |
6048 | How many Mahomet? |
6048 | How many poor souls hath Bonner to answer for, think you, and several filthy blind priests? |
6048 | How many seasons have you spent in vain? |
6048 | How many sermons and other mercies did I, of my patience, afford you? |
6048 | How many souls do you think Balaam, with his deceit, will have to answer for? |
6048 | How many souls have they been the means of destroying by their ignorance and corrupt doctrine? |
6048 | How many the Pharisees, that hired the soldiers to say the disciples stole away Jesus? |
6048 | How many times have you disappointed me? |
6048 | How much more then when light shall be against light in three ranks? |
6048 | How much more will it perplex thee to think, that thou hadst not a care of thy own? |
6048 | How now, good fellow, whither away after this burdened manner? |
6048 | How often didst thou hear us tell thee of these things? |
6048 | How sayest thou, young comer, is not this the case with thy soul? |
6048 | How shall we escape,''if we turn away from him that speaketh from heaven?'' |
6048 | How shall we get to be sharers thereof? |
6048 | How should I escape being by them torn in pieces? |
6048 | How so? |
6048 | How stands it between God and your soul now? |
6048 | How stands the country affected towards you? |
6048 | How then can any good be done to those whose conscience is worse than that? |
6048 | How then can good fruit grow from such a root, the root of all evil? |
6048 | How then can it be but that light should be against light in this house, and that in a military posture? |
6048 | How then can the world judge of the condition of the saints? |
6048 | How then shall I look Him in the face at His coming? |
6048 | How then should his brethren that survive him, and that tread in his very steps, approve of the sentence that by this book is pronounced against him? |
6048 | How then will it be with thee? |
6048 | How was Esau served for staying too long before he came for the blessing? |
6048 | How was Lot''s wife served for running lazily, and for giving but one look behind her, after the things she left in Sodom? |
6048 | How will they shine? |
6048 | How will you describe right fear? |
6048 | How? |
6048 | I also ask, in what charger our gospel passover is now dressed up and set before the people? |
6048 | I am sorry that I was so foolish, and am made to wonder that I am not now as Lot''s wife; for wherein was the difference betwixt her sin and mine? |
6048 | I ask, Why has the world such hold of thee? |
6048 | I ask, then, if there were ever anything that had a being antecedent to, or before God? |
6048 | I asked him further, how that man''s righteousness could be of that efficacy to justify another before God? |
6048 | I believe so; but pray tell me, did any of her other children hearken to her words, so as to be bettered in their souls thereby? |
6048 | I deem I have half a guess of you; your name is Old Honesty, is it not? |
6048 | I have given Him my faith, and sworn my allegiance to Him; how, then, can I go back from this, and not be hanged as a traitor? |
6048 | I pray let me hear your judgment of extortion, what it is, and when committed? |
6048 | I promise you this was enough to discourage; but did they make an end here? |
6048 | I remember he alleged many a Scripture, but those I valued not; the Scriptures, thought I, what are they? |
6048 | I say again, tell me before the first blow is given, wilt thou turn? |
6048 | I say, dost thou see thyself in him? |
6048 | I say, he puts great difference between these, and that other sort that say, When will the Sabbath be gone, that we may be at our worldly business? |
6048 | I say, if Mr. Badman was here to object thus unto you, what would be your reply? |
6048 | I say, what less than a river could do it? |
6048 | I tell you this is no easy matter; if it were, what need all those prayers, sighs, watchings? |
6048 | I think it a high favour that they were hanged before we came hither; who knows else what they might have done to such poor women as we are? |
6048 | If Christ be the way, verity, and life, how can there be any life then without Christ? |
6048 | If God would blow upon a man, who can help it? |
6048 | If Jesus be so sweet to faith below, who can tell what He is in full fruition above? |
6048 | If all that build do build to suit The glory of their state, What orator, though most acute, Can fully heaven relate? |
6048 | If any say, Who''s there? |
6048 | If nothing should by us be had When we are gone from hence, But vanities, while here? |
6048 | If palaces that princes build, Which yet are made of clay, Do so amaze when much beheld, Of heaven what shall we say? |
6048 | If so, then what is that worth, or value, that is in the grace itself? |
6048 | If so, then, in the next place, what will become of them that are grown weary before they are got half way thither? |
6048 | If so, what had she to say? |
6048 | If the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Ghost, are gracious, if they were not all gracious, what would it profit? |
6048 | If the life that is attended with so many troubles, is so loath to be let go by us, what is the life above? |
6048 | If the world, which God sets light by, is counted a thing of that worth with men; what is Heaven, which God commendeth? |
6048 | If thou wouldst know whether man be still in that state by nature that God did place him in? |
6048 | If thou wouldst know whether the man were first beguiled, or the woman that God made an help- mate for him? |
6048 | If we have such ill speed at our first setting out, what may we expect betwixt this and our journey''s end? |
6048 | If you say no, what means your sour carriage to the people of God? |
6048 | If young Badman feared not the damnation of his soul, do you think that the consideration of impairing of his body would have deterred him therefrom? |
6048 | If''the wrath of a king is as messengers of death''( Prov 16:14), if the wrath of the king''is as the roaring of a lion,''what is the wrath of God? |
6048 | In his Jerusalem Sinner Saved he thus argues''Why despair? |
6048 | In what glory will they appear? |
6048 | Indeed the Word saith,"He hath blinded their eyes, lest they should see,"& c. But now we are by ourselves, what do you think of such men? |
6048 | Indeed who can bear up, and who Can from these shakings run? |
6048 | Instructions did I say? |
6048 | Is He the one, the chief object of our soul? |
6048 | Is He the only hope of my soul, and the only confidence of my heart? |
6048 | Is fellowship with God the Father, and His Son, Jesus Christ, so prized by me, as to seek it, and to esteem it above all things? |
6048 | Is godly fear delightful unto thee, That fear that God himself delights to see Bear sway in them that love him? |
6048 | Is grace thy proper element? |
6048 | Is he not slothful, is not he careless, is he not without discretion? |
6048 | Is it I?'' |
6048 | Is it a way that my parents brought me up in, put me apprentice to, or that by providence I was first thrust into? |
6048 | Is it because they would honour God? |
6048 | Is it intended to represent that prayerful, watchful, personal investigation into Divine truth, which ought to precede church- fellowship? |
6048 | Is it meet to think that a little child should handle Goliath as David did? |
6048 | Is it not in the four evangelists, the prophets, and epistles of the apostles? |
6048 | Is it not the same by the which I have called thee? |
6048 | Is it so much to be a fiddle? |
6048 | Is it thy delight to think of Him, hear of Him, speak of Him, abide in Him, and live upon Him? |
6048 | Is not Christ the head, and we the members? |
6048 | Is not he also the price, the ground, and bottom of our happiness, both in this world and that which is to come? |
6048 | Is not here the house of the forest of Lebanon mentioned as another besides the temple? |
6048 | Is not this enough to make any poor soul begin his race? |
6048 | Is not this strange? |
6048 | Is nothing so secret but it will be revealed? |
6048 | Is the Lamb the nourishment of thy soul, and the portion of thy heart? |
6048 | Is the doctrine offered to thee so? |
6048 | Is the doctrine offered unto thee so? |
6048 | Is the way safe or dangerous? |
6048 | Is there a Slough of Despond to be passed, and a hill Difficulty to be overcome? |
6048 | Is there any good that lives there? |
6048 | Is there hope? |
6048 | Is there hope? |
6048 | Is there no better merchandise to trade in than what comes from hell, or out of the bowels of the earth? |
6048 | Is there nothing written therein but what you understand? |
6048 | Is there, in this place, any relief for pilgrims that are weary and faint in the way? |
6048 | Is this the love and care Of Jesus for the men that pilgrims are? |
6048 | Is this the way to the Celestial City? |
6048 | Is thy mind always musing on him? |
6048 | Is your heart full of mammon, or pride, or debauchery? |
6048 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at Heaven''s gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it? |
6048 | It is this: Do you experience this first part of this description of it? |
6048 | It is true that you have said; but pray how many sorts of pride are there? |
6048 | It makes one tremble to hear those who profess to follow Christ in the regeneration, crying, What harm is there in this game and the other diversion? |
6048 | It mattereth not who brought thee in hither, whether God or the devil, or thine own vain- glorious heart; but hast thou fruit? |
6048 | It may be thou hast a father, mother, brother,& c., going post- haste to heaven, wouldst thou be willing to be left behind them? |
6048 | It will not be said then, Did you believe? |
6048 | Job, in order to his repentance, cries unto God,''Show me wherefore thou contendest with me?'' |
6048 | John, what have you done? |
6048 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? |
6048 | Know you not that it is written, that he that cometh not in by the door,"but climbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber?" |
6048 | Know''st not thy Lord by fruit is glorified? |
6048 | Lazarus, who was he? |
6048 | Let me alone, let me fetch my blow, or''Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'' |
6048 | Let thy conscience speak, I say, is it not prepared for thee, thou being an ungodly man? |
6048 | Look before thee; dost thou see this narrow way? |
6048 | Look to the heavens, and behold, and consider the stars, how high are they? |
6048 | Look, doth it not go along by the way- side? |
6048 | Mark, and when they were ALONE; according to that of the prophet,''Whom shall he teach knowledge, and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? |
6048 | May I now go back, and go up to the wicket- gate? |
6048 | May I speak a few words in my own defence? |
6048 | May we have entertainment here, or must We further go? |
6048 | Meaning, who would be at the charge to have a wife that can have a whore when he listeth? |
6048 | Met you with nothing else in that valley? |
6048 | Mother, can not you do me some good? |
6048 | Much of your lives are past; and will you be slothful? |
6048 | Must I slight them as they slight me, or nay? |
6048 | Must a little of the glory of the butterfly make thee not honour thy father and mother? |
6048 | Must here be the beginning of my bliss? |
6048 | Must here the burden fall from off my back Must here the strings that bound it to me crack? |
6048 | Must they not perish rather? |
6048 | My brother, said he, rememberest thou not how valiant thou hast been heretofore? |
6048 | My little bird, how canst thou sit And sing amidst so many thorns? |
6048 | My senses, how were you beguil''d When you said sin was good? |
6048 | My soul is also sore vexed, but thou, O Lord, how long? |
6048 | Nay, but, said Mr. Bunyan, have you the very self- same original copies that were written by the penmen of the scriptures, prophets and apostles? |
6048 | Nay, do not they rather owe him something for his labour he bestowed on them, as Philemon did to Paul? |
6048 | Nay, do they not rather declare to the world that they have repented of their profession? |
6048 | Nay, do you not see with your eyes daily, that perseverance is a very great part of the cross? |
6048 | Nay, hast thou not learned the wicked ones thy ways? |
6048 | Nay, have not all the prophets from Samuel, with all those that follow after, prophesied, and foretold these things? |
6048 | Nay, say they, why may not we as well as he? |
6048 | No; if Isaiah, with his mighty eloquence, again appeared among mortals, again would his cry be heard,''Who hath believed our report?'' |
6048 | Nor are we now, as at the peep of light, To question, is it day, or is it night? |
6048 | Nor was this but the least of what he did, But the outside of what he suffered? |
6048 | Nor yet of thy poor soul some pity take? |
6048 | Now I have conquered your Diabolus, you come to me for favour, but why did you not help me against the mighty? |
6048 | Now here some may object, and say, Since the way to God by these door were so wide, why doth Christ say the way and gate is narrow? |
6048 | Now here''s the holiness that should them save, Or, as a preparation, go before, To move God to do for them less or more? |
6048 | Now if God noble angels did not spare Because they did transgress, will he forbear Poor dust and ashes? |
6048 | Now men can let their tongues run at random, as we used to say; now they will be apt to say, Our tongues are our own, who shall control them? |
6048 | Now that the lions are removed, may we not fear that hypocrites will thrust themselves into our churches? |
6048 | Now, as they came up to these places, behold, the gardener stood in the way, to whom the Pilgrims said, Whose goodly vineyards and gardens are these? |
6048 | Now, if a child has such tenderness for a useless member, how much more tender is the Son of God to his afflicted members? |
6048 | Now, if she, with her children, are in bondage, how canst thou expect by them to be made free? |
6048 | Now, it may be asked what is the throne of grace? |
6048 | Now, madam, what sayest thou? |
6048 | Now, since I show thee all these mysteries, How canst thou hate me, or me scandalize? |
6048 | Now, since this is thus, quoth he, can you be kept by any prince in more slavery, and in greater bondage, than you are under this day? |
6048 | Now, thought Christian, what shall I do? |
6048 | Now, who will meet me in this dark entry? |
6048 | O blessed face and holy grace, When shall we see this day? |
6048 | O my brethren,''what manner of persons ought we to be,''who have subscribed to the Lord, and have called ourselves by the name of Israel? |
6048 | O my brother, if He will but go along with us, what need we be afraid of ten thousands that shall set themselves against us? |
6048 | O my reader, would you be one of the glorified inhabitants of that city whose builder and maker is God? |
6048 | O that godly plea of Samuel:''Behold here I am,''says he,''witness against me, before the Lord, and before his anointed, whose ox have I taken? |
6048 | O what an alteration will there be among the ungodly when they go out of this world? |
6048 | O what will it profit thy soul to have pleasure in this life, and torments in hell? |
6048 | O''what shall be given unto thee,''thou''deceitful tongue?'' |
6048 | O, if he were here one quarter of an hour, to behold, to see, to feel, to taste and enjoy but the thousandth part of what we enjoy, what would he do? |
6048 | O, therefore, will not this aggravate thy torment? |
6048 | One chanced mockingly, beholding the carriage of the men, to say unto them, What will ye buy? |
6048 | One would have thought that this had been a small request, a small courtesy-- ONE DROP OF WATER-- what is that? |
6048 | Or art thou not? |
6048 | Or art thou one agoing backward thither? |
6048 | Or do they still like and approve of you as well as ever? |
6048 | Or dost thou wink, because thou would''st not see? |
6048 | Or how is it with thy soul? |
6048 | Or if it should, would it be a suitable medicine in the least to present to the eyes of a broken and wounded people, as the Jews will be at that day? |
6048 | Or if they were, would they be afraid that God would not make them welcome? |
6048 | Or is it a way into which I have twisted myself, as not being contented with my first lot, that by God and my parents I was cast into? |
6048 | Or is it muddy, and mixed with the doctrines of men? |
6048 | Or that he should make such ado, By justice, and by grace; By prophets and apostles too, That men might see his face? |
6048 | Or that the promise he hath made, Also the threatenings great, Should in a moment end and fade? |
6048 | Or that there should be the strength of an ox in a wren? |
6048 | Or theirs that hear the beating of a drum, But not made fly for fear from house and home? |
6048 | Or was his calling so gainful to him as always to keep his purse''s belly full, though he was himself a great spender? |
6048 | Or what careth he for the pinching frost, which burneth with the love of the Lord? |
6048 | Or what will they give in exchange for their souls? |
6048 | Or who shall condemn me-- just judges? |
6048 | Otherwise,''Being planted, shall it prosper? |
6048 | Pray how did he break it? |
6048 | Pray how did she die? |
6048 | Pray in the custody of Giant Despair, in the midst of Doubting Castle, and when their own folly brought them there too? |
6048 | Pray of what disease did Mr. Badman die, for now I perceive we are come up to his death? |
6048 | Pray tell me concerning the first, how he made away with himself? |
6048 | Pray what were they? |
6048 | Pray, Sir, What may I call you? |
6048 | Pray, did you know him? |
6048 | Pray, how was he in his death? |
6048 | Pray, what count you good thoughts, and a life according to God''s commandments? |
6048 | Pray, what is he? |
6048 | Pray, what may I call your name, that I may tell it to my Lord within? |
6048 | Pray, what principles did he hold? |
6048 | Pray, what was it more that he said unto you? |
6048 | Pray, where did you find all these? |
6048 | Pray, who are your kindred there? |
6048 | Prithee, what new knowledge hast thou got, that so worketh off thy mind from thy friends, and that tempteth thee to go, nobody knows where? |
6048 | Professors such, perhaps, there may be, and who upon earth can help it? |
6048 | Reader, can you be content with this? |
6048 | Reader, have you ever spoken harshly to, or persecuted, a child of God-- a poor penitent sinner? |
6048 | Reader, have you fled for refuge to the hope set before you in the gospel? |
6048 | Reader, how is your inclination? |
6048 | Reader, is this your lot also? |
6048 | Reader, what sayest thou to this? |
6048 | Reader, what sayst thou to this? |
6048 | Reader, wouldst see what you may never feel, Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel? |
6048 | Received you the Spirit, saith St. Paul, By hearing, faith, or works? |
6048 | Recorder was mad, and so not to be regarded: and for this he urged his fits, and said, If he be himself, why doth he not do thus always? |
6048 | Said they anything more to discourage you? |
6048 | Say you so? |
6048 | Says Paul,''They did not like to retain God in their knowledge''; and what follows? |
6048 | Says Satan, Dost thou not know that thou hast horribly sinned? |
6048 | Scenes of accomplished bliss, which who can see, Though but in distant prospect, and not feel His soul refresh''d with foretaste of the joy? |
6048 | Second, Because you know that though a man do run, yet if he do not overcome, or win, as well as run, what will he be the better for his running? |
6048 | Secondly, For that he perceived God was with them, though in that dark and dismal state; and why not, thought he, with me? |
6048 | Secondly, How safe they are in the arms of Jesus; would they be here again for a thousand worlds? |
6048 | Seest thou not that many of late have been snatched away, on each side of thee( by that hand that hath been stretched out and is so still)? |
6048 | Shall I be a citizen of that city? |
6048 | Shall I be proud, because I am sounding brass? |
6048 | Shall I buy the pleasures of this world at so dear a rate as to lose my soul for the obtaining of that? |
6048 | Shall I content myself with a heaven that will last no longer than my lifetime? |
6048 | Shall I entertain thee against my sovereign Lord? |
6048 | Shall I have my sins and lose my soul? |
6048 | Shall I need to mention particularly contests many years past, and presented to us in print? |
6048 | Shall I not be abandoned for this, and sent back from thence ashamed? |
6048 | Shall I save thee? |
6048 | Shall I speak of the satiety and of the duration of all these? |
6048 | Shall he not therefore seek for fruit, for fruit answerable to the means? |
6048 | Shall he that keeps his promise sure In things both low and small, Yet break it like a man impure, In matters great''st of all? |
6048 | Shall it be said at the last day, that the wicked made more haste to hell than you to Heaven? |
6048 | Shall it be said at the last day, that wicked men made more haste to hell than you did make to heaven? |
6048 | Shall not then these mournful groans pierce thy flinty heart? |
6048 | Shall we be ruled by the Giant? |
6048 | Shall we forget them? |
6048 | Shall we go back again to my Lord, and confess our folly, and ask one? |
6048 | Shall wood be taken thereof to do any work? |
6048 | Shall you with him live in pleasure as you do now? |
6048 | She said she was afraid; I asked her, why? |
6048 | Should I now be ashamed of His ways and servants, how can I expect the blessing? |
6048 | Should one say to some-- Art not thou that man I saw crying out under a sermon,''What shall I do to be saved?'' |
6048 | Should she stay where she dwells, and retain this her mind, who could live quietly by her? |
6048 | Should we make Mr. Good- deed our messenger when our petition cries for mercy? |
6048 | Sinner, sick sinner, what sayest thou to this? |
6048 | Sir, said the least, I was almost beat out of heart? |
6048 | Sir, what is the cause of this? |
6048 | Sir, what think you? |
6048 | Sir, which is my way to this honest man''s house? |
6048 | Sir, you seem greatly concerned at this, but what if I shall say more? |
6048 | Skill, how does it taste? |
6048 | Skill, saying, Sir, what will content you for your pains and care to, and of my child? |
6048 | Sluggard, art thou asleep still? |
6048 | Snuff- dishes, you may say, what are they? |
6048 | Snuffers, you may say, of what were they a type? |
6048 | So Christ:''Which of you convinceth me of sin?'' |
6048 | So Christiana asked Prudence what it was that made those curious notes? |
6048 | So He addressed Himself to Mercy, and said unto her, And what moved thee to come hither, sweet heart? |
6048 | So I was, and a sweet dream it was; but are you sure I laughed? |
6048 | So again:''What iniquity have your fathers found in me, that they are gone far from me, and have walked after vanity, and are become vain?'' |
6048 | So also Bunyan-"Every height is a difficulty to him that is loaden; with a burden, how shall we attain the Heaven of heavens? |
6048 | So he came directly to me, and said, Mercy, what aileth thee? |
6048 | So he further asked, if all the men in the town of Mansoul were in this confession as they? |
6048 | So the guide, Mr. Great- heart, awaked him, and the old gentleman, as he lift up his eyes, cried out, What''s the matter? |
6048 | So then, when the body of Christ is in every sense completed in this life by the light of the sunshine of his holy gospel, what need of this sun? |
6048 | So they began and said, Neighbour, pray what is your meaning by this? |
6048 | So they called her, and said to her, Mercy, what is that thing thou wouldst have? |
6048 | So they came up one to another; and presently Stand- fast said to old Honest, Ho, father Honest, are you there? |
6048 | So when he was come into the chamber of state, Diabolus saluted him with''Welcome, my Lord, how went matters betwixt you to- day?'' |
6048 | So when he was got in, the man of the gate asked him who directed him thither? |
6048 | So when they were come to the gate, the guide knocked, and the Porter cried, Who is there? |
6048 | So, did I say? |
6048 | Soul, consider, is it not miserable to lose heaven for twenty, thirty, or forty years''sinning against God? |
6048 | Specially that bitter outcry of his,''What shall I do to be saved?'' |
6048 | Stop, my dear reader, have you cast away all useless encumbrances, and all easily besetting sins? |
6048 | Suppose such a slip as I told you of before should be in your garden, and there die, would you let it abide in your garden? |
6048 | Suppose that I be cheated myself with a brass half- crown, must I therefore cheat another therewith? |
6048 | Take the THREATENINGS laid down in holy writ, and how are they disregarded? |
6048 | Take the tables for the hearts of the murderers, and the instruments for their sins, and what place more fit for such instruments to be laid upon? |
6048 | Tell me, when did you see an old drunkard converted? |
6048 | Than thought? |
6048 | Than wind? |
6048 | That is comparable to the pleasures, profits, and glory of this world? |
6048 | That is true, but what evil is that that he will not do, that is left of God, as I believe Mr. Badman was? |
6048 | That was extortion, was it not? |
6048 | The Prince asked further, saying, Could you have been content that your slavery should have continued under his tyranny as long as you had lived? |
6048 | The Shepherds then answered, Did you not see a little below these mountains a stile that led into a meadow, on the left hand of this way? |
6048 | The cost of the enterprise is vast indeed; the army is numerous as our thoughts, and who can number''the multitude of his thoughts?'' |
6048 | The creditors asked what he would give? |
6048 | The curse of God hangs over your heads; and will you be slothful? |
6048 | The day of death and judgment is at the door; and will you be slothful? |
6048 | The dragon her assaults, fills her with jars, Yet rests she under her Beloved''s shade, But whence was she? |
6048 | The hearing of this is enough to ravish one''s heart; but are these things to be enjoyed? |
6048 | The instruments with which they slew the sacrifices, what were they but a bloody axe, bloody knives, bloody hooks, and bloody hands? |
6048 | The man therefore, read it, and looking upon Evangelist very carefully, said, Whither must I fly? |
6048 | The men then asked, What must we do in the holy place? |
6048 | The record, you will say, what is that? |
6048 | The riches, honours, and pleasures of this world, what mortal can withstand? |
6048 | The saints of old, they being willing and resolved for heaven, what could stop them? |
6048 | The vital question is, Has my heart been conquered; do I love Emmanuel? |
6048 | The way that he took, led him directly into this condition; for who can expect other things of one that follows such courses? |
6048 | The which, when he had done, he said, Christiana, knowest thou wherefore I am come? |
6048 | The whole of this address is descriptive of what the author saw, felt, or heard--''What shall I say? |
6048 | Their covetousness declareth that they are weary of depending upon God; and doth not thy wanton actions declare that thou abhorrest chastity? |
6048 | Then Christian asked, What is the reason of the discontent of Passion? |
6048 | Then Christian called to Demas, saying, Is not the place dangerous? |
6048 | Then Christian said to him, Come away, man, why do you stay so behind? |
6048 | Then Demas called again, saying, But will you not come over and see? |
6048 | Then Faithful stepped forward again, and said to Talkative, Come, what cheer? |
6048 | Then I asked him further, how I must make my supplication to Him? |
6048 | Then I asked how long time he would have me live with him? |
6048 | Then I said, But how, Lord, must I consider of Thee in my coming to Thee, that my faith may be placed aright upon Thee? |
6048 | Then I said, But, Lord, what is believing? |
6048 | Then Mr. Stand- fast blushed, and said, But why, did you see me? |
6048 | Then Said Christian to the man, What art thou? |
6048 | Then did he that came in for their relief call out to the ruffians, saying, What is that thing that you do? |
6048 | Then did the Judge say to him, Hast thou any more to say? |
6048 | Then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a better, a brave golden finger? |
6048 | Then he asked them, saying, Where did you lie the last night? |
6048 | Then he said to his mother, What diet has Matthew of late fed upon? |
6048 | Then ran Innocent in( for that was her name) and said to those within, Can you think who is at the door? |
6048 | Then said Charity to Christian, Have you a family? |
6048 | Then said Christian to Hopeful his fellow, Is it true which this man hath said? |
6048 | Then said Christian to his fellow, If these men can not stand before the sentence of men, what will they do with the sentence of God? |
6048 | Then said Christian to the Interpreter, But is there no hope for such a man as this? |
6048 | Then said Christian to the porter, Sir, what house is this? |
6048 | Then said Christian, May we go in thither? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What is thy name? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What meaneth this? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What meaneth this? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What means that? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6048 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6048 | Then said Christian, Why doth this man thus tremble? |
6048 | Then said Christian, You make me afraid, but whither shall I fly to be safe? |
6048 | Then said Christiana, What is the meaning of this? |
6048 | Then said Christiana, Wherefore weepeth my Sister so? |
6048 | Then said Evangelist further, Art not thou the man that I found crying without the walls of the City of Destruction? |
6048 | Then said Evangelist, How hath it fared with you, my friends, since the time of our last parting? |
6048 | Then said Evangelist, If this be thy condition, why standest thou still? |
6048 | Then said Evangelist, Why not willing to die, since this life is attended with so many evils? |
6048 | Then said Evangelist, pointing with his finger over a very wide field, Do you see yonder wicket gate? |
6048 | Then said Gaius, Is this Christian''s wife? |
6048 | Then said Gaius, Whose wife is this aged matron? |
6048 | Then said He, Is there but one spider in all this spacious room? |
6048 | Then said Hopeful, Where are we now? |
6048 | Then said Joseph, Mother, what is it? |
6048 | Then said Matthew, May we eat apples, since they were such, by, and with which, the serpent beguiled our first mother? |
6048 | Then said Mercy to him that was their guide and conductor, What are those three men? |
6048 | Then said Mercy, How knew you this before you came from home? |
6048 | Then said Mercy, What means this? |
6048 | Then said Mnason their host, How far have ye come today? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Bunyan, Have you the original? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Desires- awake, why should not I do the best I can to save so famous a town as Mansoul from deserved destruction? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Feeble- mind to him, Man, How camest thou hither? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Great- heart to the little ones, Come, my pretty boys, how do you do? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, Good Gaius, what hast thou for supper? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, What art thou? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, What things? |
6048 | Then said Mr. Valiant- for- truth, Prithee, who is it? |
6048 | Then said he that attempted to back the lions, Will you slay me upon mine own ground? |
6048 | Then said he, Who will go with me? |
6048 | Then said he, Who, and what is he that is so hardy, as after this manner to molest the Giant Despair? |
6048 | Then said the Interpreter, Is there no hope, but you must be kept in the iron cage of despair? |
6048 | Then said the Keeper of the gate, Who is there? |
6048 | Then said the Keeper of the gate, Who is there? |
6048 | Then said the Keeper, Whence come ye, and what is that you would have? |
6048 | Then said the Prince again, Are you the men that did suffer yourselves to be corrupted and defiled by that abominable one Diabolus? |
6048 | Then said the Prince, And for what are those ropes on your heads? |
6048 | Then said the Prince, And what punishment is it, think you, that you deserve at my hand for these and other your high and mighty sins? |
6048 | Then said the Prince,''And what is he that is become thy companion in this so weighty a matter?'' |
6048 | Then said the Shepherds one to another, Shall we show these Pilgrims some wonders? |
6048 | Then said the boys, Are we not yet at the end of this doleful place? |
6048 | Then said the damsel to them, With whom would you speak in this place? |
6048 | Then said the giant, Why are you here on my ground? |
6048 | Then said the guide, Why did you not cry out, that some might have come in for your succour? |
6048 | Then said the man to the Prince,''Oh let not my Lord be angry; and why inquirest thou after the name of such a dead dog as I am? |
6048 | Then said the man, Neighbours, wherefore are ye come? |
6048 | Then said the old man, Thou lookest like an honest fellow; wilt thou be content to dwell with me for the wages that I shall give thee? |
6048 | Then said the other, Do you see yonder shining light? |
6048 | Then said their guide, Come, what cheer, Sirs? |
6048 | Then said they, Have you none? |
6048 | Then said they, What should this be? |
6048 | Then shalt thou say in thine heart, Who hath begotten me these, seeing I have lost my children, and am desolate, a captive and removing to and fro? |
6048 | Then she addressed herself to the eldest, whose name was Matthew; and she said to him, Come, Matthew, shall I also catechise you? |
6048 | Then she said, Come, Joseph( for his name was Joseph), will you let me catechise you? |
6048 | Then the water stood in mine eyes, and I asked further, But, Lord, may such a great sinner as I am, be indeed accepted of Thee, and be saved by Thee? |
6048 | Then they asked her of her welfare, and if these young men were her husband''s sons? |
6048 | Then they asked the Shepherds what that should mean? |
6048 | Then they cried out to those that were sent, What news from the Prince? |
6048 | Then they stood trembling before him, and he said, Are you the men that heretofore were the servants of Shaddai? |
6048 | Then, O that I might have a little ease for my deceitful tongue? |
6048 | Then, as it seems, sometimes you got rid of your trouble? |
6048 | Then, directing his speech to Ignorance, he said, Come, how do you? |
6048 | Then, said I, a man, it seems, may report it for a truth? |
6048 | Thereat Mercy said, And why so envious, trow? |
6048 | Therefore let him still humble himself before his God, because his hand is upon him, and say, What sin is this, for which this hand of God is upon me? |
6048 | Therefore what need have they that I should work such a miracle, as to send one from the dead unto them? |
6048 | Therefore, I say, this gate was not measured; for what should a rule do here, where things are beyond all measure? |
6048 | Therefore, wherefore? |
6048 | These are my fears of him too; but who can hinder that which will be? |
6048 | They added also, We see it is well with you, but how must it go with the town of Mansoul? |
6048 | They are fallen from grace, and what can help them? |
6048 | They gather it indeed, and think to keep it too, but what says Solomon? |
6048 | They may, with confidence, say, Lord, Lord, have we not eaten and drank in Thy presence, and taught in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out devils? |
6048 | They said( it was when I was in my troubles), What shall we do with this woman? |
6048 | Think thus with thyself, What, shall I lose a long heaven for short pleasure? |
6048 | Think you that they upon whom the tower of Siloam fell, were sinners above others? |
6048 | Thinkest thou this to be right, that thou didst put the lie upon my Father, and madest him, to Mansoul, the greatest deluder in the world? |
6048 | This beginning was bad, but what shall I say? |
6048 | This is manifest by the very name of the tree; it is called the tree of knowledge of good and evil; and have you that knowledge as yet? |
6048 | This is the reason of this inquiry, Did you come in at the gate? |
6048 | This is your hour, said He, and the power of darkness, when He cried out,''My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?'' |
6048 | This last has the body for his watch- house; the eyes and ears for his port- holes; the tongue therewith to cry, Who comes there? |
6048 | This was honest and plain; but what said Mr. Badman to her? |
6048 | Thou art in a strait, wilt thou fly before Moses, or with David fall into the hands of the Lord? |
6048 | Thou booby, say''st thou nothing but Cuckoo? |
6048 | Thou didst so wonderfully pour out thy wrath upon him, to the making of him cry out,''My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
6048 | Thou hast already been unfaithful in thy service to Him; and how dost thou think to receive wages of Him? |
6048 | Thou hast been a cumber- ground[104] long already, and wilt thou continue so still? |
6048 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6048 | Thou professest thou believest in Christ: is he thy joy, and the life of thy soul? |
6048 | Thou professest to believe thou hast a share in another world: hast thou let got THIS, barren fig- tree? |
6048 | Thou seemest angry, why dost on us frown? |
6048 | Thou simple bird, what makes thou here to play? |
6048 | Thou subject are to cold o''nights, When darkness is thy covering; At days thy danger''s great by kites, How can''st thou then sit there and sing? |
6048 | Thou talkest like one upon whose head is the shell to this very day; for what should he pawn them, or to whom should he sell them? |
6048 | Though men that have a great design, do, and must make use of those that in reason are most likely to effect it, yet must the Lord do so too? |
6048 | Through what righteousness? |
6048 | Thus, is Christ formed in me, the only hope of glory? |
6048 | Thus, when the godly among the Jews made prayers that rebellious Israel might not be cast out of the vineyard, what saith the answer of God? |
6048 | Thy sin has brought this army to thy walls, and shall it bring it in judgment to do execution into thy town? |
6048 | Time runs; and will you be slothful? |
6048 | To see a sea of brimstone burn, Who would it not affright? |
6048 | To whom did he swear that they should not enter into his rest? |
6048 | True, he stopped the blow but for a time; but why did he stop it at all? |
6048 | True, the men were but mean in themselves; for what is Paul or what Apollos, or what was James or John? |
6048 | Tush, said Obstinate, away with your book; will you go back with us, or no? |
6048 | WHAT SHALL I SAY? |
6048 | Was He not angry with me? |
6048 | Was death strong upon him? |
6048 | Was it for that some special mercies laid obligations upon thee, or how? |
6048 | Was it good also that thou madest a prey of the innocency and simplicity of the now miserable town of Mansoul? |
6048 | Was it not, therefore, well worth the seeing? |
6048 | Was it, think you, that you might show yourselves women, and that you might go out like a company of innocents to gaze on your mortal foes? |
6048 | Was not her father a poor Amorite? |
6048 | Was not his mind elevated a thousand degrees beyond sense, carnal reasons, fleshly love, self- concerns, and the desires of embracing temporal things? |
6048 | Was that all that you saw at the house of the Interpreter? |
6048 | Was thy soul worth so much, and didst thou so little regard it? |
6048 | Was your father and mother willing that you should become a pilgrim? |
6048 | Wast robb''d? |
6048 | Wast thou not told of hell- fire, those intolerable flames? |
6048 | We look, said Paul, but whither? |
6048 | Well then, did you not know, about 10 years ago, one Temporary in your parts, who was a forward man in religion then? |
6048 | Well then, do you so run? |
6048 | Well then, sinner, what sayest thou? |
6048 | Well, and how did you answer him? |
6048 | Well, and how did you apply this to yourself? |
6048 | Well, and what conclusion came the old man and you to, at last? |
6048 | Well, and what did he think and do then? |
6048 | Well, but brother, I pray thee tell us what was it that was the cause of thy being upon thy knees even now? |
6048 | Well, but did Mr. Badman and his master agree so well? |
6048 | Well, but it seems he did live to come out of his time, but what did he then? |
6048 | Well, but mark the answer of God,''Son of man, What is the vine- tree more than any tree, or than a branch which is among the trees of the forest? |
6048 | Well, but now we are upon it, pray show me the difference between swearing and cursing; for there is a difference, is there not? |
6048 | Well, but pray return again to Mr. Badman; how did he carry it to his wife, after he was married to her? |
6048 | Well, but what art thou now? |
6048 | Well, but what did he do when all was almost gone? |
6048 | Well, but what makes you think he is gone to hell? |
6048 | Well, but what will you say to this question? |
6048 | Well, if you will not, will you give me leave to do it? |
6048 | Well, now suppose that a man, by an immediate hand of God, is brought to a morsel of bread, what must he do now? |
6048 | Well, said Mr. Great- heart, will you have the Pilgrims up into their lodging? |
6048 | Well, then, said Faithful, what is that one thing that we shall at this time found our discourse upon? |
6048 | Well, what shall be done for this man? |
6048 | Well, when they had, as I said, thus saluted each other, Mr. Money- love said to Mr. By- ends, Who are they upon the road before us? |
6048 | Well, you have told me what were Mr. Badman''s thoughts now, being sick, of his condition; pray tell me also what he then did when he was sick? |
6048 | Were all the world gracious, if God were not gracious, what was man the better? |
6048 | Were the thunder- claps of the law so terrible, and didst thou so slight them? |
6048 | Were they sinners above all men upon whom the tower in Siloam fell and slew them? |
6048 | Were they troubled at it? |
6048 | Were you dead, and are you made alive? |
6048 | What a dishonour to posterity was the death of Balaam, Agag, Ahithophel, Haman, Judas, Herod, with the rest of their companions? |
6048 | What a pitiful thing it is to be left in such a case? |
6048 | What ails this fly thus desperately to enter A combat with the candle? |
6048 | What are all these but such as Badman, and such as the young man but now mentioned? |
6048 | What are good thoughts concerning God? |
6048 | What are professors more than other men? |
6048 | What are the things you seek, since you leave all the world to find them? |
6048 | What art thou fit for, O Mansoul, if mercy preventeth not, but to be hewn down, and cast into the fire and burned? |
6048 | What be good thoughts respecting ourselves? |
6048 | What black, what ugly crawling thing art thou? |
6048 | What can a man do in this case? |
6048 | What can be more express? |
6048 | What can more fully declare the commonness of a thing? |
6048 | What can the lady or mistress do to defend herself against thieves and sturdy villains, if there be none but she at home? |
6048 | What comfort is here? |
6048 | What could the temple do without its watchmen? |
6048 | What did you do then? |
6048 | What do men meddle with religion for? |
6048 | What do they do in the vineyard? |
6048 | What do they mean? |
6048 | What do you do when you meet with such places therein that you do not understand? |
6048 | What do you find in the Word of God against such a practice as this of Mr. Badman''s is? |
6048 | What do you mean by need? |
6048 | What do you think of the Bible? |
6048 | What do you think that might be? |
6048 | What dost thou bear? |
6048 | What dost thou here, Christian? |
6048 | What dost thou there? |
6048 | What doth this place signify? |
6048 | What else means your hearkening to the tyrant, and your receiving him for your king? |
6048 | What feeling or compassion can a stone be sensible of? |
6048 | What forewarning is here? |
6048 | What fruit, barren fig- tree, what degree of heart holiness? |
6048 | What good motions? |
6048 | What good will all my companions, fellow- jesters, jeerers, liars, drunkards, and all my wantons do me? |
6048 | What good will my profits do me? |
6048 | What had he to do in God''s house? |
6048 | What hath this man done now, but lied in the dispraising of his bargain? |
6048 | What have I here? |
6048 | What have I lost more than present ease and quiet by my sins that I have committed? |
6048 | What have they to look at? |
6048 | What have you met with, and how have you behaved yourselves? |
6048 | What if a man have no grace? |
6048 | What if he had pinched a little, and gone to journey- work for a time, that he might have known what a penny was, by his earning of it? |
6048 | What if she had acquainted some of her best, most knowing, and godly friends therewith? |
6048 | What if she had engaged a godly minister or two to have talked with Mr. Badman? |
6048 | What instruction is here? |
6048 | What is God''s design in saving, of poor men? |
6048 | What is Heaven? |
6048 | What is a pilgrim without knowledge? |
6048 | What is head- knowledge without heart- experience? |
6048 | What is hell? |
6048 | What is it then? |
6048 | What is it to repent of sin? |
6048 | What is leaven, or a grain of mustard seed, to the bulky lump of a body of death? |
6048 | What is like it? |
6048 | What is man? |
6048 | What is meant by the drum of Diabolus, which so terrified Mansoul? |
6048 | What is our remedy? |
6048 | What is sixteen cubits to him who would enter in here with all the world on his back? |
6048 | What is supposed by his being saved by the Trinity? |
6048 | What is supposed by this word''saved''? |
6048 | What is that? |
6048 | What is the Scripture? |
6048 | What is the fruit they here found? |
6048 | What is the meaning of your laughter? |
6048 | What is the vine, more than another tree? |
6048 | What is your name? |
6048 | What judgment shall he make how God will deal with him, by beholding the lamblike death of his companion? |
6048 | What kind of oaths would she have? |
6048 | What love to the Lord Jesus? |
6048 | What may one learn by hearing the cock crow? |
6048 | What may we learn from that? |
6048 | What may we understand by it? |
6048 | What means else all those delays and put- offs, saying, Stay a little longer, I am loth to leave my sins while I am so young, and in health? |
6048 | What means else your rejecting of the laws of Shaddai, and your obeying of Diabolus? |
6048 | What means he here by Lebanon but the church under persecution, and the fruitful field? |
6048 | What moved you at first to betake yourself to a pilgrim''s life? |
6048 | What must it be above? |
6048 | What need we be so backward to it? |
6048 | What needs that? |
6048 | What now are all other titles of grandeur and greatness, when compared with this one sentence? |
6048 | What now must be done with this fig- tree? |
6048 | What other evil effects attend this sin? |
6048 | What other sign can you give me that Mr. Badman died without repentance? |
6048 | What other things follow upon the commission of this beastly sin? |
6048 | What place was that? |
6048 | What reason, then, have you to think yourself a pilgrim? |
6048 | What resemblance hath his crying, and groaning, and bleeding, and dying, wrought in thee? |
6048 | What said that gentleman to you? |
6048 | What saith the King of him? |
6048 | What say you to Mr. Badman now? |
6048 | What say''st thou, wilt not yet unto him come? |
6048 | What sayest thou, sinner? |
6048 | What sayest thou, wilt thou turn? |
6048 | What sayst thou, O wicked man? |
6048 | What shall I do unto thee? |
6048 | What shall I do unto thee? |
6048 | What shall I do, when I at such a door For Pilgrims ask, and they shall rage the more? |
6048 | What shall I say besides what hath already been said? |
6048 | What shall I say of them who had trials,''not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection? |
6048 | What shall I say? |
6048 | What shall I say? |
6048 | What shall I say? |
6048 | What shall I say? |
6048 | What shall I say? |
6048 | What shall his companion say to this? |
6048 | What shall we do to be rid of him? |
6048 | What shall we do? |
6048 | What shall we say to these things? |
6048 | What should be the reason of that? |
6048 | What should we learn by seeing the flame of our fire go upwards? |
6048 | What than this bubble? |
6048 | What then doth he get thereby, that getteth by dishonest means? |
6048 | What then if the church made the first assault? |
6048 | What then shall we do, will you say? |
6048 | What they are in themselves, or what they have done and been? |
6048 | What thing so deserving as to turn us out of the way to see it? |
6048 | What things are they? |
6048 | What things so pleasant( that is, if a man hath any delight in things that are wonderful)? |
6048 | What things were they? |
6048 | What things? |
6048 | What think you now of Mr. Badman? |
6048 | What think you now of going on pilgrimage? |
6048 | What think you of Mr. Badman now? |
6048 | What this street is? |
6048 | What was he? |
6048 | What was he? |
6048 | What was it then, dear heart, that hath prevailed with thee to do as thou hast done? |
6048 | What was the matter that you did laugh in your sleep tonight? |
6048 | What was this king of Assyria but a type of the beast made mention of in the New Testament? |
6048 | What wast thou once? |
6048 | What will it then avail them that they have gained much? |
6048 | What wilt thou do-- wilt thou after enlargement suffer thy privileges to be invaded and taken away? |
6048 | What wilt thou do? |
6048 | What wisdom, I say, what holiness, what grace and life will be found in all their words and actions? |
6048 | What workman thence will take a beam or pin, To make ought which may be delighted in? |
6048 | What would he leave undone? |
6048 | What would he suffer? |
6048 | What would you have a man do that is in his creditor''s debt, and can neither pay him what he owes him, nor go on in a trade any longer? |
6048 | What would you have me to do? |
6048 | What''s lighter than the mind? |
6048 | What, do you think that every heavy- heeled professor will have heaven? |
6048 | What, has the voice of danger lost the art To raise the spirit of neglected care? |
6048 | What, hast thou run thy race, art going down? |
6048 | What, my true servant, quoth he, my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6048 | What, said Obstinate, and leave our friends and our comforts behind us? |
6048 | What, seek''for the living among the dead? |
6048 | What, then, is the Word against the Word? |
6048 | What, to lose all these brave things that my eyes behold, for that which I never saw with my eyes? |
6048 | What, to lose my pride, my covetousness, my vain company, sports, and pleasures, and the rest? |
6048 | What, to run back again, back again to sin, to the world, to the devil, back again to the lusts of the flesh? |
6048 | What, were they so lowly? |
6048 | What, will you go, saith the devil, without your sins, pleasures, and profits? |
6048 | What? |
6048 | What? |
6048 | When Christ said,"Do you know all these things?" |
6048 | When Israel came out of Egypt, they were led of God into the wilderness; but why? |
6048 | When a man hath got a profession, and is crowded into the church and house of God, the question is not now, Hath he life, hath he right principles? |
6048 | When do our thoughts of ourselves agree with the Word of God? |
6048 | When heart and strength fail; when the body is writhing in agony, or lying an insensible lump of mortality; is that the time to make peace with God? |
6048 | When summ''d, what comes it to more than the halter? |
6048 | When the day that he must go hence was come, many accompanied him to the river- side, into which as he went, he said,''Death, where is thy sting?'' |
6048 | When the people lusted for flesh, Moses said,''Shall the flocks and the herds be slain for them to suffice them? |
6048 | When they came at the gate, Christiana asked the Porter if any of late went by? |
6048 | When they were also set down, the Shepherds said to those of the weaker sort, What is it that you would have? |
6048 | When thy life is done, thy heaven is also done? |
6048 | Whence come you? |
6048 | Where are the victors of the world, With all their men of might? |
6048 | Where have the clouds their water? |
6048 | Where is it to be found? |
6048 | Where is thy fruit, barren fig- tree? |
6048 | Where is thy heart? |
6048 | Where is thy self- abhorrence, thy blushing before God, for the sin that is yet behind? |
6048 | Where is thy self- denial and contentment? |
6048 | Where is thy tenderness of the name of God and his ways? |
6048 | Where is thy watching, thy fasting, thy praying against the remainders of corruption? |
6048 | Where shall we begin? |
6048 | Where''s he that thaws our ice, drives cold away? |
6048 | Where''s he whose goodly face doth warm and heal, And show us what the darksome nights conceal? |
6048 | Where, barren fig- tree, is the fruit of these people''s repentance? |
6048 | Wherefore art thou come to torment me, and to cast me out of my possession? |
6048 | Wherefore dost Thou keep so cruel a dog in Thy yard, at the sight of which, such women and children as we, are ready to fly from Thy gate for fear? |
6048 | Wherefore have I commanded a watch, and that you should double your guards at the gates? |
6048 | Wherefore have I endeavoured to make you as hard as iron, and your hearts as a piece of the nether millstone? |
6048 | Which of them therefore was it that died? |
6048 | Whither are you going? |
6048 | Whither shall I go when I die? |
6048 | Who are they that must be saved? |
6048 | Who are you? |
6048 | Who bid the boar come there? |
6048 | Who bid you go this way to be rid of thy burden? |
6048 | Who can A wounded spirit bear? |
6048 | Who can charge the Waldenses, Albigenses, or Lollards with that spirit of Antichrist? |
6048 | Who can know The miseries that these poor people felt While they did underneath those burnings melt? |
6048 | Who can know it? |
6048 | Who can stand before Great- heart? |
6048 | Who could have thought that anyone could so far have been blinded by the power of lust? |
6048 | Who could have thought that this path should have led us out of the way? |
6048 | Who dares charge the Quakers with a persecuting spirit? |
6048 | Who dost expose it, yet claw those that crave it? |
6048 | Who hath babbling? |
6048 | Who hath contentions? |
6048 | Who hath redness of eyes? |
6048 | Who hath sorrow? |
6048 | Who hath wounds without cause? |
6048 | Who is it that would not have the benefit of grace, of a throne of grace? |
6048 | Who knows, but that God that made the world may cause that Giant Despair may die? |
6048 | Who shall declare his way to his face? |
6048 | Who thought yesterday, would one say, that this day would have been such a day to us? |
6048 | Who told thee that thy heart and life agree together? |
6048 | Who, I say, that was so faint- hearted as I, that would not have knocked with all their might? |
6048 | Who, that sees a house on fire, will not give the alarm to them that dwell therein? |
6048 | Who, that sees the devils as roaring lions, continually devouring souls, will not make an out- cry? |
6048 | Whose son is he? |
6048 | Why I trow he was no highwayman, was he? |
6048 | Why are they for going with their bull''s foretops,[63] with their naked shoulders, and paps hanging out like a cow''s bag? |
6048 | Why art thou so tart, my brother? |
6048 | Why came you not in at the gate, which standeth at the beginning of the way? |
6048 | Why cumbereth it the ground? |
6048 | Why did he not do execution? |
6048 | Why did not Little- faith pluck up a greater heart? |
6048 | Why did not he cut it down? |
6048 | Why did not he fetch out the axe? |
6048 | Why did they not stay, that we might have had their good company? |
6048 | Why do some of the springs rise out of the tops of high hills? |
6048 | Why do the springs come from the sea to us, through the earth? |
6048 | Why do they call themselves by the name of the Lord Jesus, if they have not the grace of God, if they have not the Spirit of Christ? |
6048 | Why do they empty themselves upon the earth? |
6048 | Why do they go by fives, nines, and seventeens? |
6048 | Why do you look on them as if you would eat them up? |
6048 | Why does physic, if it does good, purge, and cause that we vomit? |
6048 | Why dost thou listen to her enchantments? |
6048 | Why doth the fire fasten upon the candlewick? |
6048 | Why doth the pelican pierce her own breast with her bill? |
6048 | Why friend? |
6048 | Why have I not made shipwreck of faith? |
6048 | Why he saith not streets, but street, as of one? |
6048 | Why is covetousness called idolatry? |
6048 | Why is the love of this world so forbidden? |
6048 | Why is the rainbow caused by the sun? |
6048 | Why is the wick and tallow, and all, spent to maintain the light of the candle? |
6048 | Why should you be holden in ignorance and blindness? |
6048 | Why should you not be enlarged in knowledge and understanding? |
6048 | Why so? |
6048 | Why the gates should look in this manner every way, both east, west, north, and south? |
6048 | Why then dost thou not break loose from her hold? |
6048 | Why then should there be any to share with him in his executing of the second part thereof? |
6048 | Why there should be three, just three, on every side of this city? |
6048 | Why this street is called by the term of pure gold? |
6048 | Why was it? |
6048 | Why wouldest thou go to Heaven? |
6048 | Why, I trow[110] you did not consent to her desires? |
6048 | Why, are you weary of my relating of things? |
6048 | Why, art thou weary of this discourse? |
6048 | Why, did he take this counsel? |
6048 | Why, did you ever hear any man say so? |
6048 | Why, did you hear him tell his dream? |
6048 | Why, did you not serve your own son so? |
6048 | Why, he asked me whither I was going? |
6048 | Why, he might, if he would, might he not? |
6048 | Why, how dost thou think in this matter? |
6048 | Why, is this Christian''s wife? |
6048 | Why, man, do you think we shall not be received? |
6048 | Why, my brother? |
6048 | Why, prithee, what dost thou with them? |
6048 | Why, so it is here; art thou inquiring the way to heaven? |
6048 | Why, was there more of them than one? |
6048 | Why, what did he say to you? |
6048 | Why, what did you think? |
6048 | Why, what difference is there between crying out against, and abhorring of sin? |
6048 | Why, what other sins was he addicted to, I mean while he was but a child? |
6048 | Why, what was it that brought your sins to mind again? |
6048 | Why? |
6048 | Why? |
6048 | Why? |
6048 | Why? |
6048 | Why? |
6048 | Will He within Open to sorry me, though I have been An undeserving rebel? |
6048 | Will a man give a penny to fill his belly with hay; or can you persuade the turtle- dove to live upon carrion like the crow? |
6048 | Will he esteem thy riches? |
6048 | Will he suffer them To break his law, and sin, and not condemn Them for so doing? |
6048 | Will his God humour him, and answer his desires? |
6048 | Will it not be a dishonour to thee to see the very boys and girls in the country to have more wit than thyself? |
6048 | Will it not be glorious for thee to be in glory with them, while others are in unutterable torments? |
6048 | Will it not be glorious to enjoy those things that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath entered into the heart of man to conceive? |
6048 | Will it not be glorious to enter then with the angels and saints into that glorious kingdom? |
6048 | Will it, think you, be always thus with you? |
6048 | Will my sins do me good then? |
6048 | Will not this persuade thine heart, nor make thee bethink thyself? |
6048 | Will she venture To clash at light? |
6048 | Will the sheep couple with a dog, the partridge with a crow, or the pheasant with an owl? |
6048 | Will these help to turn the hand of God from inflicting his fierce anger upon me? |
6048 | Will they be able to help me when I come to fetch my last breath? |
6048 | Will they fortify themselves? |
6048 | Will they help to ease the pains of hell? |
6048 | Will they make an end in a day? |
6048 | Will they not rather imitate Korah, Dathan, and Abiram''s friends, even rail at me for condemning him, as they did at Moses for doing execution? |
6048 | Will they not rather put him upon all tricks, evasions, irreligious consequences and conclusions, such as will serve to cherish sin? |
6048 | Will they revive the stones out of the heaps of the rubbish which are bunt?'' |
6048 | Will they sacrifice? |
6048 | Will ye render me a recompence? |
6048 | Will you leave your friends and companions behind you? |
6048 | Will you not go in, and stay till morning? |
6048 | Will you now desert your old friend, or do you think of standing by me?'' |
6048 | Wilt neither tidings from heaven or hell awake thee? |
6048 | Wilt thou be like that simple one named in the seventh of Proverbs, that will be drawn to the slaughter by the cord of a silly lust? |
6048 | Wilt thou be like the bird that hasteth to the snare of the fowler? |
6048 | Wilt thou be like the silly fly, that is not quiet unless she be either entangled in the spider''s web, or burned in the candle? |
6048 | Wilt thou be so sottish and unwise, as to venture thy soul upon a little uncertain time? |
6048 | Wilt thou hearken unto me if I give thee counsel? |
6048 | Wilt thou not hear yet, barren fig- tree? |
6048 | Wilt thou not yet awake? |
6048 | Wilt thou provoke him to do it? |
6048 | Wilt thou provoke still? |
6048 | Wilt thou run? |
6048 | Wilt thou say still,''Yet a little sleep, a little slumber,''and''a little folding of the hands to sleep?'' |
6048 | Wilt thou stop thine ears, and shut thy eyes? |
6048 | Wilt thou yet turn thyself in thy sloth, as the door is turned upon the hinges? |
6048 | Wilt thou, then, lose this Christ, this food, this pleasure, this heaven, this happiness, for a thing of nought? |
6048 | Would he be afraid of friends, or shrink at the most fearful threatenings that the greatest tyrants could invent to give him? |
6048 | Would he favour sin? |
6048 | Would he love this world below? |
6048 | Would he not sometimes talk of his wife when she was dead? |
6048 | Would it not have been so to any of us, had we been used as he, to be robbed, and wounded too, and that in a strange place, as he was? |
6048 | Would such an one, thinkest thou, run again into the same course of life as before, and venture the damnation that for sin he had already been in? |
6048 | Would they be here again for a thousand worlds? |
6048 | Would they not, I say, have concluded that he was a righteous man? |
6048 | Would you act thus by God''s holy commandments? |
6048 | Would you be willing to be damned for slothfulness? |
6048 | Would you choose one and reject another? |
6048 | Would you make my Lord''s people to transgress? |
6048 | Wouldst thou be glad to be kept out of heaven with a back well clothed, and a belly well filled with the dainties of this world? |
6048 | Wouldst thou be glad to have all thy good things in thy lifetime, to have thy heaven to last no longer than while thou dost live in this world? |
6048 | Wouldst thou be that within thou dost appear, Or seem to be in outward exercise Before the most devout, and godly wise? |
6048 | Wouldst thou be very upright and sincere? |
6048 | Wouldst thou be willing to be deprived of eternal happiness and felicity? |
6048 | Wouldst thou fare deliciously every day, and have thy soul delight itself in fatness? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know how God could still love his creatures, and do his justice no wrong? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know how God''s heart stood affected toward man before the world began? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know how far a man may go on in a profession of the gospel, and yet fall away? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know how hard it is to go to heaven? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know man''s inclination so soon as he is born? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know somewhat concerning that? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know what is the wages of sin? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know what that Christ that died for sinners is doing in that place whither he is gone? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know what thou art, and what is in thine heart? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know what, or who they are that shall go to heaven? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know where God did place man after he had made him? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether God looked upon Adam''s eating[ the fruit of] the forbidden tree to be sin or no? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether God''s love did still abide towards his creatures for anything they could do to make him amends? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether a man by nature be a friend to God, or an enemy? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether a man by nature may know something of the invisible things of God? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether he did eat or drink with his disciples after he rose out of the grave? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether he did in that body bear all our sins, and where? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether he did rise again after he was crucified, with the very same body? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether he made them of something or nothing? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether he put forth any labour in making them, as we do in making things? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether it be the desire of the heart of man by nature, to follow God in his own way or no? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether it were the devil who beguiled them, or whether it was a natural serpent, such as do haunt the desolate places? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether man be defiled in every part of him by the sin he hath committed? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether man once fallen from God by transgression, can recover himself by all he can do? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether man was cursed for his sin? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether man''s obedience will obtain that Christ should die for them, or save them? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether natural man can abstain from the outward act of sin against the law, merely by a principle of nature? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether righteousness, justification, and sanctification do come through the virtue of Christ''s blood? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether sin were sufficient to draw God''s love from his creatures? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether that man did live there all his time or not? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether that sin be imputed to us? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether the curse did fall on man, or on the whole creation with him? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether they that live and die in their sins shall go to heaven or not? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whether this Saviour had a body of flesh and bones before the world was, or took it from the Virgin Mary? |
6048 | Wouldst thou know whither those do go that die unconverted to the faith of Christ? |
6048 | Wouldst thou wade? |
6048 | Wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy?'' |
6048 | Yea, art thou thus when no eye doth thee see But that which is invisible? |
6048 | Yea, did we not even kill ourselves with our earnest intreaties of thee to consider of thine estate, and by Christ to escape this dreadful day? |
6048 | Yea, did we not tell thee that God, out of his love to sinners, sent Christ to die for them, that they might, by coming to him, be saved? |
6048 | Yea, how can you now, though he is at a distance, endure to think of such a mighty one? |
6048 | Yea, if any that see her should say, Why do you so? |
6048 | Yea, was he not now in the combat? |
6048 | Yea, what conformity unto him, to his sorrows and sufferings? |
6048 | Yea, what means this your taking up of arms against, and the shutting of your gates upon us, the faithful servants of your King? |
6048 | Yea, what wilt thou then do, if death and hell shall come to visit thee, and thou in thy sins, and under the curse of the law? |
6048 | Yea, wrap thy head with clouds and hide thy face, As threatening to withdraw from us thy grace? |
6048 | You came in at the gate, did you not? |
6048 | You may ask me what that is? |
6048 | You say he was proud; but will you show me now some symptoms of one that is proud? |
6048 | You say true; but did you meet nobody else in that valley? |
6048 | You say well, for what fellowship hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6048 | You speak mystically, do you not? |
6048 | You talk of rubs; what rubs have you met withal? |
6048 | You will say, what is that? |
6048 | Your souls are worth a thousand worlds; and will you be slothful? |
6048 | [ 108] What is meant by the Hill Difficulty? |
6048 | [ 112] Examine, which do you like better, self- soothing or soul- searching doctrine? |
6048 | [ 130] Reader, can you feed upon Christ by faith? |
6048 | [ 134] But did I laugh? |
6048 | [ 138] Can we wonder that the pilgrims longed to spend some time with such lovely companions? |
6048 | [ 140] Now the King, at the sight of the petition, was glad; but how much more think you, when it was seconded by his Son? |
6048 | [ 148] When he had left her, Prudence said, Did I not tell thee, that Mr. Brisk would soon forsake thee? |
6048 | [ 14] But I beheld in my dream, that a man came to him, whose name was Help, and asked him what he did there? |
6048 | [ 15] But now, when did the day of grace end with this man? |
6048 | [ 162] Is not this too much the case with professors of this day? |
6048 | [ 163] What is this something that By- ends knew more than all the world? |
6048 | [ 167] Pretended friends come with such expostulations as these: Why, dear Sir, will you give such offence? |
6048 | [ 192] Look, said Christian, did not I tell you so? |
6048 | [ 192]What must the pure and holy Jesus have suffered when He tasted death in all its bitterness? |
6048 | [ 194] So on they went, and Joseph said, Can not we see to the end of this Valley as yet? |
6048 | [ 1] Was Christ slothful in the work of your redemption? |
6048 | [ 228] Then said Christian, What means this? |
6048 | [ 231] Then said Hopeful to the Shepherds, I perceive that these had on them, even every one, a show of pilgrimage, as we have now; had they not? |
6048 | [ 238] Now, is it not very common to hear professors talk at this rate? |
6048 | [ 242] Then they asked Mr. Feeble- mind how he fell into his hands? |
6048 | [ 248] What was this good thing? |
6048 | [ 254] Who can stand in the evil day of temptation, when beset with Faint- heart, Mistrust, and Guilt, backed by the power of their master, Satan? |
6048 | [ 257] Then said Mr. Contrite to them, Pray how fareth it with you in your pilgrimage? |
6048 | [ 267] Also, are we not now to walk by faith? |
6048 | [ 268] What can not Great- heart do? |
6048 | [ 276] Then said the Pilgrims, What means this? |
6048 | [ 27] Well, but whither do they go, that are thus gone out of the temple or church of God? |
6048 | [ 284] Then said Christian to Hopeful( but softly), Did I not tell you he cared not for our company? |
6048 | [ 288] How, then, dost thou say, I believe in Christ? |
6048 | [ 296] Then they said- Well, Ignorance, wilt thou yet foolish be, To slight good counsel, ten times given thee? |
6048 | [ 309] My soul, what''s lighter than a feather? |
6048 | [ 311] Who are these ministering spirits, that the author calls"men"? |
6048 | [ 312] Is she not rightly named Bubble? |
6048 | [ 312] What are these two difficulties? |
6048 | [ 39] Then said Christian, What means this? |
6048 | [ 3]"What shall I do?" |
6048 | [ 44] Sir, is it not time for me to go on my way now? |
6048 | [ 45]"In the midst of these heavenly instructions, why in such haste to go?" |
6048 | [ 47] Then said the Interpreter to Christian, Hast thou considered all these things? |
6048 | [ 59] What is this garden but the world? |
6048 | [ 60] What are these ill- favoured ones? |
6048 | [ 62] But why go back again? |
6048 | [ 6] I looked then, and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,"Where fore dost thou cry?" |
6048 | [ 77] What say you, O my Mansoul? |
6048 | [ 78] But shall we be flattered out of our lives? |
6048 | [ 89]''Thou hast given credit to the truth''; what is this but faith-- the faith of the operation of God? |
6048 | [ 8] Barren fig- tree, can it be imagined that those that paint themselves did ever repent of their pride? |
6048 | [ 8] Before they took him his intent was to preach on these words,''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6048 | [ 8] If thou now say, Which is the way? |
6048 | [ 99] Is there righteousness in Christ? |
6048 | [ But, pray, what talk have the people about him? |
6048 | [ Does it stun them?] |
6048 | always at it? |
6048 | and are these Christian''s children? |
6048 | and be The words of God in truth thy prop and stay? |
6048 | and by seeing the beams and sweet influences of the sun strike downwards? |
6048 | and did no more of them but you come out to escape the danger? |
6048 | and do not the members receive their whole light, guidance, and wisdom from it? |
6048 | and dost thou mingle thy tears with thy drink? |
6048 | and dost thou sigh and mourn in secret? |
6048 | and doth your life and conversation testify the same? |
6048 | and for what are they hanged there? |
6048 | and going on pilgrimage too? |
6048 | and how far go you this way? |
6048 | and if they think they shall know and do these, why not know others, and rejoice in their welfare also? |
6048 | and is all that thou hast to be ventured for his name in this world? |
6048 | and is also the life of Jesus''made manifest in thy mortal body?'' |
6048 | and is he more precious to thee than the whole world? |
6048 | and is not that a good life that is according to God''s commandments? |
6048 | and is there knowledge in the Most High?'' |
6048 | and may I lodge here tonight? |
6048 | and to be had upon no lower rates than thy immortal soul? |
6048 | and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols?'' |
6048 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
6048 | and what hath Emmanuel said? |
6048 | and what he would have? |
6048 | and what is your business here? |
6048 | and what would you have? |
6048 | and when so like to be weary, as when almost at their journey''s end? |
6048 | and whence he came? |
6048 | and while they thus call themselves, they should be the veriest rogues for all evil, sin, and villainy imaginable, who could help it? |
6048 | and whither are you bound? |
6048 | and who hath brought up these? |
6048 | and who shall repay him what he hath done? |
6048 | and why did he dispraise it, but of a covetous mind to wrong and beguile the seller? |
6048 | and, Will it go well with the town of Mansoul? |
6048 | are not even ye that have been converted by us? |
6048 | are not thy kindred as hardened as thou wast? |
6048 | are they forgotten? |
6048 | are they thrown over the bar? |
6048 | are you that countryman, then? |
6048 | art thou become like unto us?'' |
6048 | art thou resolved to sleep the sleep of death? |
6048 | be persuaded to pause a moment, and ask yourself the question- What is my case? |
6048 | because they would adorn the gospel? |
6048 | because they would beautify religion, and make sinners to fall in love with their own salvation? |
6048 | behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens can not contain thee; how much less this house that I have built?'' |
6048 | but can it turn all things into grace? |
6048 | but doth thy life and conversation declare thee to be such an one? |
6048 | but where are thy fruits, barren fig- tree? |
6048 | but, Hath he fruit? |
6048 | but, Were you doers, or talkers only? |
6048 | can it make all things work together for good? |
6048 | can not you help me? |
6048 | can we suppose he will now admit of the wit and contrivance of men in those things that are, in comparison to them, the heavenly things themselves? |
6048 | canst thou think that God hath given thee this that thou mightest thereby make a prey of thy neighbour? |
6048 | did he die before he was born again? |
6048 | did he die in unbelief? |
6048 | did he light upon you? |
6048 | did he not behave himself valiantly? |
6048 | did your neighbours talk so? |
6048 | do they use to show such kind of favours to traitors? |
6048 | do you think she will go? |
6048 | dost the wanton play, Or doth thy testy humour tend its way? |
6048 | dost thou think to run fast enough with the world, thy sins and lusts in thy heart? |
6048 | for to him I would deliver my message?'' |
6048 | had he faith and holiness? |
6048 | has not this river pleasant streams? |
6048 | have I been unfaithful to Him? |
6048 | how can he see? |
6048 | how can that be, since they are hurtful? |
6048 | how hot will that make wrath? |
6048 | how long has it lasted? |
6048 | how shall I pass through this dark entry into another world? |
6048 | how she flies and sings,[20] But could she do so if she had not wings? |
6048 | how would Thy heart and pulse beat after heav''nly things, After the upper and the nether springs? |
6048 | in each part What flames appear? |
6048 | in this so good a soil? |
6048 | is he''formed in me the hope of glory?'' |
6048 | is it little in thine eyes that our King doth offer thee mercy, and that, after so many provocations? |
6048 | is justifying, saving faith, nothing more than a belief of the truth? |
6048 | is not this excellent water? |
6048 | is old Good- deed yet alive in Mansoul? |
6048 | is she not a tall, comely dame, something of a swarthy complexion? |
6048 | is the celestial glory of so small esteem with him, that he counteth it not worth running the hazards of a few difficulties to obtain it? |
6048 | more fools still? |
6048 | neighbour Christian, where are you now? |
6048 | neither hit last year nor this? |
6048 | no Mount Zion? |
6048 | now what shall we do? |
6048 | of a wicked man dying in despair? |
6048 | or did he die with ease, quietly? |
6048 | or is it muddy, and mixed with the doctrines of men? |
6048 | or must this silver palace be of that nature either? |
6048 | or shall all the fish of the sea be gathered together for them to suffice them?'' |
6048 | or standeth your religion in word or in tongue, and not in deed and truth? |
6048 | or that he may, in a short time, have another of his fits before us, and may lose the use of his limbs? |
6048 | or that if they had known him and his life, yet to see him die so quietly, would they not have concluded that he had made his peace with God? |
6048 | or that those that pursue this world did ever repent of their covetousness? |
6048 | or that those that walk with wanton eyes did ever repent of their fleshly lusts? |
6048 | or that, at some time or other, he may forget to lock us in? |
6048 | or the devil endure that Christ Jesus should be honoured both by faith and a heavenly conversation, and let that soul alone at quiet? |
6048 | or the gospel declared by us? |
6048 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6048 | or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue? |
6048 | or what wilt resolve with thyself? |
6048 | or who can forego them? |
6048 | or whom have I defrauded? |
6048 | or whose ass have I taken? |
6048 | or will all our exquisite happiness centre in the glory of God? |
6048 | or will men take a pin of it to hang any vessel thereon?'' |
6048 | or, that I would come to God in the best of my performances? |
6048 | said Faithful to his brother, Who comes yonder? |
6048 | said Mr. Feeble- mind, is he slain? |
6048 | said old Honest, what should I think? |
6048 | said she,''and what the son of my womb? |
6048 | said she; will she not take warning by her husband''s afflictions? |
6048 | said the Porter, was he your husband? |
6048 | saith God; what a fig- tree is this, that hath stood this year in my vineyard, and brought me forth no fruit? |
6048 | seek the living among the dead? |
6048 | shall I destroy thee? |
6048 | shall I fall upon thee and grind thee to powder, or make thee a monument of the richest grace? |
6048 | shall it not utterly wither, when the east- wind toucheth it? |
6048 | such highly- favoured Christians in Doubting Castle? |
6048 | tempted to destroy thyself? |
6048 | that I heard speak well of the holy Word of God? |
6048 | that thou mightest thereby go beyond and beguile thy neighbour? |
6048 | then let old Good- deed save you from your distresses? |
6048 | there is yet a question, Whether it may be well with thy soul at last? |
6048 | they think that she will be run down with a push, or, as they said,''What do these feeble Jews? |
6048 | to be in my case, who that so was could but have done so? |
6048 | to contemn him when he is on the throne, when he is on the throne of his glory? |
6048 | was he a lover and a worshipper of God by Christ according to his word? |
6048 | was not his mind elevated a thousand degrees beyond sense, carnal reason, fleshly love, and the desires of embracing temporal things? |
6048 | what agreement? |
6048 | what communion can there be in such marriages? |
6048 | what concord? |
6048 | what feats not perform? |
6048 | what is her pedigree? |
6048 | what is this but to count him less wise than thyself? |
6048 | what less than a river could quench the thirst of more than six hundred thousand men, besides women and children? |
6048 | what shall I do unto thee? |
6048 | what victories not gain? |
6048 | what will that do? |
6048 | what''s the matter? |
6048 | what, must we With you lift up our voice? |
6048 | where are you? |
6048 | where are you? |
6048 | who are they that are thus unspeakably blessed? |
6048 | who could blame them, since their dead friends were come to life again? |
6048 | who do you think saw themselves in the best condition? |
6048 | who do you think was in the best condition? |
6048 | who is there that is weaned from the world, and from their sins and pleasures, to fly from the wrath to come? |
6048 | who knows that is yet alive, what the torments of hell are? |
6048 | who would not be a subject to it? |
6048 | who would not be in the rich man''s state? |
6048 | who would not but worship before it? |
6048 | whom have I oppressed?'' |
6048 | why do you think they consider that? |
6048 | why else do men so soon grow weary? |
6048 | why then do the fallen angels tremble there? |
6048 | wife and children, and all? |
6048 | will you not believe your own eyes? |
6048 | wilt thou go to hell for sin, or to life by grace? |
6048 | wilt thou not yet set open thy gate to receive us, the deputies of thy King, and those that would rejoice to see thee live? |
6048 | wilt thou turn, or shall I smite? |
6048 | would they not call thee a thousand fools? |
6048 | would you have us trust to what Christ, in His own person, has done without us? |
6048 | wouldst thou swim? |
6047 | And God said unto Noah,or told Noah his purpose: The same way he went with Abraham:"Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do?" |
6047 | And he said, What hast thou done? 6047 And he said, Who told thee that thou wast naked? |
6047 | And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? |
6047 | And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? |
6047 | And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? |
6047 | And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? |
6047 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? 6047 And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother?" |
6047 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel? |
6047 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Why art thou wroth? 6047 And wherefore slew he him? |
6047 | But doth not the scripture say, that it is the Spirit of Christ that doth convince of sin? |
6047 | But what must they do that have unbelieving ones? 6047 But women have sometimes cases, which modesty will not admit should be made known to men, what must they do then?" |
6047 | By which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you..What was that? |
6047 | Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? |
6047 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? 6047 Does Satan suggest that God will not hear your stammering and chattering prayers? |
6047 | Hast thou eaten of the tree? |
6047 | How doth God know,say they,"Can he judge through the thick cloud?" |
6047 | I know not: am I my brother''s keeper? |
6047 | I,saith he,"even I, am he that comforteth you; who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall die"( Isa 51:12)? |
6047 | If Christ hath enlightened all men as he is God( as thou confessest) then hath he not enlightened all men as he is the Son of God? 6047 If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? |
6047 | Is Ephraim my dear son? 6047 Is anything too hard for the Lord? |
6047 | Is it such a fast that I have chosen? 6047 Is not God in the height of heaven? |
6047 | Is not he rightly called Jacob? |
6047 | Mine own arm brought salvation,saith he, but how? |
6047 | Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
6047 | Shall iron break the northern iron and the steel? |
6047 | Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? |
6047 | That which is afar off, and exceeding deep, who can find out? |
6047 | The Lord said,--Go, but David replied, Whither shall I go? 6047 Then cometh the end,"saith Paul,"when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father;"But when shall that be? |
6047 | This is the victory,--even our faith; and"who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth?" |
6047 | Thou tellest my wanderings: put thou my tears into thy bottle; are they not in thy book? |
6047 | What hast thou done? |
6047 | What is this that thou hast done? |
6047 | What, then? 6047 What? |
6047 | When saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee? 6047 Where art thou?" |
6047 | Where is Abel thy brother? |
6047 | Where is Abel thy brother? |
6047 | Where is Abel? |
6047 | Where is boasting then? |
6047 | Wherefore slew he him? 6047 Whether any be justified but he that is born of God? |
6047 | Whether is it possible, that any can be saved, without Christ manifested within? 6047 Whether[ doth] and[ man] receive Christ, who receives him no into him? |
6047 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6047 | Who can stand before his indignation? 6047 Who hath known the mind of the Lord?" |
6047 | Who hath put wisdom in the inward parts? 6047 Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name?" |
6047 | Who told thee? |
6047 | Who will bring me into the strong city,and"wilt not thou, O God, which hadst cast us off? |
6047 | Why art thou wroth? |
6047 | Why,saith the prophet to God,"Art thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?" |
6047 | With what righteousness? |
6047 | Would it not be an insufferable thing? 6047 Ye shed blood[ says God] and shall ye possess the land? |
6047 | ''0 wretched man that I am,''& c. What complaints, what confessions, what bewailing of weakness is here? |
6047 | ''A son honoureth his father, and a servant his master: if then I be a Father, where is mine honour? |
6047 | ''And it shall come to pass, that all they that look upon thee, shall flee from thee, and say, Nineveh is laid waste: who will bemoan her? |
6047 | ''And why call ye me Lord, Lord,''saith he,''and do not, the things which I say?'' |
6047 | ''But what if a man want light in his duty to the poor?'' |
6047 | ''But what if a man want light in the supper?'' |
6047 | ''Can the Ethiopian change his skin?'' |
6047 | ''Canst thou by searching find out God? |
6047 | ''Did not Solomon king of Israel sin by these things? |
6047 | ''Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O congregation? |
6047 | ''Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods?'' |
6047 | ''Hath he said, and shall he not do it? |
6047 | ''Hath not God chosen the foolish,--the weak,--the base, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are?'' |
6047 | ''Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump?'' |
6047 | ''Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump?'' |
6047 | ''Have I been so long time with you,[ saith Christ] and yet hast thou not known me, Philip? |
6047 | ''Have any of the rulers or pharisees believed on him?'' |
6047 | ''How comes contesting for water baptism to be so much against you?'' |
6047 | ''If the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be seasoned?'' |
6047 | ''Is Christ divided?'' |
6047 | ''Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own?'' |
6047 | ''Is not this the carpenter?'' |
6047 | ''Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump?'' |
6047 | ''Ought not Christ to have suffered?'' |
6047 | ''Righteous art thou, O Lord,''saith Jeremiah,''yet let me talk with thee: Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper?'' |
6047 | ''Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
6047 | ''Should not the multitude of words be answered? |
6047 | ''The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? |
6047 | ''The righteousness which is of faith, speaketh on this wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? |
6047 | ''Then shame shall cover her that said unto thee, Where is the Lord thy God?'' |
6047 | ''This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?'' |
6047 | ''To which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son?'' |
6047 | ''Twas this that made David cry out, How great and wonderful are the works of God? |
6047 | ''What then? |
6047 | ''What then? |
6047 | ''Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant? |
6047 | ''Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6047 | ''Who can find a virtuous woman? |
6047 | ''Who is he that overcometh the world,[ saith John] but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?'' |
6047 | ''Who is he that saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth it not?'' |
6047 | ''Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos?'' |
6047 | ''Why did John reject the Pharisees that would have been baptized( Matt 3:7), and Paul examine them that were?'' |
6047 | ''Will a man leave the snow of Lebanon, which cometh from the rock of the field? |
6047 | ''[ 17]''and will God indeed dwell with men on the earth?'' |
6047 | ''what nation is there so great, who hath God so nigh unto them''as his people have, and as he''is in all things that we call upon him for? |
6047 | ( 1 Cor 13) To speak nothing of the first table, where is he that hath his love manifested by the second? |
6047 | ( 1 Cor 1:30,31) Where is boasting then? |
6047 | ( 1 Cor 3:11) But dost thou plead still as thou didst before, and wilt thou stand thereto? |
6047 | ( 1 Cor 8:13) Where is Dorcas, with her garments she used to make for the widow, and for the fatherless? |
6047 | ( 1 John 3) Shall these pass for such as believe to the saving of the soul? |
6047 | ( Acts 9:36- 39) Yea, where is that rich man that, to his power, durst say as Job does? |
6047 | ( Heb 10:19- 24) Why then dost thou talk of two strings to thy bow? |
6047 | ( Heb 13:6, Rom 8:31) and if they be against me, what disadvantage reap I thereby; since even all this also, worketh for my good? |
6047 | ( Hosea 8:3) But why? |
6047 | ( Isa 58:5) But why condemned then, and smiled upon now? |
6047 | ( Job 39:13- 17) Will it please thee when thou shalt see that thou hast brought forth children to the murderer? |
6047 | ( Luke 14:34) Wherewith shall the salt be salted? |
6047 | ( Luke 15:1,2) But by what answer doth Christ repel their objections? |
6047 | ( Luke 16:10- 12) And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who will commit unto you that which is your own? |
6047 | ( Luke 16:15) Hast thou taken notice of this, that God judgeth the fruit by the heart from whence it comes? |
6047 | ( Luke 22:70)''Then said they all, Art thou then the Son of God? |
6047 | ( Mal 1:8) And if so, how should he then accept of that which is not righteousness? |
6047 | ( Mark 12:31) True, he says, he did them no hurt; but did he do them good? |
6047 | ( Mark 1:4,5; Rom 6:21; Jer 7:3,5) Where shall the fruits of repentance be found? |
6047 | ( Matt 13:40- 42) Who can conceive of this terror to its full with his mind? |
6047 | ( Matt 21:31) Poor Pharisee, what a loss art thou at? |
6047 | ( Matt 23:17) I say again, What kind of righteousness shall this be called? |
6047 | ( Psa 139:8) Or if a man should be so bold as to say so, Whether by so saying, he confineth Christ to that place for ever? |
6047 | ( Psa 143:1,2) And David, What if God doth thus? |
6047 | ( Psa 35:13,14) Pharisee, Dost thou see here how contrary thou art to righteous men? |
6047 | ( Psa 52:7) What else means this great bundle of thy own righteousness, which thou hast brought with thee into the temple? |
6047 | ( Psa 55:12,13) For, if to be debauched in open and common transgressions is odious, how odious is it for a brother to be so? |
6047 | ( Read Eze 16) Use Fifth, Is the love of God and of Christ so great? |
6047 | ( Rom 11:33)"If I speak of strength, lo, he is strong"( Job 9:19); yea,"the thunder of his power who can understand?" |
6047 | ( Rom 4:16) That the promise, What promise? |
6047 | ( Rom 7:12) Why then, I say, dost thou reject the commandment of God, to keep thine own tradition? |
6047 | ( c.) And the will and affections so turn away from it as they should? |
6047 | ( verse 10) Can the tree boast, because it is a sweeting tree,28 since it was not the tree, but God that made it such: Where is boasting then? |
6047 | ( vs. 10) Besides, what greater contempt can be cast upon Christ than by such wordy professors is cast upon him? |
6047 | ( we will now suppose what must not be granted) Was not this thy state when thou wast in thy first parents? |
6047 | --that is, when he is committing wickedness--"saith the Lord: Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6047 | 11:30) But what is the fruit of the wicked, of the professors that are wicked? |
6047 | 1:28; 33:14) But what sinners are these? |
6047 | 23:24) Yea, do not professors teach the wicked ones to be wicked? |
6047 | 2:14) To be short, what says Paul in the seventh to the Romans? |
6047 | 3. Who knows the utmost tendencies of sin? |
6047 | 3:2) And what says John in his first epistle, and first chapter? |
6047 | 65:5) But what is the sentence of God concerning those? |
6047 | 7:16; Luke 6:44) What then? |
6047 | 9:26)''Whom dost thou pass in beauty,''saith God? |
6047 | A Creator; what is it that a Creator can not do? |
6047 | A day for a man to afflict his soul? |
6047 | A faithful Creator; what is it that one that is faithful will not do, that is, when he is engaged? |
6047 | A faithful man will encourage one much; how much more should the faithfulness of God encourage us? |
6047 | A good cause, what is that? |
6047 | A life regulated by a moral law, what hurt is in that? |
6047 | A man that nameth the name of Christ, and that departeth not from iniquity, to whom may he be compared? |
6047 | A most appalling murder has been committed;--a virtuous and pious young man is brutally murdered by his only brother:--what is the divine judgment? |
6047 | A new covenant, and why not then a new resting day to the church? |
6047 | A resurrection-- of what? |
6047 | A self- righteous man therefore can come to God for mercy none otherwise than fawningly: For what need of mercy hath a righteous man? |
6047 | A type in what? |
6047 | A while after this, as was hinted before, the Christians will begin with detestation to ask what Antichrist was? |
6047 | A work did I say? |
6047 | Again, But do you not follow them with clamours and out- cries, that their communion, even amongst themselves, is unwarrantable? |
6047 | Again, But who has the perfect knowledge of all these things? |
6047 | Again, What kind of righteousness of thine, is this, that standeth in a misplacing, and so consequently in a misesteeming of God''s commands? |
6047 | Again, if thy parents, and thou also, be godly, how happy a thing is this? |
6047 | Again, if you say he hath no other body but his church, then I ask, What that was that was taken down from the cross? |
6047 | Again, is there such a length? |
6047 | Again, see Peter''s testimony of this Son of Mary; When Jesus asked his disciples, whom say ye that I am? |
6047 | Again, what needed the woman to have a place of shelter in the wilderness, when there was no war made against her? |
6047 | Again,"Whether I am come to one of the days of the thousand years?" |
6047 | Again,''What is man, that he should be clean? |
6047 | All God''s children are criers-- cannot you be quiet without you have a bellyful of the milk of God''s Word? |
6047 | All this, what does it argue, I say, but thy diffidence of God? |
6047 | Also that he may deny to give them that grace that would preserve them from sin, without being guilty of their damnation? |
6047 | Also whether reprobation be the cause of condemnation? |
6047 | And I say again, if one sin, the least sin deserveth all these things, what thinkest thou do all thy sins deserve? |
6047 | And I say again, this is the work of a Creator, and a Creator can maintain it in its gallantry, FOOTNOTE? |
6047 | And I say again, wherefore has he so plainly told us of his greatness, and of what he can do? |
6047 | And Jesus said to them,''Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts?'' |
6047 | And Paul asked them, Whether they had yet''received the Holy Ghost?'' |
6047 | And again( Gal 3:2,5 compared together),''Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law,[ saith the Apostle] or by the hearing of faith?'' |
6047 | And again, What he hath made crooked, who can make straight? |
6047 | And again, some of them that are for infant baptism die for that as a truth? |
6047 | And again, where Judas( not Iscariot) said; Lord, how is it, that thou wilt manifest thyself to us, and not unto the world? |
6047 | And again,"If thou, Lord, shouldst mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?" |
6047 | And again,"Whom shall I send, and who will go for US?" |
6047 | And again,''Am I a sea, or a whale, that thou settest a watch over me? |
6047 | And albeit, saith Satan, thou prayest sometimes, yet is not thy heart possessed with a belief that God will not regard thee? |
6047 | And all the rest they baptized, were they not left free to join themselves for their convenience and edification? |
6047 | And are not you the same? |
6047 | And are you able thus to imitate him? |
6047 | And are you willing to stand by their judgment in the case? |
6047 | And art thou now as perfectly innocent as ever was Jesus Christ? |
6047 | And can you prove it by the scripture? |
6047 | And consequently how could he lift up his face unto God? |
6047 | And did ever God send an ordinance to be a pest and plague to his people?'' |
6047 | And did you not then believe, and do you not still believe, that you were true members of Christ, though less perfect? |
6047 | And dost thou count this a corrupted grain of Babylon''s treasure? |
6047 | And dost thou desire this medicine? |
6047 | And dost thou not rejoice in secret, that thou art the same that thou ever wert? |
6047 | And dost thou think, this is, indeed, the way to be righteous? |
6047 | And doth he not make his pots according to his pleasure? |
6047 | And doth he take charge of them as a Creator? |
6047 | And doth immodest apparel, with stretched- out necks, naked breasts, a made speech, and mincing gaits,& c., argue mortification of lusts? |
6047 | And doth not the Lord as well require the sign of baptism now, as of circumcision then? |
6047 | And doth this look like a visible church- state? |
6047 | And from sense and reason they will have ground to think so; for who now is left in the world any more to make head against them? |
6047 | And gain, how came it thither, how got the soul possession of it, while it was unjustified? |
6047 | And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?" |
6047 | And he said, I know not: Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
6047 | And he said, how long Would it have been, e''er you had understood This thing, had you not with my heifer plow''d? |
6047 | And his name not be but of a common regard on that day? |
6047 | And how are they to consider of themselves, even then when they first are apprehensive of their need of this righteousness? |
6047 | And how bitterly did David mourn for his son, who died in his wickedness? |
6047 | And how can a man that went last time out of his closet to be naught, have the face to come thither again? |
6047 | And how cold is the love of many at this day? |
6047 | And how could the people believe and embrace it? |
6047 | And how could we have seen it to purpose, had not God left some to themselves? |
6047 | And how else could they obey that command that bids them rejoice in tribulation, and glorify God in the fires? |
6047 | And how hath Christ lightened every man if not within him?" |
6047 | And how kindly did our Lord Jesus take it, to see the little children run tripping before him, and crying, Hosannah to the Son of David? |
6047 | And how must it be reckoned to them? |
6047 | And how say you? |
6047 | And how sayest thou? |
6047 | And if so, Whether they might not obtain at least, some little of the mercy, as well as those women? |
6047 | And if so, what follows? |
6047 | And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" |
6047 | And if thou shouldest be so now, what hast thou gained thereby? |
6047 | And if we know not every one of all these things to the full, how shall we know to the full the love of Christ which saveth us from them all? |
6047 | And if ye be followers of that which is good, who will harm you( 1 Peter 3:13)? |
6047 | And if you ask, How is it possible that this should be done? |
6047 | And if your brethren only you salute, What more than they do ye? |
6047 | And in that he saith''There remains a rest,''referring to that of David, what is it, if it signifies not, that the other rests remain not? |
6047 | And indeed so he does with"Adam, where art thou?" |
6047 | And into what church did Philip baptize the eunuch, or the apostle the jailor and his house? |
6047 | And is all this no good? |
6047 | And is hope, that this day is approaching, a reviving cordial to thee? |
6047 | And is not Boaz, with whose maids thou wast, One of the nearest kinsmen that thou hast? |
6047 | And is not his will the only rule of his mercy? |
6047 | And is that all? |
6047 | And is that all? |
6047 | And is that within the creature, or without, that worketh the new birth?" |
6047 | And is there toward us love in Christ that passeth knowledge? |
6047 | And is this to keep the first table; yea, the first branch of that table, which saith,"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God?" |
6047 | And may he not, without he give offence to thee, lay hold by electing love and mercy on whom himself pleaseth? |
6047 | And must baptism be such a rock of offence to professors, that very few will enquire after it, or submit to it? |
6047 | And must those that shall live to see those days, rejoice when these things begin to come to pass? |
6047 | And now I add, Is not this to deliver them to the devil( 1 Cor 5), or to put them to shame before all that see your acts? |
6047 | And now I ask what kind of christian correspondency you have with them? |
6047 | And now I ask, What was the reason that God continued his presence with this church notwithstanding this transgression? |
6047 | And now having said this much, wherein have I derogated from the glory and holiness of Christ? |
6047 | And now is it not to be wondered at, and are we not to be affected herewith, saying, And wilt thou set thine eye upon such an one? |
6047 | And now, behold, when Jacob had been told That there was corn in Egypt to be sold, He said unto his sons, Why stand ye thus? |
6047 | And observe, it is not said, that Noah shut the door, but the Lord shut him in: If God shuts in or out, who can alter it? |
6047 | And of what nation? |
6047 | And on the other hand, how often has the disjointing of the body, and the breakings thereof, occasioned the expiration of the spirit? |
6047 | And p. 26. where in answer to this question of mine; Why did the Man Christ hang on the cross on Mount Calvary? |
6047 | And shall not God avenge his own elect, which cry day and night unto him?" |
6047 | And shall not I? |
6047 | And shall we not imitate our Lord, nor the church that was immediately acted[21] by him in this, and the churches their fellows? |
6047 | And shall we not take that notice thereof as to follow the Lord Jesus and the churches herein? |
6047 | And that if they had light therein, they would as willingly do it as you? |
6047 | And that is according to the whole stream of scripture: For by one offering, What was that? |
6047 | And then, I pray you, what is left unto God, and what can he call his own? |
6047 | And then,& c. And why was not this done on the seventh day sabbath? |
6047 | And they knew it: Why, did they not know it before? |
6047 | And this is one ground( at least) why he hanged on the cross,& c. Ha Friend? |
6047 | And this is that which Peter intends when he saith,"And if ye be followers of that which is good, who will harm you?" |
6047 | And thus much doth this man Christ Jesus testify unto us where he saith he shall glorify me; mark,"He shall glorify;"( saith the Son of Mary)but how? |
6047 | And to distressed Jonah, said the Lord, Dost thou well to be angry for the gourd? |
6047 | And was not there a time when you did not so well understand the nature and extent of pride and covetousness as now you do? |
6047 | And was there not in all these things love, and love that was infinite? |
6047 | And were they all served so? |
6047 | And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? |
6047 | And what can such an one say for himself in the judgment, that shall be charged with the abuse of love? |
6047 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
6047 | And what day so fit as the Lord''s day for this? |
6047 | And what encouragement has a man to suffer for Christ, whose heart can not believe, and whose soul he can not commit to God to keep it? |
6047 | And what follows? |
6047 | And what hath he received of thy hand? |
6047 | And what nation is there so great, that hath statutes and judgments so righteous, as all this law,''said Moses, which I set before you this day?'' |
6047 | And what need was there of any of this, if Paul could, as he would, have departed from iniquity? |
6047 | And what says the Apostle? |
6047 | And what shall he do now, that is a stranger to this breadth, made mention of in the text? |
6047 | And what shall he do when he comes? |
6047 | And what then? |
6047 | And what then? |
6047 | And when did the Spirit of Christ convince thee of sin, because thou didst not believe in him? |
6047 | And when did we see thee an hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister to thee? |
6047 | And when unto her mother- in- law she came, Art thou, said she, my daughter come again? |
6047 | And where hast thou been working? |
6047 | And where is it, within or without?" |
6047 | And where is this man, that was born of the virgin, that we may come to the Father by him? |
6047 | And where that practical holiness that formerly used to be seen in the houses, lives and conversations of professors? |
6047 | And whereas thou askest, is not he a deceiver, that exhorts people to anything else than the light of Christ? |
6047 | And whereas thou asketh, whether the fault be then in God, or in that thou callest his light, or in the creature? |
6047 | And whereas you ask me,"What is that which worketh faith? |
6047 | And whereas you ask me,"do they that are born of God commit sin?" |
6047 | And whereas you ask, What is the sight of God? |
6047 | And wherefore doth he thus, but to beget an expectation in them of their salvation and deliverance? |
6047 | And whether doth he that is born of God commit sin? |
6047 | And whether it be lawful for them so to do?" |
6047 | And whether it be not lawful for them so to do? |
6047 | And who can abide the fierceness of his anger? |
6047 | And who can say, my heart is clean? |
6047 | And who could have found in their hearts to shut the door upon such an one? |
6047 | And who could have thought, that the other had been a good man? |
6047 | And who will dare to make any addition to holy writ? |
6047 | And whose word shall stand? |
6047 | And why are the women commanded silence there, if they may congregate by themselves, and set up and manage worship there? |
6047 | And why can they not as well keep the other sabbaths? |
6047 | And why do the scriptures say,"that through this man is preached to us the forgiveness of sins?" |
6047 | And why do they with pride trick up the body, if it be not to provoke both themselves and others to lusts? |
6047 | And why dost thou take notice of the mote That''s in thy brother''s eye; but dost not note The beam that''s in thine own? |
6047 | And why follow the apish fashions of the world? |
6047 | And why for raiment are ye taking thought? |
6047 | And why may not I give it the name of a shew; when you call it a symbol, and compare it to a gentleman''s livery? |
6047 | And why shall he that doth most for God in this world, enjoy most of him in that which is to come? |
6047 | And why should it not be accounted to him for righteousness? |
6047 | And why should not credence be given to that gospel that is confirmed by blood, the blood of the Son of God himself? |
6047 | And why should not the kings have it granted unto them, that she should fall by their hand? |
6047 | And why should we not have the benefit of the righteousness, while we are ungodly, since it was completed for us while we were yet ungodly? |
6047 | And why so? |
6047 | And why, but because God himself maintains the enmity? |
6047 | And why? |
6047 | And wilt thou pursue the dry stubble?'' |
6047 | And with his works he perfected his faith? |
6047 | And would it not be an insufferable thing? |
6047 | And would you be doing this? |
6047 | And ye say, Wherein have we despised thy name?'' |
6047 | And"who hath required this at your hand?" |
6047 | And, Use First, Is there such breadth, and length, and depth, and height in God, for us? |
6047 | And, What he did in the world? |
6047 | And, are there no public Christians, or public christian meetings, but them of your way? |
6047 | And, whether there was a secret or mystery in this work containing the truth of some higher thing? |
6047 | Answer, friend, dost thou put no difference betwixt the speaking of Christ without, and believing in Christ without? |
6047 | Any thing but truth; but I would know how sincerely righteous they were that were justified without works? |
6047 | Are God''s people a suffering people? |
6047 | Are all the elect, the seed, the saved, the vessels of mercy, the chosen and peculiar? |
6047 | Are her plagues pleasant or easy to be borne? |
6047 | Are not even ye,"saith Paul,"in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6047 | Are not my words verbatim these? |
6047 | Are not some, yea the most, the children of the flesh, the rest, the lost, the vessels of wrath, of dishonour, and the children of perdition? |
6047 | Are not these things rather a sign that the utter overthrow of the church of God is at the door? |
6047 | Are not they part of the scriptures of truth? |
6047 | Are not you commanded to keep out of the church all that are not circumcised? |
6047 | Are not, now- a- days, the bulk of professors like those that''strain at a gnat and swallow a camel?'' |
6047 | Are there yet any more sons in my womb, That may your husbands be in time to come? |
6047 | Are they purified, are they clean that name the name of Christ? |
6047 | Are they to be the audible mouth there, before all, to God? |
6047 | Are they to think, that they are righteous or sinners? |
6047 | Are things thus ordered? |
6047 | Are we for war? |
6047 | Are we stronger than he?'' |
6047 | Are ye not CARNAL, CARNAL, CARNAL? |
6047 | Are ye so foolish? |
6047 | Are you at that door, my brother? |
6047 | Are you brought out of the dark dungeon of this world into Christ? |
6047 | Are you commanded to reject them; If yea, where is it? |
6047 | Are you in affliction for your profession? |
6047 | Are you not sensible that such a one As I, can certainly thereof make trial? |
6047 | Art bound for hell against all wind and weather? |
6047 | Art like to him, that needs must step a mile At every stride, or think it not worth while To follow Christ? |
6047 | Art one of those whose fears do go beyond Their faith? |
6047 | Art thou a Publican? |
6047 | Art thou a professor? |
6047 | Art thou born again? |
6047 | Art thou born again? |
6047 | Art thou born again? |
6047 | Art thou born again? |
6047 | Art thou born again? |
6047 | Art thou born again? |
6047 | Art thou born again? |
6047 | Art thou not a graceless wretch? |
6047 | Art thou not it which hath dried the sea, the waters of the great deep, that hath made the depths of the sea a way for the ransomed to pass over?" |
6047 | Art thou taken? |
6047 | Art weary? |
6047 | As David said,"Shall I lift up mine yes to the hills? |
6047 | As Moses said, and that long before the law was given,"Sirs, ye are brethren, why do ye wrong one another?" |
6047 | As Paul saith, What communion hath light with darkness? |
6047 | As for example; Would a parishioner learn to be proud? |
6047 | As for instance at home; could not some of those called Baptists die in opposing infant baptism? |
6047 | As if he had said, Do you profess Christianity? |
6047 | As many as walk according to this rule: What rule? |
6047 | As soon as ever God had touched the jailer, he cries out,''Men and brethren, what must I do to be saved?'' |
6047 | As the sabbath of months, of years, and the jubilee? |
6047 | As to the query, What reason is there, why the Lord should suffer any of his ordinances to be lost? |
6047 | As to the second head, what need is there that the righteousness of Christ should be imputed, where men are righteous first? |
6047 | As touching the beauty and goodness that was in the object unto which they were allured; What was it? |
6047 | As who should say, Wherefore do I deny myself of those mercies and privileges that the men of this world enjoy? |
6047 | As"Ely said to Hannah, How long wilt thou be drunken? |
6047 | As, how many good men and good women do unawares, through their uncircumspectness, drive their own children down into the deep? |
6047 | As, who should say, My brethren, are you troubled and persecuted for your faith? |
6047 | Ask thy heart, What evil dost thou see in sin? |
6047 | At the Lord''s table, I do eat; what though? |
6047 | At this( as I said) you object, and say,''Did I ever find baptism a pest or plague to churches? |
6047 | Ay, but when didst thou see thyself a lost creature for want of faith in the son of Mary? |
6047 | Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
6047 | Because the neglect of the law will be sure to damn them; therefore wouldst thou put poor souls to follow that which will not save them? |
6047 | Because then it had been in vain for the Lord to have given the scriptures to teach men out of, either concerning himself or themselves: Why? |
6047 | Because''the children are partakers of flesh and blood; he also himself likewise took part of the same''; To what end? |
6047 | Being justified freely by his grace: How? |
6047 | Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
6047 | Believing what? |
6047 | Besides, if this be granted, why had not God respect to Cain''s offering, as well as to Abel''s? |
6047 | Besides, oppression makes a wise man mad; and when a man is mad what evils will he not do? |
6047 | Besides, the proposition is universal, why then should you be the chief intended? |
6047 | Besides, the threatening being pressed with an''How shall we escape?'' |
6047 | Besides, to what particular church was the epistle to the Hebrews wrote? |
6047 | Blessed are they that do make peace; for why? |
6047 | Both those of Peter, and the first of John? |
6047 | Brethren what profit is''t if a man saith That he hath faith, and hath not works; can faith Save him? |
6047 | But I ask, how came nature to be so weak, but through sin? |
6047 | But I fear I am lost and cast away, Sentence is past, and who reverse it may? |
6047 | But I say, suppose it should be granted, is it because reprobation made him incapable, or sin? |
6047 | But I say, what can the church do more to the sinners or open profane? |
6047 | But I say, where is thy love to thine enemy? |
6047 | But I say, wherein is the proposition offensive? |
6047 | But I say, who can tell, who can tell altogether, what and how much the Father delighted in his Son before the world began? |
6047 | But I say, who understandeth this? |
6047 | But I say, why did John call them vipers? |
6047 | But I would ask these men,''If the word of God came out from them? |
6047 | But Naomi replied, Wherefore will ye, My daughters, thus resolve to go with me? |
6047 | But again, Why should you be so angry with my brother, for joining of a sinner and a liar together? |
6047 | But all along Christ compareth his love to ours; now, why doth he so, if they be so much alike? |
6047 | But am I so? |
6047 | But are not good works the righteousness of faith? |
6047 | But are these words of faith? |
6047 | But are you out of that wilderness mentioned? |
6047 | But are you sure it is the same that we look for? |
6047 | But as Adam fell with us in him, so did he not by faith rise with us in him? |
6047 | But as to the matter in hand, What positive precept do they transgress that will not reject him that God bids us receive, if he want light in baptism? |
6047 | But by what rule then would you gather persons into church communion? |
6047 | But by what rule would you receive them into fellowship with yourselves? |
6047 | But can not the church, and every woman in it, build up themselves without their woman''s meetings? |
6047 | But can women no other way be built up in their most holy faith, but by meetings of their own without their men? |
6047 | But can you commit your soul to their ministry, and join with them in prayer; and yet not count them meet for other gospel privileges? |
6047 | But did this man rise again from the dead, that very man, with that very body wherewith he was crucified? |
6047 | But do kings use to die for captive slaves? |
6047 | But do not the scriptures make mention of a Christ within? |
6047 | But do you speak seriously, and in good earnest? |
6047 | But do you think it is because of the first? |
6047 | But do you think this is certain? |
6047 | But dost thou plead by thy righteousness, for mercy for thyself? |
6047 | But doth not a man bring forth fruit unto God, that walketh orderly according to the ten commandments? |
6047 | But doth that install it in that place and dignity, that was never intended for it? |
6047 | But doth this bloody city spill this blood by herself simply, as she is the adulterated whore? |
6047 | But farther, thou sayest; Is it not the whole mystery of salvation, God manifested in the flesh? |
6047 | But further: Do we not all agree, that men that preach the gospel should do it like workmen that need not be ashamed? |
6047 | But good Sir, are you now for unwritten verities? |
6047 | But good Sir, why so short- winded? |
6047 | But hath he no better thoughts of his own good deeds, which are by the law? |
6047 | But he answereth, What, mean ye to weep, and to break my heart? |
6047 | But he said, Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts? |
6047 | But hold, dost thou do it with the Publican''s heart, sense, dread and simplicity? |
6047 | But hold, stay; wherefore? |
6047 | But how are we by this man forgiven this? |
6047 | But how are we justified by this man''s obedience? |
6047 | But how came Diotrephes so lately into our parts? |
6047 | But how came the apostle by this confidence of his well- being and of his share in another world? |
6047 | But how can God respect a man, before he respect his offering? |
6047 | But how can that be, since no affliction for the present seems joyous? |
6047 | But how can that be, where the heart is not sanctified and made holy? |
6047 | But how comes this to be a SIGN of the approach of the ruin of Antichrist? |
6047 | But how could be either the one or the other, if the seventh day sabbath was taught to men by the light of nature, which is the moral law? |
6047 | But how could he be naked, when before he had made himself an apron? |
6047 | But how did he undertake them? |
6047 | But how dost thou know that thou shalt continue therein? |
6047 | But how indifferent? |
6047 | But how is it that they are there? |
6047 | But how is this similitude pertinent? |
6047 | But how little of this is found among men? |
6047 | But how long ago? |
6047 | But how must he take away the curse? |
6047 | But how must that be done? |
6047 | But how must this be done? |
6047 | But how shall Christ by this rod, sword, or spirit of his mouth, consume this wicked, this mystery of iniquity? |
6047 | But how shall I bring it to pass? |
6047 | But how shall I know that I am born again? |
6047 | But how shall kings do it? |
6047 | But how shall we know when this time is come? |
6047 | But how should I serve God? |
6047 | But how then doth it say, that the knowledge of God is manifested in them? |
6047 | But how then is he clear from having a hand in the death of him that perisheth? |
6047 | But how then must Jesus Christ, first save us from the filth? |
6047 | But how then must they see him? |
6047 | But how were they that had got the victory? |
6047 | But how will he make her naked? |
6047 | But how will you prove that there was a church, a rightly constituted church, at Rome, besides that in Aquila''s house? |
6047 | But how, or why doth the leaf, or the fig fall from the tree? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But how? |
6047 | But if I fly, some will blame me: what must I do now? |
6047 | But if faith doth so naturally cause good works, what then is the reason that God''s people find it so hard a matter to be fruitful in good works? |
6047 | But if indeed the first day of the week be the new christian sabbath, why is there no more spoken of its institution in the testament of Christ? |
6047 | But if it be changed, then how can it be the same? |
6047 | But is there a member who dares to violate them? |
6047 | But is there yet another reason why this holy duty should, in special as it is, be commanded to be performed on the first day of the week? |
6047 | But is there, therefore, no need at all of good works, because a man is justified before God without them? |
6047 | But is this a sign of the approach of the ruin of Antichrist? |
6047 | But is this all the wit thou hast? |
6047 | But may we not fly in a time of persecution? |
6047 | But might not God have kept Adam from inclining, if he would? |
6047 | But might they not be healed by humbling themselves? |
6047 | But my husband is an unbeliever; what shall I do? |
6047 | But now I would inquire: Had Israel done the commandment, if they had eaten the passover raw, or boiled in water? |
6047 | But now if other men should do as this man, how many universal churches should we have? |
6047 | But perhaps some may ask me, WHAT INIQUITY THEY MUST DEPART FROM THAT RELIGIOUSLY NAME THE NAME OF CHRIST? |
6047 | But perhaps thy heart is so hard, and thy mind so united to the pleasing of thy vile affections, that thou wilt say,''What care I for my servant? |
6047 | But put the case I had failed herein, Doth this warrant your unlawful practice? |
6047 | But saith the open profane, why can not we be reckoned saints also? |
6047 | But say you,"Did he put and end to the law for them who still live in transgression?" |
6047 | But say you,''We have now found an advocate for sin against God, in the breach of one of HIS holy commands?'' |
6047 | But say you,''Wherein lies the force of this man''s argument against baptism as to its place, worth, and continuance?'' |
6047 | But say you,''Who taught you to divide betwixt Christ and his precepts, that you word it at such a rate? |
6047 | But sayest thou, I will be righteous in myself that I may have wherewith to commend me to God, when I go to him for mercy? |
6047 | But says one, Would you have us singular? |
6047 | But secondly, I pray where was Christ when he spake those words? |
6047 | But shall I speak the truth for you? |
6047 | But shall he not lose his body before he come again? |
6047 | But shall we be sure of it? |
6047 | But since he can do so, why doth he suffer this, and that thing to appear, to act, and do so horribly repugnant to his word? |
6047 | But still the question is, Whether God by this his determination doth not lay a necessity on the creature to sin? |
6047 | But suppose they were all baptized, because they had light therein, what then? |
6047 | But thou wilt say unto me, Why do men profess the name of Christ that love not to depart from iniquity? |
6047 | But to lay open my folly at last thou sayest, Doth not the scripture say, Christ is within you, except ye be reprobates? |
6047 | But was not Adam unexpectedly surprised? |
6047 | But was that a sufficient shelter against either thorn or thistle? |
6047 | But were not these gentlemen more afraid of losing their own places and preferments, than of the king''s losing of his toll and custom? |
6047 | But what Jesus? |
6047 | But what acts of disobedience do we indulge them in? |
6047 | But what aileth the Pharisee? |
6047 | But what be these certain circumstances? |
6047 | But what be these other precepts? |
6047 | But what blessedness doth follow the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, to one that is yet ungodly? |
6047 | But what could not the law do? |
6047 | But what day is this? |
6047 | But what day? |
6047 | But what did the raven then do? |
6047 | But what do we more than talk of them? |
6047 | But what doth your arguing reprove?'' |
6047 | But what follows? |
6047 | But what follows? |
6047 | But what follows? |
6047 | But what if they that were stung, could not, because of the swelling of their face, look up to the brazen serpent? |
6047 | But what is committing of the soul to God? |
6047 | But what is impossible to a Creator? |
6047 | But what is it to a child? |
6047 | But what is it to be of the works of the law, or under the law? |
6047 | But what is it to believe in Christ: and what to have faith in his blood? |
6047 | But what is it to believe that he is Messias, or Christ? |
6047 | But what is it to turn from the law to the Lord? |
6047 | But what is the cause of all this slaying, and the reason of this abundance of corpses? |
6047 | But what is the spirit of the world? |
6047 | But what is there in my proposition, that men, considerate, can be offended at? |
6047 | But what is this doctrine? |
6047 | But what kind of being had the seventh day sabbath, and other Jewish rites and ceremonies, that by Christ''s resurrection were taken away? |
6047 | But what man in the world can do this whose heart is not seasoned with the love of God and the love of Christ? |
6047 | But what manner of nakedness was it? |
6047 | But what need I grant you, that which can not be proved? |
6047 | But what of that, since the wrinkles that are in their faces threaten not us but them? |
6047 | But what righteousness have you of your own, to which you so dearly are wedded, that it may not be let go, for the sake of Christ? |
6047 | But what saith it? |
6047 | But what saith the apostle? |
6047 | But what saith the jealous Lord? |
6047 | But what salvation? |
6047 | But what shall I do, I can not depart therefrom as I should? |
6047 | But what shall I do, who am so cold, slothful, and heartless, that I can not find any heart to do any work for God in this world? |
6047 | But what shall I say unto them? |
6047 | But what should I thus discourse of the degrees of the torments of the damned souls in hell? |
6047 | But what should men believe with the heart? |
6047 | But what should they believe? |
6047 | But what should we do with such kind of saints? |
6047 | But what things are they? |
6047 | But what unbecoming language is this for the children of the same father, members of the same body, and heirs of the same glory, to be accustomed to? |
6047 | But what was Sheshach? |
6047 | But what was the spirit of Diotrephes? |
6047 | But what''s the reason? |
6047 | But what, because they are not baptized, have they not Jesus Christ? |
6047 | But what, if when he hath used it, he still continueth dark about it; what will you advise him now? |
6047 | But what? |
6047 | But when? |
6047 | But whence came this but from an inward feeling by faith of the love of God, and of Christ, which passeth knowledge? |
6047 | But where are they here forbidden to teach them other truths before they be baptized? |
6047 | But where should we find him? |
6047 | But where were they taken, or about what were they found? |
6047 | But who knows all this? |
6047 | But why can you indulge the baptists in many acts of disobedience? |
6047 | But why could it not be that they should perish other where? |
6047 | But why did you not answer these parts of my argument? |
6047 | But why do YOU throw out FAITH? |
6047 | But why is covetousness called idolatry? |
6047 | But why it is said, Generations? |
6047 | But why must he be imposed upon? |
6047 | But why must the women have shame- facedness, since they live honestly as the men? |
6047 | But why not meddle with Cain, since he was a murderer? |
6047 | But why not? |
6047 | But why peace first? |
6047 | But why rejoice in this? |
6047 | But why should HE be rebuked, that said he was for Christ? |
6047 | But why so much offended at this? |
6047 | But why the seventh day? |
6047 | But why then did he thus abhor them? |
6047 | But why then were they baptized? |
6047 | But why then were they not circumcised? |
6047 | But why to Abel? |
6047 | But why was he crucified there for the sins of his children? |
6047 | But why was he true God and true man? |
6047 | But why was not all this done on the seventh day? |
6047 | But why would they take from us the Holy Scriptures? |
6047 | But why( some may say) must we come out? |
6047 | But why, I say, is this day, on which our Lord rose from the dead, nominated as it is? |
6047 | But why? |
6047 | But with the voice of my thanksgiving, I Will offer sacrifice to thee on high, And pay my vows which I have vow''d, each one, For why? |
6047 | But would you be imitating of, or accomplishing such a righteousness? |
6047 | But wouldest thou change places with them? |
6047 | But ye will say, Who are those ignorant persons, that shall find no favour at that day? |
6047 | But you ask me,''If outward and bodily conformity be become a crime?'' |
6047 | But you ask,''Is my peace maintained in a way of disobedience? |
6047 | But you ask,''Might they do so when they came into Canaan?'' |
6047 | But you bid me tell you,''What I mean by spirit baptism?'' |
6047 | But you descant; Is baptism one of the laws of Christ? |
6047 | But you may ask, How did God deal with sinners before this righteousness was actually in being? |
6047 | But you may ask, what is that righteousness, with which a Christian is made righteous before he doth righteousness? |
6047 | But you may say, how can you prove that conscience is not of the same nature, of the Spirit of Christ? |
6047 | But you object,''Must our love to the unbaptized indulge them in an act of disobedience? |
6047 | But you say, Doth it not lead to God all that follow it? |
6047 | But you tell me,''I use the arguments of the paedo- baptist, to wit, But where are infants forbidden to be baptized?'' |
6047 | But you will say, The scripture saith, he that descended is the same that ascended, which to me( say you) implies, none but the Spirit''s ascending? |
6047 | But you will say, What, will not the Lord have mercy on ignorant souls? |
6047 | But you will say, Who shall stand when he appears? |
6047 | But you will say, doth not the scripture say, that it is the Spirit of Christ that doth make manifest or convince of sin? |
6047 | But you will say, might they not be deceived? |
6047 | But you will say, upon what then was the threatening and the command to punish grounded? |
6047 | But you will say, what lies are those, that the devil beguileth poor souls withal? |
6047 | But"who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord?" |
6047 | But, Again, Wouldest thou have mercy for thy righteousness? |
6047 | But, I say, how will they fail? |
6047 | But, I say, if thou do it graciously, then a reward followeth;"For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? |
6047 | But, Sir, Are none but those of your way the public Christians? |
6047 | But, Sir, since you are not peremptory in your proof; how came you to be so absolute in your practice? |
6047 | But, Sir, who have I pleaded for, in the denial of any one ordinance of God? |
6047 | But, What, What hast thou done by thy righteousness? |
6047 | But, may some say, what good will it do a man to know that the love of Christ passeth knowledge? |
6047 | By his being able to judge by nature, that there is such a thing as sin; as Christ saith,"Why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?" |
6047 | By rest here, must needs be understood those not elect, because set one in opposition to the other; and if not elect, what then but reprobate? |
6047 | By what law? |
6047 | By which of the ten commandments is trusting to our own righteousness forbidden? |
6047 | By which professors seem willingly led, though against so many plain commands and examples, written as with a sun beam, that he that runs may read? |
6047 | Can a man be happy that is ignorant that he is hanging over hell by the poor weak thread of an uncertain life? |
6047 | Can a man be happy, that is ignorant that he is without God and Christ, and hope? |
6047 | Can no good thing come to us out of this? |
6047 | Can not we love their persons, parts, graces, but we must love their sins?'' |
6047 | Can olives, brethren, on a fig- tree grow, Or figs on vines? |
6047 | Can pride be where a soul for mercy craves? |
6047 | Can repentance be where godly sorrow is not? |
6047 | Can the same reason, or anything like it, for refusing baptism, be given now?'' |
6047 | Can we wonder that such a state of society was not long permitted to exist? |
6047 | Can we wonder that those who preached the holy, humbling, self- denying doctrines of the cross, were persecuted to the death? |
6047 | Can you build and leave out a stone in the foundation? |
6047 | Canst thou, after a due examination of thyself, say that as to these things thou art innocent and clear? |
6047 | Cast devils out, done wonders in the same? |
6047 | Christ indeed could mount up( Acts 1:9), but me, poor me, how shall I get thither? |
6047 | Civil commerce you will have with the worst, and what more have you with these? |
6047 | Consequently, who can understand the love that saves him from them? |
6047 | Consider, What conviction of thy goodness can the actions that flow from such a spirit give unto observers? |
6047 | Could the state have selected a fitter tool for their purposes? |
6047 | Counsel Second, Wouldest thou improve this love? |
6047 | Death quaketh, and destruction falleth down dead at our feet: What, then, can stand before us? |
6047 | Deep calleth unto deep: What''s that? |
6047 | Depart: what quite? |
6047 | Did Abel offer his best? |
6047 | Did Christ''s two- fold righteousness qualify him for that work of righteousness, that was of God designed for him to do? |
6047 | Did I say before, that religion is their pretence? |
6047 | Did I say before, that the God of glory is desirous to be seen of us? |
6047 | Did I say, it is fruitful? |
6047 | Did he finish his work thereon? |
6047 | Did not God know best what was best to do them good? |
6047 | Did they suffer? |
6047 | Didst thou believe, when thou saidst it, That God knew thy heart? |
6047 | Didst thou not blush when thou laidst it down? |
6047 | Do it therefore, and say, why should any thing have my heart but God, but Christ? |
6047 | Do men either Pluck grapes of thorns, or figs or thistles gather? |
6047 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6047 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6047 | Do not most decline these things when they either call for their purses or their persons to help in this and such like works as these? |
6047 | Do not publicans the same? |
6047 | Do not the rich men o''er you tyrannise; And hale ye to their courts; that worthy name By which you''re call''d do not they blaspheme? |
6047 | Do stocks or stones answer prayers? |
6047 | Do they lie too open to their spiritual foes? |
6047 | Do they say that that blood of his which was shed without the gates of Jerusalem, doth not wash away sin, yea, all sin from him that believes? |
6047 | Do they want a right frame of spirit? |
6047 | Do we know how our sins provoke God? |
6047 | Do we not see That all these things from us a fleeting be? |
6047 | Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? |
6047 | Do ye think that th''scripture saith in vain, The spirit that lusts to hate, doth in you reign? |
6047 | Do you allow their signing with the cross? |
6047 | Do you allow their sprinkling? |
6047 | Do you believe it? |
6047 | Do you delight to have your hand against every man?'' |
6047 | Do you long for the milk of the promises? |
6047 | Do you more to the openly prophane, yea, to all wizards and witches in the land? |
6047 | Do you not know that he is far more above us, than we are above our horse or mule that is without understanding? |
6047 | Do you not know that he may refuse to elect who he will, without abusing of them? |
6047 | Do you not reserve to yourself the liberty of judging what they say? |
6047 | Do you not see that the sceptre is departed from Judah? |
6047 | Do you not see that those things that are spoken of as forerunners of my coming, are accomplished? |
6047 | Do you not see the time that Daniel spake of is accomplished also? |
6047 | Do you now know, that the resurrection of the body, and glory to follow, is the very quintessence of the gospel of Jesus Christ? |
6047 | Do you suffer? |
6047 | Do you think it is seemly for the church to parrot it against her husband? |
6047 | Do you think that God gave the woman her hair, that she might deck herself, and set off her fleshly beauty therewith? |
6047 | Do you think your eyes dazzle? |
6047 | Do you want spiritual bread? |
6047 | Do you want strength against Satan''s temptations? |
6047 | Do you want strength of grace? |
6047 | Does he appear in his glory? |
6047 | Does he honour riches, and power, and wisdom, by descending in one of these classes? |
6047 | Dost keep thine eye upon what thou hast done, And yet hast licence to look on the sun? |
6047 | Dost think that such a sinner as thou art shall be heard of God? |
6047 | Dost thou Do well, said God, to be so angry now? |
6047 | Dost thou desire to be with them( Prov 24:1)? |
6047 | Dost thou know the God with whom now thou hast to do? |
6047 | Dost thou plead by thy righteousness for mercy for thyself? |
6047 | Dost thou profess the name of Christ, and dost thou pretend to be a man departing from iniquity? |
6047 | Dost thou profess the name of Christ, and dost thou pretend to be a man departing from iniquity? |
6047 | Dost thou religiously name the name of Christ? |
6047 | Dost thou see a soul that has the image of God in him? |
6047 | Dost thou see the vileness of thy heart, the fruit of sin? |
6047 | Dost thou show to others how thou lovest righteousness, by taking opportunities to do righteousness? |
6047 | Dost thou so covet more, as not to be Affected with the grace bestowed on thee? |
6047 | Dost thou suffer for righteousness''sake? |
6047 | Dost thou think, that God hath eyes of flesh, or that he seeth as man sees? |
6047 | Dost thou thus practise, because thou wouldest be taught to do outward acts of righteousness, and because thou wouldest provoke others to do so too? |
6047 | Dost want or meat, or drink, or cloth? |
6047 | Doth God find me so, when he seeth that the righteousness of his Son is upon me, being made over to me by an act of his grace? |
6047 | Doth a wanton eye argue shamefacedness? |
6047 | Doth he not here, by the lost sheep, mean the poor Publican? |
6047 | Doth he touch thee with is dirty garments; or doth he annoy thee with his stinking breath? |
6047 | Doth his posture of standing so like a man condemned offend thee? |
6047 | Doth not God by these things ofttimes call our sins to remembrance, and provoke us to amendment of life? |
6047 | Doth not the whole course of their way declare it to their face? |
6047 | Doth the law call for satisfaction for our sins? |
6047 | Doth the poor Publican stand to vex thee? |
6047 | Doth this prove that baptism is essential to church communion? |
6047 | Doth wanton talk argue chastity? |
6047 | Doth your hearts fail you? |
6047 | Elias indeed had a chariot sent him to ride in thither, and went up by it into that holy place( 2 Kings 2:11): but I, poor I, how shall I get thither? |
6047 | Else how can that assembly say AMEN at their prayer or giving of thanks? |
6047 | Enoch is there, because God took him( Gen 5:24), but as for me, how shall I get thither? |
6047 | Even thou that hast received the promise of forgiveness: How then can they do it with pleasure, who eat, and forget the Lord? |
6047 | FIRST, How they are to be considered? |
6047 | FOOTNOTE:[ 1]''Who is weak, and I am not weak? |
6047 | Fifthly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6047 | First, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6047 | First, Prithee when didst thou begin to be righteous? |
6047 | First, saith he, If women may praise God together for mercies received for the church of God, or for themselves? |
6047 | First,''Then came the Jews round about him, and said unto him, How long dost thou make us to doubt? |
6047 | For a brother in nature and religion to be so? |
6047 | For a man to be content with this kind of faith, and to look to go to salvation by it, what to God is a greater provocation? |
6047 | For as truly as thou sayest of thy fruitless tree, Cut it down, why doth it cumber the ground? |
6047 | For he asketh me very devoutly,''Whether any unbaptized persons were concerned in these epistles?'' |
6047 | For how can the servant of this my Lord talk with this my Lord? |
6047 | For if he did not heed who himself had baptized, much less did he heed who were baptized by others? |
6047 | For if it be the initiating ordinance, it entereth them into the church: What church? |
6047 | For such a man will thus conclude, that since the Creator of all is with him, what but creatures are there to be against him? |
6047 | For was it not pleasant to this hypocrite, think you, to speak thus well of himself at this time? |
6047 | For what glory is it, if when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? |
6047 | For what greater dignity can be put upon man''s righteousness, than to admit it? |
6047 | For what is God''s design in the work of conviction for sin, and in his awakening of the conscience about it? |
6047 | For what men? |
6047 | For what pain of death was his body capable of, when his soul was separate from it? |
6047 | For what''s the life of man? |
6047 | For what? |
6047 | For who wouldest thou have it; for another, or for thyself? |
6047 | For, First, Is it better that thou receive judgment in this world, or that thou stay for it to be condemned with the ungodly in the next? |
6047 | For, What iniquity is, who knows not? |
6047 | For, did Abel offer? |
6047 | For, pray, what was the flock, and who Christ''s sheep under the law, but the house and people of Israel? |
6047 | For, while a man remains faithless and ignorant of the gospel, to what doth his obedient temper of mind incline? |
6047 | Fourthly, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6047 | Friend, I did not ask thee why the Jews did put him to death? |
6047 | Friend, Who hath despised the day of small things? |
6047 | Friend, dost thou speak this as from thy own knowledge, or did any other tell thee so? |
6047 | Friend, what harm is it to join a dog and a wolf together? |
6047 | Friend, what is this to the purpose? |
6047 | Friend, will the law shew a man that his righteousness is sin and dung? |
6047 | From whence come wars and fights, come they not hence, Ev''n from th''inordinate concupiscence That in your members prompts to variance? |
6047 | Further, I make a question upon three scriptures, Whether all the saints, even in the primitive times, were baptized with water? |
6047 | Further, suppose I should grant this groundless notion, Were not the Jews in Old Testament times to enter the church by circumcision? |
6047 | Gaal mocked at Abimelech, and said, Who is Abimelech that we should serve him? |
6047 | God, or the Pharisee? |
6047 | Had he injured man at all? |
6047 | Had he notice beforehand, and warning of the danger? |
6047 | Had this Christ of God, our friend, given all he had to save us, had not his love been wonderful? |
6047 | Has he chosen that day? |
6047 | Has he concealed any of thy righteousness, or has he secretly informed against thee that thou art an hypocrite, and superstitious? |
6047 | Hast quite forgot how thou wast wo nt to pray, And cry out for forgiveness night and day? |
6047 | Hast thou a wife? |
6047 | Hast thou an heart to be sorry for this wickedness? |
6047 | Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?" |
6047 | Hast thou escaped? |
6047 | Hast thou fulfilled the whole law, and not offended in one point? |
6047 | Hast thou lost thy friend for the sake of thy profession? |
6047 | Hast thou made it thy business to give unto God the things that are God''s, and unto Caesar the things that are his, according as God has commanded? |
6047 | Hast thou purged thyself from the pollutions and motions of sin that dwell in the flesh, and work in thy own members? |
6047 | Hast thou taken delight in being defrauded and beguiled? |
6047 | Hast thou, for the sake of thy faith and profession thereof, lost thy part in the world? |
6047 | Hath God been so bountiful in making out himself about the supper, that few or none that own ordinances scruple it? |
6047 | Hath he said it, and shall he not bring it to pass?" |
6047 | Hath he spoken, and shall not make it good?'' |
6047 | Hath not man''s wisdom interposed to darken this part of God''s counsel? |
6047 | Hath that Christ that was with God the Father before the world was, no other body but his church? |
6047 | Hath the God of wisdom set them on foot among us? |
6047 | Hath the ministration of God no glory? |
6047 | Have I such an argument, in all my little book? |
6047 | Have it? |
6047 | Have they lost a good frame of heart? |
6047 | Have they lost their peace with the world? |
6047 | Have they lost their spiritual defence? |
6047 | Have they no more peace with this world? |
6047 | Have they not the means of grace? |
6047 | Have we not talked of what he did at the Red Sea, and in the land of Ham many years ago, and have we forgot him now? |
6047 | Have ye not read Of Job, how patiently he suffered? |
6047 | Have ye not seen in him what was God''s end; How he doth pity and great love extend? |
6047 | Have you commended your apprehensions soberly and submissively to those you call Independents and Presbyters? |
6047 | Have you learned to cry,''My Father?'' |
6047 | Have you not heard many complain that they are weary of church- communion, because of church contention? |
6047 | Have you not"in your flock a male?" |
6047 | Have you soberly, and submissively commended your apprehensions to those congregations in London, that are not of your persuasion in the case in hand? |
6047 | Have you the staggers? |
6047 | He begins with this question, Whether women fearing God may meet to pray together, and whether it be lawful for them so to do? |
6047 | He can not strut, vapour, and swagger as thou dost? |
6047 | He erreth in A CIRCUMSTANCE, thou errest in A SUBSTANCE; who must bear these errors? |
6047 | He saith not as the hypocrite,"Because I am innocent, surely his anger shall turn from me"( Jer 2:35); or"What have we spoken so much against thee?" |
6047 | He shall take of mine; What is that? |
6047 | He that hath by faith received the spirit of holiness, shall not he be holy? |
6047 | He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father; and how sayest thou then, Shew us the Father? |
6047 | He that is ungodly, hath a want of righteousness, even of the inward righteousness of works: but what must become of him? |
6047 | He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? |
6047 | He was God, a Creator, then; and is he not God now? |
6047 | He was wroth: and why? |
6047 | He will reckon them up so fast, and so fully, that thou wilt cry, Lord, when did I do this? |
6047 | He, in whose heart the Holy Spirit has raised the solemn inquiry, What must I do to be saved?'' |
6047 | Hence he saith,''Is Christ divided,''or separate from his servants? |
6047 | Hence such a time is rightly said to be a time to try us, or to find out what we are, and is there no good in this? |
6047 | Her plagues are death, and mourning, and famine, and fire( Rev 18:8); are these things to be overlooked? |
6047 | Her things are slain, and stink already, by the weapons that are made mention of before; what then will her carcase do? |
6047 | Here is no consideration of what capacity the people might be of, that were to be persecuted; but what matters what they are? |
6047 | Here now is a man an hungered, what must he feed upon? |
6047 | His, or the Pharisee''s? |
6047 | Hold, saith the apostle; stay a little here; first remember this, Is it meet to say unto God, What doest thou? |
6047 | How can a sense of thy own baseness, of the vileness of thy heart, and of the holiness of God, stand with such a carriage? |
6047 | How can he be a victor over himself that is led up and down by the nose by his own passions? |
6047 | How can he know so much as the extent of the love of Christ in common? |
6047 | How can he that carrieth himself basely in the sight of men, think he yet well behaveth himself in the sight of God? |
6047 | How can that man say, I love God, who from his very heart shrinketh from trusting in him? |
6047 | How did Abraham groan for Ishmael? |
6047 | How did this Christ bring in redemption for man? |
6047 | How do men come by this righteousness and everlasting life? |
6047 | How dost thou like thyself, as considered possessed with a body of sin, and as feeling and finding that sin worketh in thy members? |
6047 | How frenzily he imagines? |
6047 | How ill- favouredly do they look, that have their nose and lips eaten off with the canker? |
6047 | How is iniquity in thine eye, when severed from the guilt and punishment that attends it? |
6047 | How is it, dost thou show most mercy to thy dog, 36 or to thine enemy, to thy swine, or to the poor? |
6047 | How is the word buried under the clods of their hearts for months, yea years together? |
6047 | How long will Antichrist still hold up his head in this country? |
6047 | How look thy duties in thine eyes, I mean thy duties which thou doest in the service of God? |
6047 | How many are there in the world that pray for their children, and cry for them, and are ready to die[ for them]? |
6047 | How many are there that do not know that man consisteth of a body made of dust, and of an immortal soul? |
6047 | How many have they in all ages hanged, burned, starved, drowned, racked, dismembered, and murdered, both openly and in secret? |
6047 | How many prayers, sighs, and tears, are there wrung from their hearts upon this account? |
6047 | How much hast thou been grieved to see others break God''s law, and to find temptations in thyself to do it? |
6047 | How much hast thou been grieved to see others break God''s law, and to find temptations in thyself to do it? |
6047 | How much hath the peace of Christians been broken by an uncharitable interpretation of words and actions? |
6047 | How much more then is he merciful and gracious, even in but mentioning terms of reconciliation? |
6047 | How much more then must we needs be at loss as to the fullness of the knowledge of the love of Christ? |
6047 | How needful is it, then, that we endeavour''the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace?'' |
6047 | How often have they sustained[ thee in] thy hunger, clothed thy nakedness? |
6047 | How say you to these things, Do you make an open profession of them without dissembling? |
6047 | How shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious? |
6047 | How should the desires depart from it with that fervency as they should? |
6047 | How should the soul abhor it as it should? |
6047 | How shouldest thou rejoice, that the same faith should dwell both in thy parents and thee? |
6047 | How sick art thou of sin? |
6047 | How then can God put any trust in such people, or how can remission be extended to us for the sake of that? |
6047 | How then can this sabbath now be kept? |
6047 | How then hath every man Christ, or the light of Christ within him? |
6047 | How then shall it be thought that they should be so silly, to turn a company of weak women loose to be abused by the fallen angels? |
6047 | How then, if God should cast you into Turkey, where Mahomet reigns as Lord? |
6047 | How then? |
6047 | How therefore, is the knowledge of the true Christ to be attained unto, that we may be saved by him? |
6047 | How ungainly he carries it under convictions, counsels, and his present apprehension of things? |
6047 | How was Isaac and Rebecca grieved for the miscarriage of Esau? |
6047 | How was the bloody spirit of Saul trod down, when David met him at the mouth of the cave, and also at the hill Hachilah( 1 Sam 24; 26)? |
6047 | How was the hostile spirit of Esau trod down of God, when he came out to meet his poor naked brother, with no less than four hundred armed men? |
6047 | How, not tempted? |
6047 | How? |
6047 | I am Joseph your own brother; And doth my father live? |
6047 | I am baptiz''d, what then? |
6047 | I am not of the number of them that say,"What profit should we have if we pray unto God?" |
6047 | I answer, though I have not asserted it, yet let me ask, which is more odious, hell or sin? |
6047 | I ask again, wherein dost thou think the blessedness of heaven consists? |
6047 | I ask thee how it looks, and how thou likest it, suppose there were no guilt or punishment to attend thy love to, or commission of it? |
6047 | I ask, What should it do there before, or to what purpose is it there, if it be not acted? |
6047 | I ask, did he tell you so? |
6047 | I believe that Christ will save me; what hurt is this to my neighbour? |
6047 | I have often been amazed in my mind at this text, for how could Jesus Christ have said such a word if he had not been able to perform it? |
6047 | I have told you, that this, though it were granted, cometh not up to the question; for we ask not,''whether they were so baptized? |
6047 | I know the wise men of this world, of whom there are many, will say as to what I now press you unto; Who can shew us any good in it? |
6047 | I love Christ because he will save me; what hurt is this to any? |
6047 | I marvel what injury the Lord Jesus hath done this man, that he should have such indifferent thoughts of coming to God by him? |
6047 | I might further add, how often have we agreed in our judgment? |
6047 | I remember the question that God asked Job,"Where,"saith he,"wast thou when I laid the foundation of the earth? |
6047 | I remember what Abner said to Asahel,"Turn thee aside, from following me; wherefore should I smite thee to the ground? |
6047 | I say again, should any so conclude hence, would not all experience prove him void of truth? |
6047 | I say how easily might he have said this, and then have popt in those two verses above quoted, and so have killed the old one? |
6047 | I say, Art thou a Pharisee? |
6047 | I say, How easily might they thus have objected? |
6047 | I say, What hast thou given to God thereby? |
6047 | I say, was it not worth being in the furnace and in the den to see such things as these? |
6047 | I say, what will such say when they shall read that the Publican did only acknowledge his iniquity, and found grace and favour at the hand of God? |
6047 | I say, what wilt thou say to this? |
6047 | I say, where is the honour they should put upon them? |
6047 | I say, why are things thus left with us? |
6047 | I say, will thy conscience justify thee here? |
6047 | I say, wouldst thou go to heaven, because it is a place that is holy, or because it is a place remote from the pains of hell? |
6047 | I suppose they did commence much together; for else with whom should this beast make war, and how should the church escape? |
6047 | I then demand what precept bids you do this? |
6047 | I went out from you full, but now I come, As it hath pleased God, quite empty home: Why then call ye me Naomi? |
6047 | I will for this worship Christ as he has bid me; what hurt is this to anybody? |
6047 | I wold know by what scripture you do it? |
6047 | If God be for us, who can be against us?--Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God''s elect? |
6047 | If God, when man had broke the law, had yet with all severity kept the world to the utmost condition of it, had he then been unjust? |
6047 | If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil; but if well, why smitest thou me? |
6047 | If Samson''s riddle was so puzzling, what shall we think of this? |
6047 | If a sense of some sin,[ for who sees all? |
6047 | If any say, that these things may argue pride as well as carnal lusts; well, but why are they proud? |
6047 | If heaven has gates, and they shall be shut, how wilt thou go in thither? |
6047 | If it be asked, Who did appoint that meeting made mention of in Acts 12:12? |
6047 | If it be good and godly, why may it not be accepted? |
6047 | If it be said water baptism is not there intended, let them shew me how many baptisms there are besides water baptism? |
6047 | If it be, why is it not embraced? |
6047 | If it cost Lot''s wife dear for but looking back, shall not it cost them much dearer, that are going back, that are gone back again? |
6047 | If mercy, what mercy? |
6047 | If no, do you not dissemble? |
6047 | If not, how do they differ? |
6047 | If so, I ask, dost thou, according to the exhortation here,''Depart from iniqnity?'' |
6047 | If so; why do you so much dissemble with all the world, in print; to pretend you submit to others''judgment, and yet abide to condemn their judgments? |
6047 | If the children of God shall''scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly, and the sinner appear?'' |
6047 | If the conduct of many professors were so vile, as there can be no doubt but that it was, how gross must have been that of the openly profane? |
6047 | If the counsel of Gamaliel was good when given to the enemies of God''s people, why not fit to be given to Christians themselves? |
6047 | If the dead rise not, what shall I be the better for all my trouble that here I meet with for the gospel of Christ? |
6047 | If the very looks of God be so terrible, what will his blows be, think you? |
6047 | If there be a difference in the light, show it wherein; whether in the nature, or otherwise?" |
6047 | If therefore all the light that is in thee Be darkness, how great must that darkness be? |
6047 | If they ask what light? |
6047 | If they differ, where lieth the difference? |
6047 | If they farther ask, why, what is that? |
6047 | If they say, they retain the day, but change their manner of observation thereof; I ask, who has commanded them so to do? |
6047 | If this be faith,( sayest thou) to profess him born, dead, risen and ascended without, then is there any unbeliever in England? |
6047 | If this be so, then what should they do here, Who in their antic pranks of pride appear? |
6047 | If this kind of worship may be performed, without their conduct and government? |
6047 | If thou say, because God hath not chosen them, as well as chosen others: I answer,''Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
6047 | If what be possible? |
6047 | If ye be buffeted for your faults, for what God''s word calls faults, what thank have you from God, or good men, though you take it patiently? |
6047 | If you bid him wait, do you not encourage him to live in sin, as much as I do? |
6047 | If you say no, as it is your wonted course; then again I ask you, what that was in which he did bear the sins of his children? |
6047 | If"judgment must begin at the house of God,--what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
6047 | In Job''s day this was bewailed, that none or but a few said,"Where is God my maker, who giveth songs in the night?" |
6047 | In love to God, in love to men, in holy love, in love unfeigned? |
6047 | In the faith of what? |
6047 | Is Antichrist down and dead to ought but your faith? |
6047 | Is Christ then the image of the Father, simply, as considered of the same divine and eternal excellency with him? |
6047 | Is any fountain of so strange a nature, At once to send forth sweet and bitter water? |
6047 | Is he in health, or doth he cease to be? |
6047 | Is he that is a servant to corruption a victor? |
6047 | Is he that is led away with divers lusts a victor? |
6047 | Is he therefore the author of your perishing, or his eternal reprobation either? |
6047 | Is his heel taken in the spider''s web? |
6047 | Is it an inward one? |
6047 | Is it as separate from these, beauteous, or ill- favoured? |
6047 | Is it because I have not accepted thy offering? |
6047 | Is it because I love holiness? |
6047 | Is it because the grace that he receiveth differeth from the grace that the elect are saved by? |
6047 | Is it because they think themselves unworthy of their holy fellowship? |
6047 | Is it because they think themselves unworthy of their holy fellowship? |
6047 | Is it because thou wouldst be saved from hell, or because thou wouldst be freed from sin? |
6047 | Is it by something done within them, or by something done without them?" |
6047 | Is it by something that is done within them, or by something done without them? |
6047 | Is it covetousness? |
6047 | Is it fair to make the necessity of a woman in bondage a law to women at liberty? |
6047 | Is it fleshly lusts? |
6047 | Is it for righteousness''sake that thou sufferest? |
6047 | Is it for the sake of righteousness that thou sufferest? |
6047 | Is it not a wicked thing to make bars to communion, where God hath made none? |
6047 | Is it not a wickedness to make that a wall of division betwixt us which God never commanded to be so? |
6047 | Is it not better that we bear those tokens and marks in our flesh that bespeak us to belong to Christ, than those that declare us to be none of his? |
6047 | Is it not common now- a- days, for parents to be brought into bondage and servitude by their children? |
6047 | Is it not reasonable that man should believe God in the proffer of the gospel and life by it? |
6047 | Is it not the least in thy thoughts? |
6047 | Is it not to trick up the body? |
6047 | Is it our flesh that hangeth on our bones, which lusteth against the spirit? |
6047 | Is it possible that he should heedlessly enter the vortex, and be again drawn into wretchedness? |
6047 | Is it possible that this tender, thus offered to the reprobate, should by him be thus received and embraced, and he live thereby? |
6047 | Is it so to the present day under a faithful ministry? |
6047 | Is it that our hearts might be estranged from him, and that we still should love the world? |
6047 | Is it that we should live by sense? |
6047 | Is it the substance, is it the thing signified? |
6047 | Is it their duty to help to carry on prayer in public assemblies with men, as they? |
6047 | Is not each thing we have a dying? |
6047 | Is not such a day, the day that bends us, humbleth us, and that makes us bow before God, for our faults committed in our prosperity? |
6047 | Is not that the very entering ordinance? |
6047 | Is not the life much more Than meat; Is not the body far before The clothes thereof? |
6047 | Is not the light of God sufficient in itself, to lead to god all that follow it, yea, or nay? |
6047 | Is not the secrets of thy heart open unto him? |
6047 | Is not this blasphemy? |
6047 | Is not this now far off from some professors in the world? |
6047 | Is not this to condemn God, that thou mightest be righteous? |
6047 | Is she drowned I tro? |
6047 | Is she lost? |
6047 | Is she not to be silent before him, and to look to his laws, rather than her own fictions? |
6047 | Is that very Man, with that very body, within you, yea, or no? |
6047 | Is the fault in God, if any perish? |
6047 | Is the truth? |
6047 | Is the very being of sin rooted out of thy tabernacle? |
6047 | Is the whole world set against thee for thy love to God, to Christ, his cause, and righteousness? |
6047 | Is there any great harm in that? |
6047 | Is there more precepts or precedents for the supper, than baptism? |
6047 | Is there more reason, more equity, more holiness in thy traditions, than in the holy, and just, and good commandments of God? |
6047 | Is there no precept for this practice, that it must be thus despised, as a matter of little use? |
6047 | Is there no way to come to God but by the faith of him? |
6047 | Is there not a cause, saith he, lies bleeding upon the ground, and no man of heart or spirit to put a check to the bold blasphemer? |
6047 | Is there nothing of God, of his wisdom and power and goodness to be seen in thunder, and lightning, in hailstones? |
6047 | Is there unrighteousness with God? |
6047 | Is this the righteousness you would imitate? |
6047 | Is this the way of your retaliation? |
6047 | Is thy body to be disfigured, dismembered, starved, hanged, or burned for the faith and profession of the gospel? |
6047 | Is thy life at stake-- is that like to go for thy profession, for thy harmless profession of the gospel? |
6047 | Is wisdom to die with you? |
6047 | Is''t not a shame, a stinking shame to be Cast forth God''s vineyard as a barren tree? |
6047 | It is beset everywhere with evil angels, who would rob thee of thy soul, What now? |
6047 | It is counted a heinous crime for a man to run his sword at the picture of a king, how much more to shed the blood of the image of God? |
6047 | It learnt, It learnt: But of who but of its dam, or of the lioness to whom she had put it to learn to do such things? |
6047 | Jesus also( saith the apostle) that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered: Where? |
6047 | Labour to be patient under this mighty hand of God, and be not hasty to say, When will the rod be laid aside? |
6047 | Let these things learn us to cease from man,"whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be accounted of?" |
6047 | Lights upon a hill, and candles on a candlestick, and shall not they shine? |
6047 | Look again,"Hast thou an arm like God"( Job 40:9), an arm like his for length and strength? |
6047 | Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth'': Why, who art thou? |
6047 | Lord,"who can understand his errors?" |
6047 | Lord,"who knoweth the power of thine anger? |
6047 | Lord,"who knoweth the power of thine anger?" |
6047 | Make( saith Christ) the tree good, and his fruit good; or the tree evil, and his fruit evil: Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
6047 | Manoah said, Now let thy words be true; How shall we use the child, What must we do? |
6047 | Manoah then arose, and went his way, And when he came, he said, Art thou the man That spakest to my wife? |
6047 | Mark how David handleth the messenger that brought him tidings of the death of Saul: says he, How dost thou know that Saul is dead? |
6047 | Mark them; for what? |
6047 | Mark,''a just man,''''a righteous man,''''his righteous soul,''& c. But how obtained he this character? |
6047 | May I not say before God? |
6047 | May a man be a visible saint without light therein? |
6047 | May he have a good conscience without light therein? |
6047 | May you indeed receive persons into the church unprepared for the Lord''s supper; yea, unprepared for that, with other solemn appointments? |
6047 | Might not their eyes dazzle, and they might think they did see such a thing, when indeed there was no such matter? |
6047 | Moreover, I would ask with what face thou canst look the Lord Jesus in the face, whose name thou hast profaned by thine iniquity? |
6047 | Must God be called to an account by you, why he giveth more light about the supper than baptism? |
6047 | Must I be a Christian, says the Jew? |
6047 | Must a gift, and a little of the glory of the butterfly, make thee that thou shalt not do for, and honour to, thy father and mother? |
6047 | Must thy reason, nay, thy lust, be the ruler, orderer, and disposer of his grace? |
6047 | Must we go to hell, and be damned, for want of faith in water baptism? |
6047 | My fifth query was,"Is that very man with that very body within you, yea, or no?" |
6047 | My last argument, you say, is this:''The world may wonder at your carriage to these unbaptized persons, in keeping them out of communion?'' |
6047 | My second query was,"What is the church of God redeemed by from the curse of law? |
6047 | My seventh query was,"Hath that Christ that was with God the Father before the world was, no other body but his church?" |
6047 | Namely, which Peter spake: This is the way in which the Spirit is given? |
6047 | Nay rather, will not this, like a millstone about thy neck, drown thee in the deeps of hell? |
6047 | Nay, do not even these things declare that you would take it away if you could? |
6047 | Nay, dost thou know what original sin means? |
6047 | Nay, doth not this argue, that thy heart is a rotten, cankered, and besotted heart? |
6047 | Nay, in this I will assert nothing, but rather inquire:--What hast thou gained by all this thy righteousness? |
6047 | Nay, what petition of any kind is there in thy vain- glorious oration from first to last? |
6047 | Nay, you must make two questions of this one; that is, what is it for faith to come, and in what manner doth it come? |
6047 | Need I read you a lecture? |
6047 | Neither is baptism any thing? |
6047 | No; the poor, the despised in this world, claim kindred with him--''Is not this the carpenter''s son?'' |
6047 | No? |
6047 | Noah and Lot, who so holy as they, in the day of their affliction? |
6047 | Noah and Lot, who so idle as they in the day of their prosperity? |
6047 | Nor can any man propound such an essential way to cut off boasting as this, which is of God''s providing: for what has man here to boast of? |
6047 | Not sullenly saying like that wicked king, Why should I wait on the Lord any longer? |
6047 | Nothing of this hath been done by him in this life, and therefore how can any such be recorded for him in the book of life? |
6047 | Now I will add, but what if he that can give a shilling, giveth nothing? |
6047 | Now do you call conscience the light of Christ? |
6047 | Now dost thou mean the Spirit of Christ? |
6047 | Now if he means their ordinary sabbaths, or that called the seventh day sabbath, why doth he join the winter thereto? |
6047 | Now if it be asked, What promise is entailed to our first day sabbath? |
6047 | Now if the Captain, their king Apollion, be made to yield, how can his followers stand their ground? |
6047 | Now if these things be so, how can the love that saveth us from them be known or understood to the full? |
6047 | Now if you would know who this Lord Jesus is, look into Acts 10:28 and you shall see it was Jesus of Nazareth; would you know who that was? |
6047 | Now let the man that professes the name of Christ religiously, consider with himself, unto what sin or vanity am I most inclined; Is it pride? |
6047 | Now necessity walks about the streets, crying, Who is on the Lord''s side? |
6047 | Now saith reason, how shall I come thither? |
6047 | Now seeing the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ is so nigh, even at the doors, what doth this speak to all sorts of people( under heaven) but this? |
6047 | Now some may say, But what shall we do to depart from iniquity? |
6047 | Now the Pharisee, like Haman, saith in his heart, To whom would the king delight to do honour, more than to myself? |
6047 | Now the Spirit of Christ that leads also, but whither? |
6047 | Now the question is, who shall prevail? |
6047 | Now then, did the Publican this of his own head, or from his now mind? |
6047 | Now this is a daring thing: I know their lies, saith he; and shall he not recompense for this? |
6047 | Now this righteousness, the apostle casteth away, as was shewn before;''Not having mine own righteousness( saith he) which is of the law''; why? |
6047 | Now we are come to the pinch, viz., Whether it be that of water, or no? |
6047 | Now wherein doth it appear that he was without spot and blemish, but as he walked in the law? |
6047 | Now, I say, when this part of the book of life shall be opened, what can be found in it, of the good deeds and heaven- born actions of wicked men? |
6047 | Now, how then do you give them their liberty? |
6047 | Now, if he can not know them, from what principle should he will them? |
6047 | Now, if when she had things to trade with, her dealers left her; how shall she think of a trade, when she has nothing to traffic with? |
6047 | Now, shall a soul where the word and Spirit of Christ dwells, be a soul without good works? |
6047 | Now, when thou hast thought on these things fairly, answer thyself in these few questions: Is not this arrogancy? |
6047 | O that saying of God to them of old,"Why criest thou for thine affliction? |
6047 | O what thunderings and lightnings, what earthquakes and tempests, will there be in every damned soul, at the opening of this book? |
6047 | Observe, I am commanded to believe, but what should I believe? |
6047 | Of that which is sown, or of that which was never sown? |
6047 | Of what use are these expressions, if the soul of Christ suffered not, if it suffered not when separated from the body? |
6047 | One reads, he prays, he catechises too; But doth he nothing else, what doth he do? |
6047 | Or are we only out of that Egyptian darkness, that in baptism have got the start of our brethren? |
6047 | Or are you afraid lest the truth should invade your quarters?'' |
6047 | Or art thou like the ostrich whom God hath deprived of wisdom, and has hardened her heart against her young? |
6047 | Or art thou one a going backward thither? |
6047 | Or do they altogether make but one Spirit of Christ? |
6047 | Or do you count all that yourselves have no hand in, done to your disparagement? |
6047 | Or do you look upon Jesus at that time to be but a shadow, or type of some what that was afterwards to be done within? |
6047 | Or dost thou count they were but painted fears Which from thine eyes did squeeze so many tears? |
6047 | Or dost thou sideling go, and would''st not be Suspected? |
6047 | Or dost thou think that God is at play with thee, and that he threateneth but in jest? |
6047 | Or dost thou wink, because thou would''st not see? |
6047 | Or has it the smell or savour of such a thing? |
6047 | Or have ye not read in the law, how that on the sabbath days the priests in the temple profaned the sabbath, and are blameless?'' |
6047 | Or how sincerely righteous they were whom God justified as ungodly? |
6047 | Or if he ask a fish, will he bestow A serpent? |
6047 | Or if he looks no further than to horses, what will he do at the swellings of Jordan( Jer 12:5)? |
6047 | Or if it came to them only?'' |
6047 | Or if they had offered that offering, that was to be burnt as a sin- offering, otherwise than it was commanded? |
6047 | Or makes as if he would not reconcile To thee again? |
6047 | Or must they neglect the weightier matters, because they want mint, and anise, and cummin? |
6047 | Or shall it come to save us? |
6047 | Or the epistle of James? |
6047 | Or was it possible but that after a while these fig- leaves should have become rotten, and turned to dung? |
6047 | Or what falsehood doth it command thee to receive for truth? |
6047 | Or what if a man should act now as a son, rather than simply as a creature endued with a principle of reason? |
6047 | Or what man is there of you, if his son Shall ask him bread, will he give him a stone? |
6047 | Or what shadow now is left in it since its institution as to divine service is taken long since from it? |
6047 | Or what should be the object of my faith in the matter of my justification with God? |
6047 | Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? |
6047 | Or whether such think that Christ Jesus was subject to be tainted by the badness of the place, had he been there? |
6047 | Or whether that day, as a sabbath, was afterwards by the apostles imposed upon the churches of the Gentiles? |
6047 | Or whether, when the scripture says, God is in hell, it is any disparagement to him? |
6047 | Or who can save alive, when the maker of the world is set against them? |
6047 | Or why must the old sabbath be joined to this new ministration? |
6047 | Or"Shall any teach God knowledge?" |
6047 | Or, How could God in justice give it to a person, that by the law stood condemned, before they were quitted from that condemnation? |
6047 | Or, are these such as may better be broken, than for want of light to forbear baptism with water? |
6047 | Or, are you become so high in your own phantasies, that none have, or are to have but private means of grace? |
6047 | Or, as another prophet has it,"Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
6047 | Or, how can that man say, I would glorify God, who in his very heart refuseth to stand and fall by his mercy? |
6047 | Or, is this the way that thou takest to mortify sin? |
6047 | Or, must their graces be increased by none but private means? |
6047 | Or, must we now be afraid to say that Christ is better than water baptism? |
6047 | Or, ought none but them that are baptized to have the public means of grace? |
6047 | Or, whether every saint in some sort, hath not the keys of the kingdom of heaven, which are the Scriptures and their power? |
6047 | Our author, perhaps, will say, I have not spoken to his question; which was,"Whether women, fearing God, may meet to pray together? |
6047 | Pilate''s question,"What is truth?" |
6047 | Poor wretch, quoth the Pharisee to the Publican, What comest thou for? |
6047 | Pray then, and watch, be thou no drowsy sleeper, Grudge, nor refuse, to be thy brother''s keeper, Seest thou thy brother''s graces at an ebb? |
6047 | Presently with envy they are enraged and cry,"Dost thou not know that every man hath a measure of the spirit given to him? |
6047 | Prithee let me know Thy state? |
6047 | Proof.--"Who hath ascended up into heaven, or descended? |
6047 | Q. Hath he indeed made amends for sin? |
6047 | Quest.--But how( may some say) doth the devil make his delusions take place in the hearts of poor creatures? |
6047 | Quest.--But you will say, doth not the scripture make mention of a Christ within? |
6047 | Reader, can you solve Mr. Bunyan''s riddle? |
6047 | Reader, in the sight of god, let the heart- searching inquiry of the apostle''s be yours; Lord, is it I? |
6047 | Rejoicing in spirit for the hope of the life to come by Christ, who will that harm? |
6047 | Return again, my daughters, go your way, For I''m too old to marry: should I say I''ve hope? |
6047 | SECONDLY, What death they must die? |
6047 | Samson withstood his Delilah for a while, but she got the mastery of him at the last; why so? |
6047 | Say I this of myself? |
6047 | Says Satan, dost thou not know that thou hast horribly sinned? |
6047 | Says Satan, dost thou not know, that thou art one of the vilest in all the pack of professors? |
6047 | Says Satan, doth not thy conscience tell thee that thou art and hast been more base than any of thy fellows can imagine thee to be? |
6047 | Second, But you will say, is there a man made mention of here? |
6047 | Second, The second thing is, who are they that are carried away with this delusion, and why? |
6047 | Secondly, In the time of Elias, which time also was typical of this, what church was there to be seen in Israel? |
6047 | Secondly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed, and must she have an end? |
6047 | Secondly, by whom, and to what, he that is weak in the faith is to be received? |
6047 | Seth then was no better than we by nature, but came into the world in the blood of his mother''s filth:"What is man, that he should be clean? |
6047 | Seth, saith the Spirit, was set in the stead of Abel, there as forlorn, to defend religion: Must he not now be swallowed up? |
6047 | Seventhly, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6047 | Shall God display his glory before us under the character and title of a Creator, and shall we yet fear man? |
6047 | Shall God love me a sinner? |
6047 | Shall God love, shall he keep his faith to me? |
6047 | Shall God the only wise, be arraigned at the bar of thy blind reason, and there be judged and condemned for his acts done in eternity? |
6047 | Shall another man pray for this, one that knew the goodness and benefit of it, and shall not I meditate upon it? |
6047 | Shall pride be found among redeemed slaves? |
6047 | Shall saints, then, like slaves, be afraid of their God, the Creator; of their own God, when he rendeth the heavens, and comes down? |
6047 | Shall the beast stand glorying over them while they are dead, with his feet in their neck? |
6047 | Shall the devil''s kingdom be united, and shall Christ''s be divided? |
6047 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?'' |
6047 | Shall this be the burden of the song of heaven? |
6047 | Shall we deserve correction? |
6047 | Shalt thou indeed abide the melting and washing of this day? |
6047 | Should I this night conceive a son? |
6047 | Should one say to some, Art not thou the man that I once saw crying under a sermon, that I once, heard cry out, What must I do to be saved? |
6047 | Sixthly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6047 | So that the question is not, Do I find that I am righteous? |
6047 | So then, Doth the law call for righteousness? |
6047 | So, then, what is the axe, that it should boast itself against him that heweth therewith? |
6047 | Some of the things of God that are excellent, have not been approved by some of the saints: What then? |
6047 | Studies that yield far less profit than this, how close are they pursued, by some who have adapted themselves thereunto? |
6047 | Such as are self- evident or evident of themselves; to what? |
6047 | Suppose all, if all these churches were baptized, what then? |
6047 | Suppose he shall against thee shut the door, Knock thou the louder, and cry out the more; What if he makes thee there to stand a while? |
6047 | Tell me, I say, by this text, whether is here intended the sins of all that shall be saved? |
6047 | That it cleaves to the best, who knows not? |
6047 | That it is disgraceful to profession, who knows not? |
6047 | That of David is for this remarkable,"Who am I,[ said he] and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort? |
6047 | That they should lie and rot in their grave eternally? |
6047 | That they would put off the old man; what is that? |
6047 | That this must be so urged for their excuse: Hath God been more sparing in making out his mind in the one, rather than the other? |
6047 | That which we read is this;''Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?'' |
6047 | That, because these several things will convince of sin, therefore will they needs be the Spirit of Christ? |
6047 | The Godhead is indeed invisible; how then is Christ the image of it? |
6047 | The Pharisees, for that they professed religion, but walked not answerable thereto, unto what doth Christ compare them but to serpents and vipers? |
6047 | The Ranters would profess that they were without sin: and how far short of his opinion are the Quakers? |
6047 | The answer to the inquiry,"What is man?" |
6047 | The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? |
6047 | The forgiveness of sins: But what is meant by forgiveness? |
6047 | The guilt of blood who can bear? |
6047 | The inquiry is pursued a step farther,"Can those who differ with me be saved?" |
6047 | The inquiry was then, as, alas, it is too frequent now, Are there many that be saved? |
6047 | The law is not of faith, why then should grace be by Christians expected by observation of the law? |
6047 | The law of Christ is,"Is any sick among you? |
6047 | The man also at the touching of the bones of Elisha? |
6047 | The promise is, that Babylon shall be destroyed: And do we hold our tongues? |
6047 | The question is, Do not the scriptures make mention of a Christ within? |
6047 | The question then is, whether the elect and reprobate receive a differing grace? |
6047 | The second part of the inquiry is, to what he that is weak in the faith is to be received? |
6047 | The smith, what is he? |
6047 | The subject I should have preached upon, even then when the constable came, was,''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6047 | The tail, says the Holy Ghost, draws them down; draws down even the stars of heaven; but whither doth he draw them? |
6047 | The thing formed may not say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
6047 | The united are all the faithful in one body; into whom? |
6047 | The waster, what is that? |
6047 | Their minds were blinded, saith the text: Whose minds? |
6047 | Then I asked him which was his first coming? |
6047 | Then Israel said, Why were you so unkind To say you had a brother left behind? |
6047 | Then Naomi said, Shall I not, my daughter, Seek rest for thee, that thou do well hereafter? |
6047 | Then he inquired if they all were well, And said, When you were here I heard you tell Of an old man, your father, how does he? |
6047 | Then said she, How canst thou pretend to love me, When thus thy doing towards me disprove thee? |
6047 | Then said the men of Judah, for what reason Are you come up against us at this season? |
6047 | Then said they, We entreat thee let us know, For whose cause we this evil undergo, Whence comest thou? |
6047 | Then said they, What''s thy riddle, let us know? |
6047 | Then unto her, her mother- in- law did say, In what field hast thou been to glean to- day? |
6047 | Then were the men exceedingly afraid; And, wherefore hast thou done this thing? |
6047 | Then what doth this speak to the Lord''s own people? |
6047 | Then what mean they, who were to appearance once come out, but now are going thither again? |
6047 | Then what will become of all the profane, ignorant, scoffers, self- righteous, proud, bastard- professors in the world? |
6047 | Then what will become of all those that creep into the society of God''s people without a wedding garment on? |
6047 | Then what will become of all those that mock at the second coming of the Man Christ, as do the Ranters, Quakers, drunkards, and the like? |
6047 | Then will not you yourself confess, that he is deluded, that is persuaded to follow that light that can not reveal Christ unto him? |
6047 | There is but one law- giver, That''s able to destroy and to deliver; Who then art thou that dost condemn thy neighbour? |
6047 | Therefor, speak plainly; Dost thou believe that that man Christ Jesus is ascended from his people in his person? |
6047 | Therefore is that in the Psalms read both ways, shall I look to the mountains? |
6047 | Therefore to answer this, here we have a breadth, a spreading breadth;"I spread my skirt over thee": But how far? |
6047 | Therefore try a little, Do they slight God''s Christ, which is the Son of the Virgin? |
6047 | They are indeed reprobates who have not Christ within them; but now, how is thy folly manifest? |
6047 | They are the salt of the earth, shall not they be seasoning? |
6047 | They spake not aright, saying, what have I done? |
6047 | They:--Who? |
6047 | Thinkest thou not, who readest these lines, that all of these who had before committed their soul to God to keep were the fittest folk to die? |
6047 | Thinkest thou this to be right? |
6047 | Thinkest thou, reader, that the scripture hath two faces, and speaketh with two mouths? |
6047 | Third, But wilt thou yet plead thy righteousness for mercy? |
6047 | Thirdly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6047 | Thirdly, What was the dry bones that we read of in the 37th of Ezekiel, but the church of God, and also a figure of what we are treating of? |
6047 | This doctrine Christ teacheth when he saith,"Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not one of them is forgotten before God? |
6047 | This is but a falsehood and a slander, for the unregenerate know him not; how then can they believe on him? |
6047 | This question, I briefly ask thee,"Had Christ a body of flesh before the world began?" |
6047 | This righteousness of God- man, this righteousness of Christ? |
6047 | This word created, is added, on purpose to show that the world is under the power of his hand; for who can destroy, but he that can create? |
6047 | This; Which? |
6047 | Thou standest to thy righteousness, what dost thou mean? |
6047 | Thou thinkest that thou art a Christian; thou shouldest be sorry else: Well, But when did God shew thee that thou wert no Christian? |
6047 | Though such should climb up to heaven, from thence will God bring them down( Amos 9:2), Still I say, therefore, how shall we get in thither? |
6047 | Thus much have I thought good to speak in answer to this question, What iniquity should we depart from that religiously name the name of Christ? |
6047 | Thy answer is nothing to the question, for I did not ask, whether the Spirit of Christ was in thee? |
6047 | Thy first question should be on whom must I believe? |
6047 | To be thrown o''er the pales, and there to lie, Or be pick''d up by th''next that passeth by? |
6047 | To instance no more, although I could instance many, are not they the words of our Lord? |
6047 | To instance somewhat, Faith in Christ: what harm can that do? |
6047 | To the Romans,''I beseech you therefore,''saith he,''by the mercies of God,( What mercies? |
6047 | To this end, I say, how was the Shunammite''s son raised from the dead? |
6047 | To what end should such be comprehended in this of exhortation of his? |
6047 | To what end? |
6047 | To what purpose else is it revealed, made mention of, and commended to us? |
6047 | To whom they said, Why hath my lord such thought? |
6047 | Touching his working with some, how invisible is it to these in whose souls it is yet begun? |
6047 | Touching the book of my remembrance, who can contradict it? |
6047 | Understand,[ O] ye brutish among the people: and ye fools, when will ye be wise? |
6047 | Understandest thou what thou readest? |
6047 | Upon the first day: what, or which first day of this, or that, of the third or fourth week of the month? |
6047 | Upon whom must these reproaches fall? |
6047 | Use Second, Is it so? |
6047 | Use Second, Is there so great a heart for love, towards us, both in the Father and in the Son? |
6047 | Was it before or after thou hadst been a sinner? |
6047 | Was it better than God? |
6047 | Was it not because they had that richer and better thing,''the Lord Jesus Christ?'' |
6047 | Was it not the art of the false apostles of old to say thus? |
6047 | Was it utter nakedness, nakedness in its perfection? |
6047 | Was not I in all places to behold, to see, and to observe thee in all thy ways? |
6047 | Was not every tittle of the law reasonable, both in the first and second table? |
6047 | Was not he a liar? |
6047 | Was that a New Testament church, or no? |
6047 | Was the Lord displeased against the rivers? |
6047 | Was the serpent then lifted up for them that were good and godly? |
6047 | Was there no more, think you, but Noah, in his generation, that feared God? |
6047 | Was you awake now? |
6047 | Wast thou not innocent, perfectly innocent and righteous? |
6047 | Wast thou one of them, that didst sigh, and afflict thyself for the abominations of the times? |
6047 | We are by faith made good trees, and shall not we bring forth good fruit? |
6047 | We know God, and he is our God, our own God; of whom or of what should we be afraid? |
6047 | We may well say,"Who is like thee, O Lord, among the gods?" |
6047 | We plead not for indulging,''But are there not with you, even with you, sins against the Lord your God?'' |
6047 | Well, but if this in truth be thus, how then comes it to pass that some receive it and live for ever? |
6047 | Well, but is there no way to come to the Father of mercies but by this man that was born of the virgin? |
6047 | Well, but is thy work required to the finishing of this righteousness? |
6047 | Well, but let me ask you one word farther: Do you believe, that of very conscience they can not consent, as you, to that of water baptism? |
6047 | Well, but what of all this? |
6047 | Well, then, tell me, sinner, if Christ should now come to judge the world, canst thou abide the trial of the book of life? |
6047 | Were ever the Pharisees so profane; to whom Christ said, ye vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell; doth not the ground groan under you? |
6047 | Were there no enemies but in Jerusalem? |
6047 | Were there no good men but at Jerusalem? |
6047 | What Christian must I be; of what sect must I be of? |
6047 | What a many private things have we now brought out to public view? |
6047 | What acts of self- denial, hast thou done for the name of the Lord Jesus, among the sons of men? |
6047 | What agreement then hath the temple of God with idols? |
6047 | What are they? |
6047 | What argument can any man produce, Why we should be intemperate in the use Of any worldly good? |
6047 | What back will such a suit of apparel fit, that is set together just cross and thwart to what it should be? |
6047 | What became of him that had, and would have, two stools to sit on? |
6047 | What can a divided army do, or a disordered army, that have lost their banners, or, for fear or shame, thrown them away? |
6047 | What can be added? |
6047 | What can be fitter spoken? |
6047 | What can be more plain? |
6047 | What can be more plain? |
6047 | What can be more plain? |
6047 | What can be more suitable to the most desponding spirit in any man? |
6047 | What can we hold? |
6047 | What can we keep from flying From us? |
6047 | What care have they taken that thou mightest have wherewith to live and do well when they were dead and gone? |
6047 | What could the king of Babylon''s golden image have done, had it not been for the burning fiery furnace that stood within view of the worshippers? |
6047 | What countryman art thou? |
6047 | What designs, desires, and reachings out are there? |
6047 | What did baptism teach you? |
6047 | What doctrine did it preach to you? |
6047 | What does he call them but hypocrites, whited walls, painted sepulchres, fools, and blind? |
6047 | What dost thou think? |
6047 | What doth he there? |
6047 | What else dost thou mean, when thou sayest,"God I thank thee, that I am not as other men are?" |
6047 | What else is the use of thy adding of laws to God''s laws, precepts to God''s precepts, and traditions to God''s appointments? |
6047 | What else means the complaints of masters and of fathers in this matter? |
6047 | What follows? |
6047 | What fool would sell his part in paradise, That has a soul, and that of such a price? |
6047 | What greater contempt can be thrown upon the saints than for their brethren to cast them off, or to debar them church communion? |
6047 | What has he done? |
6047 | What has he done? |
6047 | What hast thou done, man, for God in this world? |
6047 | What hast thou done, that thou art emboldened to venture, to stand and fall to the most perfect justice of God? |
6047 | What hast thou done? |
6047 | What hinders the conversion of the Jews, but the divisions of Christians? |
6047 | What hope, help, stay, or relief then is there left for the merit- monger? |
6047 | What if I did? |
6047 | What if we must go now to heaven, and what if he is thus come down to fetch us to himself? |
6047 | What ignorance is this? |
6047 | What infirmities? |
6047 | What is Christ''s doctrine, Paul''s doctrine, scripture doctrine, but the truth couched under the words that are spoken? |
6047 | What is God''s majesty to a sinful man, but a consuming fire? |
6047 | What is a woman''s breast to a horse? |
6047 | What is baptism? |
6047 | What is here in chief asserted, but the doctrine only which water baptism preacheth? |
6047 | What is his name, and what is his son''s name, if thou canst tell?" |
6047 | What is it that embitters church- communion, and makes it burdensome, but divisions? |
6047 | What is it then? |
6047 | What is it then? |
6047 | What is it then? |
6047 | What is it? |
6047 | What is it? |
6047 | What is that? |
6047 | What is that? |
6047 | What is the breadth, and length, and depth? |
6047 | What is the cause? |
6047 | What is the church of God redeemed by, from the curse of the law? |
6047 | What is the church? |
6047 | What is there? |
6047 | What is thine occupation? |
6047 | What is this faith that doth justify the sinner? |
6047 | What is this? |
6047 | What kind of a YOU am I? |
6047 | What less now can be mine than the heavenly kingdom and glory? |
6047 | What man would count himself beloved of his wife that knows she hath a bosom for another? |
6047 | What mean those swarms of opinions that are in the world? |
6047 | What means dust thou use to mortify thy sins? |
6047 | What more certain? |
6047 | What more strong Than is a lion? |
6047 | What must we understand by that? |
6047 | What now is wanting to the help of him that has committed his soul to God to keep it while he is suffering according to his will in the world? |
6047 | What proof canst thou make of the truth of this story? |
6047 | What reason hath he that is left in this case to quarrel against his Maker? |
6047 | What said God unto him? |
6047 | What say you to John of Leyden? |
6047 | What say you to breaking of bread, which the devil, by abusing, made an engine in the hand of Papists, to burn, starve, hang and draw thousands? |
6047 | What say you to the church all along the Revelation quite through the reign of Antichrist? |
6047 | What say you to the church in the wilderness? |
6047 | What say you to,''This is my body?'' |
6047 | What say you, do you believe the resurrection of the body after it is laid in the grave? |
6047 | What scripture can be plainer spoken than this? |
6047 | What scripture have you to prove, that Christ is, or was crucified within you, dead within you, risen within you, and ascended within you? |
6047 | What scripture have you to prove, that Christ is, or was crucified within you, dead within you, risen within you, ascended within you? |
6047 | What shall I do? |
6047 | What shall I say of David? |
6047 | What shall I say? |
6047 | What shall I say? |
6047 | What shall I say? |
6047 | What shall I say? |
6047 | What shall we do unto thee, then they said, That so the raging of the sea be stay''d? |
6047 | What shall we say then? |
6047 | What shall we say then? |
6047 | What shall we then say to these things? |
6047 | What sin is it that a child of God is not liable to commit, excepting that which is the sin unpardonable? |
6047 | What then becomes of the purity and dignity of human nature, so vainly boasted of? |
6047 | What then shall we say, when we see a first practice turned into holy custom? |
6047 | What then should be the reason? |
6047 | What then, Is he a righteous man because he hath done him no hurt? |
6047 | What then, Is it faith and works together that doth justify? |
6047 | What then? |
6047 | What then? |
6047 | What then? |
6047 | What then? |
6047 | What time is that? |
6047 | What time is this that Jesus speaks of? |
6047 | What twig, or straw, or twined thread is left to be a stay for his soul? |
6047 | What unreasonable thing doth the gospel bid thee credit? |
6047 | What visible living church was now in the land, I mean, either with reference to a godly spirit for it, or the form and constitution of it? |
6047 | What was said of eating, or the contrary, may as to this be said of water baptism: neither if I be baptized, am I the better? |
6047 | What was that? |
6047 | What was the reason why they did put him to death, but this, He did say that he was the Christ the Son of God? |
6047 | What will all say, or what will they conclude, even upon the very first hearing of this story? |
6047 | What will men say if you shrink and winch, and take your sufferings unquietly, but that if you yourselves were uppermost, you would persecute also? |
6047 | What will thy gallant, generous mind do here? |
6047 | What wilt thou do? |
6047 | What wilt thou do? |
6047 | What work did he make by the abuse of the ordinance of water baptism? |
6047 | What would have become of thy trade as a brazier? |
6047 | What would they have us do? |
6047 | What wouldest thou have thought of a system by which all would have been taught to tag their laces and mend their own pots and kettles? |
6047 | What, because believers are members one of another, must they therefore be also one in another? |
6047 | What, do you think that I am a spirit? |
6047 | What, is baffling and befooling the enemies of God''s church nothing? |
6047 | What, is preservation nothing? |
6047 | What, not so much as a respect to the matter or end? |
6047 | What? |
6047 | What? |
6047 | What? |
6047 | What? |
6047 | What? |
6047 | What? |
6047 | What? |
6047 | When Israel went into Canaan, God did command them not so much as to ask, How those nations served their gods? |
6047 | When Philip, under a mistake, thought of seeing God some other way, than in and by this Lord Jesus Christ; What is the answer? |
6047 | When a man thinks he has only to prepare for an assault by footmen, how shall he contend with horses? |
6047 | When didst thou see that: And in the light of the Spirit of Christ, see that thou wert under the wrath of God because of original sin? |
6047 | When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? |
6047 | When the good shepherd went to look for his sheep that was lost in the wilderness, and had found it: did it go one step homewards upon its own legs? |
6047 | When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hands, to tread my courts? |
6047 | When? |
6047 | Where Antichrist dwelt? |
6047 | Where are the tables of stone and this law as therein contained? |
6047 | Where are they found? |
6047 | Where do we find the churches to gather together thereon? |
6047 | Where is Paul that would not eat meat while the world standeth, lest he made his brother offend? |
6047 | Where is our Pharisee then, with all his works of righteousness, and with his boasts of being better than his neighbours? |
6047 | Where is our Pharisee then, with his brags of not being as other men are? |
6047 | Where is repentance, reformation, and amendment of life amongst us? |
6047 | Where is that? |
6047 | Where is the man that is zealous of moral holiness? |
6047 | Where is the man that so pleaseth God, and consequently, that in equity and reason should be beloved of God like me? |
6047 | Where is the man that walketh with his cross upon his shoulder? |
6047 | Where is the man that will forbear some lawful things, for fear of hurting the weak thereby? |
6047 | Where is thy long- suffering? |
6047 | Where now is the sound and healthful complexion of soul? |
6047 | Where( say some) is the spirit and life of communion? |
6047 | Where, also, is thy sweet, meek, and gentle spirit? |
6047 | Wherefore has he given us grace? |
6047 | Wherefore has he sometimes visited us? |
6047 | Wherefore in answer to this conceit it is, that the Lord asketh, saying,"Is my hand shortened at all that it can not redeem?" |
6047 | Wherefore is it that thou Hast done this thing, to bring this evil now, Upon us, let us know it? |
6047 | Wherefore saith he thus? |
6047 | Wherefore say thus to thy soul, thou that art like to suffer for righteousness, How is it with the most inward parts of my soul? |
6047 | Wherefore then should we complain? |
6047 | Wherefore, the same prophet, speaking of the destruction of the same Sheshach, saith,''How is Sheshach taken? |
6047 | Wherefore? |
6047 | Wherefore? |
6047 | Whereto the man of God made this reply, Why askest thou, since''tis a mystery? |
6047 | Whether Mordecai and the good men then did not pray and fast as well as she? |
6047 | Whether any under Eternal Reprobation have just cause to quarrel with God for not electing of them? |
6047 | Whether in the nature, or in the degree, or in the management thereof? |
6047 | Whether is there a difference in the light? |
6047 | Whether the seventh day sabbath did not fall, as such, with the rest of the Jewish rites and ceremonies? |
6047 | Whether the seventh day sabbath is of, or made known to, man by the law and light of nature? |
6047 | Whether to be reprobated be the same with being appointed before- hand unto eternal condemnation? |
6047 | Which is the greatest sinner; he who invents scandal, or he who encourages the inventor to retail it? |
6047 | Which of you can By taking thought add to his height one span? |
6047 | While one saith, I am of Paul, and another I am of Apollos, are ye not carnal? |
6047 | Whither art wand''ring? |
6047 | Whither canst thou go? |
6047 | Whither will thy zeal, thy pride, and thy folly carry thee? |
6047 | Whither wilt thou go? |
6047 | Who art thou? |
6047 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6047 | Who can eat fire, drink fire, and lie down in the midst of flames of fire? |
6047 | Who can reach them, touch them, destroy them, but the Creator? |
6047 | Who can tell how many heart- pleasing thoughts Christ had of us before the world began? |
6047 | Who can tell what kind of delight the Father had in the Son before the world began? |
6047 | Who could have hoped that Israel should have returned again from the land, from the hand, and from under the tyranny of the king of Babylon? |
6047 | Who could have thought that sin would have opposed that which is just, but especially mercy and grace, had we not seen it with our eyes? |
6047 | Who could have thought that the three children could have lived in a fiery furnace? |
6047 | Who did Christ bring it into the world for, for the righteous or for sinners? |
6047 | Who hath bound the waters in a garment? |
6047 | Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord,''or who hath been his counsellor?'' |
6047 | Who hath gathered the wind in his fists? |
6047 | Who is THE BLESSED? |
6047 | Who is able to make war with him?'' |
6047 | Who is he also that purifies his heart, but he that looketh for the second coming of Christ from heaven to judge the world? |
6047 | Who is he that condemneth?'' |
6047 | Who is he? |
6047 | Who knows if God will yet be pleas''d to spare, And turn away the evil that we fear? |
6047 | Who must we now believe, the Apostle or you? |
6047 | Who prays not, is not like to play the man? |
6047 | Who said it? |
6047 | Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6047 | Who watches, should know who and who''s together: Know we not friends from foes, how know we whether Of them to fight, or which to entertain? |
6047 | Who were his members? |
6047 | Who will say unto him, What doest thou?'' |
6047 | Whose hungry belly hast thou fed? |
6047 | Whose naked body hast thou clothed? |
6047 | Whose prayers were used, or who was the mouth? |
6047 | Why am I reckoned with the Ranters? |
6047 | Why blameless? |
6047 | Why did Adam hide himself, but because, as he said, he was naked? |
6047 | Why did he rise again from the dead, with that very body? |
6047 | Why did you only cavil at words? |
6047 | Why do I haunt and frequent places and ordinances appointed for worship? |
6047 | Why do I hear? |
6047 | Why do I pray? |
6047 | Why do I read? |
6047 | Why do not I also, as well as they, shun persecution for the cross of Christ? |
6047 | Why do they believe in Christ? |
6047 | Why do you doubt of it? |
6047 | Why do you mock us, to bid us go on in our sins? |
6047 | Why for them? |
6047 | Why is man made the head of the woman in worship, in the worship now under debate, in that worship that is to be performed in assemblies? |
6047 | Why salvation? |
6047 | Why should I be thought to be against a fire in the chimney, because I say it must not be in the thatch of the house? |
6047 | Why should anything have my heart but God, but Christ? |
6047 | Why should the righteous partake of the same plagues with the wicked? |
6047 | Why so, saith the apostle, ought the wife to carry it towards her husband? |
6047 | Why so? |
6047 | Why so? |
6047 | Why then did not these days live? |
6047 | Why then do you despise my rank, my state, and quality in the world? |
6047 | Why then is the gospel offered them? |
6047 | Why then should we think that our innocent lives will exempt us from sufferings, or that troubles shall do us such harm? |
6047 | Why then were you baptized? |
6047 | Why was their name, for all that, blotted out, and this day only kept alive in the churches? |
6047 | Why wouldst thou go to heaven? |
6047 | Why, I am to believe in Christ, I am to have faith in his blood? |
6047 | Why, Sir, did you not answer these things? |
6047 | Why, is not worshipping of God, well- doing? |
6047 | Why, it will be said unto them, Friends, how came you hither? |
6047 | Why, then, should you not judge of those that differ from you herein, as you judged of yourselves when you were as they now are? |
6047 | Why, what wouldest thou ask for, sinner? |
6047 | Why, when the Lord comes; what will he do? |
6047 | Why, where is he then? |
6047 | Why, where is it to be found?" |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Why? |
6047 | Will any say we can not believe that God hath received any but such as are baptized[ in water]? |
6047 | Will not the thoughts that we have one Father quiet us, and the thoughts that we are brethren unite us? |
6047 | Will the blood- hounds let him escape? |
6047 | Wilt thou break a leaf driven to and fro? |
6047 | Wilt thou not then be afraid of the power? |
6047 | Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee, I am god? |
6047 | With how many oaths, declarations, attestations, and proclamations, is it avouched, confirmed, and established? |
6047 | Without a watch, resist a foe who can? |
6047 | Women may, yea ought to pray; what then? |
6047 | Would a heathen god refuse to answer such prayers in which the supplicants were not agreed; and shall we think the true God will answer them? |
6047 | Would either of you stay till he is grown? |
6047 | Would it not be counted an high affront, for a base inferior fellow, to call himself the head of the queen? |
6047 | Would not this make Satan fall from heaven like lightning? |
6047 | Would they learn to be drunkards? |
6047 | Would you so long without an husband[3] live? |
6047 | Would you think that such an one did all this while retain the shape, form, or similitude of a man? |
6047 | Wouldest thou be content that I should judge thee, because thou canst not for my light give thanks with me? |
6047 | Wouldest thou have MERCY for thy righteousness, or JUSTICE for thy righteousness? |
6047 | Wouldest thou sit upon their place of ease? |
6047 | Ye are the salt o''th''earth; but wherewith must The earth be season''d when the savour''s lost? |
6047 | Ye do not furnish them with what they need, Wat boots it? |
6047 | Ye stand upon your sword, ye work abomination, and ye defile every one his neighbour''s wife: and shall ye possess the land?" |
6047 | Yea more, why are the elders of the churches called watchmen, overseers, guides, teachers, rulers, and the like? |
6047 | Yea whether it doth not tend to make them unruly and headstrong? |
6047 | Yea, do we not grow worse and worse? |
6047 | Yea, how did those ravenous creatures, the ravens, bring the prophet bread and flesh twice a day, but by immediate instinct from heaven? |
6047 | Yea, or for their neglect of it either? |
6047 | Yea, or nay?" |
6047 | Yea, our faith is faulty, and also imperfect; how then should remission be extended to us for the sake of that? |
6047 | Yea, shall my Jesus die To reconcile me to my God? |
6047 | Yea, was it better than the tree of life? |
6047 | Yea, why did not the Pharisee, if he was a heathen, lay that to his charge while he stood before God? |
6047 | Yea, why do you taunt those ministers that persuade us to renounce our own righteousness, and those also that follow their doctrine? |
6047 | Yes; the Lord Jesus denied himself for thee; what sayest thou to that? |
6047 | Yes;''What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6047 | You add,''Is it a person''s light that giveth being to a precept?'' |
6047 | You ask again,''Suppose men plead want of light in other commands?'' |
6047 | You ask me next,''How long is it since I was a Baptist?'' |
6047 | You ask,''Can not you give yourself a reason, that their moving, travelling state made them incapable, and that God was merciful? |
6047 | You ask,''Was circumcision dispensed with for want of light, it being plainly commanded?'' |
6047 | You tell me also, that some of the sober Independents have shewed dislike to my writing on this subject: What then? |
6047 | You that live in adultery, know not ye The friendship of the world is enmity With God? |
6047 | You will say, Are these graves spoken of here, the graves that are made in the earth? |
6047 | Your twelfth argument is,''Why should professors have more light in breaking of bread, than baptism? |
6047 | [ 12]"Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him, saith the Lord? |
6047 | [ 21]If it be asked, Why take your unregenerate children, and invite the ungodly, to the place of worship? |
6047 | [ 2] And why is MY rank so mean, that the most gracious and godly among you, may not duly and soberly consider of what I have said? |
6047 | [ 2]( Psa 8:3,4) Now in the creation of the world we may consider several things; as, What was the order of God in this work? |
6047 | [ 35]This should prompt every professing Christian to self- examination-- Am I of the raven class, or that of the dove? |
6047 | [ I reply] If thou hadst said, I worship her Son, thou hadst said truly( I hope) But is not thy spite more against her son, than her? |
6047 | [ that is, to bring Christ down from above:] or, Who shall descend into the deep? |
6047 | and again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son? |
6047 | and are not men the more noble part in all the churches of Christ? |
6047 | and behold the height of the stars, how high they are?" |
6047 | and darkness and tempests? |
6047 | and do you question the resurrection of the body? |
6047 | and doth God testify that thy desire is true, not feigned? |
6047 | and hast not thou been led by a lying spirit also, in wresting of my words as thou hast done? |
6047 | and have you consented to stand by their opinion? |
6047 | and he that is called to glory and virtue, shall not he add to his faith virtue? |
6047 | and he which is born of a woman, that he should be righteous?" |
6047 | and how shall he be convinced of eternal judgment, if you persuade him, that when he is dead, he shall not at all rise? |
6047 | and how they hold back good from us? |
6047 | and how we may be more holy and more humble towards God, and more charitable and more serviceable to one another? |
6047 | and if I be a Master, where is my fear? |
6047 | and is goodness seen in thy seeking the life or the damage of thy enemy? |
6047 | and is not the light of God sufficient in itself, to lead to God all that follow it, yea, or nay?" |
6047 | and is not this thus much, are not all they reprobates( say you) but they in whim Christ is within? |
6047 | and is there not like reason for it? |
6047 | and of choosing what you judge is right, whether they conclude with you or no? |
6047 | and says another, Would you have us make ourselves ridiculous? |
6047 | and shall I Not love a saint? |
6047 | and shall I hate his child, nor hear his wants that call For my little assisting of him? |
6047 | and shall none be angry at it? |
6047 | and shall not I exercise my mind about it? |
6047 | and should a man full of talk be justified? |
6047 | and that Christ hath marked and recorded for such an one? |
6047 | and that also against which the spirit lusteth? |
6047 | and that, AFTER the angel had fled through the midst of heaven, preaching the gospel to those that dwell on the earth? |
6047 | and therefore that it ought to be departed from, who knows not? |
6047 | and thou, O God, which didst not go out with our armies?" |
6047 | and unquiet and troublesome, discontented, and seeking to be revenged of thy persecutors; where is, or what kind of grace hast thou got? |
6047 | and until you could by faith own it as done for you, and counted yours by reputation, yea, or no? |
6047 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
6047 | and what must they do that have none?" |
6047 | and when did I do the other? |
6047 | and when thou mockest, shall no man make thee an answer[ unashamed?]'' |
6047 | and where will they be safe in such days? |
6047 | and why is thy countenance fallen?" |
6047 | and will he not be as good to us as to them that have gone before us? |
6047 | and with what body do they come?" |
6047 | and yet doth it yield no good unto us? |
6047 | and, that some time ago I heard speak well of the holy word of God? |
6047 | are not the poor saints now in this city? |
6047 | are not they concerned in these instructions? |
6047 | are they all Esau''s indeed? |
6047 | are they weaned from that milk, and drawn from the breasts? |
6047 | are we better than they?" |
6047 | are you not ashamed of your doings? |
6047 | besides there is hell itself, the place itself, the fire itself, the nature of the torments, and the durableness of them, who can understand? |
6047 | but may it not be as strongly supposed that the presence and blessing of the Lord Jesus, with his ministers, is laid upon the same ground also? |
6047 | but what was that gospel you preached? |
6047 | but why did you not shew me my evil in thus calling it, when opposed to the substance, and the thing signified? |
6047 | but why didst thou not confess what thou hadst done then? |
6047 | but why offended at this? |
6047 | can he judge through the dark cloud?" |
6047 | can not you be satisfied without you have peace with God? |
6047 | canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?'' |
6047 | consent and nothing else? |
6047 | deeper than hell; what canst thou know? |
6047 | do ye judge uprightly, O ye sons of men?'' |
6047 | dost thou say that that which thou callest the light of Christ, is the Spirit of Christ? |
6047 | doth this yield thee inward pleasedness of mind, and a kind of secret sweetness, or bow? |
6047 | for it is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? |
6047 | for legal grounds, though not expressed? |
6047 | having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh?'' |
6047 | he that chastiseth the heathen, shall not he correct? |
6047 | he that formed the eye, shall he not see? |
6047 | he that teacheth man knowledge, shall not he know?" |
6047 | how could he bear the face to do it? |
6047 | how crossly he thinks? |
6047 | how few be there in the world whose heart and mouth in prayer shall go together? |
6047 | how many lashes with God''s iron whip dost thou deserve? |
6047 | how then can we be offended at things by which we reap so much good, and at things that God makes so profitable for us? |
6047 | how then should I hold up my face to Joab thy brother?" |
6047 | how they grieve the Holy Ghost? |
6047 | how they spoil our prayers? |
6047 | how they tempt Christ to be ashamed of us? |
6047 | how they weaken faith? |
6047 | how they weaken our graces? |
6047 | how will they die and languish in their souls? |
6047 | how will they faint? |
6047 | in storms? |
6047 | in the fifth verse, in one Lord Jesus Christ: by what? |
6047 | into what particular church was Lydia baptized by Paul, or those first converts at Philippi? |
6047 | is he a pleasant child? |
6047 | is it in the holiness that is there, or in the freedom that is there from hell? |
6047 | joyful, and glad, and merry at heart at the thoughts of the richness of the booty? |
6047 | know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you,--and ye are not your own?" |
6047 | must all men that have not so large acquaintance of their duty herein be excommunicated? |
6047 | must now the devil make thee wise? |
6047 | must these for this be cast out of the church? |
6047 | must we seek for justification by the works of the law, because the law convinceth? |
6047 | neither if I be not, am I the worse? |
6047 | not in bed?]. |
6047 | of works? |
6047 | or art thou through the ignorance that is in thee as[ one] unacquainted with these things? |
6047 | or can any give truer signs of false prophets than Isaiah and Micah give, yea or nay?" |
6047 | or can repentance be where the fruits of repentance are not? |
6047 | or can that be called a justifying faith, that has not for its fruit good works? |
6047 | or can we be without such holy appointments of God? |
6047 | or do the scriptures only help you to seeming imports, and me- hap- soes[17] for your practice? |
6047 | or doth your King countenance you in ways that are so bad? |
6047 | or he which is born of a woman, that he should be righteous?'' |
6047 | or how doth the ignorance discover itself? |
6047 | or how shall man be righteous before God? |
6047 | or how? |
6047 | or is it because the devil and wicked men, the inventors of these vain toys, have outwitted the law of God? |
6047 | or is my flesh of brass?'' |
6047 | or is not the church by these words at all directed how to carry it to those that were not yet in fellowship? |
6047 | or naked, and clothed thee not? |
6047 | or naked, and clothed thee? |
6047 | or shall the cold flowing waters that come from another place be forsaken?'' |
6047 | or shall the saw magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
6047 | or that dare say, What you see and hear to be in me, do,''and the God of peace shall be with you?'' |
6047 | or that our Lord should have risen again from the dead? |
6047 | or that thou shouldest receive it at the hand of God, when the day shall come that every man shall have praise of him for their doings? |
6047 | or the Gospel, which is the word of faith preached by us? |
6047 | or the saw, that it should magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
6047 | or thirsty, and gave thee drink? |
6047 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6047 | or when wast thou sick, or in prison, and we did not minister unto thee? |
6047 | or who can help himself thereby? |
6047 | or who has reverence for them? |
6047 | or who hath given understanding to the heart?" |
6047 | or, do you by thus and thus doing submit to the laws of your king? |
6047 | ought not I also to set this day apart to sing the songs of my redemption in? |
6047 | poor dust and ashes, that he should crowd it up, and go jostlingly in the presence of the great God? |
6047 | saith he,''Is thine eye evil, because I am good?'' |
6047 | saith not the scriptures the same? |
6047 | sayest thou; but is this the way to go to God in prayer? |
6047 | see''s not how thou hast trod Under thy foot, the very Son of God? |
6047 | shall I unfaithful be? |
6047 | shall that knowledge of him, I say, be counted such, as only causes the soul to behold, but moveth it not to good works? |
6047 | shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?'' |
6047 | should thy lies make men hold their peace? |
6047 | so truly doth thy voice cause heaven to echo again upon thy head, Cut him down; why doth he cumber the ground? |
6047 | such a length in the arm of the Lord, that he can reach those that are gone away, as far as they could? |
6047 | that Daniel could have been safe among the lions? |
6047 | that Jonah could have come home to his country, when he was in the whale''s belly? |
6047 | the disciples] said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone?'' |
6047 | the people were surprised, and cried, What, is this Naomi? |
6047 | the query in page 13. runs thus,"Will that faith which is without works justify?" |
6047 | this question I ask thee, did or doth Christ obtain salvation for any, without that body which he took of the Virgin? |
6047 | to what value will an imputative righteousness amount?'' |
6047 | was he I say, within his disciples, or without them, when he said,"I am the light of the world?" |
6047 | was he found among thieves? |
6047 | was thine anger against the rivers? |
6047 | was thy wrath against the sea, that thou didst ride upon thine horses and thy chariots of salvation?" |
6047 | what better melody can be heard? |
6047 | what better words can come from man? |
6047 | what can be more full? |
6047 | what is a promise to a carnal man? |
6047 | what is the reason that some are carried about as clouds, with a tempest? |
6047 | what is this to the purpose( See Col 1:26- 30)? |
6047 | what mean men''s waverings, men''s changing, and interchanging truth for error, and one error for another? |
6047 | what meaneth the heat of this great anger?'' |
6047 | what says James in the third chapter of his epistle? |
6047 | when God shall bind one over for his sin, to eternal judgment, who then can release him? |
6047 | when saw we thee a stranger, and took thee not in? |
6047 | when thou should''st hope, dost thou despond? |
6047 | whence shall I seek comforters for thee?'' |
6047 | whence should my help come?" |
6047 | where are they that feed the hungry and clothe the naked, and send portions to them, for whom nothing is prepared? |
6047 | where are you commanded to do it? |
6047 | where is it, if it is not here? |
6047 | where is the man, if he want God''s Spirit, that will care for the flourishing state of religion? |
6047 | where is the scripture that saith that this Lord of the sabbath commanded his church, from that time, to do any part of church service thereon? |
6047 | where is thy joy under the cross? |
6047 | where is thy peace when thine anger has put thee upon being unquiet? |
6047 | where? |
6047 | wherefore have they the word, their closet, and the grace of meditation, but to build up themselves withal? |
6047 | wherefore? |
6047 | wherein art thou bettered by the profession, than the wicked? |
6047 | wherein has he offended? |
6047 | whether only unto mutual affection, as some affirm, as if he were in church fellowship before, that were weak in the faith? |
6047 | which has most advantage to live in godly largeness of heart, and is most at liberty in his mind? |
6047 | which of these have also most in readiness to resist the wiles of the devil, and to subdue the power and prevalency of corruptions? |
6047 | which of these two have the greatest advantage to believe, and the greatest engagements laid upon him to love the Lord Jesus? |
6047 | whither can you flee from the punishment of sin, but to the Saviour''s bosom? |
6047 | who knows what it is? |
6047 | who knows what it is? |
6047 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
6047 | who speaks to their aged parents with that due regard to that relation, to their age, to their worn- out condition, as becomes them? |
6047 | why could not you make the same work with the other scriptures, as you did with these? |
6047 | why then should he judge me, for that I can not give thanks with him for his? |
6047 | why was it not sufficient to say''he rose again,''or, he rose again the third day? |
6047 | why? |
6047 | would promote righteousness, because I love to see godliness show itself in others, and because I would feel more of the power of it in myself? |
6047 | would you have men to receive it with such consciences? |
6047 | would you not readily give him by SCORES? |
6047 | yea, couldest thou be willing even now to partake of the means that would help thee to that means, that can cure thee of this disease? |
6047 | yea, what means else thy commending of thyself because of that, and so thy implicit prayer, that thou for that mightest find acceptance with God? |
6046 | A new heart also will I give them; a new heart, what a one is that? |
6046 | A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | And Moses said unto the Lord, Wherefore hast thou afflicted thy servant? |
6046 | And why,saith he,"dost thou ask Abishag for Adonijah? |
6046 | But can you in very deed make these things manifestly evident from the Word of God? 6046 Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? |
6046 | Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? 6046 Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? |
6046 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
6046 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee,saith the Lord? |
6046 | Enter in; enter into what, or whither, but into a state or place, or both? |
6046 | Fear ye not me? 6046 Fear ye not me? |
6046 | For the Lord taketh pleasure in his people,and what follows? |
6046 | For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? 6046 For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? |
6046 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? 6046 Has any man sinned? |
6046 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
6046 | His father,says the text,"had not displeased him at any time in( so much as) saying, Why hast thou done so?" |
6046 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? |
6046 | How shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? |
6046 | I know whom I have believed,I know him, said Paul; and what follows? |
6046 | I will,saith Christ;"I will,"saith Satan; but whose will shall stand? |
6046 | If I be a master, where is my fear? |
6046 | In hope of eternal life,how so? |
6046 | Is any afflicted? 6046 Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire?" |
6046 | Is thine eye evil, because I am good? 6046 It is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth?" |
6046 | Jesus stretched forth his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6046 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? 6046 Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? |
6046 | My God, My God,saith He,"why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
6046 | Now is My soul troubled, and what shall I say? |
6046 | Now,as the Psalmist says,"Who is this King of glory?" |
6046 | O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? |
6046 | O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6046 | Seemeth it to you,saith David,"a light thing to be a king''s son- in- law?" |
6046 | Shall I not visit for these things? 6046 Shall we sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, and will they not stone us?" |
6046 | Shall we- sin that grace may abound? 6046 Sinner, O why so thoughtless grown? |
6046 | Sirs, what must I do to be saved? |
6046 | Stand in awe,saith he,"and sin not"; and again,"my heart standeth in awe of thy word"; and again,"Let all the earth fear the Lord"; what is that? |
6046 | Tush,say they,"they talk of being born again; what good shall a man get by that? |
6046 | What shall I do to be saved? |
6046 | What shall we say then? |
6046 | What, my true servant,quoth he,"my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | What,says he,"shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits? |
6046 | When he hideth his face, who then can behold him? |
6046 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
6046 | Where is boasting then? 6046 Wherefore should I fear,"said David,"in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?" |
6046 | Wherefore should I,said he? |
6046 | Wherefore,saith he,"as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men,"mark that; but why? |
6046 | Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant? 6046 Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?" |
6046 | Who then can condemn? 6046 Whom have I in heaven but thee? |
6046 | Why hast thou hardened our heart from thy fear? |
6046 | Will he plead against me with his great power? 6046 Ye adulterers and adulteresses,"for so the covetous are called,"know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
6046 | ''A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | ''Adam, where art thou?'' |
6046 | ''And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who shall give you that which is your own?'' |
6046 | ''And they all with one consent began to make excuse;''--excuse for what? |
6046 | ''And why art thou disquieted within me? |
6046 | ''Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel; may I not wash in them and be clean?'' |
6046 | ''Art thou also of Galilee? |
6046 | ''But what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''Can the children of the bridechamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them?'' |
6046 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong?'' |
6046 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee? |
6046 | ''Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the days that God shall deal with thee?'' |
6046 | ''Can two walk together,''saith God,''except they be agreed?'' |
6046 | ''Canst thou thunder with a voice like him?'' |
6046 | ''Commune with your own heart upon your bed''( Psa 4:4), and then say what thou thinkest of, whether thou art going? |
6046 | ''Did he find it,''saith Paul,''by the flesh?'' |
6046 | ''Do not I fill heaven and earth, saith the Lord?'' |
6046 | ''Do ye think that the Scripture saith in vain, The spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy?'' |
6046 | ''Do you think that love letters are not desired between lovers? |
6046 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite, though he has gained''to a higher strain of desires,''when God taketh away his soul?'' |
6046 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite?'' |
6046 | ''For what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6046 | ''Happy art thou, O Israel, who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord, the shield of thy help, and who is the sword of thy excellency?'' |
6046 | ''Has it a corn? |
6046 | ''Hath he said it, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6046 | ''He can not deliver his soul, nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6046 | ''He gives light to them that sit in darkness, and in the shadow of death,''what to do? |
6046 | ''How do you know that?'' |
6046 | ''How shall I give thee up, Ephraim?'' |
6046 | ''How then can I do this great wickedness,''said he,''and sin against God?'' |
6046 | ''How?'' |
6046 | ''I am the way,''saith Christ; but to what? |
6046 | ''I will,''said David,''behave myself wisely in a perfect way; O when wilt thou come unto me?'' |
6046 | ''If David then call him Lord, how is he his Son?'' |
6046 | ''If our sins be upon us, and we pine away in them, how should we then live?'' |
6046 | ''If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?'' |
6046 | ''Is Ephraim,''saith he,''my dear son?'' |
6046 | ''Is John Bunyan safe?'' |
6046 | ''Is not my word like as a fire, saith the Lord; and like a hammer, that breaketh the rock in pieces?'' |
6046 | ''Let her alone, why trouble ye her?'' |
6046 | ''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6046 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''Ought not Christ to have suffered? |
6046 | ''Shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? |
6046 | ''Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right''in His famous distributing of judgment? |
6046 | ''Shall one man sin,''said Moses,''and wilt Thou be wroth with all the congregation?'' |
6046 | ''Shall they fall,''saith he,''and not arise? |
6046 | ''So forcible and mighty are they in operation'';''is there not life and mettle in them? |
6046 | ''So then, what shall I say to those that have thus bespattered me? |
6046 | ''The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?'' |
6046 | ''The wife of the bosom lies at him, saying, O do not cast thyself away; if thou takest this course, what shall I do? |
6046 | ''Then I said, But, Lord, what is believing?'' |
6046 | ''Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a council, and said, What do we? |
6046 | ''They have all received of his fulness, and grace for grace''; and will he shut thee out? |
6046 | ''Thus saith the Lord, The heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool, where is the house that ye build unto me? |
6046 | ''What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6046 | ''What kind of preacher is he?'' |
6046 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | ''What shall we say then? |
6046 | ''What shall we then say that Abraham, our father as pertaining to the flesh, hath found?'' |
6046 | ''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | ''What, thought I, is there but one sin that is unpardonable? |
6046 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said David,''in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6046 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said the prophet,''in the days of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6046 | ''Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way?'' |
6046 | ''Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?'' |
6046 | ''Who in the heaven can be compared unto the Lord? |
6046 | ''Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
6046 | ''Who knoweth the power or God''s anger?'' |
6046 | ''Who shall condemn? |
6046 | ''Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6046 | ''Who would set the briers and thorns against Me in battle? |
6046 | ''Why boasteth thou thyself in mischief,''said David,''O mighty man? |
6046 | ''Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him?'' |
6046 | ''Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6046 | ''Wot ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias? |
6046 | ''Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky, and of the earth, but how is it that ye do not discern this time?'' |
6046 | ''[ 30]''Will you rebel against the king? |
6046 | ''[ 335]''Was Adam bad before he eat the forbidden fruit? |
6046 | ''[ 336]''How can a man say his prayers without a word being read or uttered? |
6046 | ''[ 337]''How do men speak with their feet?'' |
6046 | ''[ 339]''How can we comprehend that which can not be comprehended, or know that which passeth knowledge? |
6046 | ''[ 340]''Who was the founder of the state or priestly domination over religion? |
6046 | ''[ 341] What is meant by the drum of Diabolus and other riddles mentioned in The Holy War? |
6046 | ''[ 343] Can''sin be driven out of the world by suffering? |
6046 | ''[ 345]''What men die two deaths at once? |
6046 | ''[ 346]''Are men ever in heaven and on earth at the same time? |
6046 | ''[ 347]''Can a beggar be worth ten thousand a- year and not know it? |
6046 | ''[ 38]''What can be the meaning of this( trumpeters), they neither sound boot and saddle, nor horse and away, nor a charge? |
6046 | ''[ 83]''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | ''[ 8] He inquired of his father--''Whether we were of the Israelites or no? |
6046 | ( 1 Peter 4:18) Canst thou answer this question, sinner? |
6046 | ( 2 Peter 2:13) And let me ask, Did God give his Word to justify your wickedness? |
6046 | ( 2 Tim 2:5) But you will say, What is it to strive lawfully? |
6046 | ( Ca nt 8:6,7) But who finds this heat in love so much as for one poor quarter of an hour together? |
6046 | ( Eze 22:14) What sayest thou? |
6046 | ( Eze 9:4,8, Isa 10:20- 22, 11:11,16, Jer 23:3, Joel 2:32) But what is a remnant to the whole piece? |
6046 | ( Heb 11:6) God must be known, else how can the sinner propound him as his end, his ultimate end? |
6046 | ( Heb 6:6) Poor trembler, wouldst thou crucify the Son of God afresh? |
6046 | ( Isa 14) They that see thee shall narrowly look upon thee, and consider thee, saying, Is this the man? |
6046 | ( Isa 3:9) Where is the man that maketh the Almighty God his delight, and that designeth his glory in the world? |
6046 | ( Isa 53:1) When the prophet speaks of the saved under this metaphor of gleaning, how doth he amplify the matter? |
6046 | ( Isa 6:10- 13) But what is a tenth? |
6046 | ( Jer 30:11) If it be so, I say, what had become of us, if we had had no Intercessor? |
6046 | ( Jer 31:7) What shall I say? |
6046 | ( Jer 3:14) That saying of Paul is much like this,"Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize?" |
6046 | ( Luke 9:25) and so, consequently, or,''What shall a man give in exchange( for himself) for his soul?'' |
6046 | ( Matt 26:21- 23) Who questioned the salvation of the foolish virgins? |
6046 | ( Matt 3:10) Poor sinner, awake; eternity is coming, and HIS SON, they are both coming to judge the world; awake, art yet asleep, poor sinner? |
6046 | ( Matt 3:12, 13:30) But mark,"There shall be a handful": What is a handful, when compared with the whole heap? |
6046 | ( Num 23:19) Hath Christ given us glory, and shall we not have it? |
6046 | ( Phil 3:14) But what do you mean by these three questions? |
6046 | ( Prov 16:8) What is it for me to claim a house, or a farm, without right? |
6046 | ( Psa 19:13) Must that wicked one touch my soul? |
6046 | ( Psa 31:22) And now where was his hope, in the right gospel discovery of it? |
6046 | ( Psa 50:3,4) And now, what will be found in that day to be the portion of them that in this day do not come to God by Christ? |
6046 | ( Rev 1:17,18) Why should Christ bring in his life to comfort John, if it was not a life advantageous to him? |
6046 | ( Rom 3:23, 5:1,2) But, I say again, who will propound God for his end that knows him not, that knows him not aright? |
6046 | ( Rom 7:24)( c.) How dost thou find thyself under the most high enjoyment of grace in this world? |
6046 | ( Zech 12:10, John 19, Heb 12:14, Psa 19:12)( c.) How do they show themselves to be true under the third? |
6046 | ( e.) O, but will he not be weary? |
6046 | ( g) And if at any time they can, or shall, meet with each other again, and nobody never the wiser, O, what courting will be betwixt sin and the soul? |
6046 | --that is, to recover or redeem his lost soul to liberty? |
6046 | --what shall, what would, yea, what would not a man, if he had it, give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | 17 Many readers will cry out, Who then can be saved? |
6046 | 17 Seventy times seven times a day we sometimes sin against our brother; but how many times, in that day, do we sin against God? |
6046 | 2. Who may have it? |
6046 | 2. Who may have this life? |
6046 | 20 We will, therefore, state it again-- Are men saved by grace? |
6046 | 25 How pointed and faithful are these words? |
6046 | 25 What can I render unto thee, my God, for such unspeakable blessedness? |
6046 | 32 What can we render to the Lord? |
6046 | 33 Take holiness away out of heaven, and what is heaven? |
6046 | 36 But alas, what are these? |
6046 | 4 What can withstand the will of Christ, that all his should behold and partake of his glory? |
6046 | 52. Who now dare say we throw away Our goods or liberty, When God''s most holy Word doth say We gain thus much thereby? |
6046 | 6 What conduct? |
6046 | 8 What heart can conceive the glorious worship of heaven? |
6046 | A Christian, and spend thy time, thy strength, and parts, for things that perish in the using? |
6046 | A certain man had a fruitless fig tree planted in his vineyard; but by whom was it planted there? |
6046 | A conduct of angels:"Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
6046 | A rainbow round about the throne, in sight; in whose sight? |
6046 | A sick body is a burden to the soul, and a wounded spirit is a burden to the body;''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | Afraid of what? |
6046 | After I had been thus for some considerable time, another thought came into my mind; and that was, whether we were of the Israelites, or no? |
6046 | After this, that other doubt did come with strength upon me, But how if the day of grace should be past and gone? |
6046 | Again I ask, Hast thou considered what truth, as to matter of fact, there is in the things whereof thou standest accused? |
6046 | Again, Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Again, are the people of God to behave themselves to the glory of God the Father? |
6046 | Again, how did Satan ply it against Peter, when he desired to have him, that he might sift him as wheat? |
6046 | Again, if Christ be the altar of incense, how stands he as a priest by that altar to offer the prayers of all the saints thereon, before the throne? |
6046 | Again, suppose the father should scourge and chasten the son for such offence, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6046 | Again, what a continuation of this alarm was there also at the birth of Jesus, which was about three months after John Baptist was born? |
6046 | Again, would the people learn to be covetous? |
6046 | Again,"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6046 | Again; Hast thou found a failure in all others that might have been entertained to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Again; when Esau threatened to slay his brother, Rebecca sent him away, saying,"Why should I be deprived also of you both in one day?" |
6046 | Again; why not live upon Christ alway? |
6046 | Alas, but how shall I come? |
6046 | All covetousness is idolatry; but what is that, or what will you call it, when men are religious for filthy lucre''s sake? |
6046 | All this is made to appear by the angels that fell; for when fallen, what was heaven to them? |
6046 | Also before his friends, how bold was he? |
6046 | Also to Simon Magus for but undervaluing of it? |
6046 | Also when the mariners inquired of Jonah, saying,"What is thine occupation, and whence comest thou? |
6046 | Also, if he ask me, What is become of the portion of goods that he gave me? |
6046 | Also, when Job had God present with him, making manifest the goodness of his great heart to him, what doth he say? |
6046 | Am I coming, indeed, to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Am I in a case to be thus near mine end? |
6046 | Am I one of the elect? |
6046 | And I ask, Why doth the wife-- that is, as the loving hind-- love to be in the presence of her husband? |
6046 | And Paul, when he said, he could wish that himself were accursed from Christ, for the vehement desire that he had that the Jews might be saved? |
6046 | And again,"Beware of men,"& c. when I had answered him, that blessed be God I was well, he said, What is the occasion of your being here? |
6046 | And again,"If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? |
6046 | And again,''My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God, when shall I come and appear before God?'' |
6046 | And are they willing, God helping them, to run hazards for his name, for the love they bear to him? |
6046 | And are we not in him, in him, even as so considered? |
6046 | And before I go further, what might I yet say to fasten this reason upon the truly gracious soul? |
6046 | And by what is this righteousness by thee applied to thyself? |
6046 | And can a holy and just God require that we give thanks to him in his name, if it was not effectually done for us by him? |
6046 | And can death, or sin, or the grave hold us, when God saith,''Give up?'' |
6046 | And can it be imagined that Christ alone shall be like the foolish ostrich, hardened against his young, yea, against his members? |
6046 | And did he license any one, and if so, who, to alter, add to, or diminish from it? |
6046 | And dost thou indeed say,"Hallowed be thy name"with thy heart? |
6046 | And dost thou not do the deeds of the flesh? |
6046 | And doth God come to the sinner, and the sinner again go to God in a saving way by him, and by him only? |
6046 | And doth all this stir up in thy heart some breathing after Him? |
6046 | And doth it not also make thee more earnestly to groan after the Lord Jesus? |
6046 | And doth this demonstrate the reformation of your church? |
6046 | And for the opening of this we must consider, first, How and through Whom this grace doth come to be, first, free to us, and, secondly, unchangeable? |
6046 | And from the sense and feeling of torment, he would give, yea, what would he not give, in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | And further, said he, can not one man teach another to pray? |
6046 | And good reason; for since they would not with us come to him now they have time, why should they stand with us when judgment is come? |
6046 | And have these desires put thy soul to the flight? |
6046 | And he turned to the woman, and said unto Simon, Seest thou this woman? |
6046 | And here those sayings are of their own natural force:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6046 | And how can that be, if he saveth not to the uttermost them that come unto God by him? |
6046 | And how if I should not? |
6046 | And how is this resented by them? |
6046 | And how little conscience is there made of prayer between God and the soul in secret, unless the Spirit of supplication be there to help? |
6046 | And how sayest thou now? |
6046 | And how sayest thou, for to name no more, dost thou with thy affection and conscience thus question? |
6046 | And how sayest thou? |
6046 | And how then? |
6046 | And how, then, can he come to him by Christ? |
6046 | And if God''s will should be done on earth as it is in heaven, must it not be thy ruin? |
6046 | And if Satan meets thee, and asketh, Whither goest thou? |
6046 | And if he breaks up one of these bags, who can tell what he can do? |
6046 | And if he goes about to do this, is not the law of the land against him? |
6046 | And if he hath said it, will he not make it good, I mean even thy salvation? |
6046 | And if he knows not the Father and the Son, how can he come? |
6046 | And if he saith, See, ye"blind that have eyes,"who shall hinder it? |
6046 | And if it be a blessing to have this fear, is it not wisdom to increase in it? |
6046 | And if it be asked, But what will become of the threatening wherewith he threatened the offender? |
6046 | And if so, did he give His church any other than that most beautiful and comprehensive form called the Lord''s Prayer? |
6046 | And if so, how can their service to God have anything like acceptation from the hand of God, that is done, not in, but without the fear of God? |
6046 | And if so, what shall we then think of the soul for which is prepared, and that of God, the most rich and excellent vessel in the world? |
6046 | And if there is so much in the pride of his countenance, what is there, think you, in the pride of his heart? |
6046 | And if these be acts that speak a condescension, what will you count of Christ''s standing up as an Advocate to plead the cause of his people? |
6046 | And if this gentle check will not do, then read the other, Shall we say, Let us do evil that good may come? |
6046 | And indeed what joy or what rejoicing is like rejoicing here? |
6046 | And indeed, take this away, and what ground can there be laid for any man to persevere in good works? |
6046 | And indeed, the soul that doth thus by practice, though with his mouth-- as who doth not? |
6046 | And is it thus with thy soul indeed? |
6046 | And is not this a needy time; doth not such an one want abundance of grace? |
6046 | And is not this love worthy of all acceptation at the hands and hearts of all coming sinners? |
6046 | And is not this the very ground of thy hoping that God will save thee from the wrath to come? |
6046 | And is there no other way to the Father but by his blood, and through the veil, that is to say, his flesh? |
6046 | And is there not a great deal in it? |
6046 | And is there not all the reason in the world for this? |
6046 | And is this all? |
6046 | And let me ask further, is not he a madman who, being loaded with combustible matter, will run headlong into the fire upon a bravado? |
6046 | And must you needs be upon the extremes? |
6046 | And now what would a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | And now, Adam, what do you mean to do? |
6046 | And now, what can this accuser say? |
6046 | And now, when body and soul are thus united, who can imagine what glory they both possess? |
6046 | And now,''what shall a man,''what would a man, but what can a man that has lost his soul, himself, and his all,''give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | And said, moreover, that they could not wait upon me any longer; but said to me, Then you confess the indictment, do you not? |
6046 | And since he can be both merciful and just in the salvation of sinners, why may he not also save them from death and hell? |
6046 | And so I may say, What think you of ten thousand more besides? |
6046 | And so doing, has it not also accommodated thee with all the aforenamed conveniences? |
6046 | And so with Paul, who tremblingly said,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6046 | And the ministers of the gospel they also cry, Lord,"who hath believed our report? |
6046 | And the reason is, because he that envieth a sinner, hath forgotten himself, that he is as bad; and how can he then fear God? |
6046 | And the reasons are weighty, for by them he proves the tree is not good; how then can it yield good fruit? |
6046 | And the same I say of his Advocate''s office- What is an advocate without the exercise of his office? |
6046 | And then, to engage us in our soul to the duty, he adds one of his wonderful mercies to the world, for a motive,"Fear ye not me?" |
6046 | And this leads me first to inquire into what, by these words the apostle must, of necessity, presuppose? |
6046 | And thou liar, what wilt thou do? |
6046 | And to put a question upon thy objection- What is a sacrifice without a priest, and what is a priest without a sacrifice? |
6046 | And what angels but those that ministered to him here in the day of his humiliation? |
6046 | And what can Satan say against this plea? |
6046 | And what chains are so heavy as those that discourage thee? |
6046 | And what did you reply? |
6046 | And what did you reply? |
6046 | And what did you reply? |
6046 | And what else? |
6046 | And what follows? |
6046 | And what follows? |
6046 | And what honour like that of being a holy man of God? |
6046 | And what if God will cross his book, and blot out the handwriting that is against thee, and not let thee know it as yet? |
6046 | And what if thou waitest upon God all thy days? |
6046 | And what if you should not? |
6046 | And what is this second veil, in, at, or through which, as the phrase is, we must, by blood, enter into the holiest? |
6046 | And what life, but death in its perfection? |
6046 | And what matter can be found in the soul for humility to work by so well, as by a sight that I have been and am an abominable sinner? |
6046 | And what more fearful than the bottomless pit of hell? |
6046 | And what need of an Advocate''s office to be exercised, if Christ, as sacrifice and Priest, was thought sufficient by God? |
6046 | And what saith the words before the text but the same--''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6046 | And what shall this man do? |
6046 | And what should a man come to God for, that can live in the world without him? |
6046 | And what sympathy and feeling would his arguments flow from? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what then? |
6046 | And what thunder did Zaccheus hear or see? |
6046 | And what use doth he make of this? |
6046 | And what was that? |
6046 | And what was the conclusion? |
6046 | And what will become of them concerning whom the Lord has said already,''I will not take up their names into my lips''? |
6046 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God? |
6046 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God?'' |
6046 | And what will not love suffer? |
6046 | And what will you do whose hearts go after your covetousness? |
6046 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6046 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6046 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6046 | And when a Christian comes to know this, should Christ as Advocate be hid, what could bear him up? |
6046 | And when they had found him, they wonderingly asked him,"Rabbi, when camest thou hither?" |
6046 | And when ye did eat, and when ye did drink, did not ye eat for yourselves, and drink for yourselves?" |
6046 | And where is the man that chooseth to go to hell? |
6046 | And where it is most, how far short of perfect acts is it? |
6046 | And where wilt thou leave thy glory? |
6046 | And who can be thankful for a mercy that is not sensible that they want it, have it, and have it of mercy? |
6046 | And who can now object against the deliverance of the child of God? |
6046 | And who can think that he should be quiet, when men take the right course to escape his hellish snares? |
6046 | And who dares to limit the Almighty? |
6046 | And who was that but Jesus Christ, even the person speaking in the text? |
6046 | And who was that, but he that"spoiled principalities and powers,"when he did hang upon the tree, triumphing over them thereon? |
6046 | And why a door of hope, but that by it, God''s people, when afflicted, should go out by it from despair by hope? |
6046 | And why doth he not concern himself with them? |
6046 | And why is it thee? |
6046 | And why is the breaking of the heart compared to the breaking of the bones? |
6046 | And why not now, as well as formerly? |
6046 | And why should a man cumber himself with what is his, when the good of all that is in Christ is laid, and to be laid out for him? |
6046 | And why so? |
6046 | And why so? |
6046 | And why then should not we have also in reserve for Christ? |
6046 | And why thus consider, but that a door might be opened for hope to exercise itself upon God by this? |
6046 | And why, to show, by these, the exceeding riches of his grace to the ages to come, through Christ Jesus? |
6046 | And why? |
6046 | And why? |
6046 | And will he be a favourable no more? |
6046 | And will not this, when they know it, yield them comfort? |
6046 | And will their agreement of hell yield them comfort? |
6046 | And will you, says Unbelief, in such a case as you now are, presume to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | And wilt thou hang back or be sullen, because thou art none of the first? |
6046 | And wilt thou judge him that doth thus? |
6046 | And wilt thou say these are things that are not? |
6046 | And would I, as was said before, be thoroughly saved, to wit, from the filth as from the guilt? |
6046 | And yet darest thou say to God, Our Father? |
6046 | And yet dost thou out of thy blasphemous throat suffer these words to come, even our Father? |
6046 | And yet who so idle as they in the time of their prosperity? |
6046 | And you that were sometime alienated, and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled[ but how?] |
6046 | And you, that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled,"how? |
6046 | And''the thunder of his power who can understand?'' |
6046 | And''what and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up where he was before?'' |
6046 | And, Fourth, what it was for him to be raised unto Israel? |
6046 | And, indeed, if people once say to God, by way of doubt,''Wherein hast thou loved us?'' |
6046 | And,"O God, why hast thou cast us off for ever?" |
6046 | And,"who shall separate us from the love of Christ"our Lord? |
6046 | Are great saints only to have the kingdom, and the glory everlasting? |
6046 | Are great works only to be rewarded? |
6046 | Are his saints precious to them? |
6046 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6046 | Are not these therefore strong desires? |
6046 | Are our fruits meet for repentance? |
6046 | Are the narratives of these mighty tempests in his spirit plain matters of fact? |
6046 | Are the words of God called by the name of the fear of the Lord? |
6046 | Are there any sins now that will fly upon this Saviour like so many lions, or raging devils, if He take in hand to redeem man? |
6046 | Are there bowels in you that are wicked, and will they be wrought upon by an importuning beggar? |
6046 | Are these the tokens of a blessed man?" |
6046 | Are they enemies to Thee? |
6046 | Are they lawful things which thou desirest? |
6046 | Are they so dreadful in their receipt and sentence? |
6046 | Are they such things as thou takest pleasure in? |
6046 | Are they tender of sinning against Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Are they that are justified by Christ''s blood such as have need yet to be saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6046 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6046 | Are they things Divine, or things natural? |
6046 | Are they things heavenly, or things earthly? |
6046 | Are they things holy, or things unholy? |
6046 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ yet such as have need of being saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ, such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need of being saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need to be saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6046 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such, after that, as have need also of saving by Christ''s intercession? |
6046 | Are thy sins so dear, so sweet, so desireable, so profitable to thee, that thou wilt venture a burning in hell fire for them till thou art burnt out? |
6046 | Are we profanely apt to judge of God harshly, as of one that would gather where he had not strawn? |
6046 | Are we tempted to distrust God? |
6046 | Are you stronger than he that made the heavens, and that holdeth angels in everlasting chains? |
6046 | Art not able to conclude, that to be saved is better than to burn in hell? |
6046 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6046 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6046 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6046 | Art thou a fool in thyself? |
6046 | Art thou a sinner of the first rate, of the biggest size? |
6046 | Art thou almost like Elymas the sorcerer, that sought to turn the deputy from the faith? |
6046 | Art thou also willing that he should decide the matter? |
6046 | Art thou begotten of God by his Word? |
6046 | Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Art thou coming, indeed? |
6046 | Art thou coming? |
6046 | Art thou coming? |
6046 | Art thou coming? |
6046 | Art thou crossed, disappointed, and waylaid, and overthrown in all thy foolish ways and doings? |
6046 | Art thou followed with affliction, and dost thou hear God''s angry voice in thy afflictions? |
6046 | Art thou indeed weary of the service of thy old master the devil, sin, and the world? |
6046 | Art thou jogged, and shaken, and molested at the hearing of the Word? |
6046 | Art thou most dejected when thou art at prayer? |
6046 | Art thou not come to discourse the Lord in prayer? |
6046 | Art thou not like to fare well, when thou hast embraced him, coming sinner? |
6046 | Art thou not willing to come faster? |
6046 | Art thou now in the favour of God? |
6046 | Art thou returning to God? |
6046 | Art thou righteous in the judgment of God? |
6046 | Art thou righteous? |
6046 | Art thou righteous? |
6046 | Art thou such an one? |
6046 | Art thou that readest these lines such an one? |
6046 | Art thou then made to see thy condition how bad it is, and that the way out of it is by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Art thou truly born again? |
6046 | Art thou unrighteous in thyself? |
6046 | Art thou visited in the night seasons with dreams about thy state, and that thou art in danger of being lost? |
6046 | Art thou weary of them? |
6046 | Art thy sins of diverse sorts? |
6046 | As God said to Coniah,''Did not thy father eat and drink, and do judgment and justice, and then it was well with him? |
6046 | As HE said,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6046 | As the mad prophet also saith of God, in another case,''Hath he said, and shall he not do it? |
6046 | As to the things of God, what shall I say? |
6046 | As who should say, My brethren, are you aware what you do? |
6046 | As who should say, My brethren, are you tempted, are you accused, have you sinned, has Satan prevailed against you? |
6046 | As who should say, What would heaven yield to me for delights, if I was there without my God? |
6046 | As, whether there were in truth a God or Christ, or no? |
6046 | Ask him where this God is? |
6046 | Ask the awakened man, or the man that is under the convictions of the law, if he doth not feel? |
6046 | Ask the carnal man to whom he prays? |
6046 | At another time, I remember I was again much under the question, Whether the blood of Christ was sufficient to save my soul? |
6046 | At last the visitor comes and sets his soul at ease, by persuading of him that he belongs to God: and what then? |
6046 | At which I was as if I had been raised out of a grave, and cried out again, Lord, how couldest thou find out such a word as this? |
6046 | Ay, but says the soul,''How can I reckon thus, when sin is yet strong in me?'' |
6046 | Ay, but when? |
6046 | Ay, that is well for you, Paul; but what advantage have we thereby? |
6046 | Aye, but this is a high pitch, how should we come by such princely spirits? |
6046 | Aye, saith he, to whom is that spoken? |
6046 | Aye, wherefore indeed? |
6046 | Because Christ died for me, shall I therefore spit in his face? |
6046 | Beelzebub? |
6046 | Behold, the Lord God will help me; who is he that shall condemn me? |
6046 | Behold, the angels cover their faces when they speak of his glory, how then shall not Satan bend before him? |
6046 | Believe, that is true; but how now must he conceive in his mind of Christ for the encouraging of him so to do? |
6046 | Besides, if men be made righteous, they are so; and if by a righteousness which the law commendeth, how can fault be found with them by the law? |
6046 | Besides, if the promise and God''s grace, without Christ''s blood, would have saved us, wherefore then did Christ die? |
6046 | Besides, to assert the contrary, what doth it but lessen sin, and make the advocateship of Jesus Christ superfluous? |
6046 | Besides, what arguments so prevailing as such as are purely gospel? |
6046 | Besides, who knows of all the ways by which the Almighty will inflict His just revenges upon the souls of damned sinners? |
6046 | Bold sinner, how darest thou tempt God, by laughing at the breach of his holy law? |
6046 | Bunyan, speaking of private prayer, keenly inquires, will God not hear thee"except thou comest before him with some eloquent oration?" |
6046 | But Abraham''s body is now dead? |
6046 | But David answered,"What have I to do with you, ye sons of Zeruiah, that ye should this day be adversaries unto me? |
6046 | But I am afraid the day of grace is past; and if it should be so, what should I do then? |
6046 | But I ask such, if the Father and Son be not unspeakably free to show mercy, why was this clause put into our commission to preach the gospel? |
6046 | But I can not pray, says one, therefore how should I persevere? |
6046 | But I say doth not this sufficiently show, had we but eyes to see it, what a sad and deplorable creature the child of God of himself is? |
6046 | But I say, if it be so, what need all this mercy? |
6046 | But I say, what is this to him that would fain be saved by Christ? |
6046 | But I say, why all these, thus named? |
6046 | But Jesus, our Advocate, answers as David, What have I to do with thee, O Satan? |
6046 | But Nathanael answered him,"Whence knowest thou me?" |
6046 | But Paul, what moved thee thus to do? |
6046 | But after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour appeared"--what then? |
6046 | But again; what mystery is desirable to be known that is not to be found in Jesus Christ, as Priest, Prophet, or King of saints? |
6046 | But are they the people on whom God doth magnify the riches of his grace? |
6046 | But are you willing, said he, to stand to the judgment of the church? |
6046 | But art thou sure thou canst? |
6046 | But ask him how, or under what notion he is to be considered there? |
6046 | But by what spirit is it then that I am brought again into fears, even into the fears of damnation, and so into bondage? |
6046 | But can any imagine that Christ will pray for them as Priest for whom he will not plead as Advocate? |
6046 | But could he not deliver him, or did the Lord forsake him? |
6046 | But could not we have been saved if Christ had not died? |
6046 | But could that heal it, could he not taste, truly taste, or rightly relish this forgiveness? |
6046 | But did He indeed suffer the torments of Hell? |
6046 | But did he prevail against him? |
6046 | But did you not fear it before? |
6046 | But do these people know what they do? |
6046 | But do they believe that thus it is with them? |
6046 | But do you think that these people did ever feel the power and majesty of the Word of God to break their hearts? |
6046 | But do you think that this outcry was caused by unbelief? |
6046 | But does the carnal world covet this, this spirit, and the blessed graces of it? |
6046 | But doth not the Scripture say,"Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life"? |
6046 | But doth not their thus living, abiding, and retaining a being(or what you will call it), demonstrate the greatness and might of the soul? |
6046 | But doth that promise suppose a willingness in us, as a condition of God''s making us willing? |
6046 | But doth the blind Pharisee think his state is such? |
6046 | But doth the guilt and burden of sin so keep them down that they can by no means lift up themselves? |
6046 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
6046 | But for what purpose? |
6046 | But hath not the law promises as well as threatenings? |
6046 | But have you no other way to discover the things of the Gospel, how they are done with a legal principle, but those you have already made mention of? |
6046 | But have you yet any other considerations to move us to fear God with child- like fear? |
6046 | But how and if I should delight in them before I am aware? |
6046 | But how are they distinguished from the Gentiles? |
6046 | But how came he by that repentance? |
6046 | But how came he to be a"new creature,"since none can create but God? |
6046 | But how came he to be affected with this? |
6046 | But how came he to bring his soul into so good a temper? |
6046 | But how came they clean? |
6046 | But how came they thus patiently to endure? |
6046 | But how came they to hear it? |
6046 | But how came this to be so? |
6046 | But how can that be, did they not come to us through the very sides of mercy? |
6046 | But how can this be done by him? |
6046 | But how can you tell you have faith? |
6046 | But how comes it to pass that thou art so hearty, that thou settest thy face against so much wind and weather? |
6046 | But how could God have respect to Abel, if Abel was not pleasing in his sight? |
6046 | But how could a holy God say,''Live,''to such a sinful people? |
6046 | But how did they tempt him? |
6046 | But how do they deliver them? |
6046 | But how doth God kill with this law, or covenant? |
6046 | But how doth he take that away but by a severe chastising of his soul for it, until he has made him weary of it? |
6046 | But how doth that appear? |
6046 | But how doth the soul carry it towards God, when He offereth to deal with it under and by this dispensation of grace? |
6046 | But how if I should have sinned the sin unpardonable, or that called the sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6046 | But how if we do? |
6046 | But how is the Lord righteous? |
6046 | But how long, prophet, wilt thou wait? |
6046 | But how much more may we behold the love that God hath bestowed upon us, in that he hath given us to his Son, and also given his Son for us? |
6046 | But how must he do that? |
6046 | But how must this be? |
6046 | But how now must this fool be made wise? |
6046 | But how shall I come hither? |
6046 | But how shall they escape all those dangerous and damnable opinions, that, like rocks and quicksands, are in the way in which they are going? |
6046 | But how shall we know that such men are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | But how should I do? |
6046 | But how should I know whether Christ do so knock at my heart as to be desirous to come in? |
6046 | But how should I prove[ or try] the goodness of mine own righteousness by the death and blood of Christ? |
6046 | But how should this rule in our hearts? |
6046 | But how should we find out what sinners shall be saved? |
6046 | But how should we know it, said he? |
6046 | But how should we try our graces now? |
6046 | But how then is what he doth accepted of God? |
6046 | But how was Jesus Christ made of God to be sin for us? |
6046 | But how will he do that? |
6046 | But how, if Sarah be barren? |
6046 | But how, if Sarah be past age? |
6046 | But how, if the day of grace should now be past and gone? |
6046 | But how, if they have exceeded many in sin, and so made themselves far more abominable? |
6046 | But how, if they have not faith and repentance? |
6046 | But how, if they want those things, those graces, power, and heart, without which they can not come? |
6046 | But how, if when I come at him he should ask me, Where I have all this while been? |
6046 | But how, if whilst thou lookest for it to come to thee at one door, it should come to thee in at another? |
6046 | But how? |
6046 | But how? |
6046 | But if God deals thus with a man, how can he otherwise think but that he is a reprobate, a graceless, Christless, and faithless one? |
6046 | But if a false faith is so forcible, what is a true? |
6046 | But if this be the sin unpardonable, why is it called the sin against the Holy Ghost, and not rather the sin against the Son of God? |
6046 | But if thou art not come, what can make thee happy? |
6046 | But if we do not use forms of prayer, how shall we teach our children to pray? |
6046 | But is it possible that He should so soon give infinite justice a satisfaction, a complete satisfaction? |
6046 | But is not Christ the gate or entrance into this heavenly place? |
6046 | But is not the door of mercy shut against some before they die? |
6046 | But is not the reward that God hath promised to his saints, for their good works to be enjoyed only here? |
6046 | But is not this a sign of madness, of madness unto perfection? |
6046 | But is not this great grace, that we should thus be called upon to come to God for mercy? |
6046 | But is not this the way to make Christ to loath us? |
6046 | But is there any comfort in being hanged with company? |
6046 | But it may be asked, When was this done to Christ, or what sacrifice of consecration had he precedent to the offering up of himself for our sins? |
6046 | But may it not come again as a spirit of bondage, to put me into my first fears for my good? |
6046 | But may one not be equally engaged for both? |
6046 | But might not Christ die for our sins but he needs must bear their guilt or burden? |
6046 | But must their obstinacy rule? |
6046 | But never let such a wicked thought pass through thy heart, saying,"This evil is of the Lord; what should I wait for the Lord any longer?" |
6046 | But now how doth God lose it? |
6046 | But now, how shall this man be reclaimed from this sin? |
6046 | But now, wouldst thou honour thy King? |
6046 | But one sin that layeth the soul without the reach of God''s mercy; and must I be guilty of that? |
6046 | But perhaps some may say, What need was there that Jesus Christ should do all this? |
6046 | But said, Hold; not so many, which is the first? |
6046 | But shall Christ take our cause in hand, and shall we doubt of good success? |
6046 | But shall I be daunted at this? |
6046 | But shall Manasseh come off thus? |
6046 | But shall such ever come to glory? |
6046 | But shall the will of heaven stoop to the will of hell? |
6046 | But shall this ever be said of Christ? |
6046 | But should I grant that which is indeed impossible-- namely, that thou art justified by the law; what then? |
6046 | But since I have lusts and desires both ways, how shall I know to which my soul adheres? |
6046 | But since I was sealed to the day of redemption, I have grievously sinned against God, have not I, therefore, cause to fear, as before? |
6046 | But some may say, How will they seek to enter in? |
6046 | But some may say, What is the meaning of this word able? |
6046 | But some may say, Wherein doth the saving grace of the Spirit appear? |
6046 | But some may say, what need of the righteousness of one that is naturally God? |
6046 | But still, I say, the question is, How comest thou to know that thou art righteous in the judgment of God? |
6046 | But suppose that at his return he should find his own cattle in that pound, would he now carry it toward them as he did unto the other? |
6046 | But suppose this great person should second his suit, and send to this sorry creature again, what would she say now? |
6046 | But the most of men do that which you forbid, and why may not we? |
6046 | But the question is now, how we should attain to, and live in, the exercise of this blessed and comely grace? |
6046 | But the third thing touched in the question was this-- What may such an one receive of God who is under the curse of the law? |
6046 | But then I turn the tables, and say, But where shall I be shortly? |
6046 | But then how as a Lamb is he in the midst of the throne? |
6046 | But then, sayest thou, how shall I escape? |
6046 | But then, some will say, since it is so difficult, how may we do without danger? |
6046 | But they are Satan''s captives; he takes them captive at his will, and he is stronger than they: how then can they come? |
6046 | But they are dead, dead in trespasses and sins, how shall they then come? |
6046 | But this is God''s complaint,''Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? |
6046 | But this, I say, is a very great block in his way when he meddles with the children; God has an interest in them-"Hath God cast away his people? |
6046 | But though I do wait, yet if I be not elected to eternal life, what good will all my waiting do me? |
6046 | But to come to the point: what righteousness hath that man that hath no works? |
6046 | But to come to the question-- What is it to be saved? |
6046 | But to the second thing, which is this, How far may such an one go? |
6046 | But upon what is this princely fearless service of God grounded? |
6046 | But was David, in a strict sense, without fault in all things else? |
6046 | But was ever heard the like to what Jesus Christ has done for sinners? |
6046 | But was not his faith exercised, or tried, about his willingness too? |
6046 | But was there not something of moment in this clause of the commission? |
6046 | But what a shame is this to man, that God should subject all his creatures to him, and he should refuse to stoop his heart to God? |
6046 | But what are all these righteousnesses? |
6046 | But what are they? |
6046 | But what are they? |
6046 | But what are we to understand by faith? |
6046 | But what did he do with our sins, for he had them upon his back? |
6046 | But what did he speak to them? |
6046 | But what do you mean by these words-- the old covenant as the old covenant? |
6046 | But what do you mean by those expressions? |
6046 | But what do you mean, John? |
6046 | But what does he? |
6046 | But what doth he mean by the dross? |
6046 | But what doth she do under all this trial? |
6046 | But what emboldened him thus to do? |
6046 | But what good will their covenant of death then do them? |
6046 | But what ground hast thou for this thy hope? |
6046 | But what had Joshua antecedent to this glorious and heavenly clothing? |
6046 | But what had he spoken? |
6046 | But what has God prepared this vessel for, and what has He put into it? |
6046 | But what if a man in this his progress hath one sinful thought? |
6046 | But what is all this to one that neither sees his sickness, that sees nothing of a wound? |
6046 | But what is all this to you that are not concerned in this privilege? |
6046 | But what is he? |
6046 | But what is it that a heart that is destitute of the fear of God will not do? |
6046 | But what is it that has got thy heart, and that keeps it from thy Saviour? |
6046 | But what is it then to be of these? |
6046 | But what is it to wait upon him according to his counsel? |
6046 | But what is that to them that never saw ought but beauty, and that never tasted anything but sweetness in sin? |
6046 | But what is the answer of Christ? |
6046 | But what is the matter? |
6046 | But what is the reason of that? |
6046 | But what is this iniquity? |
6046 | But what kind of sinners shall then be saved? |
6046 | But what law is that which hath not power to command our obedience in the point of our justification with God? |
6046 | But what men were to ascend with him, but, as was said afore, the men that''came out of the graves after his resurrection?'' |
6046 | But what must be done with them? |
6046 | But what necessity is there that the heart must be broken? |
6046 | But what need all these offices of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | But what need these things be asserted, promised, or prayed for? |
6046 | But what needs that, if mercy could save the soul without the redemption that is by him? |
6046 | But what of that, if yet he be unable to fetch us off when charged for sin at the bar, and before the face of a righteous judge? |
6046 | But what promises in the Scripture do you find your hope built upon? |
6046 | But what said the Lord unto him? |
6046 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6046 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6046 | But what saith the Word? |
6046 | But what saith the Word? |
6046 | But what saith the apostle? |
6046 | But what saith the sinful soul to this? |
6046 | But what says the distressed man? |
6046 | But what shall we say, when there must be added to that the heart blood of the Son of God, and all to make our salvation complete? |
6046 | But what should a Christian do, when God has broke his heart, to keep it tender? |
6046 | But what should be the reason of that? |
6046 | But what should be the reason that some that are coming to Christ should be so lamentably cast down and buffeted with temptations? |
6046 | But what should be the reason? |
6046 | But what should he believe? |
6046 | But what should such men do in that kingdom that comes by gift, where grace and mercy reigns? |
6046 | But what then are sinners the better for the death and blood of Christ? |
6046 | But what then do we mean when we say, justification will stand with a state of imperfection? |
6046 | But what then doth he mean by the redemption of this purchased possession? |
6046 | But what then was the altar? |
6046 | But what then? |
6046 | But what was Paul but a broken- hearted and a contrite sinner? |
6046 | But what was Paul? |
6046 | But what was it that made him thus slothful? |
6046 | But what was it that made them join their works of the law with Christ, but their unbelief, whose foundation was ignorance and fear? |
6046 | But what was it that moved so upon his heart, as to cause him to do this thing? |
6046 | But what was it to be lifted up from the earth? |
6046 | But what was it? |
6046 | But what was the affliction? |
6046 | But what was the cause of their making this excuse? |
6046 | But what was the reason thereof, I mean the reason from God? |
6046 | But what was the reason? |
6046 | But what was this to a personal performing the commandments? |
6046 | But what were the things that their eyes had seen, that would so damnify them should they be forgotten? |
6046 | But what will he do with him as he is an Advocate? |
6046 | But what will not love do? |
6046 | But what will you say to a soul in this condition? |
6046 | But what would they do if there were not one always at the right hand of God, by intercession, taking away these kind of iniquities? |
6046 | But what would you have us poor creatures to do that can not tell how to pray? |
6046 | But what, did they now love David? |
6046 | But what, then, are the works of the law? |
6046 | But what? |
6046 | But when I heard it, Lord, thought I, if this be true, what shall I do, and what will become of all this people, yea, and of this preacher too? |
6046 | But when he shall see the thief that was saved on the cross stand by, as clothed with beauteous glory, what further can he be able to object? |
6046 | But when must we conclude we have kept the law? |
6046 | But when, Lord, wilt thou laugh at, and mock at, the impenitent? |
6046 | But when? |
6046 | But whence should the soul thus receive sin? |
6046 | But where do you find that ever the Lord did thus rowl9 in his bowels for and after any self- righteous man? |
6046 | But where doth Jesus Christ, in all the word of the New Testament, expressly speak to a returning backslider with words of grace and peace? |
6046 | But where hadst thou that heart that gives entertainment to these thoughts, these heavenly thoughts? |
6046 | But wherein lieth the depth of this wisdom of God in our salvation, if man''s righteousness can save him? |
6046 | But which is the way to make one that is wild, or a madman, sober? |
6046 | But who are these? |
6046 | But who can tell, though there should not be saved so many as there shall, but thou mayest be one of that few? |
6046 | But who doth he personate if he says, This is a house for the soul; for the body is part of him that says, Our house? |
6046 | But who is this that can do this? |
6046 | But who must look upon it? |
6046 | But who told thee that thy soul was such an excellent thing as by thy practice thou declarest thou believest it to be? |
6046 | But who, when called, was there in the world, in whom grace shone so bright as in him? |
6046 | But why could they not learn that song? |
6046 | But why did Christ offer Himself in sacrifice? |
6046 | But why did God let Him die? |
6046 | But why did He spill His precious blood? |
6046 | But why did He suffer the pains of Hell? |
6046 | But why did he commit his soul to him? |
6046 | But why did he do all this? |
6046 | But why did these do thus? |
6046 | But why do I talk thus? |
6046 | But why do the righteous desire to be with Christ? |
6046 | But why do you wonder at a work of conviction and conversion? |
6046 | But why doth Job after this manner thus speak to God? |
6046 | But why doth the devil do thus? |
6046 | But why go back again, seeing that is the next way to hell? |
6046 | But why is God so delighted in the exercise of this grace of hope? |
6046 | But why is all this? |
6046 | But why is it given to him? |
6046 | But why not attain to a performance? |
6046 | But why not in the name of an angel? |
6046 | But why not possible now to be holden of death? |
6046 | But why so? |
6046 | But why speaks he so particularly? |
6046 | But why speedily? |
6046 | But why was the firstborn of men coupled with unclean beasts, but because they are both unclean? |
6046 | But why wonder, and think they are fools? |
6046 | But why would God so order it, that life should be had nowhere else but in Jesus Christ? |
6046 | But why, then, is His death so slighted by some? |
6046 | But why? |
6046 | But will it not, think you, strangely put to silence all such thoughts, and words, and reasons of the ungodly before the bar of God? |
6046 | But will riches profit in the day of wrath? |
6046 | But will that good meal that I ate last week, enable me, without supply, to do a good day''s work in this? |
6046 | But will the plea do? |
6046 | But will you be willing, said he, that two indifferent persons shall determine the case, and will you stand by their judgment? |
6046 | But with what death? |
6046 | But would God have given the world such an account of his sufferings, that by one offering he did perfect for ever them that are sanctified? |
6046 | But would He have done this for inconsiderable things? |
6046 | But would he believe it? |
6046 | But would they do thus if they knew the severity of the law? |
6046 | But would they have done so, think you, if at the same time the fear of God had had its full play in the soul, in the army? |
6046 | But would you have us sit still and do nothing? |
6046 | But would you not have the people of God stand in fear of his rod, and be afraid of his judgments? |
6046 | But would you not have us mind our worldly concerns? |
6046 | But would you not have us rejoice at the sight and sense of the forgiveness of our sins? |
6046 | But yet all the things of God were kept out of my sight, and still the tempter followed me with, But whither must you go when you die? |
6046 | But you may ask me, What the laver or molten sea should signify to us in the New Testament? |
6046 | But you may say, How shall I know that I fear God? |
6046 | But you may say, What is it to exercise this grace aright? |
6046 | But you will say, How should we try our graces? |
6046 | But you will say,"Then why did God give the law, if we can not have salvation by following of it?" |
6046 | But you will say--"But who are those that are thus under the law?" |
6046 | But''how shall I give thee up, Ephraim? |
6046 | But, Are they within the reach and power of Shall- come? |
6046 | But, Harry, said I, why do you swear and curse thus? |
6046 | But, I say, how can these Scriptures be fulfilled, if he that would indeed be saved, as before said, has sinned the sin unpardonable? |
6046 | But, I say, if he knows him not, how can he propound him as the end? |
6046 | But, I say, if the sight of heaven, at so vast a distance, is so excellent a prospect, what will it look like when one is in it? |
6046 | But, I say, was this fear, that is called now the fear of God, anything else, but a dread of the greatness of power of the king? |
6046 | But, I say, what is all this to them that have him not for their Advocate? |
6046 | But, I say, what is man without this soul, or wherein lieth this pre- eminence over a beast? |
6046 | But, I say, what is the reason some so prize what others so despise, since they both stand in need of the same grace and mercy of God in Christ? |
6046 | But, I say, what is this to them that are not admitted to a privilege in the advocate- office of Christ? |
6046 | But, I say, why offended at this? |
6046 | But, I say, why so unconcerned? |
6046 | But, I say,''Would they not change places? |
6046 | But, Lord, give an instance; when was it, or where? |
6046 | But, Lord, how wilt thou quench their boundless thirst? |
6046 | But, USE FOURTH.--Is it so? |
6046 | But, alas, I am blind, and can not see; what shall I do now? |
6046 | But, alas, I have nothing to carry with me; how then should I go? |
6046 | But, as Paul says of himself, and of those that were saved by grace in his day,"What then? |
6046 | But, brave soul, pray tell me what the things are that discourage thee, and that weaken thy strength in the way? |
6046 | But, but few comparatively will be concerned with this use; for where is he that doth this? |
6046 | But, do the broken in spirit believe this? |
6046 | But, said he, how shall we know that you have received a gift? |
6046 | But, said he, what if you should forbear awhile, and sit still, till you see further how things will go? |
6046 | But, said he, who shall be judge between you, for you take the Scriptures one way, and they another? |
6046 | But, saith Justice Keelin, who was the judge in that court? |
6046 | But, saith the Christian, I am dull and stupid that way, will not Christ be shuff13 and shy with me because of this? |
6046 | But, saith the soul, how, if after I have received a pardon, I should commit treason again? |
6046 | But, says Justice Keelin, what have you against the Common Prayer Book? |
6046 | But, says Moses,"Who is a God like unto thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?" |
6046 | But, you will say, can a man use Gospel ordinances with a legal spirit? |
6046 | But, you will say, it is like, How should this be made manifest and appear? |
6046 | By way of question; what are the things thou desirest, are they lawful or unlawful? |
6046 | By what law? |
6046 | By what will? |
6046 | By whom or by what is this fear wrought in the heart? |
6046 | Called Christian, how many times have thy sins laid thee upon a sick- bed, and, to thine and others''thinking, at the very mouth of the grave? |
6046 | Can a holy, a just, and a righteous God, once think( with honour to his name) of saving such a vile creature as I am? |
6046 | Can a man at the same time be a proud man, and fear God too? |
6046 | Can he contradict our Advocate? |
6046 | Can he excuse himself? |
6046 | Can he overstand the charge, the accusation, the sentence, and condemnation? |
6046 | Can he prove that Christ has no interest in the saints''inheritance? |
6046 | Can he prove that we are at age, or that our several parts of the heavenly house are already delivered into our own power? |
6046 | Can he speak for himself? |
6046 | Can it be a privilege for me to be annoyed with my infirmities, and to have my best duties infected with it? |
6046 | Can it be imagined, sin being what it is, and God what he is-- to wit, a revenger of disobedience-- but that one time or other man must smart for sin? |
6046 | Can it me a mercy for me to be troubled with my corruptions? |
6046 | Can none of these severally, nor all of them jointly, save a man from hell, unless Christ also become our Advocate? |
6046 | Can not a man be saved unless his heart be broken? |
6046 | Can not all the angels do it? |
6046 | Can not an angel do it? |
6046 | Can not he transform himself thus into an angel of light? |
6046 | Can not his eyes, which are as a flame of fire, see in my words, thoughts, and actions enough to make me culpable of the wrath of God? |
6046 | Can not man by any means redeem his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him? |
6046 | Can not one sinner save another? |
6046 | Can not you submit, and, notwithstanding, do as much good as you can, in a neighbourly way, without having such meetings? |
6046 | Can such a one as I am, live in glory? |
6046 | Can the body hear? |
6046 | Can the body see? |
6046 | Can the thistle produce grapes, or the noxious weeds corn? |
6046 | Can the waters quench it? |
6046 | Can there be a miss of the loss of such an one? |
6046 | Can there be any greater comfort ministered to thee than to know thy person stands just before God? |
6046 | Can there be hope for me?'' |
6046 | Can these fear God? |
6046 | Can they do that at all times which they can do at some times? |
6046 | Can they pray, believe, love, fear, repent, and bow before God always alike? |
6046 | Can we, by a new birth, say"Our Father?" |
6046 | Can you give me further reason yet to convict me of the truth of what you say? |
6046 | Can you grapple with the judgment of God? |
6046 | Can you not be content to be damned for your sins against the law, but you must sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6046 | Can you say you desire, when you pray? |
6046 | Can you wrestle with the Almighty? |
6046 | Canst thou answer it, sinner? |
6046 | Canst thou be content to be put off with a belly well filled, and a back well clothed? |
6046 | Canst thou defend thyself? |
6046 | Canst thou drink hell- fire? |
6046 | Canst thou hear of Christ, His bloody sweat and death, and not be taken with it, and not be grieved for it, and also converted by it? |
6046 | Canst thou hear that the load of thy sins did break the very heart of Christ, and spill His precious blood? |
6046 | Canst thou hear this, and not be concerned? |
6046 | Canst thou hear this, and not have thy ears to tingle and burn on thy head? |
6046 | Canst thou imagine thou shalt at the day of account out- face God, or make him believe thou wast what thou wast not? |
6046 | Canst thou in faith say, Father, Father, to God? |
6046 | Canst thou indeed, with the rest of the saints, cry, Our Father? |
6046 | Canst thou not so much as once soberly think of thy dying hour, or of whither thy sinful life will drive thee then? |
6046 | Canst thou now that readest or hearest these lines turn thy back, and go on in your sins? |
6046 | Canst thou produce the birthright? |
6046 | Canst thou read this, and not feel thy conscience begin to throb and dag? |
6046 | Canst thou say unto him as David,"Judge me, O God, and plead my cause"( Psa 43:1)? |
6046 | Canst thou see thy misery? |
6046 | Canst thou set so light of Heaven, of God, of Christ, and the salvation of thy poor, yet precious soul? |
6046 | Carest thou not for this? |
6046 | Carry the solemn inquiry to the throne of grace, Have I passed from death unto life? |
6046 | Change!--with whom? |
6046 | Charles II, hearing of it, asked the learned D.D.,''How a man of his great erudition could sit to hear a tinker preach?'' |
6046 | Chris.--What good motions? |
6046 | Christ made himself known to his disciples in breaking of bread; who would not, then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6046 | Christ made himself known to them in breaking of bread; who, who would not then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6046 | Christian man, dost thou hear? |
6046 | Christian, are you actively engaged in fulfilling the duties of your course? |
6046 | Come, sinner, let us apply it: How long is it since thou began to fear that Jesus Christ will not receive thee? |
6046 | Coming sinner, take notice of this; we use to plead practices with men, and why not with God likewise? |
6046 | Coming sinner, what thinkest thou? |
6046 | Consdier man what I have said, And judge of things aright; When all men''s cards are fully played, Whose will abide the light? |
6046 | Consider, I say, has he made a hedge and a wall to stop thee? |
6046 | Consider, thou sayest, all my strength is gone, and therefore how should I wait? |
6046 | Consider, was it man that had offended? |
6046 | Could He not have suffered without His so suffering? |
6046 | Could he not, think you, have stooped from the cross to the ground, and have laid hold on some honester man, if he would? |
6046 | Could not the grace of the Father save us without this condescension of the Son? |
6046 | Couldst thou invent a more full, free, or larger promise? |
6046 | Cry, if thou wilt, O, when wilt thou come unto me? |
6046 | Deny this, and it follows that God accepteth men without respect to righteousness; and then what follows that, but that Christ is dead in vain? |
6046 | Devote myself to it, you will say, how is that? |
6046 | Did Gideon, think you, believe that he was so strong in grace as he was? |
6046 | Did God send his Holy Spirit into the hearts of his people, to that end that you should taunt at it? |
6046 | Did He bleed for sin? |
6046 | Did I say that hearty, fervent, and constant prayer flowed from this fear of God? |
6046 | Did I say, personal virtues? |
6046 | Did he not, even when he desired life, yet break with God in the day when conditions of life were propounded to him? |
6046 | Did not Aaron fall; yea, and Moses himself? |
6046 | Did not Christ die for us; and dying for us, are we not become dead to the law by the death of his body? |
6046 | Did not I tell thee before, that a man must be righteous before he doth one good work, or he can never be righteous? |
6046 | Did the similar feeling of Job or David spring from these polluted fountains? |
6046 | Did these, then, see their graces so clear, as they saw themselves by their sins to be unworthy ones? |
6046 | Did they all know that he was to be betrayed of Judas? |
6046 | Did you never read that Scripture which saith,"Israel, which followed after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness"? |
6046 | Did you never read what God did to Ananias and Sapphira for telling but one lie against it? |
6046 | Didst thou ever burn any of thy children in the fire to idols? |
6046 | Didst thou ever curse, and swear, and deny Christ? |
6046 | Didst thou ever kill anybody? |
6046 | Didst thou ever use enchantments and conjuration? |
6046 | Do God''s people keep holy fasts? |
6046 | Do I love Christ, his Father, his saints, his words, and ways? |
6046 | Do I see salvation is nowhere but in Christ? |
6046 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
6046 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6046 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6046 | Do not I know that I am exalted this day to be king of righteousness, and king of peace? |
6046 | Do not even almost all pursue this world, their lusts and pleasures? |
6046 | Do not these fears hinder thee from profiting in hearing or reading of the Word? |
6046 | Do not these fears keep thee back from laying hold of the promise of salvation by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thou hast had, indeed, any true comfort from the Word and Spirit of God? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thy first fears were wrought by the Holy Spirit of God? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee question whether there was ever a work of grace wrought in thy soul? |
6046 | Do not these fears make thee sometimes think, that it is in vain for thee to wait upon the Lord any longer? |
6046 | Do not these fears tend to the hardening of thy heart, and to the making of thee desperate? |
6046 | Do not these fears tend to the stirring up of blasphemies in thy heart against God? |
6046 | Do not these fears weaken thy heart in prayer? |
6046 | Do such fear God? |
6046 | Do they cry out after the Lord Jesus, to save them? |
6046 | Do they cry out of the insufficiency of their own righteousness, as to justification in the sight of God? |
6046 | Do they fear God? |
6046 | Do they fear God? |
6046 | Do they fly from it, as from the face of a deadly serpent? |
6046 | Do they not know the law? |
6046 | Do they savour Christ in his Word, and do they leave all the world for his sake? |
6046 | Do they see more worth and merit in one drop of Christ''s blood to save them, than in all the sins of the world to damn them? |
6046 | Do they slight Thy groans, Thy tears, Thy blood, Thy death, Thy resurrection and intercession, Thy second coming again in heavenly glory? |
6046 | Do they slight Thy merits? |
6046 | Do they, do you think, fear God? |
6046 | Do you come to church, you know what I mean; to the parish church, to hear Divine service? |
6046 | Do you know them now? |
6046 | Do you know them now? |
6046 | Do you know what that willful sin is? |
6046 | Do you mean the covenant of the Law, or the covenant to the Gospel? |
6046 | Do you not hear the prophets, how they press faith in Jesus, and life by faith in him? |
6046 | Do you not know that they are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Do you not know them? |
6046 | Do you think it is to say a few words over before or among a people? |
6046 | Do you think that Ephraim would have looked after salvation, had not God first confounded him with the guilt of the sins of his youth? |
6046 | Do you think that I do mean that my righteousness will save me without Christ? |
6046 | Do you think that Manasseh would have regarded the Lord, had He not suffered his enemies to have prevailed against him? |
6046 | Do you think that he that repents, believes, loves, fears, or humbles himself before God, and acts in other graces too, doth always know what he doth? |
6046 | Do you think that love- letters are not desired between lovers? |
6046 | Do you think that the woman with her two mites cast in all that she desired to cast into the treasury of God? |
6046 | Do you think, I say, that the Lord Jesus did not think before he spake? |
6046 | Does thy hand and heart tremble? |
6046 | Dost fly to him that is a Saviour from the wrath to come, for life? |
6046 | Dost thou at some time see some little excellency in Christ? |
6046 | Dost thou delight in them? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear God? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6046 | Dost thou find that there is but very little sanctifying grace in thy soul? |
6046 | Dost thou know by what it is that God makes a man righteous? |
6046 | Dost thou know what the unpardonable sin, the sin against the Holy Ghost, is? |
6046 | Dost thou know where that is by or with which God makes a man righteous? |
6046 | Dost thou like these wicked blasphemies? |
6046 | Dost thou love thine own soul? |
6046 | Dost thou love thy friends, dost thou love thine enemies, dost thou love thy family or relations, or the church of God? |
6046 | Dost thou mourn for them, pray against them, and hate thyself because of them? |
6046 | Dost thou not inwardly, and with indignation against sin, say, O that I might never, never feel one such motion more? |
6046 | Dost thou not see the very paw of the devil in them; yea, in every one of thy ten confessions? |
6046 | Dost thou not understand me? |
6046 | Dost thou see and find in thee iniquity and unrighteousness? |
6046 | Dost thou see in thee all manner of wickedness? |
6046 | Dost thou see that thou art very much void of sanctification? |
6046 | Dost thou see thy sins? |
6046 | Dost thou see thyself in Christ, and canst thou come to God as a member of him? |
6046 | Dost thou see thyself surrounded with enemies? |
6046 | Dost thou strive to imitate Christ in all the works of righteousness, which God doth command of thee, and prompt thee forward to? |
6046 | Dost thou study, by all honest and lawful ways, to advance the name, holiness, and majesty of God? |
6046 | Dost thou therefore see thyself in such a sad condition as this? |
6046 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6046 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6046 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6046 | Dost thou think that the way that thou art in will lead thee to the strait gate, sinner? |
6046 | Dost thou understand me, sinful soul? |
6046 | Dost thou want a new heart? |
6046 | Dost thou want faith? |
6046 | Dost thou want grace of any sort? |
6046 | Dost thou want strength against thy lusts, against the devil''s temptations? |
6046 | Dost thou want strength to carry thee through afflictions of body, and afflictions of spirit, through persecutions? |
6046 | Dost thou want the Spirit? |
6046 | Dost thou want wisdom? |
6046 | Doth He sometimes give thee some secret persuasions, though scarcely discernible, that thou mayest attain, and get an interest in Him? |
6046 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us with God, to plead with him for us against the devil? |
6046 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us, and that of his mere grace and love? |
6046 | Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly and with cold devotions? |
6046 | Doth he hope? |
6046 | Doth he then command that his mercy should be offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Doth his promise fail for evermore? |
6046 | Doth iniquity prevail against thee? |
6046 | Doth it look like what hath any coherence with reason or mercy, for a man to abuse his friend? |
6046 | Doth it say,"and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out?" |
6046 | Doth justice call for the blood of that nature that sinned? |
6046 | Doth justice say that this blood, if it be not the blood of One that is really and naturally God, it will not give satisfaction to infinite justice? |
6046 | Doth justice say, that it must not only have satisfaction for sinners, but they that are saved must be also washed and sanctified with this blood? |
6046 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ but by the drawing,& c., of the Father? |
6046 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Doth not everybody see the folly of such arguings? |
6046 | Doth not the ground groan under you? |
6046 | Doth not thy finding of this in thee cause thee to fly from a depending on thy own doings? |
6046 | Doth not thy heart twitter at being saved? |
6046 | Doth not thy mouth water? |
6046 | Doth such a one believe? |
6046 | Doth the law command thee to do good, and nothing but good, and that with all thy soul, heart, and delight? |
6046 | Doth the text say,"Come?" |
6046 | Doth thy heart and conversation agree with this passage? |
6046 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6046 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6046 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6046 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6046 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6046 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6046 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6046 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6046 | Eighth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Eleventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Enter upon the solemn inquiry, Have I sought the gate? |
6046 | Esau did despise his birthright, saying, What good will this birthright do me? |
6046 | Especially if the judge be just, and knows me altogether, as the God of heaven does? |
6046 | Fifth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | First, Art thou indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | First, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | For how can a man act righteousness but from a principle of righteousness? |
6046 | For how can it otherwise be, since there is holiness and justice in God? |
6046 | For how can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord? |
6046 | For if sin be so dreadful a thing as to wring the heart of the Son of God, how shall a poor wretched sinner be able to bear it? |
6046 | For if the most potent parts of the soul are engaged in their service, what, think you, do the more inferior do? |
6046 | For if they reject the word of the Lord,"what wisdom is in them?" |
6046 | For so the question implies--''What will a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | For some cause he was treated with great liberality for those times; the extent of it may be seen by one justice asking him,''Is your God Beelzebub?'' |
6046 | For the fear of God is to stand in awe of him, but how can that be done if we do not set him before us? |
6046 | For the first of these, namely,''WHAT OR WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6046 | For they are now profane to amazement; and sometimes I have thought one thing, and sometimes another; that is, why God should suffer it so to be? |
6046 | For to what purpose should a man desire, or what fruits will desire bring him whose desires shall not be granted? |
6046 | For upon this one question, Am I come, or, am I not? |
6046 | For what is the ground of despair, but a conceit that sin has shut the soul out of all interest in happiness? |
6046 | For what saith the Scripture? |
6046 | For what will my weak and newly converted brethren think of it, but that I was not so strong indeed as I was in word? |
6046 | For wherein shall it be known here, that I and thy people have found grace in thy sight, is it not in that thou goest with us? |
6046 | For who can bear or grapple with the wrath of God? |
6046 | For who can do righteousness without he be principled so to do? |
6046 | For whom can so precious an inheritance be intended? |
6046 | For why are these things thus recorded, but to show to sinners what he can do, to the praise and glory of his grace? |
6046 | For why may not God be merciful, and why may not God be just? |
6046 | For zeal, where is that also? |
6046 | For''hope that is seen, is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? |
6046 | For, Was the first covenant made with the first Adam? |
6046 | Fourth, Art thou come to the Lord Jesus? |
6046 | Fourth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Friend, if thou canst fit thyself, what need hast thou of Christ? |
6046 | Go away? |
6046 | Go to him, did I say? |
6046 | God charged our sins upon Christ, and that in their guilt and burden, what remaineth but that the charge was real or feigned? |
6046 | God gave testimony of him by signs and wonders--''Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
6046 | God gave them intimation of a better country, and their minds did cleave to it with desires of it; and what then? |
6046 | God is true, his Word is true; and to help us to hope in him, how many times has he fulfilled it to others, and that before our eyes? |
6046 | Grant it; yet what law takes notice of the plea of one who doth professedly act as an enemy? |
6046 | Guilt and despair, what are they? |
6046 | Hackney, April 1850 THE GREATNESS OF THE SOUL, AND UNSPEAKABLENESS OF THE LOSS THEREOF''OR WHAT SHALL A MAN GIVE IN EXCHANGE FOR HIS SOUL?'' |
6046 | Had I ever, in all my lifetime, one sinful thought passed through my heart since I was born; yea or no? |
6046 | Had he no place clean? |
6046 | Had not now these men desires that were mighty? |
6046 | Had our sins betrayed us into and under Satan''s slavery? |
6046 | Had sin set us at an indefinite distance from God? |
6046 | Has God forbidden thee? |
6046 | Has he adopted us into his family? |
6046 | Has he crossed thee in all thou puttest thy hand unto? |
6046 | Has man given himself for sin? |
6046 | Has man lain at wait for opportunities for sin? |
6046 | Has man, that he might enjoy his sin, brought himself to a morsel of bread? |
6046 | Has man, when he has found his sin, pursued it with all his heart? |
6046 | Has sin wounded, bruised thy soul, and broken thy bones? |
6046 | Hast no affection but what is brutish? |
6046 | Hast no judgment? |
6046 | Hast no soul? |
6046 | Hast thou Jesus Christ for thine Advocate? |
6046 | Hast thou a cause moving thee to come? |
6046 | Hast thou also considered the justness of the Judge? |
6046 | Hast thou any enticing touches of the Word of God upon thy mind? |
6046 | Hast thou been a witch? |
6046 | Hast thou been with him, and prayed him to plead thy cause, and cried unto him to undertake for thee? |
6046 | Hast thou committed it? |
6046 | Hast thou desired him to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Hast thou entertained him? |
6046 | Hast thou escaped, O my soul, from the net of the infernal fowler? |
6046 | Hast thou four children? |
6046 | Hast thou heart- shaken apprehensions when deep sleep is upon thee, of hell, death, and judgment to come? |
6046 | Hast thou in thee the spirit of adoption? |
6046 | Hast thou no conscience? |
6046 | Hast thou no sins? |
6046 | Hast thou not cursed them in thine heart many a time? |
6046 | Hast thou not known? |
6046 | Hast thou not reason? |
6046 | Hast thou received the spirit of adoption? |
6046 | Hast thou seen thy state to be desperate, if the Lord Jesus doth not undertake to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Hast thou then fled, or dost thou indeed fly to it? |
6046 | Hast thou waited on the Lord so long as the Lord hath waited on thee? |
6046 | Hast thou well improved what thou hast received already? |
6046 | Hast thou, thinkest thou, found anything so good as Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Hast thou, through desires, betaken thyself to thy heels? |
6046 | Hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
6046 | Hath God required these things at your hands? |
6046 | Hath God showed thee that thou art by nature under the curse of his law? |
6046 | Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and Hell? |
6046 | Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies?" |
6046 | Hath it not a most vehement flame? |
6046 | Hath not the least creature that hath life, more of God in it than these? |
6046 | Hath not this God great love for sinners? |
6046 | Hath the Holy Ghost, hath the world, or hath thy conscience? |
6046 | Have I been grafted into Christ? |
6046 | Have I the right work of God on my soul? |
6046 | Have not I told thee already that there is no such thing as a ceasing to be? |
6046 | Have not thy groans gone up to heaven from every corner of thy house? |
6046 | Have they faith? |
6046 | Have they hope? |
6046 | Have they pardon of sin? |
6046 | Have they righteousness? |
6046 | Have they strength to do the work of God in their generations, or any other thing that God would have them do? |
6046 | Have they that shall be saved, awakenings about their state by nature? |
6046 | Have they that shall be saved, faith? |
6046 | Have thy sins corrupted thy wounds, and made them putrefy and stink? |
6046 | Have we comfort, or consolation? |
6046 | Have we sinned? |
6046 | Have we the Spirit, or the fruits thereof? |
6046 | Have you forgot the close, the milk house, the stable, the barn, and the like, where God did visit your soul? |
6046 | Have you never a hill Mizar to remember? |
6046 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6046 | He also expects this at our hands, saying,"Who will rise up for me against the evil doers? |
6046 | He answered me in a great chafe, What would the devil do for company, if it were not for such as I am?'' |
6046 | He asked me why? |
6046 | He feared God; and what then? |
6046 | He forsakes him--''My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
6046 | He hath given us his Son,"How shall he not with him also freely give us all things?" |
6046 | He hath this Abishai, and that Abishai, that presently steps in against him, saying, Shall not this rebel''s sins destroy him in hell? |
6046 | He imagined that he could bear these small afflictions with patience; but''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6046 | He is indeed the great deliverer; but what is a deliverer to them that never saw themselves in bondage, as was said before? |
6046 | He is near that justifieth me; who will contend with me? |
6046 | He is not ashamed of us, though now in heaven; why should we be ashamed of him before this adulterous and sinful generation? |
6046 | He is thy Creator; is it not seemly for creatures to fear and reverence their Creator? |
6046 | He is thy Father; is it not seemly for children to reverence and fear their Father? |
6046 | He is thy King; is it not seemly for subjects to fear and reverence their King? |
6046 | He is unwearied in his pleading for us; why should we faint and be dismayed while we plead for him? |
6046 | He never said to him,''Why hast thou done so?'' |
6046 | He pleads for us before the holy angels; why should not we plead for him before princes? |
6046 | He pleads for us to save our souls; why should not we plead for him to sanctify his name? |
6046 | He pleads for us, against fallen angels; why should we not plead for him against sinful vanities? |
6046 | He pleads for us, though our cause is bad; why should not we plead for him, since his cause is good? |
6046 | He ran to him, he kneeled down to him, and asked, and that before a multitude,''Good master, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?'' |
6046 | He said that I was ignorant, and did not understand the Scriptures; for how, said he, can you understand them when you know not the original Greek? |
6046 | He said unto me, By what scripture? |
6046 | He said, How then? |
6046 | He said, which of the Scriptures do you understand literally? |
6046 | He saith himself, they that come to him,& c., shall find rest unto their souls; hast thou found rest in him for thy soul? |
6046 | He sanctified us with his blood; but why should the Father have thanks for this? |
6046 | He was to offer it, and how? |
6046 | He was, and was his Son, before he was revealed--''What is his name, and what is his Son''s name, if thou canst tell?'' |
6046 | He will receive perfection, immortality, heaven, and glory; and what is folded up in these things, who can tell? |
6046 | Hear, did I say? |
6046 | Heartily spoken; but how did he perform his promise? |
6046 | Hence David, when he speaks of heaven, says,''Whom have I in heaven but thee?'' |
6046 | Hence it follows that Christ will be ashamed of some; but why not ashamed of others? |
6046 | Here is nought but open war, acts of hostility, and shameful rebellion, on the sinner''s side; and what delight can God take in that? |
6046 | His cause; what is his cause? |
6046 | His fee- who shall pay him his fee? |
6046 | House and land, trades and honours, places and preferments, what are they to salvation? |
6046 | How are those treated in this world who are entitled to so glorious, so exalted, so eternal, and unchangeable an inheritance in the world to come? |
6046 | How art thou when thou thinkest that thou thyself hast grace? |
6046 | How came that to pass? |
6046 | How came they by their faith? |
6046 | How came they white? |
6046 | How camest thou to see thy need of this righteousness? |
6046 | How can I judge amiss, when I judge as I feel? |
6046 | How can I then be accepted by a holy and sin- abhorring God? |
6046 | How can it possibly be? |
6046 | How can they have any to Godward that are enemies to him in their minds by wicked works? |
6046 | How can they pray or make conscience of the duty that fear not God? |
6046 | How can those that are accustomed to do evil, do that which is commanded in this particular? |
6046 | How can we judge of a preacher''s good will, but by''peace on his lips?'' |
6046 | How canst thou find in thy heart to set thyself against grace, against such grace as offereth mercy to thee? |
6046 | How could he join in their thanks, and praises, and blessings of him for ever and ever, in whose favour, mercy, and grace, they are not concerned? |
6046 | How did he ply it with Christ against Joshua the high- priest? |
6046 | How did he ply16 it against that good man Job, if possibly he might have obtained his destruction in hell- fire? |
6046 | How do the heirs to immortality conduct themselves in such a prospect? |
6046 | How do they show themselves to be true under the first of these? |
6046 | How do they show themselves to be true under the second? |
6046 | How dost thou find them in outward trials? |
6046 | How dost thou find thyself in the inward workings of sin? |
6046 | How dost thou like being saved? |
6046 | How dost thou like the discovery of that which thou thinkest is grace in other men? |
6046 | How doth that appear? |
6046 | How far? |
6046 | How if I never see the sun rise more? |
6046 | How if the first voice that rings to- morrow morning in my heavy ears be,''Arise, ye dead, and come to judgment?'' |
6046 | How if you have over- stood the time of mercy? |
6046 | How is that? |
6046 | How is that? |
6046 | How is this great object to be accomplished? |
6046 | How it appears that they that are saved, are saved by grace? |
6046 | How many are there in the world whose heart Satan hath filled with a belief that their state and condition for another world is good? |
6046 | How many good souls has he driven to these conclusions, who afterwards have been made to unsay all again? |
6046 | How many have, in all ages, been kept from coming to God aright by the terrors of the world? |
6046 | How many in Israel were destroyed for that which Aaron, Gideon, and Manasseh, unworthily did in their day? |
6046 | How many pay undue respect to buildings in which public prayer is offered up? |
6046 | How many struggling fits had Israel with God in the wilderness? |
6046 | How many times are some men put in mind of death by sickness upon themselves, by graves, by the death of others? |
6046 | How many times are they put in mind of hell by reading the Word, by lashes of conscience, and by some that go roaring in despair out of this world? |
6046 | How many times did they declare that there they feared him not? |
6046 | How many times hast thou had heaven and salvation offered to thee freely, wouldst thou but break thy league with this great enemy of God? |
6046 | How many times, think you, did Israel stand in need of pardon, from Egypt, until they came to Canaan? |
6046 | How many times, when Israel provoked the Lord to anger, did he yet defer to destroy them? |
6046 | How much of God dost thou think is in these things? |
6046 | How now, thought I, is this the sign of an upright soul, to desire to serve God, when all is taken from him? |
6046 | How rapid were his thoughts--''Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?'' |
6046 | How rich was Jesus Christ? |
6046 | How sayest thou, sinner? |
6046 | How shall I deliver thee, Israel? |
6046 | How shall I make thee as Admah? |
6046 | How shall I set thee as Zeboim? |
6046 | How shall he be brought, wrought, and made, to be out of love with it? |
6046 | How shall they come then? |
6046 | How shall this be proved? |
6046 | How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" |
6046 | How shall we, who are impure and unclean by nature and by practice, draw near unto him who is so infinitely holy? |
6046 | How should he be the Christ, and yet come out of Galilee, out of which ariseth no prophet? |
6046 | How should he contain hopes of life? |
6046 | How should the Lord put any trust in thee? |
6046 | How should we strive? |
6046 | How so? |
6046 | How then can his desires be granted, who himself refused to have them answered? |
6046 | How then can they do anything with that godly reverence of his holy Majesty that is and must be essential to every good work? |
6046 | How then can we be hindered of our hope? |
6046 | How then shall a bad man, any bad man, the best bad man upon earth, think to set himself by his best things just in the sight of God? |
6046 | How then shall the conscience of the burdened sinner by rightly quieted, if he perceiveth not the grace of God? |
6046 | How then should they do good? |
6046 | How then, may some say, doth it become ours? |
6046 | How then? |
6046 | How then? |
6046 | How will men that have before them a little honour, a little profit, a little pleasure, strive? |
6046 | How will the heavens echo of joy, when the Bride, the Lamb''s wife, shall come to dwell with her husband for ever? |
6046 | How, if He had come, having taken a commandment from His Father to damn you, and to send you to the devils in Hell? |
6046 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that hath not felt the burden of the wrath of God? |
6046 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that never was sensible of the sorrows of the one, nor distressed with the pains of the other? |
6046 | How, then, canst thou stand clear from guilt in thy soul who neglectest to act faith in the blood of the Lamb? |
6046 | How, then, could they object that the time was not come for Christ to be born? |
6046 | How? |
6046 | How? |
6046 | I a m under the force of it, and this is my continual cry, What shall I render to the Lord for all the benefits which he has bestowed upon me? |
6046 | I am the basest of creatures, I could even spew at myself? |
6046 | I answer, Art thou sensible that thou hast an action commenced against thee in that high court of justice that is above? |
6046 | I answer, Hast thou well considered the nature of the crime wherewith thou standest charged at the bar of God? |
6046 | I ask, Hast thou entertained him so to be? |
6046 | I ask, and wherefore then served the wood by which the sacrifices were burned? |
6046 | I asked her if she was sick? |
6046 | I asked him wherein? |
6046 | I come now to the second thing into which we are to inquire, and that is, WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6046 | I come now to the third question, namely, But why should we strive? |
6046 | I doubt I do not come as I should do? |
6046 | I have also asked those that pass by the way,"if they saw him whom my soul loveth,"and if they had anything to communicate to me? |
6046 | I query, is it possible to come up to the pattern for justification with God? |
6046 | I said, Are they infallible? |
6046 | I say again, how will they strive for this? |
6046 | I say again, if our love is so slender to our own souls, can any think that it should be more full to the souls of others? |
6046 | I say again, why is it affirmed''without shedding of blood is no remission,''if man''s good deeds can save him? |
6046 | I say, Art thou sensible of this? |
6046 | I say, What hast thou seen in him? |
6046 | I say, Who told thee so? |
6046 | I say, dost thou this, or dost thou hunt thine own soul to destroy it? |
6046 | I say, hast thou entertained Jesus Christ for thy lawyer to plead thy cause? |
6046 | I say, how glorious was it; and how sweet is it to you that have seen yourselves lost by nature? |
6046 | I say, should he say to the poor, Come to my door, ask at my door, knock at my door, and you shall find and have; would he not be counted liberal? |
6046 | I say, therefore, to thee that art thus, And why despair? |
6046 | I say, what benefit have we thereby? |
6046 | I say, what excuse can they make for themselves, when they shall be asked why they did not in the day of salvation come to Christ to be saved? |
6046 | I say, what more fearful than to be tormented there for ever with the devil and his angels? |
6046 | I say, where is he that hath taken his flight for salvation, because of the dread of the wrath to come? |
6046 | I say, where, as to justification with God? |
6046 | I think I am cast off from God, says the soul; so thou thoughtest afore, says memory, but thou wast mistaken then, and why not the like again? |
6046 | I use the means to be saved; and why? |
6046 | I was no sooner fixed upon this resolution, but that word dropped upon me,"Doth Job serve God for nought?" |
6046 | I will do unto them as they have done unto Me; and what unrighteousness is in all this? |
6046 | I.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED? |
6046 | II.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6046 | III.--WHO ARE THEY THAT ARE TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6046 | IV.--HOW IT APPEARS THAT THEY THAT ARE SAVED, ARE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6046 | If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6046 | If God be with one, who can hurt one? |
6046 | If He is, then how doth it appear? |
6046 | If a man can not now go to the throne of grace by prayer, through Christ, and so fetch grace for his support from thence, what can he do? |
6046 | If all that desire to go to heaven should come thither, verily they would make a hell of heaven; for, I say, what would they do there? |
6046 | If grace received would do, what need for more? |
6046 | If he also shall ask me, What hath been my preferment in all the time of my absence from him? |
6046 | If he asks me, By what authority I take upon me thus to reason? |
6046 | If he asks me, How I know that the law will not lay hold of me also? |
6046 | If he asks me, Who have been my companions? |
6046 | If he hath, show us where? |
6046 | If he knows not hell, and the torments thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not himself and the badness of his condition, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not the law, and the severity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not the world, and the emptiness and vanity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he knows not what death is, wherefore should he come? |
6046 | If he was not willing, why did he promise? |
6046 | If heart- breaking work attend such strokes,''Why should ye be stricken any more?'' |
6046 | If it be love for a fellow- creature to give a bit of bread, a coat, a cup of cold water, what shall we call this? |
6046 | If judgment begins at the house of God, what will the end of them be that obey not the gospel of God? |
6046 | If the first come in and say, Why am I judged? |
6046 | If the object of the wrath of God, then is his case most dreadful; for who can bear, who can grapple with the wrath of God? |
6046 | If the question be asked, How a just God can save that man from death, that by sin has put himself under the sentence of it? |
6046 | If the rich man should say thus to the poor, would not he be reckoned a free- hearted man? |
6046 | If there be twenty places where there are assizes kept in this land, yet if I have offended no law, what need have I of an advocate? |
6046 | If these be worth commending then, That vainly show their might, How dare you blame those holy men That in God''s quarrel fight? |
6046 | If this be concluded in the affirmative, what follows but that Christ, though he undertook, came short in doing for us? |
6046 | If thou canst go lustily, what mean thy crutches? |
6046 | If thou sayest yea, then I ask, Who told thee that thou standest accused for transgression before the judgment- seat of God? |
6046 | If thou sayest, Yea; I ask, How comest thou righteous? |
6046 | If we do take occasion to do so, that we may drop, and be yet distilling some good doctrine upon their souls? |
6046 | If what be possible? |
6046 | If yea, then Christ had such; if no, then who can fulfil the law as he? |
6046 | In a word, Doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6046 | In a word, are they converted? |
6046 | In a word, doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6046 | In a word, who knows the power of God''s wrath, the weight of sin, the torments of hell, and the length of eternity? |
6046 | In all this, what qualification shows itself as precedent to justification? |
6046 | In time of sickness, what so set by as the doctor''s glasses and gally- pots full of his excellent things? |
6046 | In whose judgment art thou righteous? |
6046 | Indeed this may be; and therefore no similitude can be found that can fully amplify the matter,''for what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | Is Benhadad yet alive? |
6046 | Is Christ Jesus not only a priest of, and a King over, but an Advocate for his people? |
6046 | Is Christ Jesus the Lord mine Advocate with the Father? |
6046 | Is Christ Jesus the redemption; and, as such, the very door and inlet into all God''s mercies? |
6046 | Is Christ, as crucified, the way and door to all spiritual and eternal mercy? |
6046 | Is God indeed to be dallied with, and will the end be pleasant unto you? |
6046 | Is He satisfied now in the behalf of sinners by this Man''s thus suffering? |
6046 | Is Jesus Christ an Advocate with the Father for us? |
6046 | Is Jesus Christ the Saviour also become our Advocate? |
6046 | Is any merry? |
6046 | Is coming to Jesus Christ by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Is coming to Jesus Christ not by the will, wisdom, or power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Is he God''s fellow? |
6046 | Is he a fool that chooseth for himself long lasters, or he whose best things will rot in a day? |
6046 | Is he a godly man, that will serve God for nothing rather than give out? |
6046 | Is he a pleasant child? |
6046 | Is he a second God? |
6046 | Is he ever the worse for coming to Jesus Christ, or for his loving and serving of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Is he merciful; will he help thee? |
6046 | Is he of the highest order of the angels? |
6046 | Is he present; will he hear thee? |
6046 | Is he qualified for my business? |
6046 | Is he then left to fill up the measure of his iniquities? |
6046 | Is heaven reserved only for the noble and the learned, like Paul? |
6046 | Is his body dead? |
6046 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6046 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6046 | Is his name, person, and undertakings, more precious to them, than is the glory of the world? |
6046 | Is it Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Is it a sign of a fool to agree with one''s adversary while we are in the way with him, even before he delivereth us to the judge? |
6046 | Is it a time to take pleasure, and to recreate thyself in anything, before thou hast mourned and been sorry for thy sins? |
6046 | Is it attended with so many blessed privileges? |
6046 | Is it below thee? |
6046 | Is it fit to say unto God, Thou art hard- hearted? |
6046 | Is it in the judgment of God, or of man? |
6046 | Is it likely that those should have the Lord Jesus for their Advocate to plead their cause; who despise and reject his person, his Word, and ways? |
6046 | Is it not a high point of wisdom for a man to be always doing of that which lays him under the conduct of angels? |
6046 | Is it not a sign of wisdom for a man yet more and more to endeavour to interest himself in the love and protection of God? |
6046 | Is it not a sign of wisdom to depart from sins, which are the snares of death and hell? |
6046 | Is it not better to say now unto God, Do not condemn me? |
6046 | Is it not for a man to sin willingly after enlightening? |
6046 | Is it not pity, had it otherwise been the will of God, that ever thou wast made a man, for that thou settest so little by thy soul? |
6046 | Is it not rather to be wondered at, that thou hast not caught before this a thousand times a thousand falls? |
6046 | Is it not so with you in respect of your beggars that come to your door? |
6046 | Is it not strong as death, cruel as the grave, and hotter than the coals of juniper? |
6046 | Is it not therefore a wonderful mercy to be blessed with this grace of fear, that thou by it mayest be kept from final, which is damnable apostasy? |
6046 | Is it so much to be a fiddle? |
6046 | Is it so, that coming to Jesus Christ is by the Father, as aforesaid? |
6046 | Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6046 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6046 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6046 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that he will not receive them? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it so? |
6046 | Is it surprising that the Quakers, at such a time, assumed their peculiar neatness of dress? |
6046 | Is not God as well mighty to punish as to save? |
6046 | Is not HE called? |
6046 | Is not HE glorified? |
6046 | Is not HE justified? |
6046 | Is not heaven worth thy affection? |
6046 | Is not here a door of hope? |
6046 | Is not here encouragement for those that think, for wicked hearts and lives, they have not their fellows in the world? |
6046 | Is not love of the greatest force to oblige? |
6046 | Is not the devil thy father? |
6046 | Is not the same spirit of rebellion amongst us in our days? |
6046 | Is not this God rich in mercy? |
6046 | Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? |
6046 | Is not this a great waster? |
6046 | Is not this a truth? |
6046 | Is not this amazing grace? |
6046 | Is not this an encouragement to the biggest sinners to make their application to Christ for mercy? |
6046 | Is not this grace? |
6046 | Is not this grace? |
6046 | Is not this love that passeth knowledge? |
6046 | Is not this love the wonderment of angels? |
6046 | Is not this the experience of all the godly? |
6046 | Is not this to play the fool, in the account of sinners, while angels wonder at and rejoice for thy wisdom? |
6046 | Is not this true as I have said? |
6046 | Is sin so vile a thing? |
6046 | Is the arm of the Lord shortened that he can not save? |
6046 | Is the blood of Christ, the death of Christ, the resurrection of Christ, of no more virtue than to bring in for us an uncertain salvation? |
6046 | Is the law sin? |
6046 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6046 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6046 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6046 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | Is the way dangerous in which thou art to go? |
6046 | Is the way of the just an abomination to you? |
6046 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6046 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6046 | Is there also hope to be in His children? |
6046 | Is there any among thy sins, thy companions, and foolish delights, that, like Christ, can help thee in the day of thy distress? |
6046 | Is there any law now that will curse and condemn this Saviour for standing in our persons to give satisfaction to God for the transgression of man? |
6046 | Is there any vicious propensity, the gratification of which is not included in that character? |
6046 | Is there but one sin among so many millions of sins, for which there is no forgiveness; and must I commit this? |
6046 | Is there grace for me?'' |
6046 | Is there no truth nor trust to be put in him, notwithstanding all that he hath said? |
6046 | Is there not a middle way? |
6046 | Is there not a time coming when the godly may ask the wicked what profit they have in their pleasure? |
6046 | Is there not everywhere in God''s Book a flat contradiction to this, in multitudes of promises, of invitations, of examples, and the like? |
6046 | Is there not palpably high wickedness in every one of the effects of this fear? |
6046 | Is there nothing else to be done but to make a covenant with death, and to maintain thy agreement with hell? |
6046 | Is there perfection in that righteousness? |
6046 | Is there room for me?'' |
6046 | Is there so much ground of comfort, and so much cause to be glad? |
6046 | Is there so much store in Christ, and such a ready heart in Him to give it to me? |
6046 | Is there that condition, they must believe? |
6046 | Is there to be a righteousness to clothe them with that is to be presented before Divine justice? |
6046 | Is this a truth, that the man that truly comes to God in order thereto has had his heart broken? |
6046 | Is this fear of God such an excellent thing? |
6046 | Is this he that professed, and disputed, and forsook us; but now he is come to us again? |
6046 | Is this he that separated from us, but now he is fallen with us into the same eternal damnation with us? |
6046 | Is this the gloomy fanaticism of a Puritan divine? |
6046 | Is this the sum of all, namely, That''the fear of the wicked it shall come upon him,''and that''the desire of the righteous shall be granted?'' |
6046 | Is this to serve God? |
6046 | Is this word more dear unto them? |
6046 | Is thy business slight; is it not concerning the welfare of thy soul? |
6046 | Is thy conscience awakened and convinced then, that thou art at present in a perishing state, and that thou hast need to cry to God for mercy? |
6046 | Is thy heart hard? |
6046 | Is thy heart slothful and idle? |
6046 | It casteth out the Word and love of God, without which no grace can grow in the soul; how then should the fear of God grow in a covetous heart? |
6046 | It confirms it; and this is part of the meaning of Paul in those large relations of his sufferings for Christ, saying,''Are they ministers of Christ? |
6046 | It has ofttimes come into my mind to ask, By what means it is that the gospel profession should be so tainted39 with loose and carnal gospellers? |
6046 | It is a neat and acceptable volume, but why altered? |
6046 | It is a sign of a very bad nature when the contrary shows itself; could God have done more for thee than to have put his fear in thy heart? |
6046 | It is an honour for the poor to stand up for the great and mighty; but what honour is it for the great to plead for the base? |
6046 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?" |
6046 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?'' |
6046 | It is false, said she; for when they said to him, Do you confess the indictment? |
6046 | It is not a sign of foolishness timely to prevent ruin, is it? |
6046 | It is said elsewhere,''For what is a man advantaged if he gain the whole world, and lose himself?'' |
6046 | It is said in another place;"Can a woman,"a mother,"forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? |
6046 | It is true, Mephibosheth had a check from David; for, said he,"Why wentest not thou with me, Mephibosheth?" |
6046 | It may be thy great prayer is to say,"Our Father which art in heaven,"& c. Dost thou know the meaning of the very first words of this prayer? |
6046 | It seems then, his heart was fainting; but what was the cause of his fainting? |
6046 | It was their sore temptation; for still, as some affirmed him to be the Christ, others as fast objected,''Shall Christ come out of Galilee?'' |
6046 | It will never backslide again, will it? |
6046 | It would not be reckoned of grace, but of debt; and what would follow from hence? |
6046 | Job was a man a none- such in his day for one that feared God; and who so bold with God as Job? |
6046 | John Bunyan? |
6046 | Just and justified from all things that would otherwise swallow thee up? |
6046 | Justice Keelin said, that I ought not to preach; and asked me where I had my authority? |
6046 | Know you not that this is the judgment of God upon you,"ye despisers, to behold, and wonder, and perish?" |
6046 | Lastly, Is there such mercy as this? |
6046 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Lastly, but dost thou think that thy more grace will exempt thee from temptations? |
6046 | Let our first inquiry be, whether the Saviour intended a fixed form of prayer? |
6046 | Let us stand together; who is mine adversary? |
6046 | Lightning and thunder is made a cause of rain, but lightning alone is not:''Who hath divided a water- course for the overflowing of waters? |
6046 | Look ye now, did not I tell you so? |
6046 | Lord, I have destroyed myself, can I live? |
6046 | Lord, every one of them are sins of the first rate, of the biggest size, of the blackest line, can I live? |
6046 | Lord, shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou canst pardon my sins, or by believing Thou canst not? |
6046 | Lord, what will be the fruit of these things, when for the doctrine of God there is imposed, that is, more than taught, the traditions of men? |
6046 | Lord, who desired Thee to promise? |
6046 | Lord,"who can understand his errors? |
6046 | Man knows the beginning of sin, said Spira, but who bounds the issues thereof?'' |
6046 | Many of this kind there be now in the world, both of men, and women, and children; art not thou that readest this book of this number? |
6046 | May I be saved by him?'' |
6046 | May not the glorified saints become angels? |
6046 | May not these be that sin I trow? |
6046 | May there not come out true men as well as thieves out from thence? |
6046 | May we appeal to our God, Lord, is it I? |
6046 | Men will do thus, as I said, in courts below; and why shouldst not thou approach thus to the court above? |
6046 | Mine eyes have seen vileness in the best of my doings; what, then, think you, must God needs see in them? |
6046 | Must also the general assembly and church of the first- born wait upon thee for their full portions of glory? |
6046 | Must he do what he lists? |
6046 | Must it be, if they turn themselves, or do something to merit of him to turn them? |
6046 | Must it needs be that? |
6046 | Must it needs be the great transgression? |
6046 | Must nobody seek because few are saved? |
6046 | Must not that be much more so accounted? |
6046 | Must the Son of God himself come down from heaven? |
6046 | Must there be redemption by blood added to mercy, if the soul be saved? |
6046 | Must they be bound to their own ruin, by the rebellion of their stubborn wills? |
6046 | Must we not fear falls? |
6046 | Must we, because of these temptations, incline to fall? |
6046 | My brethren, is it not reasonable that we should stand up for him in this world? |
6046 | My hope is grounded upon the promises; what else should it be grounded upon? |
6046 | My sins are more than the sands, can I live? |
6046 | My way is hid from the Lord, and my judgment is passed over from my God? |
6046 | Nay, God favoured His Son no more, finding our sins upon Him, than He would have favoured any of us; for, should we have died? |
6046 | Nay, are not the very thoughts of it altogether displeasing to thee? |
6046 | Nay, art thou not a desperate persecutor of the children of God? |
6046 | Nay, but why dost thou tempt the Lord thy God? |
6046 | Nay, do not many make his Word, and his name, and his ways, a stalking- horse to their own worldly advantages? |
6046 | Nay, further,"Have we not prophesied in Thy name? |
6046 | Nay, is it not the mark of implacable reprobates? |
6046 | Nay, was he not ready to give the lie to the angel, when he told him God was with him? |
6046 | Nay, what world, what people, what nation, for sin and transgression, could or can be compared to Jerusalem? |
6046 | Ninth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | No affection for the God that made thee? |
6046 | No man, when he buildeth his house, makes the principal parts thereof of weak or feeble timber; for how could such bear up the rest? |
6046 | No, saith the child, nor with this hand either; then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a better, a brave golden finger? |
6046 | Noah and Lot, who so holy as they in the time of their afflictions? |
6046 | Now I come to the second question-- to wit, What is it to be saved by grace? |
6046 | Now do we regret our want of greater conformity to his image? |
6046 | Now help, Lord; now, Lord Jesus, what shall I do? |
6046 | Now if all these and their works as to our justification, are rejected, where, but in Christ, is righteousness to be found? |
6046 | Now the soul is purchased by a price that the Son, the wisdom of God, thought fit to pay for the redemption thereof-- what a thing, then, is the soul? |
6046 | Now there is both comfort and honour in this; for what comfort like that of being a holy man of God? |
6046 | Now what can deliver the soul from these but grace? |
6046 | Now what can hell and death do to him that hath this mercy of God upon him? |
6046 | Now what did he do by this his carriage, but testify plainly that he was not for receiving accusations against poor sinners, whoever accused by? |
6046 | Now, I pray, what is it to be a devil, but to be under, for ever, the power and dominion of sin, an implacable spirit against God? |
6046 | Now, I remember that one day, as I was walking into the country, I was much in the thoughts of this, But how if the day of grace be past? |
6046 | Now, I would ask, what all this should signify, if a sinner, as a sinner, before he washes, or is washed, may immediately go unto the throne of grace? |
6046 | Now, being made free from sin, what follows? |
6046 | Now, how strong the motions or passions of love are, who is there that is an utter stranger thereto? |
6046 | Now, if Christ, as an Advocate, pleadeth a propitiation with God, for whose conviction doth he plead it? |
6046 | Now, if God shall count me righteous, who will be so hardy as to conclude I yet shall perish? |
6046 | Now, if a call to come hath such encouragement in it, what is a promise of receiving such, but an encouragement much more? |
6046 | Now, if so much safety flows from God''s being for one, how safe are we when God is with us? |
6046 | Now, if they be blind, how shall they come? |
6046 | Now, if this cause be faulty, why doth he live? |
6046 | Now, if thou takest such things for a grant of thy desires, and consequently concludest thyself a righteous man, how mayest thou be deceived? |
6046 | Now, is not this a blessed Christ, coming sinner? |
6046 | Now, justification and eternal salvation being both in Christ, and nowhere else to be had for men, who would not come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Now, since this is so, what can the condemned at the judgment say for themselves, why sentence of death should not be passed upon them? |
6046 | Now, the question is, how Abraham found? |
6046 | Now, then, I would be saved; but why? |
6046 | Now, then, it will be demanded, how a soul, before it was a month old, could receive sin to the making of itself unclean? |
6046 | Now, to be taught of God, what like it? |
6046 | Now, what can an intercessor do, if he is not able to answer this question? |
6046 | Now, what doth Christ plead, and what is the ground of his plea? |
6046 | Now, what is faith but a believing, a trusting, or relying act of the soul? |
6046 | Now, what is the result, but that the Advocate goes down, as well as we; we to hell, and he in esteem? |
6046 | Now, what is the signification of this name but SAVIOUR? |
6046 | Now, what remains but that we who are reconciled to God by faith in his blood are quit, discharged, and set free from the law of sin and death? |
6046 | Now, what shall God do to save these men? |
6046 | Now, what shall this man do? |
6046 | Now, what was Paul''s answer? |
6046 | Now, when Jesus was born, it is said,''Where is he that is born King of the Jews?'' |
6046 | Now, whence should all this disobedience arise? |
6046 | Now, where lieth the fault? |
6046 | Now, which of these hast thou? |
6046 | Now, will not this last his poor brethren to spend upon a great while? |
6046 | O Lord, thought I, what if I should not, indeed? |
6046 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
6046 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
6046 | O grave, where is thy victory?'' |
6046 | O how should a poor soul do this? |
6046 | O sinner, wilt thou not open? |
6046 | O thou that fearest the Lord, what is thy desire? |
6046 | O, but I am but one, and a very sorry one, too; and what is one, especially such an one as I am? |
6046 | O, then we should have you cry out, I must have Christ; what shall I do for Christ? |
6046 | Objection.-But doth not Christ as Advocate plead for his elect, though not called as yet? |
6046 | Of God, do I say; if thou wouldst but break this league with this great enemy of thy soul? |
6046 | On his arrival, he demanded,''Are all the prisoners safe?'' |
6046 | Once being at an honest woman''s house, I, after some pause, asked her how she did? |
6046 | One word also to you that are neglecters of Jesus Christ:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6046 | Or art thou ignorant of these things, and yet darest thou say, Our Father? |
6046 | Or how shall a man be able to give to others a satisfactory account of his unfeigned subjection to the gospel, that yet abides in his impenitency? |
6046 | Or how, if the next sight I see with mine eyes be the Lord in the clouds, with all his angels, raining floods of fire and brimstone upon the world? |
6046 | Or is he ever the more a fool, for flying from that which will drown thee in hell- fire, and for seeking eternal life? |
6046 | Or is his grace so far gone, and so near spent, that now he has not enough to pardon, and secure, and save one sinner more? |
6046 | Or is it not the least of thy thoughts all the day? |
6046 | Or of Heman, when he said he was free among them whom God remembered no more? |
6046 | Or the highly virtuous dame, Must I sue for mercy upon the same terms as the Magdalene? |
6046 | Or the will of Christ to the will of Satan? |
6046 | Or the will of righteousness to the will of sin? |
6046 | Or they who do us scorn? |
6046 | Or those who do our houses waste? |
6046 | Or us, who this have borne? |
6046 | Or what do you think of David, when he said he was cast off from God''s eyes? |
6046 | Or, Can God repute him so, and yet be holy and just? |
6046 | Or, Is it possible that a man that has done as he has, should yet be found a saint, and so in a saved state? |
6046 | Or, as you have it in John, will you love your life till you lose it? |
6046 | Paul did not so much as once ask him, What is your end in this question? |
6046 | Perfect righteousness, what to do? |
6046 | Perfecting holiness, what is that? |
6046 | Perhaps the word''satisfaction''will hardly be found in the Bible; and where is it said in so many words,''God is dissatisfied with our sins?'' |
6046 | Perhaps thou wilt not let go now, what, as a hypocrite, thou hast got; but"what is the hope of the hypocrite, when God taketh away his soul?" |
6046 | Peter asks thee another question, to wit,"If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" |
6046 | Ponder the path of thy feet with the greatest seriousness, thy life lies upon it; what thinkest thou? |
6046 | Poor besotted sinner, is this thy last shift? |
6046 | Poor child, thought I, what sorrow art thou like to have for thy portion in this world? |
6046 | Poor drunken sinner, what shall I say to thee? |
6046 | Poor sin- sick soul, do you consider your state more loathsome and dangerous than the leprosy? |
6046 | Power to do what? |
6046 | Prithee tell me what moved thee to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Prithee tell me, What seest thou in him to allure thee to forsake all the world, to come to him? |
6046 | Put thyself now upon this serious inquiry, Am I indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Reader, have you ever felt thus''in downright earnest''for salvation? |
6046 | Reader, have you had, at any time, equal anxiety for your soul''s health and salvation? |
6046 | Reader, our anxious inquiry should be, Have we entered in by Christ the gate? |
6046 | Reader, would''st see what may you never feel, Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel? |
6046 | Reason also says the same, for how can Blacks beget white children, when both father and mother are black? |
6046 | Reason will say, Then who will profess Christ that hath such coarse entertainment at the beginning? |
6046 | Received, into what? |
6046 | Riches and power, what is there more in the world? |
6046 | SECOND, How it appears that Christ hath power to save or cast out? |
6046 | Saith not the gospel the very same? |
6046 | Saith the soul, Can not the devil give one such comfort I trow? |
6046 | Satan often saith of us when we have sinned, as Abishai said of Shimei after he had cursed David, Shall not this man die for this? |
6046 | Satan stronger than the Almighty Redeemer? |
6046 | Saved I would be; and who is there that would not, were they in my condition? |
6046 | Say I these things as a man? |
6046 | Say they, if our iniquities be upon us, and we pine away in them, how can we then live? |
6046 | Say you so? |
6046 | Second, Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Second, But what is it for Jesus to be an Advocate for these? |
6046 | Second, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners, to the Jerusalem sinners? |
6046 | See here, a man at the foot of the ladder, now ready in will and mind, to die for his profession; but how will he carry it now? |
6046 | See here, what should we talk any more about such a fellow? |
6046 | See now, did not I tell thee that thy fears were but the consequence of strong desires? |
6046 | Seest thou a professor that prayeth not? |
6046 | Seest thou here, how saints of old were wo nt to do? |
6046 | Sermon being done, up she gets, and away she goes, and withal inquired where this Jesus the preacher dined that day? |
6046 | Seventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | Shall Christ come down from Heaven to earth to declare this to sinners; and shall sinners stop their ears against these good tidings? |
6046 | Shall Christ think nothing too dear for me? |
6046 | Shall Christ weep to see thy soul going on to destruction, and will though sport thyself in that way? |
6046 | Shall God enter this complaint against thee? |
6046 | Shall God speak to man''s soul, and shall not man believe? |
6046 | Shall I be admitted into, or shut out from, that blessed kingdom? |
6046 | Shall I chide them? |
6046 | Shall I come to particulars with thee? |
6046 | Shall I flatter them? |
6046 | Shall I grieve Him with my foolish carriage? |
6046 | Shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou wilt pardon my sins, or by believing Thou wilt not? |
6046 | Shall I intreat them to hold their tongues? |
6046 | Shall I now be ashamed of the cause, ways, people, or saints of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Shall I now love ever a lust or sin? |
6046 | Shall I now speak of the place that this saved body and soul shall dwell in? |
6046 | Shall I now yield my members as instruments of righteousness, seeing my end is everlasting life? |
6046 | Shall I slight His counsel by following of my own will? |
6046 | Shall I speak of their company? |
6046 | Shall I speak of their continuance in this condition? |
6046 | Shall I speak of their heavenly raiment? |
6046 | Shall I tell thee? |
6046 | Shall Jesus Christ be interceding in heaven? |
6046 | Shall he look to God? |
6046 | Shall he look to himself? |
6046 | Shall he look to the commandment? |
6046 | Shall he stay from Christ till his heart is better? |
6046 | Shall he that speaks in righteousness give place, and he who has nothing but envy and deceit be admitted to stand his ground? |
6046 | Shall he trust to his duties? |
6046 | Shall he turn away, and not return?'' |
6046 | Shall man believe what God says, and nothing at all regard it? |
6046 | Shall not Christ, then, prevail? |
6046 | Shall not I now be holy? |
6046 | Shall not I now study, strive, and lay out myself for Him that hath laid out Himself soul and body for me? |
6046 | Shall not this lay obligation upon me? |
6046 | Shall that hinder the execution of Shall- come? |
6046 | Shall the dead arise and praise thee?'' |
6046 | Shall there any man be put to death this day in Israel, for do not I know, that I am king this day over Israel?" |
6046 | Shall they come? |
6046 | Shall they prosper that do such things? |
6046 | Shall this man lie down and despair? |
6046 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6046 | Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? |
6046 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6046 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6046 | Shall we sin because we are forgiven? |
6046 | Shall we sin because we are not under the law, but under grace? |
6046 | She, also, that is thine enemy shall see it, and shame shall cover her which saith unto thee, Where is the Lord thy God?" |
6046 | Short- sighted mortal,"shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"'' |
6046 | Should a man ask me how he should know that he loveth the children of God? |
6046 | Should we have been made a curse? |
6046 | Should we have undergone the pains of Hell? |
6046 | Should we pray for communion with God through Christ? |
6046 | Should you ask him that we mentioned but now, How long is it since you began to fear you should miss of this damsel you love so? |
6046 | Since, then, the children have Christ for their advocate, art thou a child? |
6046 | Sinner, art thou thirsty? |
6046 | Sinner, be advised; ask thy heart again, saying, Am I come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Sinner, canst thou read that Jesus Christ was made an offering for sin, and yet go in sin? |
6046 | Sinner, careless sinner, didst thou take notice of this first inference that I have drawn from my second doctrine? |
6046 | Sinner, coming sinner, art thou for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Sinner, hast thou deferred to fear the Lord? |
6046 | Sinner, hast thou obtained a broken heart? |
6046 | Sinner, if this wicked thought be in thy heart, tell me again, dost thou thus think in earnest? |
6046 | Sinner, what sayest thou? |
6046 | Sinner, what wilt thou take to make a mountain of sand that will reach as high as the sun is at noon? |
6046 | Sinner, where is now thy righteousness? |
6046 | Sinner, why shouldest thou pull vengeance down upon thee? |
6046 | Sinner, wouldst thou have mercy? |
6046 | Sinners, you have souls, can you behold a crucified Christ, and not bleed, and not mourn, and not fall in love with him? |
6046 | Sir, said I, if I may do good to one by my discourse, why may I not do good to two? |
6046 | Sir, said I, pray what do you mean by calling the people together? |
6046 | So David,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6046 | So I asked her, she being a stranger to me, what she had to say to me? |
6046 | So again saith he in the next Psalm after, as afore he had complained of the oppression of the enemy,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6046 | So again:"I was left alone,"says he,"and saw this great vision"; and what follows? |
6046 | So full is this of consolation and felicity that the apostle exclaims,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6046 | So it is here, there is a promise made indeed, but to whom? |
6046 | So that, is there righteousness in Christ? |
6046 | So, again, in another place, he saith,''Lord, how long wilt thou look on? |
6046 | So, again, speaking of the wicked, he saith,''Ye have said it is vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinance?'' |
6046 | So, of which of them hath He at any time said, This is, or shall be, made in or after Mine image, Mine own image? |
6046 | So, then, wilt thou live by the law? |
6046 | Solomon says,''The word of a king is as the roaring of a lion''; and if so, what is the Word of God? |
6046 | Some make their sighs, their tears, their prayers, and their reformations, their advocates-"Hast thou tried these, and found them wanting?" |
6046 | Some may say, Will God see that which is not? |
6046 | Some, as I said, that revolt, are shot dead upon the place; and for them, who can help them? |
6046 | Sometimes I look upon myself, and say, Where am I now? |
6046 | Soon after we set out, my father came to my brother''s, and asked his men whom his daughter rode behind? |
6046 | Soul, he suffered and did bear with the manners of Israel forty years in the wilderness; and hast thou tried him half so long? |
6046 | Still how common is the question, which one of the disciples put to his master,''Lord, are there few that be saved?'' |
6046 | Suppose a child doth grievously transgress against and offend his father, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6046 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should be made to live for ever, but without the enjoyment of God, what good would his life do him? |
6046 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should go to heaven, that golden place, what good would this do him, if he was not possessed of the God of it? |
6046 | Suppose it should be urged, that this is a doctrine tending to looseness and lasciviousness; the answer is ready--"What shall we say then? |
6046 | Suppose so many cattle in such a pound, and one goes by whose they are not, doth he concern himself? |
6046 | Suppose they staid but one quarter of an hour there after their fall, before they were cast out, what sweetness found they there, but guilt? |
6046 | Surely it hath not entered into the heart of man to conceive what ear never heard, nor mortal eye ever saw? |
6046 | Tell me, dost thou not desire to desire? |
6046 | Tell me, now, you that desire to be under the law, can you fulfil all the commands of the law, and after answer all its demands? |
6046 | Tell me, therefore, which of them will love him most? |
6046 | Tenth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | That I may know also, whether the day of grace be past with me or no? |
6046 | That also in the Romans is clear to this purpose,''Who is he that condemneth? |
6046 | That old friend of publicans and sinners? |
6046 | That our duties are imperfect, follows upon what was discoursed before; for if our graces be imperfect, how can our duties but be so too? |
6046 | That tells thee the world is not, even then when it doth most appear to be; wilt thou set thine heart upon that which is not? |
6046 | That the soul, did I say? |
6046 | The Bible had been to him a sealed book until, in a state of mental agony, he cried, What must I do to be saved? |
6046 | The END of the law-- what is the end of the law but perfect and sinless obedience? |
6046 | The Lord spake unto Manasseh, and to his people, by the prophets, but would he hear? |
6046 | The broken- hearted desireth God''s company; when wilt thou come unto me? |
6046 | The children, indeed, have the advantage of an advocate; but what is this to them that have none to plead their cause? |
6046 | The devil will tempt us, sin will assault us, men will persecute; but can they do it to everlasting? |
6046 | The end, what is that? |
6046 | The first is to question whether any are said to die and rise, by the death and resurrection of Christ? |
6046 | The first observation, or truth, drawn from the words is cleared by the text,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | The full pitcher can hold no more; then why should it go to the fountain? |
6046 | The godly are called believers; and why believers, but because they are they that have given credit to the great things of the gospel of God? |
6046 | The grace of humility, when is it? |
6046 | The graces of the Spirit-- what like them, or where here are they to be found, save in the souls of men only? |
6046 | The great question is, not as to the means, but the fact-- Have I been born again? |
6046 | The heart naturally is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; how then should there flow from such an one the fear of God? |
6046 | The judge saith, What canst thou say for thyself that sentence of death should not be passed upon thee? |
6046 | The man under the sixth head complaineth for want of temptations, but thou hast enough of them; art thou glad of them, tempted, coming sinner? |
6046 | The mercy, the pardoning preserving mercy, the mercy of the Lord is upon them, who is he then that can condemn them? |
6046 | The mind becomes entranced, and when sober reflection regains her command, we naturally inquire, Can all this have taken place in my heart? |
6046 | The name of God, what is that, but that by which he is distinguished and known from all others? |
6046 | The name of master is a name of fear--"And if I be a master, where is my fear? |
6046 | The principle, you will say, what do you mean by that? |
6046 | The question is not, Are they blind? |
6046 | The question naturally arises-- What is this''furnace of earth''in which the Lord''s words are purified? |
6046 | The question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6046 | The questions was answered with that portion of Scripture,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6046 | The righteous; who is he but the man that loveth God, and his holy will, to do it? |
6046 | The same saying in effect hath also John in the Revelation--"Who shall not fear thee, O Lord,"said he,"and glorify thy name?" |
6046 | The second question is, How should we strive? |
6046 | The second thing is, How are these brought into this Everlasting Covenant of Grace? |
6046 | The second thing that I would inquire into is this: What it is to be''ready to be offered up''? |
6046 | The snare, say you, what is that? |
6046 | The study of those scriptures, in order that the solemn question might be safely resolved,''Can such a fallen sinner rise again?'' |
6046 | The text from which he intended to preach was''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6046 | The text says''the desire of the righteous shall be granted''; what then are the desires of the righteous? |
6046 | The valley of Achor; what is that? |
6046 | The whole have no need of the physician; then why should they go to him? |
6046 | The wicked; who is he but the man that loves not God, nor to do his will? |
6046 | Their minds and consciences are defiled; how then can sweet and good proceed from thence? |
6046 | Their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness; how then can there be found one word that should please God? |
6046 | Their poison-- what is that? |
6046 | Then I ask again, Hast thou committed thy cause to him? |
6046 | Then I ask again, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him?-I say, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him? |
6046 | Then breaking out in the bitterness of my soul, I said''to myself,''with a grievous sigh, How can God comfort such a wretch as I? |
6046 | Then did that scripture seize upon my soul, He is of one mind, and who can turn him? |
6046 | Then said Christian, Why doth this man thus tremble? |
6046 | Then said Mr. Bunyan,''Have you the original?'' |
6046 | Then said Nathaniel to Jesus,''Whence knowest thou me? |
6046 | Then such a question as this,"Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?" |
6046 | Then would you have none pray but those that know they are the disciples of Christ? |
6046 | Then, I pray thee, let me inquire a little of thee, what provision thou hast made for thy soul? |
6046 | Then, why may not I doubt that I may be one of these? |
6046 | There are but three or four: and can not God miss them, and save me for all them? |
6046 | There are mansion- houses, beds of glory, and places to walk in among the angels; and who knows what they are? |
6046 | There are rewards for services, and labour of love showed to God''s name here; and who knows what they will be? |
6046 | There is death? |
6046 | There is heaven itself, the imperial heaven; does any body know what that is? |
6046 | There is hope, another grace of the Spirit bestowed upon us; and how often is that also, as to the excellency of working, made to flag? |
6046 | There is immortality and eternal life: and who knows what they are? |
6046 | There is in the text an intimation of a sense of torment''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | There is never a rebel in heaven against God, and if he should so deal on earth, must it not whirl thee down to hell? |
6046 | There is reverence, fear, and standing in awe of God''s Word and judgments, where are the excellent workings thereof to be found? |
6046 | There is the mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, and the innumerable company of angels; doth any body know what all they are? |
6046 | There will be badges of honour, harps to make merry with, and heavenly songs of triumph; doth any here know what they are? |
6046 | Therefore from that time that he heard that word,"Why persecutest thou me?" |
6046 | Therefore in this sense it may be said,''Where is the fury of the oppressor?'' |
6046 | Therefore the soul is it which is said to love God--''Saw ye him whom my soul loveth?'' |
6046 | Therefore, how can you bear the face to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Therefore, this would still stick with me, How can you tell that you are elected? |
6046 | These are also taken notice of in Job, and go there also by the name of wicked men:"Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden? |
6046 | These bloody sacrifices, what did they signify, what were they figures of, but of the bloody sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | These kill the heart; for who can bear up under the guilt of sin? |
6046 | They are all gone out of the way; how then can they walk therein? |
6046 | They bless, they all bless; they thank, they all thank; and wilt thou hold thy tongue? |
6046 | They shall come, say you, but how if they be blind, and see not the way? |
6046 | They shall, you say; but how if they will not; and, if so, then what can Shall- come do? |
6046 | Think, therefore, with thyself thus, What was it that at first did wound my heart? |
6046 | Thinkest thou that thou shalt weather it out well enough at the day of judgment? |
6046 | Third, Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Third, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered in the first place to the biggest sinners? |
6046 | This brings us to the most important of all the subjects of self- examination-- am I one of the''righteous''? |
6046 | This dastardly heart of ours, when shall it be more subdued and trodden under foot of faith? |
6046 | This is but reasonable; for if Christ stands up to plead for us, why should not we stand up to plead for him? |
6046 | This is much; but is God connected with this? |
6046 | This is not a sign that you fear me, ye offer the blind for sacrifices, where is my fear? |
6046 | This is of absolute necessity; for how can or shall a man be willing to come to Christ that knows not what he is, what God has appointed him to do? |
6046 | This is plain, not only to sense, but by the natural scope of the words,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6046 | This is the common language,''if our transgressions be upon us, and we pine away in them, How should we then live?'' |
6046 | This is the fear that made the three thousand cry out,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6046 | This is the time, then, for Christ to stand up to plead; for now there is room for such a question- Can David''s sin stand with grace? |
6046 | This man is minded to give more to be damned, than God requires he should give to be saved; is not this an extravagant one? |
6046 | This may be answered by the question-- Was Peter justified in leaving the prison, and going to the prayer- meeting at Mary''s house? |
6046 | This snare will bring thee back again to the pit, which is hell, and then how wilt thou do to be rid of thy fear? |
6046 | This text utterly excludes the law-- what law? |
6046 | This to reason is very dreadful; for it cuts the soul down to the ground;''for a wounded spirit who[ none] can bear?'' |
6046 | This wicked world doth sentence us for our good deeds, but how then would they sentence us for our bad ones? |
6046 | This, I say, is a character above all angels; for, as the apostle said,''To which of the angels said He at anytime,''Thou art my Son?'' |
6046 | Those of the children of Israel that went from Egypt, and entered the land of Canaan, how came they thither? |
6046 | Thou biddest them be merry and lightsome; but dost thou not know that"the heart of fools is in the house of mirth?" |
6046 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou has sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6046 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost think to find mercy now? |
6046 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6046 | Thou mayest also doubt18 thy thoughts of the damned thus: If these poor creatures were in the world again, would they sin as they did before? |
6046 | Thou mayest by thy fear be driven away from God, from his worship, people, and ways, but what will that avail? |
6046 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him? |
6046 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him?'' |
6046 | Thou talkest of leaving him, but then whither wilt thou go? |
6046 | Thou thinkest to escape the pit; but what wilt thou do with the snare? |
6046 | Thou wilt say unto me, How should I know that I have done so? |
6046 | Thus also thou may say when death assaulteth thee-- O death, where is thy sting? |
6046 | Thus did Saul by the light that made him see; by it he came to Christ, and cried,''Who art thou, Lord?'' |
6046 | Thus to do is horrible; but mayest thou not judge amiss in this matter? |
6046 | Thy people, what people? |
6046 | Time was, indeed, he could hector, even hector it with God himself, saying,''What is the Almighty, that we should serve him?'' |
6046 | To be made an heir of God, of his grace, of his kingdom, and eternal glory, what is like it? |
6046 | To be saved from sin, from hell, from the wrath of God, from eternal damnation, what is like it? |
6046 | To prosper and be in health, as their soul prospers-- what, to thrive and mend in outwards no faster? |
6046 | To what end, O my soul, art thou retired into this place? |
6046 | To what may such an one attain? |
6046 | To which Bunyan replied;''Friend, dost thou speak this as from thy own knowledge, or did any other tell thee so? |
6046 | To whom could he go? |
6046 | True, the others murmured at him; but what did the Lord Jesus answer them? |
6046 | True, the right of dominion is the Lord''s; but the sinner will not suffer it, but will be all himself; saying''Who is Lord over us?'' |
6046 | True, thou mayest fear as devils do, but what will that profit? |
6046 | USE FIFTH, Again, fifthly, Is it so? |
6046 | USE FIRST.--Is justifying righteousness to be found in the person of Christ only? |
6046 | USE SECOND.--Is it so? |
6046 | USE THIRD.--But, thirdly, is it so? |
6046 | Upon what terms may he have this life? |
6046 | Upon what terms? |
6046 | Us: What us? |
6046 | V. What might be the reasons which prevailed with God to save us by grace, rather than by any other means? |
6046 | V.--WHAT MIGHT BE THE REASON MOVED GOD TO ORDAIN AND CHOOSE TO SAVE THOSE THAT HE SAVETH BY HIS GRACE, RATHER THAN BY ANY OTHER MEANS? |
6046 | Was it God that was offended? |
6046 | Was it not free grace for Christ to give Peter a loving look after he had cursed, and swore, and denied Him? |
6046 | Was it not free grace that met Paul when he was agoing to Damascus to persecute, which converted him, and made him a vessel of mercy? |
6046 | Was it not free grace to save such as those were that are spoken of in the 16th of Ezekiel, which no eye pitied? |
6046 | Was it not grace, absolute grace, that God made promise to Adam after transgression? |
6046 | Was it the removing of thy habitation, the change of thy condition, the loss of relations, estate, or the like? |
6046 | Was not here like to be a fine bargain, think you? |
6046 | Was not this a strange act, and a display of unthought- of grace? |
6046 | Was not this the way that the Lord was fain to take to make them close in with Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Was the unjust steward a fool in providing for himself for hereafter? |
6046 | Was there ever a man in the world so capable of describing the miseries of Doubting Castle, or of the Slough of Despond, as poor John Bunyan? |
6046 | Was this only the temper of wicked men then? |
6046 | We may adopt the language of the poet, and say--''Sinful soul, what hast thou done? |
6046 | We need not lay the reins on its neck and say, What care we? |
6046 | We read, in the book of Revelations, of the holy city, and that it had twelve gates, and at the gates twelve angels; but what did they do there? |
6046 | We received, by our thus being counted in him, that benefit which did precede his rising from the dead; and what was that but the forgiveness of sins? |
6046 | Well might Mr. Doe say,''What hath the devil or his agents got by putting our great gospel minister in prison?'' |
6046 | Well said, and how was it then? |
6046 | Well said, and what after that? |
6046 | Well, but how was he received by the lord of the vineyard? |
6046 | Well, but is there in truth such a thing as the obedience of faith? |
6046 | Well, but what judgment hast thou passed upon it while thou livest in thy debaucheries? |
6046 | Well, but what says God? |
6046 | Well, but whither must they go? |
6046 | Well, said I, shall I send to your master, while you abide out of sight, and make your peace with him before he sees you? |
6046 | Well, said he, to conclude, but will you promise that you will not call the people together any more? |
6046 | Well, what judgment now doth God, the righteous judge, pass upon the damsel for this? |
6046 | Well, will things that are less satisfy thy soul? |
6046 | Were a man to plead for a limb, or a member of his own, how would he plead? |
6046 | Were ever the Pharisees so profane; to whom Christ said, Ye vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
6046 | Were it granted that you kept the law, and that no man on earth could accuse you; were you therefore just before God? |
6046 | Were there no objects of pity among those that in the old world perished by the flood, or that in Sodom were burned with fire from heaven? |
6046 | Were there none but thieves there, or were the rest of that company out of his reach? |
6046 | Were we by sin subject to death? |
6046 | Were we under the curse of the law by reason of sin? |
6046 | What a devil then is sin? |
6046 | What are our desires? |
6046 | What are the desires of a righteous man? |
6046 | What are the gleanings to the whole crop? |
6046 | What are the honours and riches of this world, when compared to the glories of a crown of life? |
6046 | What are the pleasures and delights of thy soul now? |
6046 | What are the privileges of those that are actually brought into this free and glorious grace of the glorious God of Heaven and glory? |
6046 | What are the signs and tokens that thou bearest about thee, concerning how it will go with thy soul at last? |
6046 | What arguments would he use? |
6046 | What better warrant canst thou have to come, than to be bid to come of God? |
6046 | What can a man do to procure Christ, or procure faith, or love? |
6046 | What can a man say more, but that he stands in the rank of the biggest sinners? |
6046 | What can be more plain than this beautiful text? |
6046 | What can follow more clearly from this, but that amends were made by him for those souls for whose sins he suffered upon the tree? |
6046 | What can the body do as to these? |
6046 | What canst thou have more from the sweet lips of the Son of God? |
6046 | What care I, saith he, though I be seven years in chilling your heart if I can do it at last? |
6046 | What care hast thou had of securing of thy soul, and that it might be delivered from the danger that by sin it is brought into? |
6046 | What care they for God? |
6046 | What comeliness hast thou seen in his person? |
6046 | What condition is this man in? |
6046 | What demand of thine have I not fully answered? |
6046 | What did Constantine see in Christ, when he used to kiss the wounds of them that suffered for him? |
6046 | What did Daniel and the three children find in him, to make them run the hazards of the fiery furnace, and the den of lions, for his sake? |
6046 | What did, or what doth, the Lord Jesus see in us to be at all this care, and pains, and cost to save us? |
6046 | What didst thou come away from, in thy coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What do they think of themselves? |
6046 | What do you count prayer? |
6046 | What do you think of Paul? |
6046 | What do you think of the jailer? |
6046 | What do you think of the three thousand? |
6046 | What do you think the prophet desired, when he said,''O that thou wouldest rend the heavens and-- come down?'' |
6046 | What dost thou mean by can not? |
6046 | What doth the law require? |
6046 | What doth this word strive import? |
6046 | What doth this word strive import? |
6046 | What evidence have you for heaven and glory, and an inheritance among them that are sanctified? |
6046 | What followeth? |
6046 | What follows now? |
6046 | What follows? |
6046 | What follows? |
6046 | What follows? |
6046 | What folly can be greater than to labour for the meat that perisheth, and neglect the food of eternal life? |
6046 | What force, I say, is there in a faith that is begotten by truth, managed by truth, fed by truth, and preserved by the truth of God? |
6046 | What greater argument to holiness than to be made the members of the body, of the flesh, and of the bones of Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What greater argument to holiness than to have our soul, our body, our life, hid and secured with Christ in God? |
6046 | What ground can a man have to believe that Christ is his Saviour, if he do not believe that He suffered for sin in his nature? |
6046 | What ground now is here for despair? |
6046 | What ground then to despair? |
6046 | What ground? |
6046 | What had Paul committed to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What has God been doing for and to his church from the beginning of the world, but extending to and exercising loving- kindness and mercy for them? |
6046 | What hast THOU found in him, sinner? |
6046 | What hast thou done? |
6046 | What hast thou found in him, since thou camest to him? |
6046 | What hast thou left behind thee? |
6046 | What hast thou thought of thy soul? |
6046 | What hath this man done against thee, that is coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What have I to do with you, that accuse the coming sinners to me? |
6046 | What higher affront or contempt can be offered to God, and what greater disdain can be shown against the gospel? |
6046 | What hinders? |
6046 | What hope therefore can I have? |
6046 | What if God will be silent to thee, is that ground of despair? |
6046 | What if a man had all the parts, yea, all the arts of men and angels? |
6046 | What if he were never so willing, if he were not of ability sufficient, what would his willingness do? |
6046 | What if it should be applied thus? |
6046 | What is Jerusalem that stood in Canaan, to that new Jerusalem that shall come down from heaven? |
6046 | What is Jordan? |
6046 | What is a house full of treasures, and all the delights of this world, if thou be empty of grace,''if thy soul be not filled with good?'' |
6046 | What is a remnant of people to the whole kingdom? |
6046 | What is a sheep, a bull, an ox, or calf, to Christ, or their blood to the blood of Christ? |
6046 | What is he that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What is he that is not coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What is heaven without God? |
6046 | What is here omitted that might have been inserted, to make the promise more full and free? |
6046 | What is his calling? |
6046 | What is his name? |
6046 | What is it then? |
6046 | What is it to be saved by grace? |
6046 | What is it to be saved? |
6046 | What is it, then? |
6046 | What is man that God should so unweariedly attend upon him, and visit him every moment? |
6046 | What is meant by this word"law"? |
6046 | What is meant or to be understood by the granting of the desires of the righteous? |
6046 | What is one in ten? |
6046 | What is the best physician alive, or all the physicians in the world, put all together, to him that knows no sickness, that is sensible of no disease? |
6046 | What is the cause that sinners can play so delightfully with sin? |
6046 | What is the promise without God''s grace, and what is that grace without a promise to bestow it on us? |
6046 | What is there in the Lord''s supper, in baptism, yea, in preaching the Word, and prayer, were they not the appointments of God? |
6046 | What it was for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6046 | What it was for this Jesus to be of the seed of David? |
6046 | What judgment hast thou made of the present state of thy soul? |
6046 | What kind of secret wishes hast thou in thy soul when thou feelest the lusts of thy flesh to rage? |
6046 | What kind of thoughts hast thou of thyself, now thou seest these desires of thine that are good so briskly opposed by those that are bad? |
6046 | What laid the cornerstone of this throne, but grace? |
6046 | What life is in Christ? |
6046 | What life is in Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What life is it that is thus the ground of his priesthood? |
6046 | What made he ready for? |
6046 | What makes grace so good to us as sin in its guilt and filth? |
6046 | What makes sin so horrible and damnable a thing in our eyes, as when we see there is nothing can save us from it but the infinite grace of God? |
6046 | What man or angel could have thought that the Jerusalem sinners had been yet on this side of an impossibility of enjoying life and mercy? |
6046 | What man? |
6046 | What mattereth it what a man gets, if by the getting thereof he loseth himself? |
6046 | What matters besides, above, or beyond the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ, and of our acceptance with God through him? |
6046 | What meant he by turning Adam out of paradise, by drowning the old world, by burning up Sodom with fire and brimstone from heaven? |
6046 | What messenger of Satan buffeted Paul? |
6046 | What more abominable than sin? |
6046 | What more can be objected? |
6046 | What more could have been said? |
6046 | What more insupportable than the dreadful wrath of an angry God? |
6046 | What must I say then? |
6046 | What must he do now? |
6046 | What must he do therefore? |
6046 | What nation, what people, what kind of sinners have not been subdued by the preaching of a crucified Christ? |
6046 | What need we go to the throne of grace for more? |
6046 | What need we pray for more? |
6046 | What now must be done? |
6046 | What now? |
6046 | What now? |
6046 | What or where wilt thou find in the Bible, so many privileges so affectionately entailed to any grace, as to this of the fear of God? |
6046 | What or who is he that would not also have ease from the guilt of sin? |
6046 | What or who is he that would not go to heaven? |
6046 | What other matters? |
6046 | What ponderous thoughts hast thou had of the greatness and of the immortality of thy soul? |
6046 | What power has he that is dead, as every natural man spiritually is, even dead in trespasses and sins? |
6046 | What power hath he, then, whereby to come to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What provision hast thou made for thy soul? |
6046 | What reason can I have to hope for an inheritance in eternal life? |
6046 | What saith he? |
6046 | What say you to that?" |
6046 | What say you, O you wounded sinners? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, backslider? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou now? |
6046 | What sayest thou to this, poor sinner? |
6046 | What sayest thou, child of God? |
6046 | What sayest thou, man? |
6046 | What sayest thou, poor heart, to this? |
6046 | What sayest thou, poor soul? |
6046 | What sayest thou, soul? |
6046 | What sayest thou? |
6046 | What sayest thou? |
6046 | What says Christ? |
6046 | What says Job? |
6046 | What shall I do? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say then? |
6046 | What shall I say to thee? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall I say? |
6046 | What shall he do now? |
6046 | What shall profit a man that has lost his soul? |
6046 | What shall the fly do now? |
6046 | What shall we say of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat? |
6046 | What shall, what shall not, a man, if he had it, if it would answer his design, give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | What should I do then? |
6046 | What society, but to be abandoned of all? |
6046 | What solace can he that is without God, though he were in heaven, have with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the prophets and angels? |
6046 | What spirit possesseth thee, and holds thee back from a sincere closure with thy Saviour? |
6046 | What stay, but a continual fall of heart and mind? |
6046 | What stronger argument to holiness than this:''If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous?'' |
6046 | What stronger than a free forgiveness of sins? |
6046 | What then can accrue to our enemy? |
6046 | What then is the acceptable form, and what the appointed medium consecrated for our access to God, by which prayer is sanctified and accepted? |
6046 | What then shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | What then should be the meaning? |
6046 | What then, said I, are any of your children ill? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What then? |
6046 | What things? |
6046 | What think you of him who, when he tempted the wench to uncleanness, said to her, If thou wilt venture thy body, I''ll venture my soul? |
6046 | What think you of the first man, by whose sins there are millions now in hell? |
6046 | What think you? |
6046 | What this Jesus is? |
6046 | What this Jesus is? |
6046 | What though you do not preach? |
6046 | What thoughts, words, or actions can be clean, sufficiently to answer a perfect law that flows from this original? |
6046 | What time, you may ask, was required? |
6046 | What was it for Jesus to be of David''s seed? |
6046 | What was it for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6046 | What was it for Jesus to be raised thus up of God to Israel? |
6046 | What was that baptism but his death? |
6046 | What was that? |
6046 | What was the matter? |
6046 | What was the providence that God made use of as a means, either more remote or more near, to bring thee to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | What will become of me, think you?'' |
6046 | What will become of you, if you die in this condition? |
6046 | What will become of you? |
6046 | What will he get of us by the bargain but a small pittance of thanks and love? |
6046 | What will not love bear with? |
6046 | What will they say then? |
6046 | What will you do, when God shall come to reckon for these things? |
6046 | What wilt thou do at this day, and the day of thy trial and judgment? |
6046 | What wilt thou do when thou shalt be damned in hell, because thou couldst not find in thine heart to ask for heaven? |
6046 | What wilt thou do, poor sinner? |
6046 | What wilt thou do? |
6046 | What wilt thou have me to do? |
6046 | What wonderful love doth there appear by this in the heart of our Lord Jesus, in suffering such things for our poor bodies and souls? |
6046 | What words wilt thou use to move him to compassion? |
6046 | What worth or value then can there be in any of their doings? |
6046 | What would he not give? |
6046 | What would he not part with at that day, the day in which he will see himself damned, if he had it, in exchange for his soul? |
6046 | What would man have more? |
6046 | What would she say? |
6046 | What would you have me do? |
6046 | What would you say? |
6046 | What would you think? |
6046 | What wouldst thou have? |
6046 | What zeal? |
6046 | What, I say, should be the reason, but that death assaulted him with his sting? |
6046 | What, Lord, any him? |
6046 | What, a Christian, and live as does the world? |
6046 | What, again; is there no breaking of the league that is betwixt sin and thy soul? |
6046 | What, and come to Christ as a sinner? |
6046 | What, or who is the righteous man? |
6046 | What, resolved to be a self- murderer, a soul murderer? |
6046 | What, said I, is your husband amiss, or do you go back in the world? |
6046 | What, saith the merit- monger, will you look for life by the obedience of another man? |
6046 | What, then, must it rely upon or trust in? |
6046 | What, then, should the sinner, if he could come there, do at this bar to plead? |
6046 | What, thought I, must it be no sin but this? |
6046 | What, what shall I say? |
6046 | What, will your husband leave preaching? |
6046 | What[ evil] hath he done?" |
6046 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6046 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6046 | When God roars( as ofttimes the coming soul hears him roar), what man that is coming can do otherwise than tremble? |
6046 | When God speaks, when God works, who can let it? |
6046 | When he was come into the house he sent for me out of my chamber; who, when I was come unto him, he said, Neighbour Bunyan, how do you do? |
6046 | When he was taken this last time, he was preaching on these words, viz.,"Dost thou believe on the Son of God?" |
6046 | When justice itself is pleased with a man, and speaks on his side, instead of speaking against him, we may well cry out, Who shall condemn? |
6046 | When shall Christ ride Lord, and King, and Advocate, upon the faith of his people, as he should? |
6046 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
6046 | When shall Jesus Christ our Lord be honoured by us as he ought? |
6046 | When the apostle had taken such a view of himself as to put himself into a maze, with an outcry also,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6046 | When the jailer said,"Sirs, What must I do to be saved?" |
6046 | When the jailor cried out,''Sirs, what must I do to be saved?'' |
6046 | When this was read, the clerk of the sessions said unto me, What say you to this? |
6046 | When thou art called to an account for thy neglects of so great salvation, what canst thou answer? |
6046 | When thou shalt see less sinners than thou art, bound up by angels in bundles, to burn them, where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6046 | Whence came the invisible power that struck Paul from his horse? |
6046 | Whence came this strange idea-- not limited to the poor negro, but felt by thousands who have watched over departing saints? |
6046 | Whence came those sudden suggestions, those gloomy fears, those heavenly rays of joy? |
6046 | Where doth Christ Jesus require such a qualification of those that are coming to him for life? |
6046 | Where doth it lay its head, but in their laps? |
6046 | Where has He called them His love, His dove, His fair one? |
6046 | Where is he that is coming[ but has not come], to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Where is he that is thus under pangs of love for the grace bestowed upon him by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Where is he that is''clothed with humility,''and that does what he is commanded''with all humility of mind''? |
6046 | Where is he that seeks and groans for salvation? |
6046 | Where is he? |
6046 | Where is now any room for the righteousness of men? |
6046 | Where is that jot or tittle of the law that is able to object against my doings for want of satisfaction?" |
6046 | Where is the man that pursues with all his might what but now he seemed to ask for with all his heart? |
6046 | Where now is the man that feareth the Lord? |
6046 | Where shall we begin? |
6046 | Where was the righteous forsaken? |
6046 | Where will you be found in another world? |
6046 | Where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6046 | Where, now, is room for man''s righteousness, either in the whole, or as to any part thereof? |
6046 | Where? |
6046 | Wherefore a self- righteous man is but a painted Satan, or a devil in fine clothes; but thinks he so of himself? |
6046 | Wherefore has God put this sword, WE HAVE AN ADVOCATE, into thy hand, but to fight thy way through the world? |
6046 | Wherefore hast thou anything of the truth of Christ in thy heart? |
6046 | Wherefore is it said, Begin at Jerusalem, if the Jerusalem sinner is not to have the benefit of it? |
6046 | Wherefore puttest thou thy hand in thy bosom, as being afraid to touch the hem of the garment of the Lord? |
6046 | Wherefore then served the cross? |
6046 | Wherefore thou that hast a broken heart take courage, God bids thee take courage; say therefore to thy soul,''Why are thou cast down, O my soul?'' |
6046 | Wherefore, I ask again, hast thou been with him? |
6046 | Wherefore, at present, lay the thoughts of thy election by, and ask thyself these questions: Do I see my lost condition? |
6046 | Wherefore, dost thou think, art thou told of all this, but to encourage thee to come to the throne of grace? |
6046 | Wherefore, he falls to crying out, What shall I do? |
6046 | Wherefore, wouldst thou be a praying man, a man that would pray and prevail? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherefore? |
6046 | Wherein is he to be accounted of? |
6046 | Whether goes the child, when it catcheth harm, but to its father, to its mother? |
6046 | Which of the twelve ever thought that Judas would have proved a devil? |
6046 | Which of these two covenants art thou under, soul? |
6046 | Which wouldest thou have prevail? |
6046 | While I was on this sudden thus overtaken with surprise, Wife, said I, is there ever such a scripture, I must go to Jesus? |
6046 | While Jacob was afraid of Esau, how heavily did he drive even towards the promised land? |
6046 | Whither did his desires bring him? |
6046 | Whither did they carry him? |
6046 | Whither is he like to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Whither is he to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Whither may he arrive, and yet be an undone man, under this covenant? |
6046 | Whither will you go? |
6046 | Whither wilt thou go? |
6046 | Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? |
6046 | Who are brought in?] |
6046 | Who are so lawless, so little advanced in civilization, as the poor Irish, Spaniards, or Italians? |
6046 | Who are they that are saved by grace? |
6046 | Who believes as he desires to believe? |
6046 | Who but Jesus Christ would have undertaken such a task as the salvation of the sinner is, if Jesus Christ had passed us by? |
6046 | Who but an idiot or a maniac would attempt to reduce the mental powers of all men to uniformity? |
6046 | Who can contradict it? |
6046 | Who can make them see that Christ has made blind? |
6046 | Who can stand before his indignation? |
6046 | Who dares limit the Almighty? |
6046 | Who ever was mad enough to ask Moses to intercede for him, and surely he is as able as Mary or any other saint? |
6046 | Who is He? |
6046 | Who is able to separate us from the love of Jesus Christ our Lord? |
6046 | Who is he that condemneth me? |
6046 | Who is he that condemneth? |
6046 | Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
6046 | Who is mine adversary? |
6046 | Who knows the power of his anger? |
6046 | Who knows what will become of the ark of God? |
6046 | Who put''a new song''into the mouth of David? |
6046 | Who shall do so? |
6046 | Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?'' |
6046 | Who so bold as blind Bayard? |
6046 | Who so ready to fly to the physician as those who feel their case to be desperate? |
6046 | Who so vilified as the righteous? |
6046 | Who they are that are actually brought into His free and unchangeable Covenant of Grace, and how they are brought in? |
6046 | Who told thee so? |
6046 | Who told thee so? |
6046 | Who understands them unto perfection? |
6046 | Who was it that scared Job with dreams, and terrified him with visions? |
6046 | Who will grieve for thy sorrow, that didst not count mercy worth asking for? |
6046 | Who will stand up for me against the workers of iniquity?" |
6046 | Who would knowingly go over a pearl, and yet not count it worth stooping for? |
6046 | Who would not be here? |
6046 | Who would not fear thee, said Jeremiah, O king of nations, for to thee doth it appertain? |
6046 | Who would not hope to enjoy life eternal, that has an inheritance in the God of Israel? |
6046 | Who, now seeing all this is so effectually done, shall lay anything, the least thing? |
6046 | Who, then, shall condemn when Christ has died, and doth also make intercession? |
6046 | Who? |
6046 | Who? |
6046 | Why at his trial? |
6046 | Why before them? |
6046 | Why betook not I myself to the holy Word of God? |
6046 | Why comest thou then so slowly? |
6046 | Why did I judge of his ability to save me by the voice of my shallow reason, and the voice of a guilty conscience? |
6046 | Why did I not humbly cast my soul at his blessed footstool for mercy? |
6046 | Why did he say he would receive the coming sinner? |
6046 | Why dost thou make him the object of thy scorn? |
6046 | Why dost thou put him off? |
6046 | Why dost thou sin and provoke the eyes of his glory? |
6046 | Why dost thou stop thine ear? |
6046 | Why have we not a catalogue of some holy men that were so in their own eyes, and in the judgment of the world? |
6046 | Why in his name, if he be not accepted of God? |
6046 | Why is Christ bid to gird his sword upon his thigh? |
6046 | Why is it a free and unchangeable grace? |
6046 | Why is it then, that thou livest when they are dead, and that thou hast a promise of pardon when they had not? |
6046 | Why is man''s heart compared to fallow ground, God''s Word to a plough, and his ministers to ploughmen? |
6046 | Why is the conversion of the soul compared to the grafting of a tree, if that be done without cutting? |
6046 | Why may not I expect the same when anguish and guilt is upon me?'' |
6046 | Why not another? |
6046 | Why not familiar with sinners, provided we hate their spots and blemishes, and seek that they may be healed of them? |
6046 | Why not fellowly with our carnal neighbours? |
6046 | Why not go to the poor man''s house, and give him a penny, and a Scripture to think upon? |
6046 | Why not live before him? |
6046 | Why shall thy deceived heart turn thee aside, that thou canst not deliver thy soul,''nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6046 | Why should God beseech us to reconcile to him, but that we might hope in him? |
6046 | Why should Satan molest those whose ways he knows will bring them to him? |
6046 | Why should not devils and damned souls despair? |
6046 | Why should not others arise as extensively to bless the world as Bunyan did? |
6046 | Why should the righteous partake of the same plagues with the wicked? |
6046 | Why should the saints look for any good from thee? |
6046 | Why should we strive? |
6046 | Why sittest thou still? |
6046 | Why so, I pray you? |
6046 | Why so, seeing circumcision is not one of the ten words[ commandments]? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why so? |
6046 | Why wilt thou not come to Jesus Christ, since thou art a Jerusalem sinner? |
6046 | Why"doth a living man complain, a man for the punishment of his sins?" |
6046 | Why, Christian, what is thy experience? |
6046 | Why, he that saith, They shall come, shall he not make it good? |
6046 | Why, he would say, I have yet with my father in store for my brethren, wherefore then seekest thou to stop his hand? |
6046 | Why, man, doth the fear of God make a man idle and slothful? |
6046 | Why, soul? |
6046 | Why, then, is it said God beholdeth every one that is proud, and abases him? |
6046 | Why, then, should we conceit that the Son will forgive these that come not to the Father by him? |
6046 | Why, then, wilt thou set thy heart upon that which is not? |
6046 | Why, thou must have a safe- conduct to heaven? |
6046 | Why, truly thus-- Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly, and with very cold devotion? |
6046 | Why, what had Jonathan done? |
6046 | Why, what is it? |
6046 | Why, what is the matter? |
6046 | Why, what is thine end in coming to Christ? |
6046 | Why, what wilt thou make of God? |
6046 | Why, who are thou? |
6046 | Why, with the Lord there is great mercy for thee? |
6046 | Why, would you have us do nothing? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Why? |
6046 | Wicked men talk of heaven, and say they hope and desire to go to heaven, even while they continue wicked men; but, I say, what would they do there? |
6046 | Will He esteem thy riches? |
6046 | Will a less thing than heaven, than glory and eternal life, answer thy desires? |
6046 | Will he always call upon God? |
6046 | Will he hold him when Shall- come puts forth itself, will he then let12 him, for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Will he leave him to recover himself by the strength of his now languishing graces? |
6046 | Will he let him alone in his apostasy? |
6046 | Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6046 | Will he show wonders to such a dead dog as I am? |
6046 | Will he take this advantage to destroy the sinner? |
6046 | Will he urge that he will plead against us? |
6046 | Will it not amaze them to be unexpectedly excluded from life and salvation? |
6046 | Will it not be amazing to some of the damned themselves, to see some come to hell that then they shall see come thither? |
6046 | Will my profession, or the faith I think I have, carry me through all the trials of God''s tribunal? |
6046 | Will not a humble posture best become us when we have humbling providences in prospect? |
6046 | Will temporal things make thy soul to live? |
6046 | Will the wrath of God be a pleasant dish to thy taste? |
6046 | Will these be excuses for them, as the case now standeth with them? |
6046 | Will they do me any good when Christ comes? |
6046 | Will they not also be amazed one at another, while they remember how in their lifetime they counted themselves fellow- heirs of life? |
6046 | Will those, who have us hither cast? |
6046 | Will you not hear the errand of Christ, although He telleth you tidings of peace and salvation? |
6046 | Will you rebel against the king? |
6046 | Will you take up the cross, come after Me, and so preserve your souls from perishing? |
6046 | Will you trust to the blood that was shed upon the cross, that run down to the ground, and perished in the dust? |
6046 | Wilt not thou serve him with joyfulness in the enjoyment of all good things, even him by whom thou art to be made blessed for ever? |
6046 | Wilt thou answer this question now, or wilt thou take time to do it? |
6046 | Wilt thou by thus doing endeavour to keep them wrapt up still in the dust of the earth, there to dwell with the worm and corruption? |
6046 | Wilt thou continue to contemn and reproach the living God? |
6046 | Wilt thou not cry? |
6046 | Wilt thou stand by thy doings? |
6046 | With promises, did I say? |
6046 | With respect to thy desires, what are they? |
6046 | With that, one of them said, Who is your God? |
6046 | Witness they that live in hell; if it be proper to say they live in hell? |
6046 | Would God else have given him the heaven to dispose of to us that believe, and would he else have told us so? |
6046 | Would I share in this salvation by faith in him? |
6046 | Would not By- ends, Facing- both- ways, and Save- all, have jumped to the same conclusion? |
6046 | Would not Heaven be better to me than my sins? |
6046 | Would not His dying only of a natural death have served the turn? |
6046 | Would she not say, You mock me? |
6046 | Would the people learn to be wanton? |
6046 | Would they learn to be drunkards? |
6046 | Would you be saved by keeping the law? |
6046 | Would you have us make Christ such a drudge as to do all, while we sit idling still? |
6046 | Would you have us run into temptation, to try if they be sound or rotten? |
6046 | Would you not say, I did not think of covenants, or study the nature of them? |
6046 | Would you serve your prince so? |
6046 | Would you stand just before God thereby? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this fear of God? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of godly fear? |
6046 | Wouldest thou know whether Christ is thine Advocate or no? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be saved from guilt and filth too? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be saved with a thorough salvation? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be saved? |
6046 | Wouldst thou be the servant of thy Saviour? |
6046 | Wouldst thou have the kingdom of God come indeed, and also his will to be done in earth as it is in heaven? |
6046 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine Advocate, whether he has taken in hand to plead thy cause? |
6046 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine advocate? |
6046 | Wouldst thou know, sinner, what thou art? |
6046 | Wouldst thou then know this throne of grace, where God sits to hear prayers and give grace? |
6046 | Wouldst thou willingly hold out, stand to the last, and be more than a conqueror? |
6046 | Wouldst thou, then, know the greatest things of God? |
6046 | Wouldst thou, with all thy heart, be saved by Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Yea, I say again, if judgment must begin at them, will it not make thee think, What shall become of me? |
6046 | Yea, and if he ask me, Why I came home no sooner? |
6046 | Yea, and it has its followers ready at its heels continually to blow its applause abroad, saying,''Who will show us any[ other] good?'' |
6046 | Yea, and why is death suffered to slay the body? |
6046 | Yea, are they not hurtful in the day of grace? |
6046 | Yea, canst thou appeal to the Lord Jesus, who knoweth perfectly the very inmost thought of thy heart, that this is true? |
6046 | Yea, canst thou say, My soul, my soul waiteth upon God, my soul thirsteth for Him, my soul followeth hard after him? |
6046 | Yea, dost thou not vehemently desire to desire to depart and to be with Christ? |
6046 | Yea, hath the truth itself bestowed it upon us, and shall those to whom it is given, even given by Scripture of truth, be yet deprived thereof? |
6046 | Yea, if the works of a sanctified man are blameworthy, how shall the works of a bad man set him clear in the eyes of Divine justice? |
6046 | Yea, is it not meet that to every one they should confess what sorry ones they are? |
6046 | Yea, is it not reason that in all things we should study his exaltation here, since he in all things contrives our honour and glory in heaven? |
6046 | Yea, open thy heart, and take this man, not into judgment, but into mercy with thee? |
6046 | Yea, suppose the child should now, through ignorance, cry, and say, This man is now no more my father; is he, therefore, now no more his father? |
6046 | Yea, the passover being to be eaten on the even of his sufferings, with what desires did he desire to eat it with his disciples? |
6046 | Yea, what a word of worth, and goodness, and blessedness, is it to him that lies continually upon the wrath of a guilty conscience? |
6046 | Yea, what do you think John desired, when he cried out to Christ to come quickly? |
6046 | Yea, what shall we say of such that are the inventors and promoters of wickedness, as of oaths, beastly talk, or the like? |
6046 | Yea, what should they do among that company that are saved alone by grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ? |
6046 | Yea, what works of that man doth God impute to him that he yet justifies as ungodly? |
6046 | Yea, wherefore hath God also given it out that there is none other name given to men under heaven whereby we must be saved? |
6046 | Yea, why is he commanded to let it be so, if the people would bow and fall kindly under him, and heartily implore his grace without it? |
6046 | Yea,"how oft is the candle of the wicked put out?" |
6046 | Yes; for I think if I were deceived before, if I were comforted by a spirit of delusion before, why may it not be so again? |
6046 | Yet the question is, Are they absolutely or conditionally promised? |
6046 | Yet, hast thou fallen? |
6046 | You may ask me, What is it to come boldly? |
6046 | You may ask me, what those things are? |
6046 | You may ask, How should I know those shepherds? |
6046 | You read they come weeping and mourning, and with tears; they knock and they cry for mercy; but what did tears avail? |
6046 | You will say, How should I know that? |
6046 | [ 15] Was this love of God extended to him because of his personal virtues? |
6046 | [ 163] Can a man enter upon the work of the ministry from a better school than this? |
6046 | [ 17] But is he now quit? |
6046 | [ 17] Can it be imagined that when the wicked are in this distress, but that they will desire to be saved? |
6046 | [ 217] Mr. Wingate asked Bunyan why he did not follow his calling and go to church? |
6046 | [ 21] What do all their acts declare, but this, that they either know not God, or fear not what he can do unto them? |
6046 | [ 24] Seest thou the poor? |
6046 | [ 25] The trial we have before God is of otherguise importance,[26] it concerns our eternal happiness or misery; and yet dare we affront him? |
6046 | [ 2] He asked the constable what we did, where we were met together, and what we had with us? |
6046 | [ 31] And how many times are they that fear God said to be delivered both by God and his holy angels? |
6046 | [ 338]''Why was the brazen laver made of the women''s looking- glasses? |
6046 | [ 33] What is this to me, O law, that thou accusest me, and sayest that I have committed many sins? |
6046 | [ 38] But is our present need all the need that we are like to have, and the present work all the work that we have to do in the world? |
6046 | [ 39] Will it be comfort to thee to see the Saviour turn Judge? |
6046 | [ 5] The genuine disciple"who thinketh no evil"will say, Can this be so now? |
6046 | [ 5] Where is the man, except he be a willful perverter of Divine truth, who can charge the doctrines of grace with licentiousness? |
6046 | [ 6] Would you be ready to die in peace? |
6046 | [ How should we strive?] |
6046 | [ WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6046 | [ WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6046 | [ Why should we strive?] |
6046 | a promise that declares, yea, that engageth Christ Jesus to open his heart to receive the coming sinner? |
6046 | a promise that looks at the first moving of the heart after Jesus Christ? |
6046 | afraid to go to Joseph''s house? |
6046 | all who? |
6046 | and again, He beholds the proud afar off? |
6046 | and again,"O death, where is thy sting? |
6046 | and also how God doth make a man righteous with it? |
6046 | and are notions and whimsies of such credit with thee that thou must leave the foundation to follow them? |
6046 | and are you stronger than He? |
6046 | and art thou for ever resolved so to do? |
6046 | and canst thou find in thy heart to labour to lay more sins upon His back? |
6046 | and comes as it were to the borders of doubt, saying,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6046 | and falsify their words for thee? |
6046 | and fears as he desires to fear God''s name? |
6046 | and from whence would the flaming flame ascend highest, and make the most roaring noise? |
6046 | and how could Abel be yet pleasing in his sight, for the sake of his own righteousness, when it is plain that Abel had not yet done good works? |
6046 | and how if all our faith, and Christ, and Scriptures, should be but a think- so too? |
6046 | and how? |
6046 | and if to two, why not to four, and so to eight? |
6046 | and in Thy name have cast out devils?" |
6046 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6046 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6046 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6046 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6046 | and is God''s love and care of the salvation of the souls of sinners infinitely greater than is their own care for their own souls? |
6046 | and loves as he desires to love? |
6046 | and shall I count anything too dear for Him? |
6046 | and so, consequently, say unto God,"Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways; or, What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6046 | and that eternal life with God''s favour, is better than a temporal life in God''s displeasure? |
6046 | and that made the jailer cry out, and that with great trembling of soul,"Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" |
6046 | and the company of God, Christ, saints, and angels, be better than the company of Cain, Judas, Balaam, with the devils in the furnace of fire? |
6046 | and to say now, Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner? |
6046 | and to what did they make him stoop? |
6046 | and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?" |
6046 | and what course should I take to be delivered from this sad and troublesome condition? |
6046 | and what fruits in all their labour? |
6046 | and what is the criterion of Christian charity, except it be''zeal for the salvation of others in his heart?'' |
6046 | and what is the reason of that, but a persuasion that there is no help for him in God? |
6046 | and what profit should we have if we pray unto him?'' |
6046 | and what still wilt thou further do, if mercy, and blood and grace doth not prevent thee? |
6046 | and when it is committed? |
6046 | and where is the place of my rest? |
6046 | and where, when He speaketh of them, doth He express a communion that they have with Him by the similitude of conjugal love? |
6046 | and whether the holy Scriptures were not rather a fable, and cunning story, than the holy and pure Word of God? |
6046 | and why I did not content myself with following my calling? |
6046 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6046 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6046 | and why did he so long for it, but of desire to do us good? |
6046 | and why dost Thou pass such a sad sentence of condemnation upon us? |
6046 | and why may we not go to Christ in the name of the Father, as well as to the Father in the name of Christ? |
6046 | and why must he make his arrows sharp, and all, that the heart may with this sword and these arrows be shot, wounded, and made to bleed? |
6046 | and will he judge a man just that is a sinner? |
6046 | and yet all this is included in this word saved, and in the answer to that question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6046 | and, I say, as I said before, in whom is it, light, like so to shine, as in the souls of great sinners? |
6046 | and,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6046 | and,''What wouldst thou have me do?'' |
6046 | any him that cometh to thee? |
6046 | are not the things that are eternal best? |
6046 | are these the effects of a purblind spirit? |
6046 | are these the tokens of a blessed man? |
6046 | are they not rather the fruits of an eagle- eyed confidence? |
6046 | are we better than they? |
6046 | are we better than they? |
6046 | are we stronger than He?'' |
6046 | are ye made to be taken and destroyed? |
6046 | are you not ashamed of your doings? |
6046 | arise: why standest thou still? |
6046 | art thou one of them that hast cast off fear? |
6046 | art thou weary? |
6046 | art thou willing? |
6046 | because Christ is our pattern, is he not our passover? |
6046 | but how much is there of it?'' |
6046 | but how shall I come by them? |
6046 | can the floods drown it? |
6046 | can these be possessed with this grace of fear? |
6046 | canst thou give no better counsel touching those whom God hath wounded, than to send them to the ordinances of hell for help? |
6046 | canst thou imagine that such a gnat, a flea, a pismire as thou art, can take and possess the heavens, and mantle thyself up in the eternal glories? |
6046 | canst thou judge no better? |
6046 | cast a world behind thy back for the welfare of a soul? |
6046 | count convictions for sin, mournings for sin, and repentance for sin, melancholy? |
6046 | did they now choose him to be their king? |
6046 | did they say, did they do nothing while they sat before the throne? |
6046 | did you see how I turned again to those vanities from which some time before I fell? |
6046 | do they not tend to surfeit the heart, and to alienate a man and his mind from the things that are better? |
6046 | do you design the glory of God, in the salvation of your soul? |
6046 | do you not understand that God is resolved to have the mastery one way or another? |
6046 | dost thou know what thou art? |
6046 | dost thou not know that thou by so doing deferrest the coming of thy dearest Lord? |
6046 | dost thou think that God, Christ, Prophets, and Scriptures, will all lie for thee? |
6046 | doth his coming to Jesus Christ offend thee? |
6046 | doth his forsaking of his sins and pleasures offend thee? |
6046 | doth his pursuing of his own salvation offend thee? |
6046 | doth not this man deserve to be ranked among the extravagant ones? |
6046 | doth she give up her faith and hope, and return to that fear that begot the first bondage? |
6046 | fear God and a liar, and one that cries for mercies to spend them upon thy lusts? |
6046 | fear God and be proud, and covetous, a wine- bibber, and a riotous eater of flesh? |
6046 | fear God without a change of heart and life? |
6046 | fear God, and in a state of nature? |
6046 | flow they not, think you, from faith of the finest sort, and are they not bred in the bosom of a truly mortified soul? |
6046 | for a man must know before he does, else how should he divert[13] himself to do? |
6046 | for providing friends to receive him to harbour when others should turn him out of their doors? |
6046 | for to do things, but not in God''s fear, to what will it amount? |
6046 | has God bestowed a contrite spirit upon thee? |
6046 | hast thou cried out? |
6046 | hast thou cried? |
6046 | hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not? |
6046 | hath it ears? |
6046 | hath it eyes? |
6046 | have they not in them power to loose the bands of nature, and to harden the soul against sorrow? |
6046 | how came the prophet by this sight? |
6046 | how canst thou deal so unkindly with such a sweet Lord Jesus? |
6046 | how doth he behave himself in his presence? |
6046 | how he found that which some of his children sought and missed? |
6046 | how much of his Spirit, and the grace of his Word? |
6046 | how poorly will these be able to plead the virtues of the law to which they have cleaved, when God shall answer them,''Whom dost thou pass in beauty? |
6046 | how readest thou? |
6046 | how shall I come at Christ? |
6046 | if it were not for these three or four words, now how might I be comforted? |
6046 | if, at any time, any of them are mentioned, how seemingly coldly doth the record of scripture present them to us? |
6046 | in sinking into the bottom of the sea with company? |
6046 | in the body of his flesh,[ that then must be first: to what?] |
6046 | is all right with my soul? |
6046 | is man such a fool as to believe things, and yet not look after them? |
6046 | is sitting alone, pensive under God''s hand, reading the Scriptures, and hearing of sermons,& c., the way to be undone? |
6046 | is the soul so precious a thing? |
6046 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6046 | is there not life and mettle in them? |
6046 | is thy heart still so stubborn as not to say yet,"Let us fear the Lord?" |
6046 | it is the gift of the Father--"how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him( Luke 11:13)? |
6046 | it was for sufferings; and why made he ready for them but because he saw they wrought out for him a''far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory?'' |
6046 | may not, therefore, the spirit of bondage be sent again to put me in fear, as at first? |
6046 | must he save them all? |
6046 | must ye utterly perish in your own corruptions? |
6046 | must you mind this world to the damning of your souls? |
6046 | nay, may they not both fall short? |
6046 | none for his loving Son that has showed his love, and died for thee? |
6046 | not fear in the day of evil? |
6046 | not when the iniquity of thy heels compasseth thee about? |
6046 | of works? |
6046 | or a way for the lightning of thunder to cause it to rain on the earth, where no man is: on the wilderness wherein there is no man?'' |
6046 | or art thou none of those that should look after the salvation of their soul? |
6046 | or can there be no salvation? |
6046 | or dost think thou mayest lose thy soul, and save thyself? |
6046 | or dost thou but dream thereof? |
6046 | or dost thou think that thou shalt escape the judgment? |
6046 | or doth grace teach you to plead for the flesh, or the making provision for the lusts thereof? |
6046 | or has the day of grace been suffered to pass by never to return? |
6046 | or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6046 | or how is that? |
6046 | or how would she frame an answer? |
6046 | or if Christ is the throne of grace and mercy- seat, how doth he appear before God as sitting there, to sprinkle that now with his blood? |
6046 | or if it so may be said; yet whether thou art one of them? |
6046 | or in going to hell, in burning in hell, and in enduring the everlasting pains of hell, with company? |
6046 | or must the effectualness of Christ''s merits, as touching our perseverance, be helped on by the doings of man? |
6046 | or no forgiveness of sins--"If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?" |
6046 | or of restoring what he had oft taken away? |
6046 | or shall we be base in life because God by grace hath secured us from wrath to come? |
6046 | or shall we not much matter what manner of lives we live, because we are set free from the law of sin and death? |
6046 | or that he was to be buried in Joseph''s sepulchre? |
6046 | or that he will speak for them to God for whom he will not plead against the devil? |
6046 | or that when the gate of mercy is shut up in wrath, he will at thy pleasure, and to the reversing of his own counsel, open it again to thee? |
6046 | or that your prayers come from the braying, panting, and longing of your hearts? |
6046 | or the tabernacle made with corruptible things, to the body of Christ, or heaven itself? |
6046 | or those either who are so far off from sense of, and shame for, sin, that it is the only thing they hug and embrace? |
6046 | or to say, all this is mine, but have nothing to show for it? |
6046 | or to see this great appearance of this great God, and the Lord Jesus Christ? |
6046 | or was not this man like to be a gainer by so doing? |
6046 | or what advantage can he get by his thus vexing and troubling the children of the Most High? |
6046 | or what is a remnant of wheat to the whole harvest? |
6046 | or what is he? |
6046 | or what profit have we if we keep his ways?" |
6046 | or what profit shall I have if I keep his commandments? |
6046 | or who are they that by this exhortation are called upon to come? |
6046 | or who did Christ come into the world to save, but the chief of sinners? |
6046 | or will that penny that supplied my want the other day, I say, will the same penny also, without a supply, supply my wants today? |
6046 | or will that seasonable shower which fell last year, be, without supplies, a seasonable help to the grain and grass that is growing now? |
6046 | or will the law slay both him and us, and that for the same transgression? |
6046 | or will you hate your life, and save it? |
6046 | or will you not mind your callings at all? |
6046 | or will you shun the cross to save your lives, and so run the danger of eternal damnation? |
6046 | or wilt thou be desperate, and venture all? |
6046 | or wouldst thou know if thou hast? |
6046 | or''him,''by believing thou neither wilt nor canst? |
6046 | or, Can the merits of the Lord Jesus reach, according to the law of heaven, a man in this condition? |
6046 | or, as he was in the flesh? |
6046 | or, because we should in these things follow his steps, died he not for our sins? |
6046 | or, by acts and works of the flesh? |
6046 | or, in other words,''am I born again?'' |
6046 | or, in the humble hope that your course is accomplished, are you patiently waiting the heavenly messenger? |
6046 | or, what is a handful out of the rest of the world? |
6046 | or, what need you trouble us with these nice distinctions? |
6046 | poor man, what wilt thou do when these three things beset thee? |
6046 | pull no longer; why shouldest thou be thine own executioner? |
6046 | room, I say, for man''s righteousness, as to his acceptance and justification? |
6046 | saith Satan; why, that will I. Ay, saith he, but who can do it, and prevail? |
6046 | saith the Lord; shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this?" |
6046 | saith the Lord; will ye not tremble at my presence?" |
6046 | saith the backslider that is returned, did you see how I left my God? |
6046 | saith the child, pray do not hurt me: I then have replied, Canst thou do nothing with this finger? |
6046 | says the honourable man, must I take mercy upon no higher consideration than the thief on the cross? |
6046 | seest thou the fatherless? |
6046 | seest thou thy foe in distress? |
6046 | set more by thy soul than by all the world? |
6046 | shall Christ become a drudge for you; and will you be drudges for the devil? |
6046 | shall I threaten them? |
6046 | shall not the worthiness of the Son of God be sufficient to save from the sin of man? |
6046 | shall the desire of the righteous be granted? |
6046 | shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6046 | shall we sin that grace may abound? |
6046 | should we pray for faith, for justification by grace, and a truly sanctified heart? |
6046 | sin, what art thou? |
6046 | so was he: are we tempted to commit idolatry, and to worship the devil? |
6046 | so was he: are we tempted to murder ourselves? |
6046 | so was he: are we tempted with the bewitching vanities of this world? |
6046 | such privileges as these? |
6046 | teach men to put God and his Word out of their minds, by running to merry company, by running to the world, by gossiping? |
6046 | than He that shook hands with the Father in making of the covenant? |
6046 | that he was to be crowned with thorns? |
6046 | that he was to be crucified between two thieves, and to be pierced till blood and water came out of his side? |
6046 | that he was to be scourged of the soldiers? |
6046 | that is, he is so;''is he a pleasant child?'' |
6046 | that remember thy triumphant victory? |
6046 | that the damned shall never be burned out in hell? |
6046 | that word came suddenly upon me,"What shall we then say to these things? |
6046 | the desires of the flesh, or the lusts of the spirit, whose side art thou of? |
6046 | then how should I come? |
6046 | then they may be coming to him, for aught you know; and why will ye be worse than the brute, to speak evil of the things you know not? |
6046 | thou thinkest to escape the fear; but what wilt thou do with the pit? |
6046 | thy God has bidden thee''open thy mouth wide''; he has bid thee open it wide, and promised, saying,''And I will fill it''; and wilt thou not desire? |
6046 | to believe great things, and yet not to concern himself with them? |
6046 | to hear this trump of God? |
6046 | to see him that wept and died for the sin of the world now ease his mind on Christ- abhorring sinners by rendering to them the just judgment of God? |
6046 | to the salvation of the soul? |
6046 | to truck+ with the devil?'' |
6046 | was made the curse of God for me? |
6046 | were they silent? |
6046 | what a fool has sin made of thee? |
6046 | what a privilege is this, but who believes it? |
6046 | what aileth the man thus to express himself? |
6046 | what an ass art thou become to sin? |
6046 | what are you doing? |
6046 | what care they for his Word? |
6046 | what comfort in their greatness? |
6046 | what does a righteous man desire? |
6046 | what does not the world owe to thee and to the great Being who could produce such as thee? |
6046 | what is deliverance from hell without the enjoyment of God? |
6046 | what is ease without the peace and enjoyment of God? |
6046 | what is faith to possession? |
6046 | what is he adoing now? |
6046 | what is he advantaged by his rich adventure? |
6046 | what is like being saved? |
6046 | what is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
6046 | what is there wrapped up in this Christ, this secret of God? |
6046 | what is this to the loss about which we have been speaking all this while? |
6046 | what is thy country, and of what people art thou?" |
6046 | what need we stand to prove the sun is light, the fire hot, the water wet? |
6046 | what sayest thou? |
6046 | what was it that he spake? |
6046 | what will become of you if you die in this condition? |
6046 | what, none at all? |
6046 | what, resolved to murder thine own soul? |
6046 | when he is in the Spirit, and sees in the Spirit, do you think his tongue can tell? |
6046 | when we believed, or before? |
6046 | when? |
6046 | where is thy sting? |
6046 | where is thy victory? |
6046 | where shall I see myself anon, after a few times more have passed over me? |
6046 | where will they leave their glory? |
6046 | which is all one as if he had said, Why dost thou commit murder? |
6046 | which is strongest, thinkest thou, God or thee? |
6046 | which the law as a Covenant of Works calleth for; and canst thou, being carnal, do that? |
6046 | whither shall I go when I die, if sweet Christ has not pity for my soul?'' |
6046 | whither will they fly then? |
6046 | whither wilt thou fly for help? |
6046 | who among the sons of the mighty can be likened unto the Lord?'' |
6046 | who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" |
6046 | who believes this talk? |
6046 | who can abide in the fierceness of his anger? |
6046 | who can act reason that hath not reason? |
6046 | who can deliver me? |
6046 | who compelled Thee to swear? |
6046 | who has a thimbleful thereof? |
6046 | who is able to conceive the inexpressible, inconceivable joys that are there? |
6046 | who knows the power of God''s wrath? |
6046 | who smells the stink of sin? |
6046 | who so bold with God, and who so bold with men as he? |
6046 | who then that hath the faith of him can do otherwise but desire to be with him? |
6046 | who thinks of this? |
6046 | who would not be in this condition? |
6046 | who would not be in this glory? |
6046 | who would slight convictions that are on their souls, which( if not slighted) tend so much for their good? |
6046 | why am I damned? |
6046 | why did not I give glory to the redeeming blood of Jesus? |
6046 | why in his name if his undertakings for us are not well- pleasing to God? |
6046 | why shouldest thou pull vengeance down from heaven upon thee? |
6046 | why, what shall they see? |
6046 | why? |
6046 | will he be able to stand to his refusal? |
6046 | will he pursue his desperate denial? |
6046 | will it avail? |
6046 | will this content thee, the Lord will fulfil thy desires? |
6046 | wilt thou comfort thyself with this? |
6046 | wilt thou not desire? |
6046 | wilt thou still be unwilling to hasten righteousness? |
6046 | wilt thou yet loiter in the work of thy day? |
6046 | works that are done by virtue of great grace, and the abundance of the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
6046 | would they neglect salvation as they did before? |
6046 | would they not have a more comfortable house and home for their souls?'' |
6046 | wouldst thou be saved? |
6046 | yea, and to do it more and more? |
6046 | yea, it is impossible else that he should ever cry out with all his heart,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6046 | yea, what can make that man happy that, for his not coming to Jesus Christ for life, must be damned in hell? |
6046 | yea, what like to be taught in the way that thou shalt choose? |
6046 | yea, why should not man despair of getting to heaven by his own abilities? |
6046 | you may say, what judgments? |
6049 | A new heart also will I give them; a new heart, what a one is that? |
6049 | A wounded spirit who can bear? |
6049 | A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | And God said unto Noah,or told Noah his purpose: The same way he went with Abraham:"Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do?" |
6049 | And Moses said unto the Lord, Wherefore hast thou afflicted thy servant? |
6049 | And he said, What hast thou done? 6049 And he said, Who told thee that thou wast naked? |
6049 | And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? |
6049 | And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? |
6049 | And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? |
6049 | And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? |
6049 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? 6049 And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother?" |
6049 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Where is Abel? |
6049 | And the Lord said unto Cain, Why art thou wroth? 6049 And wherefore slew he him? |
6049 | And why,saith he,"dost thou ask Abishag for Adonijah? |
6049 | But can you in very deed make these things manifestly evident from the Word of God? 6049 But doth not the scripture say, that it is the Spirit of Christ that doth convince of sin?" |
6049 | But what must they do that have unbelieving ones? 6049 But women have sometimes cases, which modesty will not admit should be made known to men, what must they do then?" |
6049 | By which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you..What was that? |
6049 | Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? 6049 Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? |
6049 | Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? 6049 Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him?" |
6049 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
6049 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee,saith the Lord? |
6049 | Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that he shall dealin judgment"with thee?" |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? 6049 Does Satan suggest that God will not hear your stammering and chattering prayers? |
6049 | Enter in; enter into what, or whither, but into a state or place, or both? |
6049 | Fear ye not me? 6049 Fear ye not me? |
6049 | For the Lord taketh pleasure in his people,and what follows? |
6049 | For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? 6049 For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? |
6049 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? 6049 Has any man sinned? |
6049 | Hast thou eaten of the tree? |
6049 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
6049 | His father,says the text,"had not displeased him at any time in( so much as) saying, Why hast thou done so?" |
6049 | How doth God know,say they,"Can he judge through the thick cloud?" |
6049 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? |
6049 | How shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? |
6049 | I know not: am I my brother''s keeper? |
6049 | I know whom I have believed,I know him, said Paul; and what follows? |
6049 | I will,saith Christ;"I will,"saith Satan; but whose will shall stand? |
6049 | I,saith he,"even I, am he that comforteth you; who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall die"( Isa 51:12)? |
6049 | If Christ hath enlightened all men as he is God( as thou confessest) then hath he not enlightened all men as he is the Son of God? 6049 If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6049 | If I be a master, where is my fear? |
6049 | If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? 6049 In hope of eternal life,"how so? |
6049 | Is Ephraim my dear son? 6049 Is any afflicted? |
6049 | Is anything too hard for the Lord? 6049 Is it such a fast that I have chosen? |
6049 | Is not God in the height of heaven? 6049 Is not he rightly called Jacob?" |
6049 | Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? |
6049 | Is thine eye evil, because I am good? 6049 It is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth?" |
6049 | Jesus stretched forth his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6049 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? 6049 Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? |
6049 | Mine own arm brought salvation,saith he, but how? |
6049 | My God, My God,saith He,"why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
6049 | Now is My soul troubled, and what shall I say? |
6049 | Now,as the Psalmist says,"Who is this King of glory?" |
6049 | O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? |
6049 | O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
6049 | Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
6049 | Seemeth it to you,saith David,"a light thing to be a king''s son- in- law?" |
6049 | Shall I not visit for these things? 6049 Shall iron break the northern iron and the steel?" |
6049 | Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? |
6049 | Shall we sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, and will they not stone us? |
6049 | Shall we- sin that grace may abound? 6049 Sinner, O why so thoughtless grown? |
6049 | Sirs, what must I do to be saved? |
6049 | Stand in awe,saith he,"and sin not"; and again,"my heart standeth in awe of thy word"; and again,"Let all the earth fear the Lord"; what is that? |
6049 | That which is afar off, and exceeding deep, who can find out? |
6049 | The Lord said,--Go, but David replied, Whither shall I go? 6049 Then cometh the end,"saith Paul,"when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father;"But when shall that be? |
6049 | This is the victory,--even our faith; and"who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth?" |
6049 | Thou tellest my wanderings: put thou my tears into thy bottle; are they not in thy book? |
6049 | Tush,say they,"they talk of being born again; what good shall a man get by that? |
6049 | Was not this man, think you, a giant? 6049 What hast thou done?" |
6049 | What is this that thou hast done? |
6049 | What shall I do to be saved? |
6049 | What shall we say then? |
6049 | What, my true servant,quoth he,"my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | What, then? 6049 What,"says he,"shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits? |
6049 | What? 6049 When he hideth his face, who then can behold him?" |
6049 | When saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee? 6049 When shall I come and appear before God?" |
6049 | Where art thou? |
6049 | Where is Abel thy brother? |
6049 | Where is Abel thy brother? |
6049 | Where is Abel? |
6049 | Where is boasting then? 6049 Where is boasting then?" |
6049 | Wherefore should I fear,said David,"in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?" |
6049 | Wherefore should I,said he? |
6049 | Wherefore slew he him? 6049 Wherefore,"saith he,"as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men,"mark that; but why? |
6049 | Whether any be justified but he that is born of God? 6049 Whether is it possible, that any can be saved, without Christ manifested within? |
6049 | Whether[ doth] and[ man] receive Christ, who receives him no into him? 6049 Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant? |
6049 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6049 | Who can stand before his indignation? 6049 Who hath known the mind of the Lord?" |
6049 | Who hath put wisdom in the inward parts? 6049 Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?" |
6049 | Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6049 | Who then can condemn? 6049 Who told thee?" |
6049 | Who will bring me into the strong city,and"wilt not thou, O God, which hadst cast us off? |
6049 | Whom have I in heaven but thee? 6049 Why art thou wroth?" |
6049 | Why hast thou hardened our heart from thy fear? |
6049 | Why,saith the prophet to God,"Art thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?" |
6049 | Will he plead against me with his great power? 6049 With what righteousness?" |
6049 | Would it not be an insufferable thing? 6049 Ye adulterers and adulteresses,"for so the covetous are called,"know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
6049 | Ye shed blood[ says God] and shall ye possess the land? 6049 [ 257] How did these sturdy rogues and their fellows make David groan, mourn, and roar? |
6049 | ''0 wretched man that I am,''& c. What complaints, what confessions, what bewailing of weakness is here? |
6049 | ''A son honoureth his father, and a servant his master: if then I be a Father, where is mine honour? |
6049 | ''A wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | ''Adam, where art thou?'' |
6049 | ''And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who shall give you that which is your own?'' |
6049 | ''And it shall come to pass, that all they that look upon thee, shall flee from thee, and say, Nineveh is laid waste: who will bemoan her? |
6049 | ''And now why tarriest thou? |
6049 | ''And the Lord said, Who shall persuade Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth- Gilead? |
6049 | ''And they all with one consent began to make excuse;''--excuse for what? |
6049 | ''And when thou art spoiled, what wilt thou do? |
6049 | ''And why art thou disquieted within me? |
6049 | ''And why call ye me Lord, Lord,''saith he,''and do not, the things which I say?'' |
6049 | ''Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel; may I not wash in them and be clean?'' |
6049 | ''Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?'' |
6049 | ''Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?'' |
6049 | ''Are we better than they? |
6049 | ''Are ye able to drink of the cup that I shall drink of?'' |
6049 | ''Art thou also of Galilee? |
6049 | ''Be ye not,''saith it,''unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
6049 | ''Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? |
6049 | ''Besides,''quoth the old gentleman,''should the Prince now, as he receives the petition, ask him and say, What is thy name? |
6049 | ''But what if a man want light in his duty to the poor?'' |
6049 | ''But what if a man want light in the supper?'' |
6049 | ''But what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''Can the Ethiopian change his skin?'' |
6049 | ''Can the children of the bridechamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them?'' |
6049 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong?'' |
6049 | ''Can thine heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee? |
6049 | ''Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the days that God shall deal with thee?'' |
6049 | ''Can two walk together,''saith God,''except they be agreed?'' |
6049 | ''Canst thou by searching find out God? |
6049 | ''Canst thou thunder with a voice like him?'' |
6049 | ''Commune with your own heart upon your bed''( Psa 4:4), and then say what thou thinkest of, whether thou art going? |
6049 | ''Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'' |
6049 | ''Cut it down, why doth it cumber the ground?'' |
6049 | ''Did he find it,''saith Paul,''by the flesh?'' |
6049 | ''Did not Solomon king of Israel sin by these things? |
6049 | ''Do not I fill heaven and earth, saith the Lord?'' |
6049 | ''Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O congregation? |
6049 | ''Do ye think that the Scripture saith in vain, The spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy?'' |
6049 | ''Do you think that love letters are not desired between lovers? |
6049 | ''Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish?'' |
6049 | ''For how great is his goodness, and how great is his beauty? |
6049 | ''For if God be for us, who shall be against us? |
6049 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite, though he has gained''to a higher strain of desires,''when God taketh away his soul?'' |
6049 | ''For what is the hope of the hypocrite?'' |
6049 | ''For what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | ''Friend, how camest thou in hither?'' |
6049 | ''Happy art thou, O Israel, who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord, the shield of thy help, and who is the sword of thy excellency?'' |
6049 | ''Has it a corn? |
6049 | ''Hast thou found me,''said Ahab,''O mine enemy?'' |
6049 | ''Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods?'' |
6049 | ''Hath he said it, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6049 | ''Hath he said, and shall he not do it? |
6049 | ''Hath not God chosen the foolish,--the weak,--the base, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are?'' |
6049 | ''Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump?'' |
6049 | ''Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump?'' |
6049 | ''Have I been so long time with you,[ saith Christ] and yet hast thou not known me, Philip? |
6049 | ''Have any of the rulers or pharisees believed on him?'' |
6049 | ''He can not deliver his soul, nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6049 | ''He gives light to them that sit in darkness, and in the shadow of death,''what to do? |
6049 | ''Hear this, O ye that swallow up the needy, even to make the poor of the land to fail, saying, When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? |
6049 | ''Here see a soul that''s all despair; a man All hell; a spirit all wounds; who can A wounded spirit bear? |
6049 | ''How camest thou in hither?'' |
6049 | ''How camest thou in hither?'' |
6049 | ''How comes contesting for water baptism to be so much against you?'' |
6049 | ''How do you know that?'' |
6049 | ''How long wilt thou not depart from me, nor let me alone till I swallow down my spittle?'' |
6049 | ''How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity? |
6049 | ''How much more abominable and filthy is man, which drinketh iniquity like water?'' |
6049 | ''How shall I give thee up, Ephraim?'' |
6049 | ''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6049 | ''How then can I do this great wickedness,''said he,''and sin against God?'' |
6049 | ''How?'' |
6049 | ''I am the way,''saith Christ; but to what? |
6049 | ''I made a covenant with mine eyes,''said Job,''why then should I think upon a maid? |
6049 | ''I will,''said David,''behave myself wisely in a perfect way; O when wilt thou come unto me?'' |
6049 | ''If David then call him Lord, how is he his Son?'' |
6049 | ''If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him''; how then can he be fruitful in the vineyard? |
6049 | ''If our sins be upon us, and we pine away in them, how should we then live?'' |
6049 | ''If the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be seasoned?'' |
6049 | ''If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?'' |
6049 | ''Is Christ divided?'' |
6049 | ''Is Ephraim,''saith he,''my dear son?'' |
6049 | ''Is John Bunyan safe?'' |
6049 | ''Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own?'' |
6049 | ''Is not my word like as a fire, saith the Lord; and like a hammer, that breaketh the rock in pieces?'' |
6049 | ''Is not this the carpenter?'' |
6049 | ''Is there no place will serve to fit those for hell but the church, the vineyard of God?'' |
6049 | ''Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump?'' |
6049 | ''Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
6049 | ''Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? |
6049 | ''Let her alone, why trouble ye her?'' |
6049 | ''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6049 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''Ought not Christ to have suffered? |
6049 | ''Ought not Christ to have suffered?'' |
6049 | ''Righteous art thou, O Lord,''saith Jeremiah,''yet let me talk with thee: Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper?'' |
6049 | ''Shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? |
6049 | ''Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right''in His famous distributing of judgment? |
6049 | ''Shall one man sin,''said Moses,''and wilt Thou be wroth with all the congregation?'' |
6049 | ''Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
6049 | ''Shall they fall,''saith he,''and not arise? |
6049 | ''Should not the multitude of words be answered? |
6049 | ''So forcible and mighty are they in operation'';''is there not life and mettle in them? |
6049 | ''So then, what shall I say to those that have thus bespattered me? |
6049 | ''The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? |
6049 | ''The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?'' |
6049 | ''The righteousness which is of faith, speaketh on this wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? |
6049 | ''The wife of the bosom lies at him, saying, O do not cast thyself away; if thou takest this course, what shall I do? |
6049 | ''Then I said, But, Lord, what is believing?'' |
6049 | ''Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a council, and said, What do we? |
6049 | ''Then shame shall cover her that said unto thee, Where is the Lord thy God?'' |
6049 | ''Then thou shalt be clear from this my oath''; or,''How shall we clear ourselves?'' |
6049 | ''They have all received of his fulness, and grace for grace''; and will he shut thee out? |
6049 | ''They set their mouth against the heavens,''& c.''And they say, How doth God know? |
6049 | ''This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?'' |
6049 | ''Thus saith the Lord, The heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool, where is the house that ye build unto me? |
6049 | ''To which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son?'' |
6049 | ''Twas this that made David cry out, How great and wonderful are the works of God? |
6049 | ''What ailed thee, O Jordan, that thou wast driven back?'' |
6049 | ''What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6049 | ''What kind of preacher is he?'' |
6049 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | ''What shall we say then? |
6049 | ''What shall we then say that Abraham, our father as pertaining to the flesh, hath found?'' |
6049 | ''What then? |
6049 | ''What then? |
6049 | ''What, despair of bread in a land that is full of corn? |
6049 | ''What, my son?'' |
6049 | ''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | ''What, thought I, is there but one sin that is unpardonable? |
6049 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said David,''in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6049 | ''Wherefore should I fear,''said the prophet,''in the days of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?'' |
6049 | ''Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way?'' |
6049 | ''Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant? |
6049 | ''Who art thou that judgest another man''s servant?'' |
6049 | ''Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6049 | ''Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?'' |
6049 | ''Who can find a virtuous woman? |
6049 | ''Who hath woe? |
6049 | ''Who in the heaven can be compared unto the Lord? |
6049 | ''Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
6049 | ''Who is he that overcometh the world,[ saith John] but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?'' |
6049 | ''Who is he that saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth it not?'' |
6049 | ''Who knoweth the power or God''s anger?'' |
6049 | ''Who shall condemn? |
6049 | ''Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6049 | ''Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6049 | ''Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos?'' |
6049 | ''Who would set the briers and thorns against Me in battle? |
6049 | ''Why boasteth thou thyself in mischief,''said David,''O mighty man? |
6049 | ''Why did John reject the Pharisees that would have been baptized( Matt 3:7), and Paul examine them that were?'' |
6049 | ''Why hast thou conceived this thing in thine heart? |
6049 | ''Why was I made to hear thy voice,''while so many more amiable and less guilty''make a wretched choice?'' |
6049 | ''Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him?'' |
6049 | ''Will a man leave the snow of Lebanon, which cometh from the rock of the field? |
6049 | ''Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6049 | ''Wilt thou,''said Festus to Paul,''go up to Jerusalem, and there be judged of these things before me?'' |
6049 | ''Wot ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias? |
6049 | ''Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky, and of the earth, but how is it that ye do not discern this time?'' |
6049 | ''[ 120] Then said Mercy, This is much like to the saying of the Beloved,''What shall be given unto thee? |
6049 | ''[ 17]''and will God indeed dwell with men on the earth?'' |
6049 | ''[ 30]''Will you rebel against the king? |
6049 | ''[ 335]''Was Adam bad before he eat the forbidden fruit? |
6049 | ''[ 336]''How can a man say his prayers without a word being read or uttered? |
6049 | ''[ 337]''How do men speak with their feet?'' |
6049 | ''[ 339]''How can we comprehend that which can not be comprehended, or know that which passeth knowledge? |
6049 | ''[ 340]''Who was the founder of the state or priestly domination over religion? |
6049 | ''[ 341] What is meant by the drum of Diabolus and other riddles mentioned in The Holy War? |
6049 | ''[ 343] Can''sin be driven out of the world by suffering? |
6049 | ''[ 345]''What men die two deaths at once? |
6049 | ''[ 346]''Are men ever in heaven and on earth at the same time? |
6049 | ''[ 347]''Can a beggar be worth ten thousand a- year and not know it? |
6049 | ''[ 38]''What can be the meaning of this( trumpeters), they neither sound boot and saddle, nor horse and away, nor a charge? |
6049 | ''[ 83]''What, my true servant,''quoth he,''my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | ''[ 8] He inquired of his father--''Whether we were of the Israelites or no? |
6049 | ''or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue?'' |
6049 | ''what nation is there so great, who hath God so nigh unto them''as his people have, and as he''is in all things that we call upon him for? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 13) To speak nothing of the first table, where is he that hath his love manifested by the second? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 1:30,31) Where is boasting then? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 3:11) But dost thou plead still as thou didst before, and wilt thou stand thereto? |
6049 | ( 1 Cor 8:13) Where is Dorcas, with her garments she used to make for the widow, and for the fatherless? |
6049 | ( 1 John 3) Shall these pass for such as believe to the saving of the soul? |
6049 | ( 1 Peter 4:18) Canst thou answer this question, sinner? |
6049 | ( 2 Peter 2:13) And let me ask, Did God give his Word to justify your wickedness? |
6049 | ( 2 Tim 2:5) But you will say, What is it to strive lawfully? |
6049 | ( Acts 9:36- 39) Yea, where is that rich man that, to his power, durst say as Job does? |
6049 | ( Ca nt 8:6,7) But who finds this heat in love so much as for one poor quarter of an hour together? |
6049 | ( Eze 22:14) What sayest thou? |
6049 | ( Eze 9:4,8, Isa 10:20- 22, 11:11,16, Jer 23:3, Joel 2:32) But what is a remnant to the whole piece? |
6049 | ( Heb 10:19- 24) Why then dost thou talk of two strings to thy bow? |
6049 | ( Heb 11:6) God must be known, else how can the sinner propound him as his end, his ultimate end? |
6049 | ( Heb 13:6, Rom 8:31) and if they be against me, what disadvantage reap I thereby; since even all this also, worketh for my good? |
6049 | ( Heb 6:6) Poor trembler, wouldst thou crucify the Son of God afresh? |
6049 | ( Heb 7:26) and for depth, it is lower than hell, who can undermine it? |
6049 | ( Hosea 8:3) But why? |
6049 | ( Isa 14) They that see thee shall narrowly look upon thee, and consider thee, saying, Is this the man? |
6049 | ( Isa 3:9) Where is the man that maketh the Almighty God his delight, and that designeth his glory in the world? |
6049 | ( Isa 53:1) When the prophet speaks of the saved under this metaphor of gleaning, how doth he amplify the matter? |
6049 | ( Isa 58:5) But why condemned then, and smiled upon now? |
6049 | ( Isa 6:10- 13) But what is a tenth? |
6049 | ( Jer 30:11) If it be so, I say, what had become of us, if we had had no Intercessor? |
6049 | ( Jer 31:7) What shall I say? |
6049 | ( Jer 3:14) That saying of Paul is much like this,"Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize?" |
6049 | ( Job 39:13- 17) Will it please thee when thou shalt see that thou hast brought forth children to the murderer? |
6049 | ( Luke 14:34) Wherewith shall the salt be salted? |
6049 | ( Luke 15:1,2) But by what answer doth Christ repel their objections? |
6049 | ( Luke 16:10- 12) And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another man''s, who will commit unto you that which is your own? |
6049 | ( Luke 16:15) Hast thou taken notice of this, that God judgeth the fruit by the heart from whence it comes? |
6049 | ( Luke 22:70)''Then said they all, Art thou then the Son of God? |
6049 | ( Luke 9:25) and so, consequently, or,''What shall a man give in exchange( for himself) for his soul?'' |
6049 | ( Mal 1:8) And if so, how should he then accept of that which is not righteousness? |
6049 | ( Mark 12:31) True, he says, he did them no hurt; but did he do them good? |
6049 | ( Mark 1:4,5; Rom 6:21; Jer 7:3,5) Where shall the fruits of repentance be found? |
6049 | ( Matt 13:40- 42) Who can conceive of this terror to its full with his mind? |
6049 | ( Matt 21:31) Poor Pharisee, what a loss art thou at? |
6049 | ( Matt 23:17) I say again, What kind of righteousness shall this be called? |
6049 | ( Matt 26:21- 23) Who questioned the salvation of the foolish virgins? |
6049 | ( Matt 3:10) Poor sinner, awake; eternity is coming, and HIS SON, they are both coming to judge the world; awake, art yet asleep, poor sinner? |
6049 | ( Matt 3:12, 13:30) But mark,"There shall be a handful": What is a handful, when compared with the whole heap? |
6049 | ( Num 23:19) Hath Christ given us glory, and shall we not have it? |
6049 | ( Phil 3:14) But what do you mean by these three questions? |
6049 | ( Prov 16:8) What is it for me to claim a house, or a farm, without right? |
6049 | ( Psa 139:8) Or if a man should be so bold as to say so, Whether by so saying, he confineth Christ to that place for ever? |
6049 | ( Psa 143:1,2) And David, What if God doth thus? |
6049 | ( Psa 19:13) Must that wicked one touch my soul? |
6049 | ( Psa 31:22) And now where was his hope, in the right gospel discovery of it? |
6049 | ( Psa 35:13,14) Pharisee, Dost thou see here how contrary thou art to righteous men? |
6049 | ( Psa 50:3,4) And now, what will be found in that day to be the portion of them that in this day do not come to God by Christ? |
6049 | ( Psa 52:7) What else means this great bundle of thy own righteousness, which thou hast brought with thee into the temple? |
6049 | ( Psa 55:12,13) For, if to be debauched in open and common transgressions is odious, how odious is it for a brother to be so? |
6049 | ( Read Eze 16) Use Fifth, Is the love of God and of Christ so great? |
6049 | ( Rev 1:17,18) Why should Christ bring in his life to comfort John, if it was not a life advantageous to him? |
6049 | ( Rom 11:33)"If I speak of strength, lo, he is strong"( Job 9:19); yea,"the thunder of his power who can understand?" |
6049 | ( Rom 3:23, 5:1,2) But, I say again, who will propound God for his end that knows him not, that knows him not aright? |
6049 | ( Rom 4:16) That the promise, What promise? |
6049 | ( Rom 7:12) Why then, I say, dost thou reject the commandment of God, to keep thine own tradition? |
6049 | ( Rom 7:24)( c.) How dost thou find thyself under the most high enjoyment of grace in this world? |
6049 | ( Zech 12:10, John 19, Heb 12:14, Psa 19:12)( c.) How do they show themselves to be true under the third? |
6049 | ( c.) And the will and affections so turn away from it as they should? |
6049 | ( e.) O, but will he not be weary? |
6049 | ( g) And if at any time they can, or shall, meet with each other again, and nobody never the wiser, O, what courting will be betwixt sin and the soul? |
6049 | ( verse 10) Can the tree boast, because it is a sweeting tree,28 since it was not the tree, but God that made it such: Where is boasting then? |
6049 | ( vs. 10) Besides, what greater contempt can be cast upon Christ than by such wordy professors is cast upon him? |
6049 | ( we will now suppose what must not be granted) Was not this thy state when thou wast in thy first parents? |
6049 | --that is, to recover or redeem his lost soul to liberty? |
6049 | --that is, when he is committing wickedness--"saith the Lord: Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | --what shall, what would, yea, what would not a man, if he had it, give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | 11:30) But what is the fruit of the wicked, of the professors that are wicked? |
6049 | 13:5) Then said the guide, Do you hear him? |
6049 | 17 Many readers will cry out, Who then can be saved? |
6049 | 17 Seventy times seven times a day we sometimes sin against our brother; but how many times, in that day, do we sin against God? |
6049 | 1:28; 33:14) But what sinners are these? |
6049 | 2. Who may have it? |
6049 | 2. Who may have this life? |
6049 | 20 We will, therefore, state it again-- Are men saved by grace? |
6049 | 23:24) Yea, do not professors teach the wicked ones to be wicked? |
6049 | 25 How pointed and faithful are these words? |
6049 | 25 What can I render unto thee, my God, for such unspeakable blessedness? |
6049 | 2:14) To be short, what says Paul in the seventh to the Romans? |
6049 | 3. Who knows the utmost tendencies of sin? |
6049 | 32 What can we render to the Lord? |
6049 | 33 Take holiness away out of heaven, and what is heaven? |
6049 | 36 But alas, what are these? |
6049 | 3:2) And what says John in his first epistle, and first chapter? |
6049 | 4 What can withstand the will of Christ, that all his should behold and partake of his glory? |
6049 | 4:10); and why seekest thou to bring us into the like condemnation? |
6049 | 52. Who now dare say we throw away Our goods or liberty, When God''s most holy Word doth say We gain thus much thereby? |
6049 | 6 What conduct? |
6049 | 65:5) But what is the sentence of God concerning those? |
6049 | 7:16; Luke 6:44) What then? |
6049 | 8 What heart can conceive the glorious worship of heaven? |
6049 | 9:26)''Whom dost thou pass in beauty,''saith God? |
6049 | A Christian, and spend thy time, thy strength, and parts, for things that perish in the using? |
6049 | A Creator; what is it that a Creator can not do? |
6049 | A certain man had a fruitless fig tree planted in his vineyard; but by whom was it planted there? |
6049 | A conduct of angels:"Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
6049 | A day for a man to afflict his soul? |
6049 | A faithful Creator; what is it that one that is faithful will not do, that is, when he is engaged? |
6049 | A faithful man will encourage one much; how much more should the faithfulness of God encourage us? |
6049 | A good cause, what is that? |
6049 | A life regulated by a moral law, what hurt is in that? |
6049 | A man that nameth the name of Christ, and that departeth not from iniquity, to whom may he be compared? |
6049 | A most appalling murder has been committed;--a virtuous and pious young man is brutally murdered by his only brother:--what is the divine judgment? |
6049 | A new covenant, and why not then a new resting day to the church? |
6049 | A rainbow round about the throne, in sight; in whose sight? |
6049 | A resurrection-- of what? |
6049 | A self- righteous man therefore can come to God for mercy none otherwise than fawningly: For what need of mercy hath a righteous man? |
6049 | A sick body is a burden to the soul, and a wounded spirit is a burden to the body;''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | A type in what? |
6049 | A while after this, as was hinted before, the Christians will begin with detestation to ask what Antichrist was? |
6049 | A whoremaster, a drunkard, a thief, what are they but the devil''s baits by which he catcheth others? |
6049 | A work did I say? |
6049 | ALL; take it where you will, and in what place you will,''All is profitable'': For what? |
6049 | Afraid of what? |
6049 | After I had been thus for some considerable time, another thought came into my mind; and that was, whether we were of the Israelites, or no? |
6049 | After this He led them into His garden, where was great variety of flowers; and he said, Do you see all these? |
6049 | After this, she thought she saw two very ill- favoured ones standing by her bedside, and saying, What shall we do with this woman? |
6049 | After this, that other doubt did come with strength upon me, But how if the day of grace should be past and gone? |
6049 | Again I ask, Hast thou considered what truth, as to matter of fact, there is in the things whereof thou standest accused? |
6049 | Again, But do you not follow them with clamours and out- cries, that their communion, even amongst themselves, is unwarrantable? |
6049 | Again, But who has the perfect knowledge of all these things? |
6049 | Again, Did not Moses write of the Saviour that was to come afterwards into the world? |
6049 | Again, How basely do they behave themselves, how unlike are they to win, that think it enough to keep company with the hindmost? |
6049 | Again, Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Again, Was the man a good man? |
6049 | Again, What kind of righteousness of thine, is this, that standeth in a misplacing, and so consequently in a misesteeming of God''s commands? |
6049 | Again, are the people of God to behave themselves to the glory of God the Father? |
6049 | Again, how did Satan ply it against Peter, when he desired to have him, that he might sift him as wheat? |
6049 | Again, if Christ be the altar of incense, how stands he as a priest by that altar to offer the prayers of all the saints thereon, before the throne? |
6049 | Again, if thy parents, and thou also, be godly, how happy a thing is this? |
6049 | Again, if you say he hath no other body but his church, then I ask, What that was that was taken down from the cross? |
6049 | Again, is there such a length? |
6049 | Again, see Peter''s testimony of this Son of Mary; When Jesus asked his disciples, whom say ye that I am? |
6049 | Again, shall God, who is the truth, Say there is heaven and hell And shall men play that trick of youth To say, But who can tell? |
6049 | Again, suppose the father should scourge and chasten the son for such offence, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6049 | Again, what a continuation of this alarm was there also at the birth of Jesus, which was about three months after John Baptist was born? |
6049 | Again, what needed the woman to have a place of shelter in the wilderness, when there was no war made against her? |
6049 | Again, would the people learn to be covetous? |
6049 | Again,"Whether I am come to one of the days of the thousand years?" |
6049 | Again,"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
6049 | Again,''If they hear not Moses and the prophets,''& c. As if he had said, Thou wouldst have me send one from the dead unto them; what needs that? |
6049 | Again,''Is it not yet a very little while, and Lebanon shall be turned into a fruitful field, and the fruitful field shall be esteemed as a forest? |
6049 | Again,''What is man, that he should be clean? |
6049 | Again; Hast thou found a failure in all others that might have been entertained to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Again; when Esau threatened to slay his brother, Rebecca sent him away, saying,"Why should I be deprived also of you both in one day?" |
6049 | Again; why not live upon Christ alway? |
6049 | Ah, Mind, why didst thou do those things That now do work my woe? |
6049 | Ah, Will, why was thou thus inclin''d Me ever to undo? |
6049 | Alas, but how shall I come? |
6049 | All God''s children are criers-- cannot you be quiet without you have a bellyful of the milk of God''s Word? |
6049 | All covetousness is idolatry; but what is that, or what will you call it, when men are religious for filthy lucre''s sake? |
6049 | All our anxious inquiries should be, Is Emmanuel in Heart- castle? |
6049 | All they,''that is, that are in hell, shall say,''Art thou also become weak as we? |
6049 | All this is made to appear by the angels that fell; for when fallen, what was heaven to them? |
6049 | All this is taught us by the spoons; for what need is there of spoons where there is nothing to eat but strong meat? |
6049 | All this, what does it argue, I say, but thy diffidence of God? |
6049 | Also before his friends, how bold was he? |
6049 | Also that he may deny to give them that grace that would preserve them from sin, without being guilty of their damnation? |
6049 | Also to Simon Magus for but undervaluing of it? |
6049 | Also when the mariners inquired of Jonah, saying,"What is thine occupation, and whence comest thou? |
6049 | Also whether reprobation be the cause of condemnation? |
6049 | Also your neighbours are diligent for things that will perish; and will you be slothful for things that will endure for ever? |
6049 | Also, if he ask me, What is become of the portion of goods that he gave me? |
6049 | Also, what if she had laid wait round about him, to espy if he was not otherwise behind her back than he was before her face? |
6049 | Also, when Job had God present with him, making manifest the goodness of his great heart to him, what doth he say? |
6049 | Also, wouldst thou know what a sad thing it is for any to turn their backs upon the gospel of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Am I a new creature in Him? |
6049 | Am I coming, indeed, to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Am I in a case to be thus near mine end? |
6049 | Am I one of the elect? |
6049 | Amaziah having sinned against the Lord, he sends to him a prophet to reprove him; but Amaziah says,''Forbear, why shouldest thou be smitten?'' |
6049 | And I ask, Why doth the wife-- that is, as the loving hind-- love to be in the presence of her husband? |
6049 | And I say again, if one sin, the least sin deserveth all these things, what thinkest thou do all thy sins deserve? |
6049 | And I say again, this is the work of a Creator, and a Creator can maintain it in its gallantry, FOOTNOTE? |
6049 | And I say again, wherefore has he so plainly told us of his greatness, and of what he can do? |
6049 | And Jesus said to them,''Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts?'' |
6049 | And Paul asked them, Whether they had yet''received the Holy Ghost?'' |
6049 | And Paul, when he said, he could wish that himself were accursed from Christ, for the vehement desire that he had that the Jews might be saved? |
6049 | And a new heart and a new man must have objects of delight that are new, and like himself;''Old things are passed away''; why? |
6049 | And again( Gal 3:2,5 compared together),''Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law,[ saith the Apostle] or by the hearing of faith?'' |
6049 | And again, What he hath made crooked, who can make straight? |
6049 | And again, some of them that are for infant baptism die for that as a truth? |
6049 | And again, where Judas( not Iscariot) said; Lord, how is it, that thou wilt manifest thyself to us, and not unto the world? |
6049 | And again,"Beware of men,"& c. when I had answered him, that blessed be God I was well, he said, What is the occasion of your being here? |
6049 | And again,"If thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? |
6049 | And again,"If thou, Lord, shouldst mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?" |
6049 | And again,"Whom shall I send, and who will go for US?" |
6049 | And again,''Am I a sea, or a whale, that thou settest a watch over me? |
6049 | And again,''My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God, when shall I come and appear before God?'' |
6049 | And again,''When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts?'' |
6049 | And albeit, saith Satan, thou prayest sometimes, yet is not thy heart possessed with a belief that God will not regard thee? |
6049 | And albeit, saith Satan, thou prayest sometimes, yet is not thy heart possessed with a belief that God will not regard thee? |
6049 | And all the rest they baptized, were they not left free to join themselves for their convenience and edification? |
6049 | And are not all His holy doctrines also stamped with the same Divine sanction? |
6049 | And are not these pleasant sights? |
6049 | And are not you the same? |
6049 | And are they willing, God helping them, to run hazards for his name, for the love they bear to him? |
6049 | And are we not in him, in him, even as so considered? |
6049 | And are you able thus to imitate him? |
6049 | And are you willing to stand by their judgment in the case? |
6049 | And art thou now as perfectly innocent as ever was Jesus Christ? |
6049 | And as he went down deeper, he said,''Grave, where is thy victory?'' |
6049 | And before I go further, what might I yet say to fasten this reason upon the truly gracious soul? |
6049 | And by what is this righteousness by thee applied to thyself? |
6049 | And can a holy and just God require that we give thanks to him in his name, if it was not effectually done for us by him? |
6049 | And can death, or sin, or the grave hold us, when God saith,''Give up?'' |
6049 | And can it be imagined that Christ alone shall be like the foolish ostrich, hardened against his young, yea, against his members? |
6049 | And can you prove it by the scripture? |
6049 | And canst thou tell me who saves thee? |
6049 | And consequently how could he lift up his face unto God? |
6049 | And could you at any time, with ease, get off the guilt of sin,[275] when, by any of these ways, it came upon you? |
6049 | And did ever God send an ordinance to be a pest and plague to his people?'' |
6049 | And did he do it before he had need to do it? |
6049 | And did he do thus indeed? |
6049 | And did he license any one, and if so, who, to alter, add to, or diminish from it? |
6049 | And did he not behave himself valiantly? |
6049 | And did none of these things discourage you? |
6049 | And did the Father reveal His Son to you? |
6049 | And did the old man give him money to set up with? |
6049 | And did they make them welcome? |
6049 | And did you ask him what man this was, and how you must be justified by Him? |
6049 | And did you do as you were bidden? |
6049 | And did you endeavour to mend? |
6049 | And did you not then believe, and do you not still believe, that you were true members of Christ, though less perfect? |
6049 | And did you pray to God that He would bless your counsel to them? |
6049 | And did you presently fall under the power of this conviction? |
6049 | And did you think he spake true? |
6049 | And did you think yourself well then? |
6049 | And did you, said he, when I came up against this town of Mansoul, heartily wish that I might not have the victory over you? |
6049 | And didst thou fear the lake and pit? |
6049 | And do I desire to be found in Him; knowing by the Word, and feeling by the teaching of His Spirit, that I am totally lost in myself? |
6049 | And do the things that truly are divine, Before thee more than gold or rubies shine? |
6049 | And do they in thy conscience bear more sway To govern thee in faith and holiness, Than thou canst with thy heart and mouth express? |
6049 | And do you think that the words of your book are certainly true? |
6049 | And do you think the Lord will sit still, as I may say, and let thy tongue run as it lists, and yet never bring you to an account for the same? |
6049 | And dost thou count this a corrupted grain of Babylon''s treasure? |
6049 | And dost thou desire this medicine? |
6049 | And dost thou indeed say,"Hallowed be thy name"with thy heart? |
6049 | And dost thou not do the deeds of the flesh? |
6049 | And dost thou not rejoice in secret, that thou art the same that thou ever wert? |
6049 | And dost thou think that these are but threatenings, or that our King has not power to execute his words? |
6049 | And dost thou think, this is, indeed, the way to be righteous? |
6049 | And dost thou think, wast thou there now, that thou art able to wrestle with the judgment of God? |
6049 | And doth God come to the sinner, and the sinner again go to God in a saving way by him, and by him only? |
6049 | And doth all this stir up in thy heart some breathing after Him? |
6049 | And doth he not make his pots according to his pleasure? |
6049 | And doth he take charge of them as a Creator? |
6049 | And doth immodest apparel, with stretched- out necks, naked breasts, a made speech, and mincing gaits,& c., argue mortification of lusts? |
6049 | And doth it not also make thee more earnestly to groan after the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | And doth not the Lord as well require the sign of baptism now, as of circumcision then? |
6049 | And doth this demonstrate the reformation of your church? |
6049 | And doth this look like a visible church- state? |
6049 | And fools hate knowledge?'' |
6049 | And for the opening of this we must consider, first, How and through Whom this grace doth come to be, first, free to us, and, secondly, unchangeable? |
6049 | And from sense and reason they will have ground to think so; for who now is left in the world any more to make head against them? |
6049 | And from the sense and feeling of torment, he would give, yea, what would he not give, in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | And further, said he, can not one man teach another to pray? |
6049 | And gain, how came it thither, how got the soul possession of it, while it was unjustified? |
6049 | And good reason; for since they would not with us come to him now they have time, why should they stand with us when judgment is come? |
6049 | And have these desires put thy soul to the flight? |
6049 | And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?" |
6049 | And he said, I know not: Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
6049 | And he said, how long Would it have been, e''er you had understood This thing, had you not with my heifer plow''d? |
6049 | And he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding- garment?'' |
6049 | And he turned to the woman, and said unto Simon, Seest thou this woman? |
6049 | And here those sayings are of their own natural force:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6049 | And his name not be but of a common regard on that day? |
6049 | And how are they to consider of themselves, even then when they first are apprehensive of their need of this righteousness? |
6049 | And how bitterly did David mourn for his son, who died in his wickedness? |
6049 | And how can a man that went last time out of his closet to be naught, have the face to come thither again? |
6049 | And how can that be, if he saveth not to the uttermost them that come unto God by him? |
6049 | And how cold is the love of many at this day? |
6049 | And how could the people believe and embrace it? |
6049 | And how could we have seen it to purpose, had not God left some to themselves? |
6049 | And how did he carry it there? |
6049 | And how did his good wife take it, when she saw that he had no amendment, but that he returned with the dog to his vomit, to his old courses again? |
6049 | And how did you do then? |
6049 | And how do they deceive souls? |
6049 | And how doth God the Holy Ghost save thee? |
6049 | And how else could they obey that command that bids them rejoice in tribulation, and glorify God in the fires? |
6049 | And how hath Christ lightened every man if not within him?" |
6049 | And how if I should not? |
6049 | And how if thou shouldst come but one quarter of an hour too late? |
6049 | And how is this resented by them? |
6049 | And how kindly did our Lord Jesus take it, to see the little children run tripping before him, and crying, Hosannah to the Son of David? |
6049 | And how little conscience is there made of prayer between God and the soul in secret, unless the Spirit of supplication be there to help? |
6049 | And how many did Samson slay with the jaw- bone of an ass? |
6049 | And how must it be reckoned to them? |
6049 | And how say you? |
6049 | And how sayest thou now? |
6049 | And how sayest thou, for to name no more, dost thou with thy affection and conscience thus question? |
6049 | And how sayest thou? |
6049 | And how sayest thou? |
6049 | And how seldom do they trouble their heads, to have their minds taken up with thoughts of the better? |
6049 | And how then? |
6049 | And how then? |
6049 | And how was He revealed unto you? |
6049 | And how were they served that are mentioned in the 13th of Luke,''for staying till the door was shut?'' |
6049 | And how, then, can he come to him by Christ? |
6049 | And if God''s will should be done on earth as it is in heaven, must it not be thy ruin? |
6049 | And if Satan meets thee, and asketh, Whither goest thou? |
6049 | And if he breaks up one of these bags, who can tell what he can do? |
6049 | And if he goes about to do this, is not the law of the land against him? |
6049 | And if he hath said it, will he not make it good, I mean even thy salvation? |
6049 | And if he knows not the Father and the Son, how can he come? |
6049 | And if he saith, See, ye"blind that have eyes,"who shall hinder it? |
6049 | And if it be a blessing to have this fear, is it not wisdom to increase in it? |
6049 | And if it be asked, But what will become of the threatening wherewith he threatened the offender? |
6049 | And if not to think of him, while at a distance, how can you endure to be in his presence? |
6049 | And if our sun seems angry, hides his face, Shall it go down, shall night possess this place? |
6049 | And if so, Whether they might not obtain at least, some little of the mercy, as well as those women? |
6049 | And if so, did he give His church any other than that most beautiful and comprehensive form called the Lord''s Prayer? |
6049 | And if so, how can their service to God have anything like acceptation from the hand of God, that is done, not in, but without the fear of God? |
6049 | And if so, what follows? |
6049 | And if so, what shall we then think of the soul for which is prepared, and that of God, the most rich and excellent vessel in the world? |
6049 | And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" |
6049 | And if there is so much in the pride of his countenance, what is there, think you, in the pride of his heart? |
6049 | And if these be acts that speak a condescension, what will you count of Christ''s standing up as an Advocate to plead the cause of his people? |
6049 | And if they are mute when dealt with by vessels of clay, what will they do when they shall be rebuked by the flames of a devouring fire? |
6049 | And if they shall not escape that neglect, then how shall they escape that reject and turn their back upon''so great a salvation?'' |
6049 | And if this gentle check will not do, then read the other, Shall we say, Let us do evil that good may come? |
6049 | And if thou dost, thou wilt run into the bosom of Christ and of God, and then what harm will that do thee? |
6049 | And if thou shouldest be so now, what hast thou gained thereby? |
6049 | And if we know not every one of all these things to the full, how shall we know to the full the love of Christ which saveth us from them all? |
6049 | And if ye be followers of that which is good, who will harm you( 1 Peter 3:13)? |
6049 | And if you ask, How is it possible that this should be done? |
6049 | And if your brethren only you salute, What more than they do ye? |
6049 | And if, as unto Solomon, God should Propound to thee, What wouldst thou have? |
6049 | And in that he saith''There remains a rest,''referring to that of David, what is it, if it signifies not, that the other rests remain not? |
6049 | And in the land of peace thou trustedst, then how wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan?'' |
6049 | And indeed so he does with"Adam, where art thou?" |
6049 | And indeed what joy or what rejoicing is like rejoicing here? |
6049 | And indeed, take this away, and what ground can there be laid for any man to persevere in good works? |
6049 | And indeed, the soul that doth thus by practice, though with his mouth-- as who doth not? |
6049 | And into what church did Philip baptize the eunuch, or the apostle the jailor and his house? |
6049 | And is all this no good? |
6049 | And is hope, that this day is approaching, a reviving cordial to thee? |
6049 | And is it not reason that they who did this horrid villany, should have their doings laid before their faces upon the tables of their heart? |
6049 | And is it possible it should be forgotten, or that, by it, our joy, light, and heaven should not be made the sweeter to all eternity? |
6049 | And is it thus with thy soul indeed? |
6049 | And is not Boaz, with whose maids thou wast, One of the nearest kinsmen that thou hast? |
6049 | And is not his will the only rule of his mercy? |
6049 | And is not this a needy time; doth not such an one want abundance of grace? |
6049 | And is not this love worthy of all acceptation at the hands and hearts of all coming sinners? |
6049 | And is not this the very ground of thy hoping that God will save thee from the wrath to come? |
6049 | And is not this, said he, a shame? |
6049 | And is that all? |
6049 | And is that all? |
6049 | And is that within the creature, or without, that worketh the new birth?" |
6049 | And is there no other way to the Father but by his blood, and through the veil, that is to say, his flesh? |
6049 | And is there not a great deal in it? |
6049 | And is there not all the reason in the world for this? |
6049 | And is there toward us love in Christ that passeth knowledge? |
6049 | And is this all? |
6049 | And is this to keep the first table; yea, the first branch of that table, which saith,"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God?" |
6049 | And it was so indeed, thought Mr. Badman; was my troubles only the effects of my distemper, and because ill vapours got up into my brain? |
6049 | And let me ask further, is not he a madman who, being loaded with combustible matter, will run headlong into the fire upon a bravado? |
6049 | And look, did not I tell you? |
6049 | And may he not, without he give offence to thee, lay hold by electing love and mercy on whom himself pleaseth? |
6049 | And must baptism be such a rock of offence to professors, that very few will enquire after it, or submit to it? |
6049 | And must those that shall live to see those days, rejoice when these things begin to come to pass? |
6049 | And must we be all alone? |
6049 | And must you needs be upon the extremes? |
6049 | And now I add, Is not this to deliver them to the devil( 1 Cor 5), or to put them to shame before all that see your acts? |
6049 | And now I ask what kind of christian correspondency you have with them? |
6049 | And now I ask, What was the reason that God continued his presence with this church notwithstanding this transgression? |
6049 | And now had he had a heart to do for Mansoul, what could he do for it or wherein could he be profitable to her? |
6049 | And now having said this much, wherein have I derogated from the glory and holiness of Christ? |
6049 | And now is it not to be wondered at, and are we not to be affected herewith, saying, And wilt thou set thine eye upon such an one? |
6049 | And now what would a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | And now, Adam, what do you mean to do? |
6049 | And now, behold, when Jacob had been told That there was corn in Egypt to be sold, He said unto his sons, Why stand ye thus? |
6049 | And now, what can this accuser say? |
6049 | And now, when body and soul are thus united, who can imagine what glory they both possess? |
6049 | And now,''what shall a man,''what would a man, but what can a man that has lost his soul, himself, and his all,''give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | And observe, it is not said, that Noah shut the door, but the Lord shut him in: If God shuts in or out, who can alter it? |
6049 | And of what nation? |
6049 | And on the other hand, how often has the disjointing of the body, and the breakings thereof, occasioned the expiration of the spirit? |
6049 | And p. 26. where in answer to this question of mine; Why did the Man Christ hang on the cross on Mount Calvary? |
6049 | And said, moreover, that they could not wait upon me any longer; but said to me, Then you confess the indictment, do you not? |
6049 | And sayest thou so, my dear? |
6049 | And shall not God avenge his own elect, which cry day and night unto him?" |
6049 | And shall not I? |
6049 | And shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive be delivered? |
6049 | And shall we not imitate our Lord, nor the church that was immediately acted[21] by him in this, and the churches their fellows? |
6049 | And shall we not take that notice thereof as to follow the Lord Jesus and the churches herein? |
6049 | And she said, Come, James, canst thou tell me who made thee? |
6049 | And she''shall be glad for them''; for what? |
6049 | And since he can be both merciful and just in the salvation of sinners, why may he not also save them from death and hell? |
6049 | And so I may say, What think you of ten thousand more besides? |
6049 | And so doing, has it not also accommodated thee with all the aforenamed conveniences? |
6049 | And so with Paul, who tremblingly said,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6049 | And suppose they were the truly godly that made the first assault, can they be blamed? |
6049 | And that if they had light therein, they would as willingly do it as you? |
6049 | And that is according to the whole stream of scripture: For by one offering, What was that? |
6049 | And the Lord said unto him, Wherewith? |
6049 | And the ministers of the gospel they also cry, Lord,"who hath believed our report? |
6049 | And the reason is, because he that envieth a sinner, hath forgotten himself, that he is as bad; and how can he then fear God? |
6049 | And the reasons are weighty, for by them he proves the tree is not good; how then can it yield good fruit? |
6049 | And the same I say of his Advocate''s office- What is an advocate without the exercise of his office? |
6049 | And the scorners delight in their scorning? |
6049 | And then he answers himself:''Is not destruction to the wicked, and a strange punishment to the workers of iniquity?'' |
6049 | And then what doth he get thereby but loss and damage? |
6049 | And then, I pray you, what is left unto God, and what can he call his own? |
6049 | And then, to engage us in our soul to the duty, he adds one of his wonderful mercies to the world, for a motive,"Fear ye not me?" |
6049 | And then,& c. And why was not this done on the seventh day sabbath? |
6049 | And then,''what profit hath he that hath laboured for the wind?'' |
6049 | And they knew it: Why, did they not know it before? |
6049 | And this is one ground( at least) why he hanged on the cross,& c. Ha Friend? |
6049 | And this is that which Peter intends when he saith,"And if ye be followers of that which is good, who will harm you?" |
6049 | And this leads me first to inquire into what, by these words the apostle must, of necessity, presuppose? |
6049 | And thou liar, what wilt thou do? |
6049 | And thus much doth this man Christ Jesus testify unto us where he saith he shall glorify me; mark,"He shall glorify;"( saith the Son of Mary)but how? |
6049 | And to distressed Jonah, said the Lord, Dost thou well to be angry for the gourd? |
6049 | And to put a question upon thy objection- What is a sacrifice without a priest, and what is a priest without a sacrifice? |
6049 | And was not there a time when you did not so well understand the nature and extent of pride and covetousness as now you do? |
6049 | And was that all? |
6049 | And was there not in all these things love, and love that was infinite? |
6049 | And was this all? |
6049 | And were they all served so? |
6049 | And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? |
6049 | And what angels but those that ministered to him here in the day of his humiliation? |
6049 | And what can Satan say against this plea? |
6049 | And what can our pretended giants do or say in comparison of these? |
6049 | And what can such an one say for himself in the judgment, that shall be charged with the abuse of love? |
6049 | And what canst thou earn a day? |
6049 | And what chains are so heavy as those that discourage thee? |
6049 | And what company shall we have there? |
6049 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
6049 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial? |
6049 | And what day so fit as the Lord''s day for this? |
6049 | And what did Badman do after his wife was dead? |
6049 | And what did they say else? |
6049 | And what did you do then? |
6049 | And what did you do then? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you reply? |
6049 | And what did you say to him? |
6049 | And what else? |
6049 | And what else? |
6049 | And what else? |
6049 | And what encouragement has a man to suffer for Christ, whose heart can not believe, and whose soul he can not commit to God to keep it? |
6049 | And what follows? |
6049 | And what follows? |
6049 | And what follows? |
6049 | And what good will my vanities do, when death says he will have no nay? |
6049 | And what harm will that do thee? |
6049 | And what hath he received of thy hand? |
6049 | And what honour like that of being a holy man of God? |
6049 | And what if God will cross his book, and blot out the handwriting that is against thee, and not let thee know it as yet? |
6049 | And what if thou waitest upon God all thy days? |
6049 | And what if you should not? |
6049 | And what is it that makes you so desirous to go to Mount Zion? |
6049 | And what is this second veil, in, at, or through which, as the phrase is, we must, by blood, enter into the holiest? |
6049 | And what life, but death in its perfection? |
6049 | And what matter can be found in the soul for humility to work by so well, as by a sight that I have been and am an abominable sinner? |
6049 | And what more fearful than the bottomless pit of hell? |
6049 | And what nation is there so great, that hath statutes and judgments so righteous, as all this law,''said Moses, which I set before you this day?'' |
6049 | And what need of an Advocate''s office to be exercised, if Christ, as sacrifice and Priest, was thought sufficient by God? |
6049 | And what need was there of any of this, if Paul could, as he would, have departed from iniquity? |
6049 | And what revenge hast thou in thy heart against every thought of disobedience? |
6049 | And what said Faithful to you then? |
6049 | And what said he then? |
6049 | And what said he then? |
6049 | And what said the neighbours to him? |
6049 | And what saith the words before the text but the same--''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | And what saw you else in the way? |
6049 | And what sayest thou to thy perverting, knowingly, the right purport and intent of the law? |
6049 | And what says the Apostle? |
6049 | And what shall he do now, that is a stranger to this breadth, made mention of in the text? |
6049 | And what shall he do when he comes? |
6049 | And what shall this man do? |
6049 | And what should a man come to God for, that can live in the world without him? |
6049 | And what sympathy and feeling would his arguments flow from? |
6049 | And what than fire? |
6049 | And what the son of my vows? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what then? |
6049 | And what thunder did Zaccheus hear or see? |
6049 | And what use doth he make of this? |
6049 | And what was that? |
6049 | And what was the conclusion? |
6049 | And what was the other thing? |
6049 | And what was the reason you did not? |
6049 | And what will become of them concerning whom the Lord has said already,''I will not take up their names into my lips''? |
6049 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God? |
6049 | And what will become of them that trample under foot this Son of God?'' |
6049 | And what will not love suffer? |
6049 | And what will you do whose hearts go after your covetousness? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And what, did you despair, or how? |
6049 | And when a Christian comes to know this, should Christ as Advocate be hid, what could bear him up? |
6049 | And when a man is down, you know, what can he do? |
6049 | And when did the Spirit of Christ convince thee of sin, because thou didst not believe in him? |
6049 | And when did we see thee an hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister to thee? |
6049 | And when the hand of the rulers are chief in a trespass, who can keep their people from being drowned in that trespass? |
6049 | And when they had found him, they wonderingly asked him,"Rabbi, when camest thou hither?" |
6049 | And when unto her mother- in- law she came, Art thou, said she, my daughter come again? |
6049 | And when ye did eat, and when ye did drink, did not ye eat for yourselves, and drink for yourselves?" |
6049 | And where hast thou been working? |
6049 | And where is it, within or without?" |
6049 | And where is the man that chooseth to go to hell? |
6049 | And where is this man, that was born of the virgin, that we may come to the Father by him? |
6049 | And where it is most, how far short of perfect acts is it? |
6049 | And where that practical holiness that formerly used to be seen in the houses, lives and conversations of professors? |
6049 | And where wilt thou leave thy glory? |
6049 | And whereabout does he dwell? |
6049 | And whereas thou askest, is not he a deceiver, that exhorts people to anything else than the light of Christ? |
6049 | And whereas thou asketh, whether the fault be then in God, or in that thou callest his light, or in the creature? |
6049 | And whereas you ask me, Whither away? |
6049 | And whereas you ask me,"What is that which worketh faith? |
6049 | And whereas you ask me,"do they that are born of God commit sin?" |
6049 | And whereas you ask, What is the sight of God? |
6049 | And wherefore doth he thus, but to beget an expectation in them of their salvation and deliverance? |
6049 | And whether doth he that is born of God commit sin? |
6049 | And whether it be lawful for them so to do?" |
6049 | And whether it be not lawful for them so to do? |
6049 | And who can abide the fierceness of his anger? |
6049 | And who can be thankful for a mercy that is not sensible that they want it, have it, and have it of mercy? |
6049 | And who can contradict him? |
6049 | And who can now object against the deliverance of the child of God? |
6049 | And who can say, my heart is clean? |
6049 | And who can think that he should be quiet, when men take the right course to escape his hellish snares? |
6049 | And who could have found in their hearts to shut the door upon such an one? |
6049 | And who could have thought, that the other had been a good man? |
6049 | And who dares to limit the Almighty? |
6049 | And who then shall dare to blame this our age consumed; or say that our years be cut off? |
6049 | And who was that but Jesus Christ, even the person speaking in the text? |
6049 | And who was that, but he that"spoiled principalities and powers,"when he did hang upon the tree, triumphing over them thereon? |
6049 | And who will dare to make any addition to holy writ? |
6049 | And who with him again but they? |
6049 | And who with them but Mr. Badman? |
6049 | And whose be the sheep that feed upon them? |
6049 | And whose portrait is Bunyan describing here? |
6049 | And whose word shall stand? |
6049 | And why a door of hope, but that by it, God''s people, when afflicted, should go out by it from despair by hope? |
6049 | And why are the women commanded silence there, if they may congregate by themselves, and set up and manage worship there? |
6049 | And why can they not as well keep the other sabbaths? |
6049 | And why candlesticks, if they were not to hold the candles? |
6049 | And why did you not bring them along with you? |
6049 | And why do the scriptures say,"that through this man is preached to us the forgiveness of sins?" |
6049 | And why do they with pride trick up the body, if it be not to provoke both themselves and others to lusts? |
6049 | And why dost thou take notice of the mote That''s in thy brother''s eye; but dost not note The beam that''s in thine own? |
6049 | And why doth he not concern himself with them? |
6049 | And why follow the apish fashions of the world? |
6049 | And why for raiment are ye taking thought? |
6049 | And why is it thee? |
6049 | And why is the breaking of the heart compared to the breaking of the bones? |
6049 | And why may not I give it the name of a shew; when you call it a symbol, and compare it to a gentleman''s livery? |
6049 | And why might they not be a type of gospel sermons? |
6049 | And why not now, as well as formerly? |
6049 | And why shall he that doth most for God in this world, enjoy most of him in that which is to come? |
6049 | And why should a man cumber himself with what is his, when the good of all that is in Christ is laid, and to be laid out for him? |
6049 | And why should a man so carelessly cast away himself, by giving heed to a stranger? |
6049 | And why should it not be accounted to him for righteousness? |
6049 | And why should not credence be given to that gospel that is confirmed by blood, the blood of the Son of God himself? |
6049 | And why should not the kings have it granted unto them, that she should fall by their hand? |
6049 | And why should we not have the benefit of the righteousness, while we are ungodly, since it was completed for us while we were yet ungodly? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why so? |
6049 | And why then should not we have also in reserve for Christ? |
6049 | And why thus consider, but that a door might be opened for hope to exercise itself upon God by this? |
6049 | And why, but because God himself maintains the enmity? |
6049 | And why, to show, by these, the exceeding riches of his grace to the ages to come, through Christ Jesus? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And why? |
6049 | And will he be a favourable no more? |
6049 | And will not this, when they know it, yield them comfort? |
6049 | And will their agreement of hell yield them comfort? |
6049 | And will you, says Unbelief, in such a case as you now are, presume to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | And wilt thou hang back or be sullen, because thou art none of the first? |
6049 | And wilt thou judge him that doth thus? |
6049 | And wilt thou not regard? |
6049 | And wilt thou pursue the dry stubble?'' |
6049 | And wilt thou say these are things that are not? |
6049 | And with his works he perfected his faith? |
6049 | And with that she plucked out her letter,[28] and read it, and said to them, What now will ye say to this? |
6049 | And without this, what is to be seen in the church of God? |
6049 | And would I, as was said before, be thoroughly saved, to wit, from the filth as from the guilt? |
6049 | And would it not be an insufferable thing? |
6049 | And would you be doing this? |
6049 | And ye say, Wherein have we despised thy name?'' |
6049 | And yet darest thou say to God, Our Father? |
6049 | And yet dost thou out of thy blasphemous throat suffer these words to come, even our Father? |
6049 | And yet who so idle as they in the time of their prosperity? |
6049 | And you are sure he was of this opinion? |
6049 | And you that were sometime alienated, and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled[ but how?] |
6049 | And you ungodly children, how are your ungodly parents that lived and died ungodly, now in the pains of hell also? |
6049 | And you, that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled,"how? |
6049 | And"who hath required this at your hand?" |
6049 | And''the thunder of his power who can understand?'' |
6049 | And''what and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up where he was before?'' |
6049 | And''will ye weary my God also?'' |
6049 | And, By what means have you so persevered therein? |
6049 | And, Fourth, what it was for him to be raised unto Israel? |
6049 | And, How got you into the way? |
6049 | And, Sir, you, as all our neighbours know, are a very observing man, pray, therefore, what do you think of them? |
6049 | And, Use First, Is there such breadth, and length, and depth, and height in God, for us? |
6049 | And, What he did in the world? |
6049 | And, are there no public Christians, or public christian meetings, but them of your way? |
6049 | And, in reason, how could it be otherwise? |
6049 | And, indeed, if people once say to God, by way of doubt,''Wherein hast thou loved us?'' |
6049 | And, listening still, she thought she heard another answer it, saying-- For why? |
6049 | And, moreover, my brother, thou talkest of ease in the grave; but hast thou forgotten the hell, whither for certain the murderers go? |
6049 | And, said Christiana to Mr. Great- heart, Sir, will you do as we? |
6049 | And, therefore, what need have they that one should be sent unto them in another way? |
6049 | And, whether there was a secret or mystery in this work containing the truth of some higher thing? |
6049 | And,"O God, why hast thou cast us off for ever?" |
6049 | And,"who shall separate us from the love of Christ"our Lord? |
6049 | And,''Will ye rebel against the king?'' |
6049 | Answer, friend, dost thou put no difference betwixt the speaking of Christ without, and believing in Christ without? |
6049 | Any thing but truth; but I would know how sincerely righteous they were that were justified without works? |
6049 | Are God''s people a suffering people? |
6049 | Are all the elect, the seed, the saved, the vessels of mercy, the chosen and peculiar? |
6049 | Are great saints only to have the kingdom, and the glory everlasting? |
6049 | Are great works only to be rewarded? |
6049 | Are her plagues pleasant or easy to be borne? |
6049 | Are his feet shod with the Gospel of peace? |
6049 | Are his loins girt about with truth? |
6049 | Are his ministers slothful in tendering this unto you? |
6049 | Are his saints precious to them? |
6049 | Are my prayers lost? |
6049 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6049 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6049 | Are not even ye,"saith Paul,"in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? |
6049 | Are not my words verbatim these? |
6049 | Are not some, yea the most, the children of the flesh, the rest, the lost, the vessels of wrath, of dishonour, and the children of perdition? |
6049 | Are not the seven churches in Asia called by name of candlesticks? |
6049 | Are not these therefore strong desires? |
6049 | Are not these things rather a sign that the utter overthrow of the church of God is at the door? |
6049 | Are not they part of the scriptures of truth? |
6049 | Are not you commanded to keep out of the church all that are not circumcised? |
6049 | Are not, now- a- days, the bulk of professors like those that''strain at a gnat and swallow a camel?'' |
6049 | Are our fruits meet for repentance? |
6049 | Are the narratives of these mighty tempests in his spirit plain matters of fact? |
6049 | Are the words of God called by the name of the fear of the Lord? |
6049 | Are there any sins now that will fly upon this Saviour like so many lions, or raging devils, if He take in hand to redeem man? |
6049 | Are there bowels in you that are wicked, and will they be wrought upon by an importuning beggar? |
6049 | Are there yet any more sons in my womb, That may your husbands be in time to come? |
6049 | Are these the tokens of a blessed man?" |
6049 | Are these"spirits of just men made perfect"-the angel- ministering spirits which are sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? |
6049 | Are they enemies to Thee? |
6049 | Are they lawful things which thou desirest? |
6049 | Are they not all of equal authority? |
6049 | Are they not death without, and unbelief within? |
6049 | Are they purified, are they clean that name the name of Christ? |
6049 | Are they so dreadful in their receipt and sentence? |
6049 | Are they such things as thou takest pleasure in? |
6049 | Are they tender of sinning against Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Are they that are justified by Christ''s blood such as have need yet to be saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6049 | Are they that are saved, saved by grace? |
6049 | Are they the glorified inhabitants of the Celestial City? |
6049 | Are they things Divine, or things natural? |
6049 | Are they things heavenly, or things earthly? |
6049 | Are they things holy, or things unholy? |
6049 | Are they to be the audible mouth there, before all, to God? |
6049 | Are they to think, that they are righteous or sinners? |
6049 | Are things thus ordered? |
6049 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ yet such as have need of being saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ, such as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need of being saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as, after that, have need to be saved by Christ''s intercession? |
6049 | Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such, after that, as have need also of saving by Christ''s intercession? |
6049 | Are thy sins so dear, so sweet, so desireable, so profitable to thee, that thou wilt venture a burning in hell fire for them till thou art burnt out? |
6049 | Are we for war? |
6049 | Are we now almost got past the Enchanted Ground? |
6049 | Are we profanely apt to judge of God harshly, as of one that would gather where he had not strawn? |
6049 | Are we stronger than he?'' |
6049 | Are we tempted to distrust God? |
6049 | Are we truly convinced of sin, and converted to Christ? |
6049 | Are ye not CARNAL, CARNAL, CARNAL? |
6049 | Are ye so foolish? |
6049 | Are you a married man? |
6049 | Are you a married man? |
6049 | Are you at that door, my brother? |
6049 | Are you brought out of the dark dungeon of this world into Christ? |
6049 | Are you come out of it? |
6049 | Are you commanded to reject them; If yea, where is it? |
6049 | Are you going to the heavenly country? |
6049 | Are you in affliction for your profession? |
6049 | Are you not sensible that such a one As I, can certainly thereof make trial? |
6049 | Are you not sorry for what you have done? |
6049 | Are you so hasty? |
6049 | Are you stronger than he that made the heavens, and that holdeth angels in everlasting chains? |
6049 | Art become freakish? |
6049 | Art bound for hell against all wind and weather? |
6049 | Art bound for hell, against all wind and weather? |
6049 | Art like to him, that needs must step a mile At every stride, or think it not worth while To follow Christ? |
6049 | Art not able to conclude, that to be saved is better than to burn in hell? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now? |
6049 | Art one of those whose fears do go beyond Their faith? |
6049 | Art thou a Publican? |
6049 | Art thou a buyer, and do things grow dear? |
6049 | Art thou a fish, O man, art thou a fish? |
6049 | Art thou a fool in thyself? |
6049 | Art thou a professor? |
6049 | Art thou a seller, and do things grow dear? |
6049 | Art thou a sinner of the first rate, of the biggest size? |
6049 | Art thou almost like Elymas the sorcerer, that sought to turn the deputy from the faith? |
6049 | Art thou also willing that he should decide the matter? |
6049 | Art thou begotten of God by his Word? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou born again? |
6049 | Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Art thou coming, indeed? |
6049 | Art thou coming? |
6049 | Art thou coming? |
6049 | Art thou coming? |
6049 | Art thou convinced that she is nothing more? |
6049 | Art thou crossed, disappointed, and waylaid, and overthrown in all thy foolish ways and doings? |
6049 | Art thou followed with affliction, and dost thou hear God''s angry voice in thy afflictions? |
6049 | Art thou got into the right way? |
6049 | Art thou in Christ''s righteousness? |
6049 | Art thou indeed weary of the service of thy old master the devil, sin, and the world? |
6049 | Art thou jogged, and shaken, and molested at the hearing of the Word? |
6049 | Art thou most dejected when thou art at prayer? |
6049 | Art thou not a graceless wretch? |
6049 | Art thou not a graceless wretch? |
6049 | Art thou not come to discourse the Lord in prayer? |
6049 | Art thou not it which hath dried the sea, the waters of the great deep, that hath made the depths of the sea a way for the ransomed to pass over?" |
6049 | Art thou not like to fare well, when thou hast embraced him, coming sinner? |
6049 | Art thou not planted by the water- side? |
6049 | Art thou not willing to come faster? |
6049 | Art thou now in the favour of God? |
6049 | Art thou resolved to follow me? |
6049 | Art thou resolved to strip? |
6049 | Art thou returning to God? |
6049 | Art thou righteous in the judgment of God? |
6049 | Art thou righteous? |
6049 | Art thou righteous? |
6049 | Art thou such an one? |
6049 | Art thou taken? |
6049 | Art thou that readest these lines such an one? |
6049 | Art thou then made to see thy condition how bad it is, and that the way out of it is by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Art thou therefore discharged and unladen of these things? |
6049 | Art thou to buy or sell? |
6049 | Art thou troubled with cross children, cross relations, cross neighbours? |
6049 | Art thou truly born again? |
6049 | Art thou unladen of the things of this world, as pride, pleasures, profits, lusts, vanities? |
6049 | Art thou unrighteous in thyself? |
6049 | Art thou visited in the night seasons with dreams about thy state, and that thou art in danger of being lost? |
6049 | Art thou weary of them? |
6049 | Art thy sins of diverse sorts? |
6049 | Art weary? |
6049 | Art[ thou] resolved to follow me? |
6049 | As David said,"Shall I lift up mine yes to the hills? |
6049 | As God said to Coniah,''Did not thy father eat and drink, and do judgment and justice, and then it was well with him? |
6049 | As HE said,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6049 | As Moses said, and that long before the law was given,"Sirs, ye are brethren, why do ye wrong one another?" |
6049 | As Paul saith, What communion hath light with darkness? |
6049 | As for example; Would a parishioner learn to be proud? |
6049 | As for instance at home; could not some of those called Baptists die in opposing infant baptism? |
6049 | As he saith again, Am I not an apostle? |
6049 | As if he had said, Do you profess Christianity? |
6049 | As if he should say, what need have they that one should be sent to them from the dead? |
6049 | As many as walk according to this rule: What rule? |
6049 | As soon as ever God had touched the jailer, he cries out,''Men and brethren, what must I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | As the mad prophet also saith of God, in another case,''Hath he said, and shall he not do it? |
6049 | As the sabbath of months, of years, and the jubilee? |
6049 | As to the query, What reason is there, why the Lord should suffer any of his ordinances to be lost? |
6049 | As to the second head, what need is there that the righteousness of Christ should be imputed, where men are righteous first? |
6049 | As to the things of God, what shall I say? |
6049 | As touching the beauty and goodness that was in the object unto which they were allured; What was it? |
6049 | As who should say, My brethren, are you aware what you do? |
6049 | As who should say, My brethren, are you tempted, are you accused, have you sinned, has Satan prevailed against you? |
6049 | As who should say, What would heaven yield to me for delights, if I was there without my God? |
6049 | As who should say, Wherefore do I deny myself of those mercies and privileges that the men of this world enjoy? |
6049 | As yet despise you the offers of peace, and deliverance? |
6049 | As yet will ye refuse the golden offers of Shaddai, and trust to the lies and falsehoods of Diabolus? |
6049 | As"Ely said to Hannah, How long wilt thou be drunken? |
6049 | As, how many good men and good women do unawares, through their uncircumspectness, drive their own children down into the deep? |
6049 | As, whether there were in truth a God or Christ, or no? |
6049 | As, who should say, My brethren, are you troubled and persecuted for your faith? |
6049 | Ask him where this God is? |
6049 | Ask the awakened man, or the man that is under the convictions of the law, if he doth not feel? |
6049 | Ask the carnal man to whom he prays? |
6049 | Ask the rich man spoken of in the ensuing treatise, who was the fool-- he or Lazarus? |
6049 | Ask thy heart, What evil dost thou see in sin? |
6049 | At another time, I remember I was again much under the question, Whether the blood of Christ was sufficient to save my soul? |
6049 | At last the visitor comes and sets his soul at ease, by persuading of him that he belongs to God: and what then? |
6049 | At last there came a grave person to the gate, named Good- will, who asked who was there? |
6049 | At that Pliable began to be offended, and angrily said to his fellow, Is this the happiness you have told me all this while of? |
6049 | At the Lord''s table, I do eat; what though? |
6049 | At this( as I said) you object, and say,''Did I ever find baptism a pest or plague to churches? |
6049 | At which I was as if I had been raised out of a grave, and cried out again, Lord, how couldest thou find out such a word as this? |
6049 | Ay, but says the soul,''How can I reckon thus, when sin is yet strong in me?'' |
6049 | Ay, but when didst thou see thyself a lost creature for want of faith in the son of Mary? |
6049 | Ay, but when? |
6049 | Ay, that is well for you, Paul; but what advantage have we thereby? |
6049 | Aye, but Lord, what wilt thou do to quench their thirst? |
6049 | Aye, but this is a high pitch, how should we come by such princely spirits? |
6049 | Aye, saith he, to whom is that spoken? |
6049 | Aye, wherefore indeed? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou consider? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear what a striving there is between the vine- dresser and the husbandman, for thy life? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, fruitless Christian, do not thine ears tingle? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, fruitless professor, hast thou heard all these things? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, hast thou heard all these things? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, hast thou subscribed, hast thou called thyself by the name of Jacob, and surnamed thyself by the name of Israel? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, what fruit hast thou? |
6049 | Barren fig- tree, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Barren professor, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Be patient then, my brethren; but how long? |
6049 | Be ruled by me, and go back; who knows whither such a brain- sick fellow will lead you? |
6049 | Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? |
6049 | Because Christ died for me, shall I therefore spit in his face? |
6049 | Because the neglect of the law will be sure to damn them; therefore wouldst thou put poor souls to follow that which will not save them? |
6049 | Because then it had been in vain for the Lord to have given the scriptures to teach men out of, either concerning himself or themselves: Why? |
6049 | Because''the children are partakers of flesh and blood; he also himself likewise took part of the same''; To what end? |
6049 | Beelzebub? |
6049 | Behold, I was left alone, these, where had they been?'' |
6049 | Behold, the Lord God will help me; who is he that shall condemn me? |
6049 | Behold, the angels cover their faces when they speak of his glory, how then shall not Satan bend before him? |
6049 | Being justified freely by his grace: How? |
6049 | Believe, that is true; but how now must he conceive in his mind of Christ for the encouraging of him so to do? |
6049 | Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
6049 | Believing what? |
6049 | Besides, if men be made righteous, they are so; and if by a righteousness which the law commendeth, how can fault be found with them by the law? |
6049 | Besides, if the promise and God''s grace, without Christ''s blood, would have saved us, wherefore then did Christ die? |
6049 | Besides, if this be granted, why had not God respect to Cain''s offering, as well as to Abel''s? |
6049 | Besides, oppression makes a wise man mad; and when a man is mad what evils will he not do? |
6049 | Besides, the great things that he desired, were to be delivered from going to hell, and who would, willingly? |
6049 | Besides, the proposition is universal, why then should you be the chief intended? |
6049 | Besides, the threatening being pressed with an''How shall we escape?'' |
6049 | Besides, to assert the contrary, what doth it but lessen sin, and make the advocateship of Jesus Christ superfluous? |
6049 | Besides, to what particular church was the epistle to the Hebrews wrote? |
6049 | Besides, was the gospel so freely, so frequently, so fully tendered to thee, and yet hast thou rejected all these things? |
6049 | Besides, what arguments so prevailing as such as are purely gospel? |
6049 | Besides, who knows of all the ways by which the Almighty will inflict His just revenges upon the souls of damned sinners? |
6049 | Blessed are they that do make peace; for why? |
6049 | Bold sinner, how darest thou tempt God, by laughing at the breach of his holy law? |
6049 | Both those of Peter, and the first of John? |
6049 | Brethren what profit is''t if a man saith That he hath faith, and hath not works; can faith Save him? |
6049 | Brother, said Christian, what shall we do? |
6049 | Bunyan, speaking of private prayer, keenly inquires, will God not hear thee"except thou comest before him with some eloquent oration?" |
6049 | But Abraham''s body is now dead? |
6049 | But David answered,"What have I to do with you, ye sons of Zeruiah, that ye should this day be adversaries unto me? |
6049 | But I am afraid the day of grace is past; and if it should be so, what should I do then? |
6049 | But I ask such, if the Father and Son be not unspeakably free to show mercy, why was this clause put into our commission to preach the gospel? |
6049 | But I ask, how came nature to be so weak, but through sin? |
6049 | But I can not pray, says one, therefore how should I persevere? |
6049 | But I fear I am lost and cast away, Sentence is past, and who reverse it may? |
6049 | But I have let myself to another, even to the King of princes; and how can I, with fairness, go back with thee? |
6049 | But I know you have made strong objections against him; prithee, what can he say for himself? |
6049 | But I say doth not this sufficiently show, had we but eyes to see it, what a sad and deplorable creature the child of God of himself is? |
6049 | But I say, if it be so, what need all this mercy? |
6049 | But I say, suppose it should be granted, is it because reprobation made him incapable, or sin? |
6049 | But I say, what can the church do more to the sinners or open profane? |
6049 | But I say, what is this to him that would fain be saved by Christ? |
6049 | But I say, where is thy love to thine enemy? |
6049 | But I say, wherein is the proposition offensive? |
6049 | But I say, who can tell, who can tell altogether, what and how much the Father delighted in his Son before the world began? |
6049 | But I say, who understandeth this? |
6049 | But I say, why all these, thus named? |
6049 | But I say, why did John call them vipers? |
6049 | But I would ask these men,''If the word of God came out from them? |
6049 | But I, poor I, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | But Jesus, our Advocate, answers as David, What have I to do with thee, O Satan? |
6049 | But Mr. Bunyan replied: Sin doth distinguish a man from a beast; is sin therefore the gift of God? |
6049 | But Naomi replied, Wherefore will ye, My daughters, thus resolve to go with me? |
6049 | But Nathanael answered him,"Whence knowest thou me?" |
6049 | But Paul, what moved thee thus to do? |
6049 | But after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour appeared"--what then? |
6049 | But again, Why should you be so angry with my brother, for joining of a sinner and a liar together? |
6049 | But again; what mystery is desirable to be known that is not to be found in Jesus Christ, as Priest, Prophet, or King of saints? |
6049 | But alas, what thief, what tyrant, what devil is there that may not conquer after this sort? |
6049 | But all along Christ compareth his love to ours; now, why doth he so, if they be so much alike? |
6049 | But all these will fail you; for what think you? |
6049 | But all this while, where''s he whose golden rays Drives night away and beautifies our days? |
6049 | But am I daunted? |
6049 | But am I so? |
6049 | But are not good works the righteousness of faith? |
6049 | But are the other righteousnesses of no use to us? |
6049 | But are there no dissuasive arguments to lay before such, to prevent their future misery? |
6049 | But are these words of faith? |
6049 | But are they the people on whom God doth magnify the riches of his grace? |
6049 | But are you out of that wilderness mentioned? |
6049 | But are you sure it is the same that we look for? |
6049 | But are you willing, said he, to stand to the judgment of the church? |
6049 | But art thou blind? |
6049 | But art thou sure thou canst? |
6049 | But as Adam fell with us in him, so did he not by faith rise with us in him? |
6049 | But as to the intercession of Christ, who can come in to help upon the account of such innocency or worth? |
6049 | But as to the matter in hand, What positive precept do they transgress that will not reject him that God bids us receive, if he want light in baptism? |
6049 | But ask him how, or under what notion he is to be considered there? |
6049 | But at the end of all this promised pardon for a million of years-- what then? |
6049 | But be the candles down, and scattered too, Some lying here, some there? |
6049 | But by what rule then would you gather persons into church communion? |
6049 | But by what rule would you receive them into fellowship with yourselves? |
6049 | But by what spirit is it then that I am brought again into fears, even into the fears of damnation, and so into bondage? |
6049 | But can any imagine that Christ will pray for them as Priest for whom he will not plead as Advocate? |
6049 | But can not the church, and every woman in it, build up themselves without their woman''s meetings? |
6049 | But can women no other way be built up in their most holy faith, but by meetings of their own without their men? |
6049 | But can you commit your soul to their ministry, and join with them in prayer; and yet not count them meet for other gospel privileges? |
6049 | But can you imagine how the people of the corporation were taken with this entertainment? |
6049 | But canst thou not now repent and turn? |
6049 | But could he not deliver him, or did the Lord forsake him? |
6049 | But could not we have been saved if Christ had not died? |
6049 | But could that heal it, could he not taste, truly taste, or rightly relish this forgiveness? |
6049 | But could the house of Lebanon, though a fortified place, assault Damascus? |
6049 | But could they persuade any to be of their opinion? |
6049 | But did He indeed suffer the torments of Hell? |
6049 | But did he prevail against him? |
6049 | But did none of them follow you, to persuade you to go back? |
6049 | But did not Mr. Badman marry again quickly? |
6049 | But did not the neighbours take notice of this alteration that Mr. Badman had made? |
6049 | But did they take from him all that ever he had? |
6049 | But did this man rise again from the dead, that very man, with that very body wherewith he was crucified? |
6049 | But did this young Badman accustom himself to such filthy kind of language? |
6049 | But did you never give an occasion to men to call you by this name? |
6049 | But did you not come by the house of the Interpreter? |
6049 | But did you not fear it before? |
6049 | But did you not see the house that stood there on the top of the hill, on the side of which Moses met you? |
6049 | But did you not, with your vain life, damp all that you by words used by way of persuasion to bring them away with you? |
6049 | But did you take his counsel? |
6049 | But did you tell them of your own sorrow, and fear of destruction? |
6049 | But did you, said he, when you were at a stand, pluck out and read your note? |
6049 | But do kings use to die for captive slaves? |
6049 | But do kings use to die for captive slaves? |
6049 | But do not bad masters condemn themselves in condemning the badness of their servants? |
6049 | But do not the scriptures make mention of a Christ within? |
6049 | But do these people know what they do? |
6049 | But do they believe that thus it is with them? |
6049 | But do you speak seriously, and in good earnest? |
6049 | But do you think Mr. Badman would have been so base? |
6049 | But do you think it is because of the first? |
6049 | But do you think that the men that do thus, do think that they do so vilely, so abominably? |
6049 | But do you think that these people did ever feel the power and majesty of the Word of God to break their hearts? |
6049 | But do you think that this outcry was caused by unbelief? |
6049 | But do you think these men saw the strength of the Jews now? |
6049 | But do you think this is certain? |
6049 | But does the carnal world covet this, this spirit, and the blessed graces of it? |
6049 | But dost thou plead by thy righteousness, for mercy for thyself? |
6049 | But doth not a man bring forth fruit unto God, that walketh orderly according to the ten commandments? |
6049 | But doth not the Scripture say,"Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life"? |
6049 | But doth not their thus living, abiding, and retaining a being(or what you will call it), demonstrate the greatness and might of the soul? |
6049 | But doth that install it in that place and dignity, that was never intended for it? |
6049 | But doth that promise suppose a willingness in us, as a condition of God''s making us willing? |
6049 | But doth the blind Pharisee think his state is such? |
6049 | But doth the guilt and burden of sin so keep them down that they can by no means lift up themselves? |
6049 | But doth this bloody city spill this blood by herself simply, as she is the adulterated whore? |
6049 | But farther, thou sayest; Is it not the whole mystery of salvation, God manifested in the flesh? |
6049 | But first, do you know which of the Badmans I mean? |
6049 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
6049 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
6049 | But for what cause? |
6049 | But for what purpose? |
6049 | But further: Do we not all agree, that men that preach the gospel should do it like workmen that need not be ashamed? |
6049 | But good Sir, are you now for unwritten verities? |
6049 | But good Sir, why so short- winded? |
6049 | But had one not need to walk with a guard, and to have a sentinel stand at one''s door for this? |
6049 | But had the maid no friend to look after her? |
6049 | But hath he no better thoughts of his own good deeds, which are by the law? |
6049 | But hath not the law promises as well as threatenings? |
6049 | But have you no other way to discover the things of the Gospel, how they are done with a legal principle, but those you have already made mention of? |
6049 | But have you yet any other considerations to move us to fear God with child- like fear? |
6049 | But he answereth, What, mean ye to weep, and to break my heart? |
6049 | But he said, Why are ye troubled, and why do thoughts arise in your hearts? |
6049 | But his father would, as you intimate, sometimes rebuke him for his wickedness; pray how would he carry it then? |
6049 | But hold, dost thou do it with the Publican''s heart, sense, dread and simplicity? |
6049 | But hold, stay; wherefore? |
6049 | But how and if I should delight in them before I am aware? |
6049 | But how are they distinguished from the Gentiles? |
6049 | But how are we by this man forgiven this? |
6049 | But how are we justified by this man''s obedience? |
6049 | But how are your neighbours for quietness? |
6049 | But how came Diotrephes so lately into our parts? |
6049 | But how came he by that repentance? |
6049 | But how came he to be a"new creature,"since none can create but God? |
6049 | But how came he to be affected with this? |
6049 | But how came he to bring his soul into so good a temper? |
6049 | But how came the apostle by this confidence of his well- being and of his share in another world? |
6049 | But how came they clean? |
6049 | But how came they thus patiently to endure? |
6049 | But how came they to hear it? |
6049 | But how came this to be so? |
6049 | But how camest thou in this condition? |
6049 | But how can God respect a man, before he respect his offering? |
6049 | But how can a man be sorry for it, that has neither sight nor sense of it? |
6049 | But how can that be, did they not come to us through the very sides of mercy? |
6049 | But how can that be, since no affliction for the present seems joyous? |
6049 | But how can that be, where the heart is not sanctified and made holy? |
6049 | But how can this be done by him? |
6049 | But how can you tell you have faith? |
6049 | But how comes it to pass that thou art so hearty, that thou settest thy face against so much wind and weather? |
6049 | But how comes this to be a SIGN of the approach of the ruin of Antichrist? |
6049 | But how could God have respect to Abel, if Abel was not pleasing in his sight? |
6049 | But how could a holy God say,''Live,''to such a sinful people? |
6049 | But how could be either the one or the other, if the seventh day sabbath was taught to men by the light of nature, which is the moral law? |
6049 | But how could he be naked, when before he had made himself an apron? |
6049 | But how could he be naked, when before he had made himself an apron? |
6049 | But how could he so quickly run out, for I perceive it was in little time, by what you say? |
6049 | But how did he undertake them? |
6049 | But how did it happen that you came out of your country this way? |
6049 | But how did they make that out? |
6049 | But how did they tempt him? |
6049 | But how do they deliver them? |
6049 | But how do you think to get in at the gate? |
6049 | But how dost thou know that thou shalt continue therein? |
6049 | But how dost thou prove that? |
6049 | But how doth God kill with this law, or covenant? |
6049 | But how doth God the Father save thee? |
6049 | But how doth he take that away but by a severe chastising of his soul for it, until he has made him weary of it? |
6049 | But how doth it happen that you come so late? |
6049 | But how doth that appear? |
6049 | But how doth the soul carry it towards God, when He offereth to deal with it under and by this dispensation of grace? |
6049 | But how if I should have sinned the sin unpardonable, or that called the sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | But how if this path should lead us out of the way? |
6049 | But how if we do? |
6049 | But how indifferent? |
6049 | But how is it that they are there? |
6049 | But how is it that you came alone? |
6049 | But how is the Lord righteous? |
6049 | But how is this resented? |
6049 | But how is this similitude pertinent? |
6049 | But how little of this is found among men? |
6049 | But how long ago? |
6049 | But how long, prophet, wilt thou wait? |
6049 | But how much more may we behold the love that God hath bestowed upon us, in that he hath given us to his Son, and also given his Son for us? |
6049 | But how much more now? |
6049 | But how much more then when he comes To grapple with thy heart; To bind with thread thy toes and thumbs,[4] And fetch thee in his cart? |
6049 | But how must he do that? |
6049 | But how must he take away the curse? |
6049 | But how must that be done? |
6049 | But how must this be done, but as we take them off with the snuffers, and put them in these snuff- dishes? |
6049 | But how must this be done? |
6049 | But how must this be? |
6049 | But how now must this fool be made wise? |
6049 | But how shall Christ by this rod, sword, or spirit of his mouth, consume this wicked, this mystery of iniquity? |
6049 | But how shall I be ascertained that I also shall be entertained? |
6049 | But how shall I bring it to pass? |
6049 | But how shall I come hither? |
6049 | But how shall I know that I am born again? |
6049 | But how shall kings do it? |
6049 | But how shall they escape all those dangerous and damnable opinions, that, like rocks and quicksands, are in the way in which they are going? |
6049 | But how shall we do to see some of them? |
6049 | But how shall we know that such men are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But how shall we know when this time is come? |
6049 | But how should I do? |
6049 | But how should I know whether Christ do so knock at my heart as to be desirous to come in? |
6049 | But how should I prove[ or try] the goodness of mine own righteousness by the death and blood of Christ? |
6049 | But how should I serve God? |
6049 | But how should a poor soul do to run? |
6049 | But how should this rule in our hearts? |
6049 | But how should we find out what sinners shall be saved? |
6049 | But how should we know it, said he? |
6049 | But how should we try our graces now? |
6049 | But how then doth it say, that the knowledge of God is manifested in them? |
6049 | But how then is he clear from having a hand in the death of him that perisheth? |
6049 | But how then is what he doth accepted of God? |
6049 | But how then must Jesus Christ, first save us from the filth? |
6049 | But how then must they see him? |
6049 | But how was Jesus Christ made of God to be sin for us? |
6049 | But how were they that had got the victory? |
6049 | But how will he do that? |
6049 | But how will he make her naked? |
6049 | But how will this man die? |
6049 | But how will you prove that there was a church, a rightly constituted church, at Rome, besides that in Aquila''s house? |
6049 | But how, if Sarah be barren? |
6049 | But how, if Sarah be past age? |
6049 | But how, if the day of grace should now be past and gone? |
6049 | But how, if they have exceeded many in sin, and so made themselves far more abominable? |
6049 | But how, if they have not faith and repentance? |
6049 | But how, if they want those things, those graces, power, and heart, without which they can not come? |
6049 | But how, if when I come at him he should ask me, Where I have all this while been? |
6049 | But how, if whilst thou lookest for it to come to thee at one door, it should come to thee in at another? |
6049 | But how, or why doth the leaf, or the fig fall from the tree? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But how? |
6049 | But if God deals thus with a man, how can he otherwise think but that he is a reprobate, a graceless, Christless, and faithless one? |
6049 | But if He parts with His righteousness to us, what will He have for Himself? |
6049 | But if I fly, some will blame me: what must I do now? |
6049 | But if a false faith is so forcible, what is a true? |
6049 | But if faith doth so naturally cause good works, what then is the reason that God''s people find it so hard a matter to be fruitful in good works? |
6049 | But if he had done as you have supposed, what had he done worse than what he hath done already? |
6049 | But if indeed the first day of the week be the new christian sabbath, why is there no more spoken of its institution in the testament of Christ? |
6049 | But if it be changed, then how can it be the same? |
6049 | But if they should not, ask them yet again If formerly they did not entertain One CHRISTIAN, a Pilgrim? |
6049 | But if this be the sin unpardonable, why is it called the sin against the Holy Ghost, and not rather the sin against the Son of God? |
6049 | But if thou art not come, what can make thee happy? |
6049 | But if thy God thou wilt not hearken to, What can the swallow, ant, or spider do? |
6049 | But if we do not use forms of prayer, how shall we teach our children to pray? |
6049 | But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe my words?'' |
6049 | But is it asked how are we to see that that is invisible, or to imagine bliss that is past our understanding? |
6049 | But is it not a good heart that hath good thoughts? |
6049 | But is it not a shame for a man to defile himself with that vice which he rebuketh in another? |
6049 | But is it not a wonder they got not from him his certificate, by which he was to receive his admittance at the Celestial Gate? |
6049 | But is it possible that He should so soon give infinite justice a satisfaction, a complete satisfaction? |
6049 | But is not Christ the gate or entrance into this heavenly place? |
6049 | But is not the door of mercy shut against some before they die? |
6049 | But is not the reward that God hath promised to his saints, for their good works to be enjoyed only here? |
6049 | But is not this a shame for them that are such? |
6049 | But is not this a sign of madness, of madness unto perfection? |
6049 | But is not this great grace, that we should thus be called upon to come to God for mercy? |
6049 | But is not this the way to make Christ to loath us? |
6049 | But is there a member who dares to violate them? |
6049 | But is there any comfort in being hanged with company? |
6049 | But is there yet another reason why this holy duty should, in special as it is, be commanded to be performed on the first day of the week? |
6049 | But is there, therefore, no need at all of good works, because a man is justified before God without them? |
6049 | But is this a sign of the approach of the ruin of Antichrist? |
6049 | But is this all the wit thou hast? |
6049 | But is this the common custom of princes? |
6049 | But it may be asked, When was this done to Christ, or what sacrifice of consecration had he precedent to the offering up of himself for our sins? |
6049 | But let us return again to Mr. Badman; had he any children by his wife? |
6049 | But may it not come again as a spirit of bondage, to put me into my first fears for my good? |
6049 | But may my sin be forgiven? |
6049 | But may one not be equally engaged for both? |
6049 | But may we not fly in a time of persecution? |
6049 | But met you with no opposition before you set out of doors? |
6049 | But might not Christ die for our sins but he needs must bear their guilt or burden? |
6049 | But might not God have kept Adam from inclining, if he would? |
6049 | But might they not be healed by humbling themselves? |
6049 | But must their obstinacy rule? |
6049 | But must this wall, I say, consist chiefly in outward glory, in the glory of earthly things? |
6049 | But my husband is an unbeliever; what shall I do? |
6049 | But never let such a wicked thought pass through thy heart, saying,"This evil is of the Lord; what should I wait for the Lord any longer?" |
6049 | But now I would inquire: Had Israel done the commandment, if they had eaten the passover raw, or boiled in water? |
6049 | But now how doth God lose it? |
6049 | But now if other men should do as this man, how many universal churches should we have? |
6049 | But now, how shall this man be reclaimed from this sin? |
6049 | But now, what thing is that which is greater than his body, save the altar, his Divinity on which it was offered? |
6049 | But now, when didst thou feel the power of this first part of the Scripture, the law, so mighty as to strike thee dead? |
6049 | But now, wouldst thou honour thy King? |
6049 | But of what? |
6049 | But one sin that layeth the soul without the reach of God''s mercy; and must I be guilty of that? |
6049 | But perhaps some may ask me, WHAT INIQUITY THEY MUST DEPART FROM THAT RELIGIOUSLY NAME THE NAME OF CHRIST? |
6049 | But perhaps some may say, What need was there that Jesus Christ should do all this? |
6049 | But perhaps thy heart is so hard, and thy mind so united to the pleasing of thy vile affections, that thou wilt say,''What care I for my servant? |
6049 | But pray how can you tell that he did not care for the company of such? |
6049 | But pray tell me, Did you meet nobody in the Valley of Humility? |
6049 | But pray, Sir, what other sign have you by which you can prove that Mr. Badman died in his sins, and so in a state of damnation? |
6049 | But pray, Sir, where was it that Christian and Faithful met Talkative? |
6049 | But put the case I had failed herein, Doth this warrant your unlawful practice? |
6049 | But said, Hold; not so many, which is the first? |
6049 | But saith the open profane, why can not we be reckoned saints also? |
6049 | But say you,"Did he put and end to the law for them who still live in transgression?" |
6049 | But say you,''We have now found an advocate for sin against God, in the breach of one of HIS holy commands?'' |
6049 | But say you,''Wherein lies the force of this man''s argument against baptism as to its place, worth, and continuance?'' |
6049 | But say you,''Who taught you to divide betwixt Christ and his precepts, that you word it at such a rate? |
6049 | But sayest thou, I will be righteous in myself that I may have wherewith to commend me to God, when I go to him for mercy? |
6049 | But says one, Would you have us singular? |
6049 | But secondly, I pray where was Christ when he spake those words? |
6049 | But shall Christ take our cause in hand, and shall we doubt of good success? |
6049 | But shall I be daunted at this? |
6049 | But shall I speak the truth for you? |
6049 | But shall Manasseh come off thus? |
6049 | But shall he not lose his body before he come again? |
6049 | But shall such ever come to glory? |
6049 | But shall the will of heaven stoop to the will of hell? |
6049 | But shall they be my God, or shall I have Of them so foul and impious a thought, To think that from the curse they can me save? |
6049 | But shall this ever be said of Christ? |
6049 | But shall we be sure of it? |
6049 | But should I grant that which is indeed impossible-- namely, that thou art justified by the law; what then? |
6049 | But show me something out of the Word against it, will you? |
6049 | But since I have lusts and desires both ways, how shall I know to which my soul adheres? |
6049 | But since I was sealed to the day of redemption, I have grievously sinned against God, have not I, therefore, cause to fear, as before? |
6049 | But since he can do so, why doth he suffer this, and that thing to appear, to act, and do so horribly repugnant to his word? |
6049 | But some love not the method of your first; Romance they count it, throw''t away as dust, If I should meet with such, what should I say? |
6049 | But some may say, How will they seek to enter in? |
6049 | But some may say, What is the meaning of this word able? |
6049 | But some may say, Wherein doth the saving grace of the Spirit appear? |
6049 | But some may say, what need of the righteousness of one that is naturally God? |
6049 | But still the question is, Whether God by this his determination doth not lay a necessity on the creature to sin? |
6049 | But still when a fresh dish was set before them, they would whisperingly say to each other, What is it? |
6049 | But still, I say, the question is, How comest thou to know that thou art righteous in the judgment of God? |
6049 | But suppose that at his return he should find his own cattle in that pound, would he now carry it toward them as he did unto the other? |
6049 | But suppose they were all baptized, because they had light therein, what then? |
6049 | But suppose this great person should second his suit, and send to this sorry creature again, what would she say now? |
6049 | But surely I may begin this time enough, a year or two hence, may I not? |
6049 | But the most of men do that which you forbid, and why may not we? |
6049 | But the question is now, how we should attain to, and live in, the exercise of this blessed and comely grace? |
6049 | But the third thing touched in the question was this-- What may such an one receive of God who is under the curse of the law? |
6049 | But then I turn the tables, and say, But where shall I be shortly? |
6049 | But then how as a Lamb is he in the midst of the throne? |
6049 | But then, sayest thou, how shall I escape? |
6049 | But then, some will say, since it is so difficult, how may we do without danger? |
6049 | But they are Satan''s captives; he takes them captive at his will, and he is stronger than they: how then can they come? |
6049 | But they are dead, dead in trespasses and sins, how shall they then come? |
6049 | But this is God''s complaint,''Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? |
6049 | But this, I say, is a very great block in his way when he meddles with the children; God has an interest in them-"Hath God cast away his people? |
6049 | But thou wilt say unto me, Why do men profess the name of Christ that love not to depart from iniquity? |
6049 | But though I do wait, yet if I be not elected to eternal life, what good will all my waiting do me? |
6049 | But to accept of grace, especially when it is free grace, grace that reigns, grace from the throne, how sweet is it? |
6049 | But to come to the point: what righteousness hath that man that hath no works? |
6049 | But to come to the question-- What is it to be saved? |
6049 | But to come to the second question, that is, Why these twelve angels are said to stand at the gate? |
6049 | But to lay open my folly at last thou sayest, Doth not the scripture say, Christ is within you, except ye be reprobates? |
6049 | But to slight grace, to do despite to the Spirit of grace, to prefer our own works to the derogating from grace, what is it but to contemn God? |
6049 | But to the second thing, which is this, How far may such an one go? |
6049 | But upon what is this princely fearless service of God grounded? |
6049 | But was David, in a strict sense, without fault in all things else? |
6049 | But was ever heard the like to what Jesus Christ has done for sinners? |
6049 | But was he not afraid of the judgments of God that did fly about at that time? |
6049 | But was not Adam unexpectedly surprised? |
6049 | But was not his faith exercised, or tried, about his willingness too? |
6049 | But was not this man, think you, a giant, a pillar in this house? |
6049 | But was that a sufficient shelter against either thorn or thistle? |
6049 | But was there not something of moment in this clause of the commission? |
6049 | But were not these gentlemen more afraid of losing their own places and preferments, than of the king''s losing of his toll and custom? |
6049 | But were you not afraid, good Sir, when you saw him come out with his club? |
6049 | But what Jesus? |
6049 | But what a shame is this to man, that God should subject all his creatures to him, and he should refuse to stoop his heart to God? |
6049 | But what acts of disobedience do we indulge them in? |
6049 | But what aileth the Pharisee? |
6049 | But what an entrance into life is here? |
6049 | But what answer hath God prepared for these objections? |
6049 | But what are all these righteousnesses? |
6049 | But what are they? |
6049 | But what are they? |
6049 | But what are they? |
6049 | But what are we to understand by faith? |
6049 | But what are we to understand in gospel days, by going out of the house of the Lord, for or by sin? |
6049 | But what be these certain circumstances? |
6049 | But what be these other precepts? |
6049 | But what blessedness doth follow the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, to one that is yet ungodly? |
6049 | But what can be the end of those that are proud in the decking of themselves after their antic manner? |
6049 | But what could not the law do? |
6049 | But what could they say for themselves, why they came not? |
6049 | But what day is this? |
6049 | But what day? |
6049 | But what did he do with our sins, for he had them upon his back? |
6049 | But what did he speak to them? |
6049 | But what did she do to you? |
6049 | But what did the raven then do? |
6049 | But what did you think when he fetched you down to the ground at the first blow? |
6049 | But what do we more than talk of them? |
6049 | But what do we talk of them? |
6049 | But what do you mean by Mr. Badman''s breaking? |
6049 | But what do you mean by these words-- the old covenant as the old covenant? |
6049 | But what do you mean by those expressions? |
6049 | But what do you mean, John? |
6049 | But what does he? |
6049 | But what doth he get in this world, more than travail and sorrow, vexation of spirit, and disappointment? |
6049 | But what doth he mean by the dross? |
6049 | But what doth she do under all this trial? |
6049 | But what doth your arguing reprove?'' |
6049 | But what emboldened him thus to do? |
6049 | But what followed? |
6049 | But what follows? |
6049 | But what follows? |
6049 | But what follows? |
6049 | But what fruit doth God expect? |
6049 | But what good will their covenant of death then do them? |
6049 | But what ground had he for his so saying? |
6049 | But what ground hast thou for this thy hope? |
6049 | But what had Joshua antecedent to this glorious and heavenly clothing? |
6049 | But what had he spoken? |
6049 | But what has God prepared this vessel for, and what has He put into it? |
6049 | But what have they got by all they have done, either against the head or body of the same? |
6049 | But what have you met with? |
6049 | But what have you seen? |
6049 | But what have you to show at that gate, that may cause that the gate should be opened to you? |
6049 | But what if a man in this his progress hath one sinful thought? |
6049 | But what if they that were stung, could not, because of the swelling of their face, look up to the brazen serpent? |
6049 | But what is all this to one that neither sees his sickness, that sees nothing of a wound? |
6049 | But what is all this to the DEAD world-- to them that love to be dead? |
6049 | But what is all this to you that are not concerned in this privilege? |
6049 | But what is ankle- deep to that which followeth after? |
6049 | But what is committing of the soul to God? |
6049 | But what is he? |
6049 | But what is impossible to a Creator? |
6049 | But what is it that a heart that is destitute of the fear of God will not do? |
6049 | But what is it that has got thy heart, and that keeps it from thy Saviour? |
6049 | But what is it then to be of these? |
6049 | But what is it to a child? |
6049 | But what is it to be of the works of the law, or under the law? |
6049 | But what is it to believe in Christ: and what to have faith in his blood? |
6049 | But what is it to believe that he is Messias, or Christ? |
6049 | But what is it to turn from the law to the Lord? |
6049 | But what is it to wait upon him according to his counsel? |
6049 | But what is that to them that never saw ought but beauty, and that never tasted anything but sweetness in sin? |
6049 | But what is the answer of Christ? |
6049 | But what is the cause of all this slaying, and the reason of this abundance of corpses? |
6049 | But what is the matter? |
6049 | But what is the meaning of this? |
6049 | But what is the reason of that? |
6049 | But what is the second thing whereby you would prove a discovery of a work of grace in the heart? |
6049 | But what is the spirit of the world? |
6049 | But what is there in my proposition, that men, considerate, can be offended at? |
6049 | But what is this doctrine? |
6049 | But what is this iniquity? |
6049 | But what judgments do you mean? |
6049 | But what kind of being had the seventh day sabbath, and other Jewish rites and ceremonies, that by Christ''s resurrection were taken away? |
6049 | But what kind of sinners shall then be saved? |
6049 | But what law is that which hath not power to command our obedience in the point of our justification with God? |
6049 | But what man in the world can do this whose heart is not seasoned with the love of God and the love of Christ? |
6049 | But what manner of nakedness was it? |
6049 | But what men were to ascend with him, but, as was said afore, the men that''came out of the graves after his resurrection?'' |
6049 | But what more false than such a conclusion? |
6049 | But what must be done with them? |
6049 | But what necessity is there that the heart must be broken? |
6049 | But what need I grant you, that which can not be proved? |
6049 | But what need all these offices of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But what need these things be asserted, promised, or prayed for? |
6049 | But what needs that, if mercy could save the soul without the redemption that is by him? |
6049 | But what needs that? |
6049 | But what of that, if yet he be unable to fetch us off when charged for sin at the bar, and before the face of a righteous judge? |
6049 | But what of that, since the wrinkles that are in their faces threaten not us but them? |
6049 | But what of that? |
6049 | But what promises in the Scripture do you find your hope built upon? |
6049 | But what righteousness have you of your own, to which you so dearly are wedded, that it may not be let go, for the sake of Christ? |
6049 | But what said the Lord unto him? |
6049 | But what saith it? |
6049 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6049 | But what saith the Scripture? |
6049 | But what saith the Word of God? |
6049 | But what saith the Word? |
6049 | But what saith the Word? |
6049 | But what saith the apostle? |
6049 | But what saith the apostle? |
6049 | But what saith the jealous Lord? |
6049 | But what saith the scripture? |
6049 | But what saith the sinful soul to this? |
6049 | But what salvation? |
6049 | But what says the distressed man? |
6049 | But what shall I do, I can not depart therefrom as I should? |
6049 | But what shall I do, who am so cold, slothful, and heartless, that I can not find any heart to do any work for God in this world? |
6049 | But what shall I now do, saith the sinner? |
6049 | But what shall I say unto them? |
6049 | But what shall we say, when there must be added to that the heart blood of the Son of God, and all to make our salvation complete? |
6049 | But what should I thus discourse of the degrees of the torments of the damned souls in hell? |
6049 | But what should a Christian do, when God has broke his heart, to keep it tender? |
6049 | But what should be the reason of that? |
6049 | But what should be the reason that some that are coming to Christ should be so lamentably cast down and buffeted with temptations? |
6049 | But what should be the reason that such a good man should be all his days so much in the dark? |
6049 | But what should be the reason? |
6049 | But what should he believe? |
6049 | But what should he mean by that? |
6049 | But what should men believe with the heart? |
6049 | But what should such men do in that kingdom that comes by gift, where grace and mercy reigns? |
6049 | But what should they believe? |
6049 | But what should we do with such kind of saints? |
6049 | But what then are sinners the better for the death and blood of Christ? |
6049 | But what then do we mean when we say, justification will stand with a state of imperfection? |
6049 | But what then doth he mean by the redemption of this purchased possession? |
6049 | But what then was the altar? |
6049 | But what then? |
6049 | But what then? |
6049 | But what then? |
6049 | But what things are they? |
6049 | But what unbecoming language is this for the children of the same father, members of the same body, and heirs of the same glory, to be accustomed to? |
6049 | But what was Paul but a broken- hearted and a contrite sinner? |
6049 | But what was Paul? |
6049 | But what was Sheshach? |
6049 | But what was it that made him thus slothful? |
6049 | But what was it that made them join their works of the law with Christ, but their unbelief, whose foundation was ignorance and fear? |
6049 | But what was it that made you so afraid of this sight? |
6049 | But what was it that moved so upon his heart, as to cause him to do this thing? |
6049 | But what was it to be lifted up from the earth? |
6049 | But what was it? |
6049 | But what was the affliction? |
6049 | But what was the cause of their making this excuse? |
6049 | But what was the cause of your carrying of it thus to the first workings of God''s blessed Spirit upon you? |
6049 | But what was the reason thereof, I mean the reason from God? |
6049 | But what was the reason? |
6049 | But what was the spirit of Diotrephes? |
6049 | But what was this curse? |
6049 | But what was this to a personal performing the commandments? |
6049 | But what were the chargers a type of? |
6049 | But what were the things that their eyes had seen, that would so damnify them should they be forgotten? |
6049 | But what were the tongs a type of? |
6049 | But what were these chains a type of? |
6049 | But what were these golden spoons a type of? |
6049 | But what were they used about the candlestick to do? |
6049 | But what were those instruments a type of? |
6049 | But what will he do with him as he is an Advocate? |
6049 | But what will not love do? |
6049 | But what will not love do? |
6049 | But what will they do when the axe is fetched out? |
6049 | But what will they do with her? |
6049 | But what will you say to a soul in this condition? |
6049 | But what would they do if there were not one always at the right hand of God, by intercession, taking away these kind of iniquities? |
6049 | But what would you have us poor creatures to do that can not tell how to pray? |
6049 | But what''s the bush, whose pricks, like tenter- hooks, Do scratch and claw the finest lady''s hands, Or rend her clothes, if she too near it stands? |
6049 | But what''s the reason? |
6049 | But what, because they are not baptized, have they not Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But what, did they now love David? |
6049 | But what, if when he hath used it, he still continueth dark about it; what will you advise him now? |
6049 | But what, then, are the works of the law? |
6049 | But what, then, must we understand by these lavers, and by this sacrifice being washed in them, in order to its being burned upon the altar? |
6049 | But what? |
6049 | But what? |
6049 | But when I heard it, Lord, thought I, if this be true, what shall I do, and what will become of all this people, yea, and of this preacher too? |
6049 | But when did you give him such a rebuke? |
6049 | But when he shall see the thief that was saved on the cross stand by, as clothed with beauteous glory, what further can he be able to object? |
6049 | But when must we conclude we have kept the law? |
6049 | But when shall this be? |
6049 | But when will that be? |
6049 | But when, Lord, wilt thou laugh at, and mock at, the impenitent? |
6049 | But when? |
6049 | But when? |
6049 | But whence came this but from an inward feeling by faith of the love of God, and of Christ, which passeth knowledge? |
6049 | But whence must this come? |
6049 | But whence should the soul thus receive sin? |
6049 | But where are they here forbidden to teach them other truths before they be baptized? |
6049 | But where do you find that ever the Lord did thus rowl9 in his bowels for and after any self- righteous man? |
6049 | But where doth Jesus Christ, in all the word of the New Testament, expressly speak to a returning backslider with words of grace and peace? |
6049 | But where hadst thou that heart that gives entertainment to these thoughts, these heavenly thoughts? |
6049 | But where is she? |
6049 | But where is the fruit of this repentance? |
6049 | But where should we find him? |
6049 | But where were they taken, or about what were they found? |
6049 | But wherein lieth the depth of this wisdom of God in our salvation, if man''s righteousness can save him? |
6049 | But which is the way to make one that is wild, or a madman, sober? |
6049 | But who are these? |
6049 | But who are they that must thus be feared? |
6049 | But who can tell, though there should not be saved so many as there shall, but thou mayest be one of that few? |
6049 | But who doth he personate if he says, This is a house for the soul; for the body is part of him that says, Our house? |
6049 | But who is it that can live by grace? |
6049 | But who is this that can do this? |
6049 | But who knows all this? |
6049 | But who must look upon it? |
6049 | But who told thee that thy soul was such an excellent thing as by thy practice thou declarest thou believest it to be? |
6049 | But who understands this, who believes it? |
6049 | But who, quoth he, do you think this is? |
6049 | But who, when called, was there in the world, in whom grace shone so bright as in him? |
6049 | But why are the ungodly held forth under the notion of a rich man? |
6049 | But why can you indulge the baptists in many acts of disobedience? |
6049 | But why could it not be that they should perish other where? |
6049 | But why could they not learn that song? |
6049 | But why did Christ offer Himself in sacrifice? |
6049 | But why did God let Him die? |
6049 | But why did He spill His precious blood? |
6049 | But why did He suffer the pains of Hell? |
6049 | But why did he commit his soul to him? |
6049 | But why did he do all this? |
6049 | But why did he not come through? |
6049 | But why did not you look for the steps? |
6049 | But why did not young Badman run away from this master, as he ran away from the other? |
6049 | But why did these do thus? |
6049 | But why did you not answer these parts of my argument? |
6049 | But why do I talk thus? |
6049 | But why do YOU throw out FAITH? |
6049 | But why do the righteous desire to be with Christ? |
6049 | But why do you put in these cautionary words, They must not sell always as dear, nor buy always as cheap as they can? |
6049 | But why do you wonder at a work of conviction and conversion? |
6049 | But why doth Job after this manner thus speak to God? |
6049 | But why doth the devil do thus? |
6049 | But why go back again, seeing that is the next way to hell? |
6049 | But why is God so delighted in the exercise of this grace of hope? |
6049 | But why is all this? |
6049 | But why is covetousness called idolatry? |
6049 | But why is it given to him? |
6049 | But why is it said, Let him''dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue?'' |
6049 | But why it is said, Generations? |
6049 | But why must he be imposed upon? |
6049 | But why must the instruments be laid upon the tables? |
6049 | But why must the women have shame- facedness, since they live honestly as the men? |
6049 | But why not attain to a performance? |
6049 | But why not in the name of an angel? |
6049 | But why not meddle with Cain, since he was a murderer? |
6049 | But why not possible now to be holden of death? |
6049 | But why not? |
6049 | But why peace first? |
6049 | But why rejoice in this? |
6049 | But why should HE be rebuked, that said he was for Christ? |
6049 | But why should they be so set against him, since they also despise the way that he forsook? |
6049 | But why so much offended at this? |
6049 | But why so? |
6049 | But why speaks he so particularly? |
6049 | But why speedily? |
6049 | But why stand off? |
6049 | But why standest thou thus at the door? |
6049 | But why the seventh day? |
6049 | But why then did he thus abhor them? |
6049 | But why then were they baptized? |
6049 | But why then were they not circumcised? |
6049 | But why to Abel? |
6049 | But why was he crucified there for the sins of his children? |
6049 | But why was he true God and true man? |
6049 | But why was not all this done on the seventh day? |
6049 | But why was the firstborn of men coupled with unclean beasts, but because they are both unclean? |
6049 | But why wilt thou seek for ease this way, seeing so many dangers attend it? |
6049 | But why wonder, and think they are fools? |
6049 | But why would God so order it, that life should be had nowhere else but in Jesus Christ? |
6049 | But why would they take from us the Holy Scriptures? |
6049 | But why( some may say) must we come out? |
6049 | But why, I say, is this day, on which our Lord rose from the dead, nominated as it is? |
6049 | But why, good Sir, do you sigh so deeply; is it for ought else than that for the which, as you have perceived, I myself am concerned? |
6049 | But why, may some say, do you make so homely a comparison? |
6049 | But why, or by what, art thou persuaded that thou hast left all for God and Heaven? |
6049 | But why, then, is His death so slighted by some? |
6049 | But why? |
6049 | But why? |
6049 | But why? |
6049 | But will it not be counted a trespass against the Lord of the city whither we are bound, thus to violate His revealed will? |
6049 | But will it not, think you, strangely put to silence all such thoughts, and words, and reasons of the ungodly before the bar of God? |
6049 | But will riches profit in the day of wrath? |
6049 | But will that good meal that I ate last week, enable me, without supply, to do a good day''s work in this? |
6049 | But will the plea do? |
6049 | But will you be willing, said he, that two indifferent persons shall determine the case, and will you stand by their judgment? |
6049 | But will you promise me to mend? |
6049 | But with the voice of my thanksgiving, I Will offer sacrifice to thee on high, And pay my vows which I have vow''d, each one, For why? |
6049 | But with what death? |
6049 | But would God have given the world such an account of his sufferings, that by one offering he did perfect for ever them that are sanctified? |
6049 | But would He have done this for inconsiderable things? |
6049 | But would he believe it? |
6049 | But would they do thus if they knew the severity of the law? |
6049 | But would they have done so, think you, if at the same time the fear of God had had its full play in the soul, in the army? |
6049 | But would you be imitating of, or accomplishing such a righteousness? |
6049 | But would you have us sit still and do nothing? |
6049 | But would you not have the people of God stand in fear of his rod, and be afraid of his judgments? |
6049 | But would you not have us mind our worldly concerns? |
6049 | But would you not have us rejoice at the sight and sense of the forgiveness of our sins? |
6049 | But wouldest thou change places with them? |
6049 | But ye ungodly fathers, how are your ungodly children roaring now in hell? |
6049 | But ye will say, Who are those ignorant persons, that shall find no favour at that day? |
6049 | But yet all the things of God were kept out of my sight, and still the tempter followed me with, But whither must you go when you die? |
6049 | But you ask me,''If outward and bodily conformity be become a crime?'' |
6049 | But you ask,''Is my peace maintained in a way of disobedience? |
6049 | But you ask,''Might they do so when they came into Canaan?'' |
6049 | But you bid me tell you,''What I mean by spirit baptism?'' |
6049 | But you descant; Is baptism one of the laws of Christ? |
6049 | But you may ask me, What the laver or molten sea should signify to us in the New Testament? |
6049 | But you may ask, How did God deal with sinners before this righteousness was actually in being? |
6049 | But you may ask, what is that righteousness, with which a Christian is made righteous before he doth righteousness? |
6049 | But you may say, How shall I know that I fear God? |
6049 | But you may say, What is it to exercise this grace aright? |
6049 | But you may say, how can you prove that conscience is not of the same nature, of the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | But you object,''Must our love to the unbaptized indulge them in an act of disobedience? |
6049 | But you saw more than this, did you not? |
6049 | But you say, Doth it not lead to God all that follow it? |
6049 | But you tell me,''I use the arguments of the paedo- baptist, to wit, But where are infants forbidden to be baptized?'' |
6049 | But you will say, How doth the law kill and strike dead the poor creatures? |
6049 | But you will say, How should we try our graces? |
6049 | But you will say, The scripture saith, he that descended is the same that ascended, which to me( say you) implies, none but the Spirit''s ascending? |
6049 | But you will say, What, will not the Lord have mercy on ignorant souls? |
6049 | But you will say, Who shall stand when he appears? |
6049 | But you will say, doth not the scripture say, that it is the Spirit of Christ that doth make manifest or convince of sin? |
6049 | But you will say, might they not be deceived? |
6049 | But you will say, upon what then was the threatening and the command to punish grounded? |
6049 | But you will say, what lies are those, that the devil beguileth poor souls withal? |
6049 | But you will say,"Then why did God give the law, if we can not have salvation by following of it?" |
6049 | But you will say--"But who are those that are thus under the law?" |
6049 | But"who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord?" |
6049 | But''how shall I give thee up, Ephraim? |
6049 | But, Again, Wouldest thou have mercy for thy righteousness? |
6049 | But, Are they within the reach and power of Shall- come? |
6049 | But, Harry, said I, why do you swear and curse thus? |
6049 | But, I pray, what, and how many, were the things wherein you differed? |
6049 | But, I pray, will you tell me why you ask me such questions? |
6049 | But, I say, how can these Scriptures be fulfilled, if he that would indeed be saved, as before said, has sinned the sin unpardonable? |
6049 | But, I say, how will they fail? |
6049 | But, I say, if he knows him not, how can he propound him as the end? |
6049 | But, I say, if the sight of heaven, at so vast a distance, is so excellent a prospect, what will it look like when one is in it? |
6049 | But, I say, if thou do it graciously, then a reward followeth;"For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? |
6049 | But, I say, was this fear, that is called now the fear of God, anything else, but a dread of the greatness of power of the king? |
6049 | But, I say, what is all this to them that have him not for their Advocate? |
6049 | But, I say, what is man without this soul, or wherein lieth this pre- eminence over a beast? |
6049 | But, I say, what is the reason some so prize what others so despise, since they both stand in need of the same grace and mercy of God in Christ? |
6049 | But, I say, what is this to them that are not admitted to a privilege in the advocate- office of Christ? |
6049 | But, I say, why is it repeated? |
6049 | But, I say, why offended at this? |
6049 | But, I say, why so unconcerned? |
6049 | But, I say,''Would they not change places? |
6049 | But, Lord, give an instance; when was it, or where? |
6049 | But, Lord, how wilt thou quench their boundless thirst? |
6049 | But, Sir, Are none but those of your way the public Christians? |
6049 | But, Sir, said she, what is this pill good for else? |
6049 | But, Sir, said the old gentleman, how could you guess that I am such a man, since I came from such a place? |
6049 | But, Sir, since you are not peremptory in your proof; how came you to be so absolute in your practice? |
6049 | But, Sir, was not this it that made my good Christian''s burden fall from off his shoulder, and that made him give three leaps for joy? |
6049 | But, Sir, who have I pleaded for, in the denial of any one ordinance of God? |
6049 | But, USE FOURTH.--Is it so? |
6049 | But, What, What hast thou done by thy righteousness? |
6049 | But, alas, I am blind, and can not see; what shall I do now? |
6049 | But, alas, I have nothing to carry with me; how then should I go? |
6049 | But, as Paul says of himself, and of those that were saved by grace in his day,"What then? |
6049 | But, brave soul, pray tell me what the things are that discourage thee, and that weaken thy strength in the way? |
6049 | But, but few comparatively will be concerned with this use; for where is he that doth this? |
6049 | But, do the broken in spirit believe this? |
6049 | But, good neighbour Wiseman, be pleased to tell me who this man was, and why you conclude him so miserable in his death? |
6049 | But, may some say, what good will it do a man to know that the love of Christ passeth knowledge? |
6049 | But, mother, what is it like? |
6049 | But, my good companion, do you know the way to this desired place? |
6049 | But, pray Sir, while it is fresh in my mind, do you hear anything of his wife and children? |
6049 | But, pray, what said my Lord to my rudeness? |
6049 | But, pray, why do you ask me this question? |
6049 | But, said Christian, are there no turnings nor windings, by which a stranger may lose his way? |
6049 | But, said Christian, will your practice stand a trial at law? |
6049 | But, said he, how shall we know that you have received a gift? |
6049 | But, said he, what if you should forbear awhile, and sit still, till you see further how things will go? |
6049 | But, said he, who shall be judge between you, for you take the Scriptures one way, and they another? |
6049 | But, saith Justice Keelin, who was the judge in that court? |
6049 | But, saith the Christian, I am dull and stupid that way, will not Christ be shuff13 and shy with me because of this? |
6049 | But, saith the soul, how, if after I have received a pardon, I should commit treason again? |
6049 | But, says Justice Keelin, what have you against the Common Prayer Book? |
6049 | But, says Moses,"Who is a God like unto thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?" |
6049 | But, sluggard, is it not a shame for thee To be outdone by pismires? |
6049 | But, you will say, What needs all this ado, and why is all this time and pains spent in speaking to this that is surely believed already? |
6049 | But, you will say, can a man use Gospel ordinances with a legal spirit? |
6049 | But, you will say, it is like, How should this be made manifest and appear? |
6049 | By his being able to judge by nature, that there is such a thing as sin; as Christ saith,"Why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?" |
6049 | By rest here, must needs be understood those not elect, because set one in opposition to the other; and if not elect, what then but reprobate? |
6049 | By way of question; what are the things thou desirest, are they lawful or unlawful? |
6049 | By what law? |
6049 | By what law? |
6049 | By what will? |
6049 | By which of the ten commandments is trusting to our own righteousness forbidden? |
6049 | By which professors seem willingly led, though against so many plain commands and examples, written as with a sun beam, that he that runs may read? |
6049 | By whom or by what is this fear wrought in the heart? |
6049 | Called Christian, how many times have thy sins laid thee upon a sick- bed, and, to thine and others''thinking, at the very mouth of the grave? |
6049 | Can a holy, a just, and a righteous God, once think( with honour to his name) of saving such a vile creature as I am? |
6049 | Can a loving husband abide to be always from a beloved spouse? |
6049 | Can a man at the same time be a proud man, and fear God too? |
6049 | Can a man be happy that is ignorant that he is hanging over hell by the poor weak thread of an uncertain life? |
6049 | Can a man be happy, that is ignorant that he is without God and Christ, and hope? |
6049 | Can a man believe in Christ and not be hated by the devil? |
6049 | Can any think that God should take That pains, to form a man So like himself, only to make Him here a moment stand? |
6049 | Can any think that trees are the things taken care of here? |
6049 | Can darkness agree with light? |
6049 | Can he contradict our Advocate? |
6049 | Can he excuse himself? |
6049 | Can he make a profession of this Christ, and that sweetly and convincingly, and the children of Satan hold their tongue? |
6049 | Can he overstand the charge, the accusation, the sentence, and condemnation? |
6049 | Can he prove that Christ has no interest in the saints''inheritance? |
6049 | Can he prove that we are at age, or that our several parts of the heavenly house are already delivered into our own power? |
6049 | Can he speak for himself? |
6049 | Can his heart now endure, or can his hands be strong? |
6049 | Can it be a privilege for me to be annoyed with my infirmities, and to have my best duties infected with it? |
6049 | Can it be imagined that those''that paint themselves did ever repent of their pride?'' |
6049 | Can it be imagined, sin being what it is, and God what he is-- to wit, a revenger of disobedience-- but that one time or other man must smart for sin? |
6049 | Can it me a mercy for me to be troubled with my corruptions? |
6049 | Can no good thing come to us out of this? |
6049 | Can none of these severally, nor all of them jointly, save a man from hell, unless Christ also become our Advocate? |
6049 | Can not a man be saved unless his heart be broken? |
6049 | Can not all the angels do it? |
6049 | Can not an angel do it? |
6049 | Can not he transform himself thus into an angel of light? |
6049 | Can not his eyes, which are as a flame of fire, see in my words, thoughts, and actions enough to make me culpable of the wrath of God? |
6049 | Can not man by any means redeem his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him? |
6049 | Can not one sinner save another? |
6049 | Can not we love their persons, parts, graces, but we must love their sins?'' |
6049 | Can not you submit, and, notwithstanding, do as much good as you can, in a neighbourly way, without having such meetings? |
6049 | Can olives, brethren, on a fig- tree grow, Or figs on vines? |
6049 | Can pride be where a soul for mercy craves? |
6049 | Can repentance be where godly sorrow is not? |
6049 | Can such a one as I am, live in glory? |
6049 | Can the body hear? |
6049 | Can the body see? |
6049 | Can the same reason, or anything like it, for refusing baptism, be given now?'' |
6049 | Can the thistle produce grapes, or the noxious weeds corn? |
6049 | Can the waters quench it? |
6049 | Can there be a miss of the loss of such an one? |
6049 | Can there be any greater comfort ministered to thee than to know thy person stands just before God? |
6049 | Can there be hope for me?'' |
6049 | Can there now be any thing more plain? |
6049 | Can these fear God? |
6049 | Can these teach him to manage his knowledge well? |
6049 | Can they do that at all times which they can do at some times? |
6049 | Can they pray, believe, love, fear, repent, and bow before God always alike? |
6049 | Can we wonder that such a state of society was not long permitted to exist? |
6049 | Can we wonder that those who preached the holy, humbling, self- denying doctrines of the cross, were persecuted to the death? |
6049 | Can we, by a new birth, say"Our Father?" |
6049 | Can you behold every one that he is proud, and abase him, and bind their faces in secret? |
6049 | Can you build and leave out a stone in the foundation? |
6049 | Can you call for the waters of the sea, and cause them to cover the face of the ground? |
6049 | Can you cast all, and rest all, upon the love of Christ? |
6049 | Can you count the number of the stars, or stay the bottles of heaven? |
6049 | Can you give me further reason yet to convict me of the truth of what you say? |
6049 | Can you grapple with the judgment of God? |
6049 | Can you not be content to be damned for your sins against the law, but you must sin against the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | Can you not do as your neighbours do, carry the world, sin, lust, pleasure, profit, esteem among men, along with you? |
6049 | Can you not stay and take these along with you? |
6049 | Can you not tell how you knocked? |
6049 | Can you remember by what means you find your annoyances, at times, as if they were vanquished? |
6049 | Can you say you desire, when you pray? |
6049 | Can you stop the sun from running his course, and hinder the moon from giving her light? |
6049 | Can you wrestle with the Almighty? |
6049 | Canst thou answer it, sinner? |
6049 | Canst thou be content to be put off with a belly well filled, and a back well clothed? |
6049 | Canst thou commend thyself''to every man''s conscience in the sight of God?'' |
6049 | Canst thou defend thyself? |
6049 | Canst thou drink hell- fire? |
6049 | Canst thou hear of Christ, His bloody sweat and death, and not be taken with it, and not be grieved for it, and also converted by it? |
6049 | Canst thou hear that the load of thy sins did break the very heart of Christ, and spill His precious blood? |
6049 | Canst thou hear this, and not be concerned? |
6049 | Canst thou hear this, and not have thy ears to tingle and burn on thy head? |
6049 | Canst thou imagine thou shalt at the day of account out- face God, or make him believe thou wast what thou wast not? |
6049 | Canst thou in faith say, Father, Father, to God? |
6049 | Canst thou indeed, with the rest of the saints, cry, Our Father? |
6049 | Canst thou live in the water; canst thou live always, and nowhere else, but in the water? |
6049 | Canst thou not so much as once soberly think of thy dying hour, or of whither thy sinful life will drive thee then? |
6049 | Canst thou now that readest or hearest these lines turn thy back, and go on in your sins? |
6049 | Canst thou produce the birthright? |
6049 | Canst thou read this, O thou wicked sinner, and yet go on in sin? |
6049 | Canst thou read this, and not feel thy conscience begin to throb and dag? |
6049 | Canst thou say unto him as David,"Judge me, O God, and plead my cause"( Psa 43:1)? |
6049 | Canst thou say, from blessed experience,''His flesh is meat indeed, and His blood is drink indeed?'' |
6049 | Canst thou see thy misery? |
6049 | Canst thou set so light of Heaven, of God, of Christ, and the salvation of thy poor, yet precious soul? |
6049 | Canst thou think of this, and defer repentance one hour longer? |
6049 | Canst thou, after a due examination of thyself, say that as to these things thou art innocent and clear? |
6049 | Carest thou not for this? |
6049 | Carry the solemn inquiry to the throne of grace, Have I passed from death unto life? |
6049 | Cast devils out, done wonders in the same? |
6049 | Change!--with whom? |
6049 | Charles II, hearing of it, asked the learned D.D.,''How a man of his great erudition could sit to hear a tinker preach?'' |
6049 | Chris.--What good motions? |
6049 | Christ indeed could mount up( Acts 1:9), but me, poor me, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | Christ made himself known to his disciples in breaking of bread; who would not, then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6049 | Christ made himself known to them in breaking of bread; who, who would not then, that loves to know him, be present at such an ordinance? |
6049 | Christian man, dost thou hear? |
6049 | Christian, are you actively engaged in fulfilling the duties of your course? |
6049 | Christiana and her sons? |
6049 | Civil commerce you will have with the worst, and what more have you with these? |
6049 | Come, Samuel, are you willing that I should catechise you also? |
6049 | Come, neighbour Pliable, how do you do? |
6049 | Come, pr''ythee bird, I pr''ythee come away, Why should this net thee take, when''scape thou may? |
6049 | Come, said Christiana, will you eat a bit, a little to sweeten your mouths, while you sit here to rest your legs? |
6049 | Come, sinner, let us apply it: How long is it since thou began to fear that Jesus Christ will not receive thee? |
6049 | Come, tell me, do you keep it from the dust, Yea, wind it also duly up you must? |
6049 | Coming sinner, take notice of this; we use to plead practices with men, and why not with God likewise? |
6049 | Coming sinner, what thinkest thou? |
6049 | Consdier man what I have said, And judge of things aright; When all men''s cards are fully played, Whose will abide the light? |
6049 | Consequently, who can understand the love that saves him from them? |
6049 | Consider thus with thyself, Would I be glad to have all, every one of my sins to come in against me, to inflame the justice of God against me? |
6049 | Consider thus, Would I be glad to have all, and every one of the ten commandments, to discharge themselves against my soul? |
6049 | Consider, I say, has he made a hedge and a wall to stop thee? |
6049 | Consider, What conviction of thy goodness can the actions that flow from such a spirit give unto observers? |
6049 | Consider, thou sayest, all my strength is gone, and therefore how should I wait? |
6049 | Consider, was it man that had offended? |
6049 | Could He not have suffered without His so suffering? |
6049 | Could he not, think you, have stooped from the cross to the ground, and have laid hold on some honester man, if he would? |
6049 | Could it remove from the place on which God had set it? |
6049 | Could not the grace of the Father save us without this condescension of the Son? |
6049 | Could the state have selected a fitter tool for their purposes? |
6049 | Couldst thou invent a more full, free, or larger promise? |
6049 | Counsel Second, Wouldest thou improve this love? |
6049 | Cry, if thou wilt, O, when wilt thou come unto me? |
6049 | Cry, why so? |
6049 | Cumber- ground, how many hopeful, inclinable, forward people, hast thou by thy fruitless and unprofitable life, kept out of the vineyard of God? |
6049 | Cut him down, why cumbereth he the ground? |
6049 | Dark- land, said the guide; doth not that lie up on the same coast with the City of Destruction? |
6049 | Death quaketh, and destruction falleth down dead at our feet: What, then, can stand before us? |
6049 | Deep calleth unto deep: What''s that? |
6049 | Deny this, and it follows that God accepteth men without respect to righteousness; and then what follows that, but that Christ is dead in vain? |
6049 | Depart: what quite? |
6049 | Devote myself to it, you will say, how is that? |
6049 | Did Abel offer his best? |
6049 | Did Christ''s two- fold righteousness qualify him for that work of righteousness, that was of God designed for him to do? |
6049 | Did Formalist and Hypocrite turn off into bye ways at the foot of the hill Difficulty, and miserably perish? |
6049 | Did Giant Slay- good intend me this favour when he stopped me, and resolved to let me go no further? |
6049 | Did Gideon, think you, believe that he was so strong in grace as he was? |
6049 | Did God send his Holy Spirit into the hearts of his people, to that end that you should taunt at it? |
6049 | Did He bleed for sin? |
6049 | Did He bleed for sins? |
6049 | Did I call him before an atheist? |
6049 | Did I ever exclaim, in the agony of my spirit,"What must I do to be saved?" |
6049 | Did I ever feel a deep concern about my soul? |
6049 | Did I ever see my danger as a sinner? |
6049 | Did I say before, that religion is their pretence? |
6049 | Did I say before, that the God of glory is desirous to be seen of us? |
6049 | Did I say that hearty, fervent, and constant prayer flowed from this fear of God? |
6049 | Did I say, it is fruitful? |
6049 | Did I say, our Lord had here in former days his country- house, and that He loved here to walk? |
6049 | Did I say, personal virtues? |
6049 | Did Ignorance, who perished from the way, say to the pilgrims,''You go so fast, I must stay awhile behind?'' |
6049 | Did Mistrust and Timorous run back for fear of the persecuting lions, Church and State? |
6049 | Did any of them know of your coming? |
6049 | Did ever God tell thee thou shalt live half a year or two months longer? |
6049 | Did ever God tell thee thou shalt live half a year, or two months longer? |
6049 | Did ever any of your carnal acquaintance take knowledge of a difference of your language and conduct? |
6049 | Did good men then go to see him in his last sickness? |
6049 | Did he break his leg then? |
6049 | Did he finish his work thereon? |
6049 | Did he intend, that after he had rifled my pockets, I should go to Gaius, mine host? |
6049 | Did he not, even when he desired life, yet break with God in the day when conditions of life were propounded to him? |
6049 | Did he often carry it thus to her? |
6049 | Did not Aaron fall; yea, and Moses himself? |
6049 | Did not Christ die for us; and dying for us, are we not become dead to the law by the death of his body? |
6049 | Did not God know best what was best to do them good? |
6049 | Did not Haman lead Mordecai in his state by the hand of anger? |
6049 | Did not I direct thee the way to the little wicket- gate? |
6049 | Did not I tell thee before, that a man must be righteous before he doth one good work, or he can never be righteous? |
6049 | Did not the Shepherds bid us beware of the flatterers? |
6049 | Did not we tell thee of these things? |
6049 | Did she desire thee to come with her to this place? |
6049 | Did she talk thus openly? |
6049 | Did the similar feeling of Job or David spring from these polluted fountains? |
6049 | Did these, then, see their graces so clear, as they saw themselves by their sins to be unworthy ones? |
6049 | Did they all know that he was to be betrayed of Judas? |
6049 | Did they show wherein this way is so dangerous? |
6049 | Did they suffer? |
6049 | Did we not run, ride, labour, and strive abundantly, if it might have been, for the good of thy soul, though now a damned soul? |
6049 | Did we not see, from the Delectable Mountains, the gate of the city? |
6049 | Did we not sound an alarm in thine ears, by the trumpet of God''s word day after day? |
6049 | Did we not tell thee sin would damn thy soul? |
6049 | Did we not tell thee that they who loved their sins should be damned at this dark and gloomy day, as thou art like to be? |
6049 | Did we not tell thee that without conversion there was no salvation? |
6049 | Did we not venture our goods, our names, our lives? |
6049 | Did you cry me mercy so long as you had hopes that you might prevail against me? |
6049 | Did you hear no talk of neighbour Pliable? |
6049 | Did you meet with no other assault as you came? |
6049 | Did you never read that Scripture which saith,"Israel, which followed after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness"? |
6049 | Did you never read what God did to Ananias and Sapphira for telling but one lie against it? |
6049 | Did you never read, that''the dragon persecuteth the woman?'' |
6049 | Did you then so well know his life? |
6049 | Didst thou believe, when thou saidst it, That God knew thy heart? |
6049 | Didst thou ever burn any of thy children in the fire to idols? |
6049 | Didst thou ever curse, and swear, and deny Christ? |
6049 | Didst thou ever kill anybody? |
6049 | Didst thou ever use enchantments and conjuration? |
6049 | Didst thou never hear of the intolerable roarings of the damned ones that are therein? |
6049 | Didst thou never hear or read that doleful saying in Luke 16, how the sinful man cries out among the flames,''One drop of water to cool my tongue?'' |
6049 | Didst thou not blush when thou laidst it down? |
6049 | Do God''s people keep holy fasts? |
6049 | Do I look alone to Christ for righteousness, and depend only on Him for holiness? |
6049 | Do I love Christ, his Father, his saints, his words, and ways? |
6049 | Do I renounce my own righteousness, as well as abhor my sins? |
6049 | Do I see salvation is nowhere but in Christ? |
6049 | Do I see that all other ways, whether of sin or self- righteousness, lead to hell? |
6049 | Do I study to please Him, as well as hope to enjoy Him? |
6049 | Do it therefore, and say, why should any thing have my heart but God, but Christ? |
6049 | Do men either Pluck grapes of thorns, or figs or thistles gather? |
6049 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
6049 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?'' |
6049 | Do n''t you hear a noise? |
6049 | Do n''t you remember how undaunted they were when they stood before the judge? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
6049 | Do not I know that I am exalted this day to be king of righteousness, and king of peace? |
6049 | Do not even almost all pursue this world, their lusts and pleasures? |
6049 | Do not most decline these things when they either call for their purses or their persons to help in this and such like works as these? |
6049 | Do not most rather seek to push away our feet from taking hold of the path of life, or else lay snares for us in the way? |
6049 | Do not publicans the same? |
6049 | Do not the rich men o''er you tyrannise; And hale ye to their courts; that worthy name By which you''re call''d do not they blaspheme? |
6049 | Do not these fears hinder thee from profiting in hearing or reading of the Word? |
6049 | Do not these fears keep thee back from laying hold of the promise of salvation by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thou hast had, indeed, any true comfort from the Word and Spirit of God? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee question whether ever thy first fears were wrought by the Holy Spirit of God? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee question whether there was ever a work of grace wrought in thy soul? |
6049 | Do not these fears make thee sometimes think, that it is in vain for thee to wait upon the Lord any longer? |
6049 | Do not these fears tend to the hardening of thy heart, and to the making of thee desperate? |
6049 | Do not these fears tend to the stirring up of blasphemies in thy heart against God? |
6049 | Do not these fears weaken thy heart in prayer? |
6049 | Do stocks or stones answer prayers? |
6049 | Do such fear God? |
6049 | Do they cry out after the Lord Jesus, to save them? |
6049 | Do they cry out of the insufficiency of their own righteousness, as to justification in the sight of God? |
6049 | Do they drink wine in bowls? |
6049 | Do they fear God? |
6049 | Do they fear God? |
6049 | Do they fly from it, as from the face of a deadly serpent? |
6049 | Do they lie too open to their spiritual foes? |
6049 | Do they live in pleasures, and spend their days in wealth? |
6049 | Do they not know the law? |
6049 | Do they savour Christ in his Word, and do they leave all the world for his sake? |
6049 | Do they say that that blood of his which was shed without the gates of Jerusalem, doth not wash away sin, yea, all sin from him that believes? |
6049 | Do they see more worth and merit in one drop of Christ''s blood to save them, than in all the sins of the world to damn them? |
6049 | Do they slight Thy groans, Thy tears, Thy blood, Thy death, Thy resurrection and intercession, Thy second coming again in heavenly glory? |
6049 | Do they slight Thy merits? |
6049 | Do they think that God can not be even with them? |
6049 | Do they think they shall know themselves then, or that they shall rejoice to see themselves in that bliss? |
6049 | Do they want a right frame of spirit? |
6049 | Do they, do you think, fear God? |
6049 | Do we indeed see Christ by the eye of faith? |
6049 | Do we know how our sins provoke God? |
6049 | Do we know the manner and temper of their King? |
6049 | Do we not see That all these things from us a fleeting be? |
6049 | Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? |
6049 | Do we think that the prophet prophesieth here against trees, against the natural cedars of Lebanon? |
6049 | Do ye think that th''scripture saith in vain, The spirit that lusts to hate, doth in you reign? |
6049 | Do you allow their signing with the cross? |
6049 | Do you allow their sprinkling? |
6049 | Do you believe it? |
6049 | Do you come to church, you know what I mean; to the parish church, to hear Divine service? |
6049 | Do you count them pure with the wicked balances? |
6049 | Do you delight to have your hand against every man?'' |
6049 | Do you find this? |
6049 | Do you know him, then? |
6049 | Do you know them now? |
6049 | Do you know them now? |
6049 | Do you know what that willful sin is? |
6049 | Do you know who they are, whence they come, and what is their purpose in setting down before the town of Mansoul? |
6049 | Do you long for the milk of the promises? |
6049 | Do you mean the covenant of the Law, or the covenant to the Gospel? |
6049 | Do you mean, how came I at first to look after the good of my soul? |
6049 | Do you more to the openly prophane, yea, to all wizards and witches in the land? |
6049 | Do you not find sometimes, as if those things were vanquished, which at other times are your perplexity? |
6049 | Do you not hear the prophets, how they press faith in Jesus, and life by faith in him? |
6049 | Do you not know that he is far more above us, than we are above our horse or mule that is without understanding? |
6049 | Do you not know that he may refuse to elect who he will, without abusing of them? |
6049 | Do you not know that they are coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Do you not know them? |
6049 | Do you not remember that one of the Shepherds bid us beware of the Enchanted Ground? |
6049 | Do you not reserve to yourself the liberty of judging what they say? |
6049 | Do you not see that the sceptre is departed from Judah? |
6049 | Do you not see that those things that are spoken of as forerunners of my coming, are accomplished? |
6049 | Do you not see the time that Daniel spake of is accomplished also? |
6049 | Do you not thereby intimate that a man may sometimes do so? |
6049 | Do you not think sometimes of the country from whence you came? |
6049 | Do you not yet bear away with you some of the things that then you were conversant withal? |
6049 | Do you now know, that the resurrection of the body, and glory to follow, is the very quintessence of the gospel of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Do you see yonder hill? |
6049 | Do you so run? |
6049 | Do you so run? |
6049 | Do you so run? |
6049 | Do you suffer? |
6049 | Do you think it is seemly for the church to parrot it against her husband? |
6049 | Do you think it is to say a few words over before or among a people? |
6049 | Do you think that Ephraim would have looked after salvation, had not God first confounded him with the guilt of the sins of his youth? |
6049 | Do you think that God gave the woman her hair, that she might deck herself, and set off her fleshly beauty therewith? |
6049 | Do you think that I am such a fool as to think God can see no further than I? |
6049 | Do you think that I do mean that my righteousness will save me without Christ? |
6049 | Do you think that Manasseh would have regarded the Lord, had He not suffered his enemies to have prevailed against him? |
6049 | Do you think that he that repents, believes, loves, fears, or humbles himself before God, and acts in other graces too, doth always know what he doth? |
6049 | Do you think that love- letters are not desired between lovers? |
6049 | Do you think that that maid''s master would have been troubled at the loss of her, if he had not lost, with her, his gain? |
6049 | Do you think that the woman with her two mites cast in all that she desired to cast into the treasury of God? |
6049 | Do you think that you are stronger than he? |
6049 | Do you think those will ever come thither? |
6049 | Do you think your eyes dazzle? |
6049 | Do you think, I say, that the Lord Jesus did not think before he spake? |
6049 | Do you want spiritual bread? |
6049 | Do you want strength against Satan''s temptations? |
6049 | Do you want strength of grace? |
6049 | Do''st not behold the net? |
6049 | Does Christ dwell in my heart by faith? |
6049 | Does he appear in his glory? |
6049 | Does he honour riches, and power, and wisdom, by descending in one of these classes? |
6049 | Does he take the shield of faith, and helmet of salvation? |
6049 | Does he take the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God? |
6049 | Does thy hand and heart tremble? |
6049 | Dost fly to him that is a Saviour from the wrath to come, for life? |
6049 | Dost keep thine eye upon what thou hast done, And yet hast licence to look on the sun? |
6049 | Dost not thou see that thou art called a thief and a robber, that hast either climbed up to, or crept in at another place than the door? |
6049 | Dost think that such a sinner as thou art shall be heard of God? |
6049 | Dost thou Do well, said God, to be so angry now? |
6049 | Dost thou at some time see some little excellency in Christ? |
6049 | Dost thou believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6049 | Dost thou believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6049 | Dost thou bring forth fruit unto God? |
6049 | Dost thou continually neglect to come to Christ, and usest arguments in thine own heart to satisfy thy soul with so doing? |
6049 | Dost thou count all things but poor, lifeless, empty, vain things, without communion with him? |
6049 | Dost thou count his company more precious than the whole world? |
6049 | Dost thou delight in them? |
6049 | Dost thou delight to sin against plain commands? |
6049 | Dost thou desire to be with them( Prov 24:1)? |
6049 | Dost thou examine thyself whether thou be in the faith or no, having a command in Scripture so to do? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear God? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou fear the Lord? |
6049 | Dost thou find that there is but very little sanctifying grace in thy soul? |
6049 | Dost thou give diligence to make thy calling and election sure, because God commanded it in Scripture? |
6049 | Dost thou hear, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Dost thou hear, barren professor? |
6049 | Dost thou in deed and in truth believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God? |
6049 | Dost thou know by what it is that God makes a man righteous? |
6049 | Dost thou know the God with whom now thou hast to do? |
6049 | Dost thou know what the unpardonable sin, the sin against the Holy Ghost, is? |
6049 | Dost thou know where that is by or with which God makes a man righteous? |
6049 | Dost thou know whether the day of grace will last a week longer or no? |
6049 | Dost thou like these wicked blasphemies? |
6049 | Dost thou love thine own soul? |
6049 | Dost thou love thy friends, dost thou love thine enemies, dost thou love thy family or relations, or the church of God? |
6049 | Dost thou love to be talking of him-- and also to be walking with him? |
6049 | Dost thou mourn for them, pray against them, and hate thyself because of them? |
6049 | Dost thou not inwardly, and with indignation against sin, say, O that I might never, never feel one such motion more? |
6049 | Dost thou not see the very paw of the devil in them; yea, in every one of thy ten confessions? |
6049 | Dost thou not understand me? |
6049 | Dost thou plead by thy righteousness for mercy for thyself? |
6049 | Dost thou profess the name of Christ, and dost thou pretend to be a man departing from iniquity? |
6049 | Dost thou profess the name of Christ, and dost thou pretend to be a man departing from iniquity? |
6049 | Dost thou religiously name the name of Christ? |
6049 | Dost thou see a soul that has the image of God in him? |
6049 | Dost thou see and find in thee iniquity and unrighteousness? |
6049 | Dost thou see in thee all manner of wickedness? |
6049 | Dost thou see that thou art very much void of sanctification? |
6049 | Dost thou see the vileness of thy heart, the fruit of sin? |
6049 | Dost thou see thy sins? |
6049 | Dost thou see thyself in Christ, and canst thou come to God as a member of him? |
6049 | Dost thou see thyself surrounded with enemies? |
6049 | Dost thou show to others how thou lovest righteousness, by taking opportunities to do righteousness? |
6049 | Dost thou slight and scorn the counsels contained in the Scriptures, and continue in so doing? |
6049 | Dost thou so covet more, as not to be Affected with the grace bestowed on thee? |
6049 | Dost thou strive to imitate Christ in all the works of righteousness, which God doth command of thee, and prompt thee forward to? |
6049 | Dost thou study, by all honest and lawful ways, to advance the name, holiness, and majesty of God? |
6049 | Dost thou suffer for righteousness''sake? |
6049 | Dost thou therefore see thyself in such a sad condition as this? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul His fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with thee? |
6049 | Dost thou think that the way that thou art in will lead thee to the strait gate, sinner? |
6049 | Dost thou think, that God hath eyes of flesh, or that he seeth as man sees? |
6049 | Dost thou thus practise, because thou wouldest be taught to do outward acts of righteousness, and because thou wouldest provoke others to do so too? |
6049 | Dost thou understand me, sinful soul? |
6049 | Dost thou walk like one that is bought with a price, even with the price of precious blood? |
6049 | Dost thou want a new heart? |
6049 | Dost thou want faith? |
6049 | Dost thou want grace of any sort? |
6049 | Dost thou want strength against thy lusts, against the devil''s temptations? |
6049 | Dost thou want strength to carry thee through afflictions of body, and afflictions of spirit, through persecutions? |
6049 | Dost thou want the Spirit? |
6049 | Dost thou want wisdom? |
6049 | Dost thou''bear about in thy body the dying of the Lord Jesus?'' |
6049 | Dost want or meat, or drink, or cloth? |
6049 | Doth God find me so, when he seeth that the righteousness of his Son is upon me, being made over to me by an act of his grace? |
6049 | Doth He sometimes give thee some secret persuasions, though scarcely discernible, that thou mayest attain, and get an interest in Him? |
6049 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us with God, to plead with him for us against the devil? |
6049 | Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us, and that of his mere grace and love? |
6049 | Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly and with cold devotions? |
6049 | Doth a wanton eye argue shamefacedness? |
6049 | Doth he entreat you, for fear of you? |
6049 | Doth he hope? |
6049 | Doth he not here, by the lost sheep, mean the poor Publican? |
6049 | Doth he then command that his mercy should be offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Doth he touch thee with is dirty garments; or doth he annoy thee with his stinking breath? |
6049 | Doth his company sweeten all things-- and his absence embitter all things? |
6049 | Doth his posture of standing so like a man condemned offend thee? |
6049 | Doth his promise fail for evermore? |
6049 | Doth iniquity prevail against thee? |
6049 | Doth it look like what hath any coherence with reason or mercy, for a man to abuse his friend? |
6049 | Doth it not suit many a feeble mind? |
6049 | Doth it say,"and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out?" |
6049 | Doth justice call for the blood of that nature that sinned? |
6049 | Doth justice say that this blood, if it be not the blood of One that is really and naturally God, it will not give satisfaction to infinite justice? |
6049 | Doth justice say, that it must not only have satisfaction for sinners, but they that are saved must be also washed and sanctified with this blood? |
6049 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ but by the drawing,& c., of the Father? |
6049 | Doth no man come to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Doth not God by these things ofttimes call our sins to remembrance, and provoke us to amendment of life? |
6049 | Doth not everybody see the folly of such arguings? |
6049 | Doth not the ground groan under you? |
6049 | Doth not the whole course of their way declare it to their face? |
6049 | Doth not thy finding of this in thee cause thee to fly from a depending on thy own doings? |
6049 | Doth not thy heart twitter at being saved? |
6049 | Doth not thy mouth water? |
6049 | Doth she not speak very smoothly, and give you a smile at the end of a sentence? |
6049 | Doth she not wear a great purse by her side; and is not her hand often in it, fingering her money, as if that was her heart''s delight? |
6049 | Doth such a one believe? |
6049 | Doth the law call for satisfaction for our sins? |
6049 | Doth the law command thee to do good, and nothing but good, and that with all thy soul, heart, and delight? |
6049 | Doth the poor Publican stand to vex thee? |
6049 | Doth the text say,"Come?" |
6049 | Doth this prove that baptism is essential to church communion? |
6049 | Doth thy heart and conversation agree with this passage? |
6049 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6049 | Doth unbelief count God a liar? |
6049 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6049 | Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? |
6049 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6049 | Doth unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? |
6049 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6049 | Doth unbelief quench thy graces? |
6049 | Doth wanton talk argue chastity? |
6049 | Doth your hearts fail you? |
6049 | Eighth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Eleventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Elias indeed had a chariot sent him to ride in thither, and went up by it into that holy place( 2 Kings 2:11): but I, poor I, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | Else how can that assembly say AMEN at their prayer or giving of thanks? |
6049 | Enoch is there, because God took him( Gen 5:24), but as for me, how shall I get thither? |
6049 | Enter upon the solemn inquiry, Have I sought the gate? |
6049 | Esau did despise his birthright, saying, What good will this birthright do me? |
6049 | Especially if the judge be just, and knows me altogether, as the God of heaven does? |
6049 | Even Judas could as boldly ask,''Master, is it I''who shall betray Thee? |
6049 | Even thou that hast received the promise of forgiveness: How then can they do it with pleasure, who eat, and forget the Lord? |
6049 | Everybody will cry up the goodness of men; but who is there that is, as he should, affected with the goodness of God? |
6049 | Examine again, Dost thou labour after those qualifications that the Scriptures do describe a child of God by? |
6049 | Examine, Dost thou stand in awe of sinning against God, because he hath in the Scriptures commanded thee to abstain from it? |
6049 | FIRST, How they are to be considered? |
6049 | FOOTNOTE:[ 1]''Who is weak, and I am not weak? |
6049 | Farther, if all be true that this man hath said, how comes it to pass that the subjects of Shaddai are so enslaved in all places where they come? |
6049 | Fearing, that came on pilgrimage out of his parts? |
6049 | Fifth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Fifthly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6049 | First, Art thou indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | First, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6049 | First, Prithee when didst thou begin to be righteous? |
6049 | First, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | First, saith he, If women may praise God together for mercies received for the church of God, or for themselves? |
6049 | First,''Then came the Jews round about him, and said unto him, How long dost thou make us to doubt? |
6049 | For a brother in nature and religion to be so? |
6049 | For a man to be content with this kind of faith, and to look to go to salvation by it, what to God is a greater provocation? |
6049 | For as truly as thou sayest of thy fruitless tree, Cut it down, why doth it cumber the ground? |
6049 | For he asketh me very devoutly,''Whether any unbaptized persons were concerned in these epistles?'' |
6049 | For how can a man act righteousness but from a principle of righteousness? |
6049 | For how can a man repent of that of which he hath neither sight nor sense? |
6049 | For how can it otherwise be, since there is holiness and justice in God? |
6049 | For how can the servant of this my Lord talk with this my Lord? |
6049 | For how can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord? |
6049 | For if he did not heed who himself had baptized, much less did he heed who were baptized by others? |
6049 | For if it be the initiating ordinance, it entereth them into the church: What church? |
6049 | For if sin be so dreadful a thing as to wring the heart of the Son of God, how shall a poor wretched sinner be able to bear it? |
6049 | For if the most potent parts of the soul are engaged in their service, what, think you, do the more inferior do? |
6049 | For if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and sinners appear? |
6049 | For if they reject the word of the Lord,"what wisdom is in them?" |
6049 | For my part, I am out of charity with myself; who then should be in love with me? |
6049 | For of what should a man repent? |
6049 | For should the saints enjoy all this But for a certain time, O, how would they their mark then miss, And at this thing repine? |
6049 | For so the question implies--''What will a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | For some cause he was treated with great liberality for those times; the extent of it may be seen by one justice asking him,''Is your God Beelzebub?'' |
6049 | For such a man will thus conclude, that since the Creator of all is with him, what but creatures are there to be against him? |
6049 | For the fear of God is to stand in awe of him, but how can that be done if we do not set him before us? |
6049 | For the first of these, namely,''WHAT OR WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6049 | For they are now profane to amazement; and sometimes I have thought one thing, and sometimes another; that is, why God should suffer it so to be? |
6049 | For to what purpose should a man desire, or what fruits will desire bring him whose desires shall not be granted? |
6049 | For upon this one question, Am I come, or, am I not? |
6049 | For was it not pleasant to this hypocrite, think you, to speak thus well of himself at this time? |
6049 | For what am I thus tormented? |
6049 | For what bondage greater than to be kept in blindness? |
6049 | For what did you bring yourself into this condition? |
6049 | For what glory is it, if when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? |
6049 | For what greater dignity can be put upon man''s righteousness, than to admit it? |
6049 | For what is God''s design in the work of conviction for sin, and in his awakening of the conscience about it? |
6049 | For what is the ground of despair, but a conceit that sin has shut the soul out of all interest in happiness? |
6049 | For what journey, I pray you? |
6049 | For what men? |
6049 | For what pain of death was his body capable of, when his soul was separate from it? |
6049 | For what portion of God is there,''for that sin,''from above, and what inheritance of the Almighty from on high?'' |
6049 | For what saith the Scripture? |
6049 | For what will my weak and newly converted brethren think of it, but that I was not so strong indeed as I was in word? |
6049 | For what''s the life of man? |
6049 | For what? |
6049 | For when, thinks the enemy, will these fools be so desirous to sit down, as when they are weary? |
6049 | For wherein can grace or love more appear than in his laying down his life for us? |
6049 | For wherein shall it be known here, that I and thy people have found grace in thy sight, is it not in that thou goest with us? |
6049 | For who can bear or grapple with the wrath of God? |
6049 | For who can do righteousness without he be principled so to do? |
6049 | For who can endure a boar in a vineyard; a man of sin in a holy temple; or a dragon in heaven? |
6049 | For who doth not perceive, but when those that sit aloft are vile, and corrupt themselves, they corrupt the whole region and country where they are? |
6049 | For who is prouder than you professors? |
6049 | For who wouldest thou have it; for another, or for thyself? |
6049 | For whom can so precious an inheritance be intended? |
6049 | For why are these things thus recorded, but to show to sinners what he can do, to the praise and glory of his grace? |
6049 | For why may not God be merciful, and why may not God be just? |
6049 | For zeal, where is that also? |
6049 | For''hope that is seen, is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? |
6049 | For''what good is there to the owners thereof, saving the beholding of them with their eyes?'' |
6049 | For, First, Is it better that thou receive judgment in this world, or that thou stay for it to be condemned with the ungodly in the next? |
6049 | For, Was the first covenant made with the first Adam? |
6049 | For, What iniquity is, who knows not? |
6049 | For, did Abel offer? |
6049 | For, pray, what was the flock, and who Christ''s sheep under the law, but the house and people of Israel? |
6049 | For, while a man remains faithless and ignorant of the gospel, to what doth his obedient temper of mind incline? |
6049 | Fourth, Art thou come to the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | Fourth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Fourthly, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6049 | Friend, I did not ask thee why the Jews did put him to death? |
6049 | Friend, Who hath despised the day of small things? |
6049 | Friend, dost thou speak this as from thy own knowledge, or did any other tell thee so? |
6049 | Friend, if thou canst fit thyself, what need hast thou of Christ? |
6049 | Friend, what harm is it to join a dog and a wolf together? |
6049 | Friend, what is this to the purpose? |
6049 | Friend, whither away? |
6049 | Friend, will the law shew a man that his righteousness is sin and dung? |
6049 | Friends, Solomon saith, that''The desire of the slothful killeth him''; and if so, what will slothfulness itself do to those that entertain it? |
6049 | From what? |
6049 | From whence come wars and fights, come they not hence, Ev''n from th''inordinate concupiscence That in your members prompts to variance? |
6049 | Further, I make a question upon three scriptures, Whether all the saints, even in the primitive times, were baptized with water? |
6049 | Further, suppose I should grant this groundless notion, Were not the Jews in Old Testament times to enter the church by circumcision? |
6049 | GREAT- HEART, What could they say against it? |
6049 | Gaal mocked at Abimelech, and said, Who is Abimelech that we should serve him? |
6049 | Gentlemen, whence came you, and whither go you? |
6049 | Go away? |
6049 | Go to him, did I say? |
6049 | God charged our sins upon Christ, and that in their guilt and burden, what remaineth but that the charge was real or feigned? |
6049 | God gave testimony of him by signs and wonders--''Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? |
6049 | God gave them intimation of a better country, and their minds did cleave to it with desires of it; and what then? |
6049 | God is true, his Word is true; and to help us to hope in him, how many times has he fulfilled it to others, and that before our eyes? |
6049 | God''s people wish well to the souls of others, and wilt not thou wish well to thy own? |
6049 | God, or the Pharisee? |
6049 | Good morrow, my good neighbour, Mr. Attentive; whither are you walking so early this morning? |
6049 | Grant it; yet what law takes notice of the plea of one who doth professedly act as an enemy? |
6049 | Guilt and despair, what are they? |
6049 | Hackney, April 1850 THE GREATNESS OF THE SOUL, AND UNSPEAKABLENESS OF THE LOSS THEREOF''OR WHAT SHALL A MAN GIVE IN EXCHANGE FOR HIS SOUL?'' |
6049 | Had I ever, in all my lifetime, one sinful thought passed through my heart since I was born; yea or no? |
6049 | Had he injured man at all? |
6049 | Had he no place clean? |
6049 | Had he not also now hold of the shield of faith? |
6049 | Had he notice beforehand, and warning of the danger? |
6049 | Had he then such a good trade, for all he was such a bad man? |
6049 | Had not now these men desires that were mighty? |
6049 | Had our sins betrayed us into and under Satan''s slavery? |
6049 | Had sin set us at an indefinite distance from God? |
6049 | Had this Christ of God, our friend, given all he had to save us, had not his love been wonderful? |
6049 | Had you ever any talk with him about it? |
6049 | Had you no talk with him before you came out? |
6049 | Had you not thoughts of leaving off praying? |
6049 | Has God forbidden thee? |
6049 | Has He given it to thee, my reader? |
6049 | Has he adopted us into his family? |
6049 | Has he chosen that day? |
6049 | Has he concealed any of thy righteousness, or has he secretly informed against thee that thou art an hypocrite, and superstitious? |
6049 | Has he crossed thee in all thou puttest thy hand unto? |
6049 | Has he on the breastplate of righteousness? |
6049 | Has he that need of you, that we are sure you have of him? |
6049 | Has man given himself for sin? |
6049 | Has man lain at wait for opportunities for sin? |
6049 | Has man, that he might enjoy his sin, brought himself to a morsel of bread? |
6049 | Has man, when he has found his sin, pursued it with all his heart? |
6049 | Has sin wounded, bruised thy soul, and broken thy bones? |
6049 | Has the enmity of the human heart by nature changed? |
6049 | Hast been among the thieves? |
6049 | Hast no affection but what is brutish? |
6049 | Hast no judgment? |
6049 | Hast no soul? |
6049 | Hast quite forgot how thou wast wo nt to pray, And cry out for forgiveness night and day? |
6049 | Hast thou Jesus Christ for thine Advocate? |
6049 | Hast thou a cause moving thee to come? |
6049 | Hast thou a wife and children? |
6049 | Hast thou a wife? |
6049 | Hast thou also considered the justness of the Judge? |
6049 | Hast thou an heart to be sorry for this wickedness? |
6049 | Hast thou an heart to be sorry for this wickedness? |
6049 | Hast thou any enticing touches of the Word of God upon thy mind? |
6049 | Hast thou any lease of thy life? |
6049 | Hast thou any lease of thy life? |
6049 | Hast thou been a witch? |
6049 | Hast thou been digg''d about and dunged too, Will neither patience nor yet dressing do? |
6049 | Hast thou been with him, and prayed him to plead thy cause, and cried unto him to undertake for thee? |
6049 | Hast thou committed it? |
6049 | Hast thou desired him to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?" |
6049 | Hast thou entertained him? |
6049 | Hast thou escaped, O my soul, from the net of the infernal fowler? |
6049 | Hast thou escaped? |
6049 | Hast thou four children? |
6049 | Hast thou fruit becoming the care of God, the protection of God, the wisdom of God, the patience and husbandry of God? |
6049 | Hast thou fulfilled the whole law, and not offended in one point? |
6049 | Hast thou given thyself to the Lord? |
6049 | Hast thou heart- shaken apprehensions when deep sleep is upon thee, of hell, death, and judgment to come? |
6049 | Hast thou in thee the spirit of adoption? |
6049 | Hast thou lost thy friend for the sake of thy profession? |
6049 | Hast thou made it thy business to give unto God the things that are God''s, and unto Caesar the things that are his, according as God has commanded? |
6049 | Hast thou no conscience? |
6049 | Hast thou no sins? |
6049 | Hast thou not cursed them in thine heart many a time? |
6049 | Hast thou not known? |
6049 | Hast thou not reason? |
6049 | Hast thou purged thyself from the pollutions and motions of sin that dwell in the flesh, and work in thy own members? |
6049 | Hast thou received the spirit of adoption? |
6049 | Hast thou seen thy state to be desperate, if the Lord Jesus doth not undertake to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Hast thou taken delight in being defrauded and beguiled? |
6049 | Hast thou that''godly sorrow''that''worketh repentance to salvation, not to be repented of?'' |
6049 | Hast thou then fled, or dost thou indeed fly to it? |
6049 | Hast thou valued sin at a higher rate than thy soul, than God, Christ, angels, saints, and communion with them in eternal blessedness and glory? |
6049 | Hast thou waited on the Lord so long as the Lord hath waited on thee? |
6049 | Hast thou well improved what thou hast received already? |
6049 | Hast thou''renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in craftiness?'' |
6049 | Hast thou, for the sake of thy faith and profession thereof, lost thy part in the world? |
6049 | Hast thou, thinkest thou, found anything so good as Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Hast thou, through desires, betaken thyself to thy heels? |
6049 | Hath God been so bountiful in making out himself about the supper, that few or none that own ordinances scruple it? |
6049 | Hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
6049 | Hath God required these things at your hands? |
6049 | Hath God showed thee that thou art by nature under the curse of his law? |
6049 | Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and Hell? |
6049 | Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and hell? |
6049 | Hath Jesus performed righteousness to cover us, and spilled blood to wash us? |
6049 | Hath he been digging about thee? |
6049 | Hath he been dunging of thee? |
6049 | Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies?" |
6049 | Hath he said it, and shall he not bring it to pass?" |
6049 | Hath he spoken, and shall not make it good?'' |
6049 | Hath it not a most vehement flame? |
6049 | Hath it not hindered many in their pilgrimage? |
6049 | Hath not Moses told them the danger of living in sin? |
6049 | Hath not man''s wisdom interposed to darken this part of God''s counsel? |
6049 | Hath not the least creature that hath life, more of God in it than these? |
6049 | Hath not this God great love for sinners? |
6049 | Hath that Christ that was with God the Father before the world was, no other body but his church? |
6049 | Hath the God of wisdom set them on foot among us? |
6049 | Hath the Holy Ghost, hath the world, or hath thy conscience? |
6049 | Hath the ministration of God no glory? |
6049 | Have I been grafted into Christ? |
6049 | Have I such an argument, in all my little book? |
6049 | Have I the right work of God on my soul? |
6049 | Have it? |
6049 | Have not I told thee already that there is no such thing as a ceasing to be? |
6049 | Have not thy groans gone up to heaven from every corner of thy house? |
6049 | Have they at no time, think you, convictions of sin, and so consequently fears that their state is dangerous? |
6049 | Have they faith? |
6049 | Have they hope? |
6049 | Have they lost a good frame of heart? |
6049 | Have they lost their peace with the world? |
6049 | Have they lost their spiritual defence? |
6049 | Have they no more peace with this world? |
6049 | Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
6049 | Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
6049 | Have they not had my ministers and servants sent unto them and coming as from me? |
6049 | Have they not the means of grace? |
6049 | Have they pardon of sin? |
6049 | Have they righteousness? |
6049 | Have they strength to do the work of God in their generations, or any other thing that God would have them do? |
6049 | Have they that shall be saved, awakenings about their state by nature? |
6049 | Have they that shall be saved, faith? |
6049 | Have thy sins corrupted thy wounds, and made them putrefy and stink? |
6049 | Have we comfort, or consolation? |
6049 | Have we not talked of what he did at the Red Sea, and in the land of Ham many years ago, and have we forgot him now? |
6049 | Have we sinned? |
6049 | Have we the Spirit, or the fruits thereof? |
6049 | Have we the faith of this? |
6049 | Have ye not read Of Job, how patiently he suffered? |
6049 | Have ye not seen in him what was God''s end; How he doth pity and great love extend? |
6049 | Have you any more things to ask me about my beginning to come on pilgrimage? |
6049 | Have you commended your apprehensions soberly and submissively to those you call Independents and Presbyters? |
6049 | Have you felt the alarm in your soul under a sense of sin and judgment? |
6049 | Have you forgot the close, the milk house, the stable, the barn, and the like, where God did visit your soul? |
6049 | Have you learned to cry,''My Father?'' |
6049 | Have you lost any of your cattle, or what is the matter? |
6049 | Have you never a hill Mizar to remember? |
6049 | Have you not heard many complain that they are weary of church- communion, because of church contention? |
6049 | Have you not"in your flock a male?" |
6049 | Have you soberly, and submissively commended your apprehensions to those congregations in London, that are not of your persuasion in the case in hand? |
6049 | Have you the staggers? |
6049 | Have you these? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | Having these to look to, what should stagger our faith, or deject our hope? |
6049 | He also expects this at our hands, saying,"Who will rise up for me against the evil doers? |
6049 | He answered me in a great chafe, What would the devil do for company, if it were not for such as I am?'' |
6049 | He asked again if they had aught to say for themselves, why the sentence that they confessed that they had deserved should not be passed upon them? |
6049 | He asked me if I had a family? |
6049 | He asked me why? |
6049 | He asked them, Why? |
6049 | He begins with this question, Whether women fearing God may meet to pray together, and whether it be lawful for them so to do? |
6049 | He can not strut, vapour, and swagger as thou dost? |
6049 | He erreth in A CIRCUMSTANCE, thou errest in A SUBSTANCE; who must bear these errors? |
6049 | He feared God; and what then? |
6049 | He forsakes him--''My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
6049 | He hath given us his Son,"How shall he not with him also freely give us all things?" |
6049 | He hath this Abishai, and that Abishai, that presently steps in against him, saying, Shall not this rebel''s sins destroy him in hell? |
6049 | He imagined that he could bear these small afflictions with patience; but''a wounded spirit who can bear?'' |
6049 | He is indeed the great deliverer; but what is a deliverer to them that never saw themselves in bondage, as was said before? |
6049 | He is near that justifieth me; who will contend with me? |
6049 | He is not ashamed of us, though now in heaven; why should we be ashamed of him before this adulterous and sinful generation? |
6049 | He is thy Creator; is it not seemly for creatures to fear and reverence their Creator? |
6049 | He is thy Father; is it not seemly for children to reverence and fear their Father? |
6049 | He is thy King; is it not seemly for subjects to fear and reverence their King? |
6049 | He is unwearied in his pleading for us; why should we faint and be dismayed while we plead for him? |
6049 | He knocked, therefore, more than once or twice, saying--"May I now enter here? |
6049 | He loved to live high, but his hands refused to labour; and what else can the end of such an one be but that which the wise man saith? |
6049 | He never said to him,''Why hast thou done so?'' |
6049 | He pleads for us before the holy angels; why should not we plead for him before princes? |
6049 | He pleads for us to save our souls; why should not we plead for him to sanctify his name? |
6049 | He pleads for us, against fallen angels; why should we not plead for him against sinful vanities? |
6049 | He pleads for us, though our cause is bad; why should not we plead for him, since his cause is good? |
6049 | He ran away, you say, but whither did he run? |
6049 | He ran to him, he kneeled down to him, and asked, and that before a multitude,''Good master, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?'' |
6049 | He said that I was ignorant, and did not understand the Scriptures; for how, said he, can you understand them when you know not the original Greek? |
6049 | He said unto me, By what scripture? |
6049 | He said, How then? |
6049 | He said, which of the Scriptures do you understand literally? |
6049 | He saith himself, they that come to him,& c., shall find rest unto their souls; hast thou found rest in him for thy soul? |
6049 | He saith not as the hypocrite,"Because I am innocent, surely his anger shall turn from me"( Jer 2:35); or"What have we spoken so much against thee?" |
6049 | He sanctified us with his blood; but why should the Father have thanks for this? |
6049 | He shall take of mine; What is that? |
6049 | He that feareth not to be burned in the fire, how will he fear the heat of weather? |
6049 | He that hath by faith received the spirit of holiness, shall not he be holy? |
6049 | He that hath his word shall then speak it faithfully, for''what is the chaff to the wheat? |
6049 | He that hath seen me, hath seen the Father; and how sayest thou then, Shew us the Father? |
6049 | He that is ungodly, hath a want of righteousness, even of the inward righteousness of works: but what must become of him? |
6049 | He that opened stepped out after him, and said, Thou trembling one, what wantest thou? |
6049 | He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? |
6049 | He that was in darkness, or he that was in light? |
6049 | He that was in everlasting joy, or he that was in everlasting torments? |
6049 | He that was in hell, or he that was in heaven? |
6049 | He was God, a Creator, then; and is he not God now? |
6049 | He was to offer it, and how? |
6049 | He was wroth: and why? |
6049 | He was, and was his Son, before he was revealed--''What is his name, and what is his Son''s name, if thou canst tell?'' |
6049 | He will receive perfection, immortality, heaven, and glory; and what is folded up in these things, who can tell? |
6049 | He will reckon them up so fast, and so fully, that thou wilt cry, Lord, when did I do this? |
6049 | He, in whose heart the Holy Spirit has raised the solemn inquiry, What must I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | Hear, did I say? |
6049 | Heartily spoken; but how did he perform his promise? |
6049 | Hence David said again,''Whom have I in heaven but thee?'' |
6049 | Hence David, when he speaks of heaven, says,''Whom have I in heaven but thee?'' |
6049 | Hence he saith,''Is Christ divided,''or separate from his servants? |
6049 | Hence it follows that Christ will be ashamed of some; but why not ashamed of others? |
6049 | Hence see what it is to grieve the Spirit of God: for He only is the Comforter: and if He withdraws His influences, who or what can comfort us? |
6049 | Hence such a time is rightly said to be a time to try us, or to find out what we are, and is there no good in this? |
6049 | Her plagues are death, and mourning, and famine, and fire( Rev 18:8); are these things to be overlooked? |
6049 | Her things are slain, and stink already, by the weapons that are made mention of before; what then will her carcase do? |
6049 | Here is no consideration of what capacity the people might be of, that were to be persecuted; but what matters what they are? |
6049 | Here is nought but open war, acts of hostility, and shameful rebellion, on the sinner''s side; and what delight can God take in that? |
6049 | Here now is a man an hungered, what must he feed upon? |
6049 | His cause; what is his cause? |
6049 | His fee- who shall pay him his fee? |
6049 | His song was this: The Lord is only my support, And he that doth me feed; How can I then want anything Whereof I stand in need? |
6049 | His, or the Pharisee''s? |
6049 | Hold, saith the apostle; stay a little here; first remember this, Is it meet to say unto God, What doest thou? |
6049 | Honest asked his landlord, if there were any store of good people in the town? |
6049 | Honest asked, why it was said that the Saviour is said to come''out of a dry ground''; and also, that''He had no form or comeliness in him?'' |
6049 | Honest( when they were all sat down) asked Mr. Contrite, and the rest, in what posture their town was at present? |
6049 | Honest, interrupting of him, said, Did you see the two men asleep in the arbour? |
6049 | House and land, trades and honours, places and preferments, what are they to salvation? |
6049 | How are all things out of order? |
6049 | How are those treated in this world who are entitled to so glorious, so exalted, so eternal, and unchangeable an inheritance in the world to come? |
6049 | How art thou when thou thinkest that thou thyself hast grace? |
6049 | How believe you, as touching the resurrection of the dead? |
6049 | How came that about, since you were now reformed? |
6049 | How came that about? |
6049 | How came that to pass? |
6049 | How came they by their faith? |
6049 | How came they white? |
6049 | How came you to think at first of so doing as you do now? |
6049 | How camest thou by the burden at first? |
6049 | How camest thou to see thy need of this righteousness? |
6049 | How can I judge amiss, when I judge as I feel? |
6049 | How can I then be accepted by a holy and sin- abhorring God? |
6049 | How can a sense of thy own baseness, of the vileness of thy heart, and of the holiness of God, stand with such a carriage? |
6049 | How can he be a victor over himself that is led up and down by the nose by his own passions? |
6049 | How can he know so much as the extent of the love of Christ in common? |
6049 | How can he that carrieth himself basely in the sight of men, think he yet well behaveth himself in the sight of God? |
6049 | How can it possibly be? |
6049 | How can such poor women as we hold out in a way so full of troubles as this way is, without a friend and defender? |
6049 | How can that man say, I love God, who from his very heart shrinketh from trusting in him? |
6049 | How can they have any to Godward that are enemies to him in their minds by wicked works? |
6049 | How can they pray or make conscience of the duty that fear not God? |
6049 | How can those that are accustomed to do evil, do that which is commanded in this particular? |
6049 | How can we judge of a preacher''s good will, but by''peace on his lips?'' |
6049 | How canst thou find in thy heart to set thyself against grace, against such grace as offereth mercy to thee? |
6049 | How could he join in their thanks, and praises, and blessings of him for ever and ever, in whose favour, mercy, and grace, they are not concerned? |
6049 | How did Abraham groan for Ishmael? |
6049 | How did he break it? |
6049 | How did he ply it with Christ against Joshua the high- priest? |
6049 | How did he ply16 it against that good man Job, if possibly he might have obtained his destruction in hell- fire? |
6049 | How did this Christ bring in redemption for man? |
6049 | How do men come by this righteousness and everlasting life? |
6049 | How do the heirs to immortality conduct themselves in such a prospect? |
6049 | How do they seek to stifle them? |
6049 | How do they show themselves to be true under the first of these? |
6049 | How do they show themselves to be true under the second? |
6049 | How do you know that these sayings are true? |
6049 | How do you know that? |
6049 | How do you mean? |
6049 | How dost thou believe? |
6049 | How dost thou find them in outward trials? |
6049 | How dost thou find thyself in the inward workings of sin? |
6049 | How dost thou like being saved? |
6049 | How dost thou like the discovery of that which thou thinkest is grace in other men? |
6049 | How dost thou like thyself, as considered possessed with a body of sin, and as feeling and finding that sin worketh in thy members? |
6049 | How dost thou show before men the truth of thy turning to God? |
6049 | How doth God the Son save thee? |
6049 | How doth that appear? |
6049 | How far do you think he may be before? |
6049 | How far is it thither? |
6049 | How far may such an one go? |
6049 | How far might they go on in pilgrimage in their day, since they notwithstanding were thus miserably cast away? |
6049 | How far? |
6049 | How frenzily he imagines? |
6049 | How hard are these things? |
6049 | How he carried it? |
6049 | How if I never see the sun rise more? |
6049 | How if the first voice that rings to- morrow morning in my heavy ears be,''Arise, ye dead, and come to judgment?'' |
6049 | How if you have over- stood the time of mercy? |
6049 | How ill- favouredly do they look, that have their nose and lips eaten off with the canker? |
6049 | How is iniquity in thine eye, when severed from the guilt and punishment that attends it? |
6049 | How is it now? |
6049 | How is it, dost thou show most mercy to thy dog, 36 or to thine enemy, to thy swine, or to the poor? |
6049 | How is it, then, that thou art so quickly turned aside? |
6049 | How is it, then, that thou hast run away from thy king? |
6049 | How is that? |
6049 | How is that? |
6049 | How is the word buried under the clods of their hearts for months, yea years together? |
6049 | How is this great object to be accomplished? |
6049 | How it appears that they that are saved, are saved by grace? |
6049 | How long must this be my state? |
6049 | How long will Antichrist still hold up his head in this country? |
6049 | How long? |
6049 | How look thy duties in thine eyes, I mean thy duties which thou doest in the service of God? |
6049 | How many Mahomet? |
6049 | How many are there in the world that pray for their children, and cry for them, and are ready to die[ for them]? |
6049 | How many are there in the world whose heart Satan hath filled with a belief that their state and condition for another world is good? |
6049 | How many are there that do not know that man consisteth of a body made of dust, and of an immortal soul? |
6049 | How many good souls has he driven to these conclusions, who afterwards have been made to unsay all again? |
6049 | How many have they in all ages hanged, burned, starved, drowned, racked, dismembered, and murdered, both openly and in secret? |
6049 | How many have, in all ages, been kept from coming to God aright by the terrors of the world? |
6049 | How many in Israel were destroyed for that which Aaron, Gideon, and Manasseh, unworthily did in their day? |
6049 | How many pay undue respect to buildings in which public prayer is offered up? |
6049 | How many poor souls hath Bonner to answer for, think you, and several filthy blind priests? |
6049 | How many prayers, sighs, and tears, are there wrung from their hearts upon this account? |
6049 | How many seasons have you spent in vain? |
6049 | How many sermons and other mercies did I, of my patience, afford you? |
6049 | How many souls do you think Balaam, with his deceit, will have to answer for? |
6049 | How many souls have they been the means of destroying by their ignorance and corrupt doctrine? |
6049 | How many struggling fits had Israel with God in the wilderness? |
6049 | How many the Pharisees, that hired the soldiers to say the disciples stole away Jesus? |
6049 | How many times are some men put in mind of death by sickness upon themselves, by graves, by the death of others? |
6049 | How many times are they put in mind of hell by reading the Word, by lashes of conscience, and by some that go roaring in despair out of this world? |
6049 | How many times did they declare that there they feared him not? |
6049 | How many times hast thou had heaven and salvation offered to thee freely, wouldst thou but break thy league with this great enemy of God? |
6049 | How many times have you disappointed me? |
6049 | How many times, think you, did Israel stand in need of pardon, from Egypt, until they came to Canaan? |
6049 | How many times, when Israel provoked the Lord to anger, did he yet defer to destroy them? |
6049 | How much hast thou been grieved to see others break God''s law, and to find temptations in thyself to do it? |
6049 | How much hast thou been grieved to see others break God''s law, and to find temptations in thyself to do it? |
6049 | How much hath the peace of Christians been broken by an uncharitable interpretation of words and actions? |
6049 | How much more then is he merciful and gracious, even in but mentioning terms of reconciliation? |
6049 | How much more then must we needs be at loss as to the fullness of the knowledge of the love of Christ? |
6049 | How much more then when light shall be against light in three ranks? |
6049 | How much more will it perplex thee to think, that thou hadst not a care of thy own? |
6049 | How much of God dost thou think is in these things? |
6049 | How needful is it, then, that we endeavour''the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace?'' |
6049 | How now, good fellow, whither away after this burdened manner? |
6049 | How now, thought I, is this the sign of an upright soul, to desire to serve God, when all is taken from him? |
6049 | How often didst thou hear us tell thee of these things? |
6049 | How often have they sustained[ thee in] thy hunger, clothed thy nakedness? |
6049 | How rapid were his thoughts--''Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?'' |
6049 | How rich was Jesus Christ? |
6049 | How say you to these things, Do you make an open profession of them without dissembling? |
6049 | How sayest thou, sinner? |
6049 | How sayest thou, young comer, is not this the case with thy soul? |
6049 | How shall I deliver thee, Israel? |
6049 | How shall I make thee as Admah? |
6049 | How shall I set thee as Zeboim? |
6049 | How shall he be brought, wrought, and made, to be out of love with it? |
6049 | How shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious? |
6049 | How shall they come then? |
6049 | How shall this be proved? |
6049 | How shall we escape,''if we turn away from him that speaketh from heaven?'' |
6049 | How shall we get to be sharers thereof? |
6049 | How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" |
6049 | How shall we, who are impure and unclean by nature and by practice, draw near unto him who is so infinitely holy? |
6049 | How should I escape being by them torn in pieces? |
6049 | How should he be the Christ, and yet come out of Galilee, out of which ariseth no prophet? |
6049 | How should he contain hopes of life? |
6049 | How should the Lord put any trust in thee? |
6049 | How should the desires depart from it with that fervency as they should? |
6049 | How should the soul abhor it as it should? |
6049 | How should we strive? |
6049 | How shouldest thou rejoice, that the same faith should dwell both in thy parents and thee? |
6049 | How sick art thou of sin? |
6049 | How so? |
6049 | How so? |
6049 | How stands it between God and your soul now? |
6049 | How stands the country affected towards you? |
6049 | How then can God put any trust in such people, or how can remission be extended to us for the sake of that? |
6049 | How then can any good be done to those whose conscience is worse than that? |
6049 | How then can good fruit grow from such a root, the root of all evil? |
6049 | How then can his desires be granted, who himself refused to have them answered? |
6049 | How then can it be but that light should be against light in this house, and that in a military posture? |
6049 | How then can the world judge of the condition of the saints? |
6049 | How then can they do anything with that godly reverence of his holy Majesty that is and must be essential to every good work? |
6049 | How then can this sabbath now be kept? |
6049 | How then can we be hindered of our hope? |
6049 | How then hath every man Christ, or the light of Christ within him? |
6049 | How then shall I look Him in the face at His coming? |
6049 | How then shall a bad man, any bad man, the best bad man upon earth, think to set himself by his best things just in the sight of God? |
6049 | How then shall it be thought that they should be so silly, to turn a company of weak women loose to be abused by the fallen angels? |
6049 | How then shall the conscience of the burdened sinner by rightly quieted, if he perceiveth not the grace of God? |
6049 | How then should his brethren that survive him, and that tread in his very steps, approve of the sentence that by this book is pronounced against him? |
6049 | How then should they do good? |
6049 | How then will it be with thee? |
6049 | How then, if God should cast you into Turkey, where Mahomet reigns as Lord? |
6049 | How then, may some say, doth it become ours? |
6049 | How then? |
6049 | How then? |
6049 | How then? |
6049 | How therefore, is the knowledge of the true Christ to be attained unto, that we may be saved by him? |
6049 | How ungainly he carries it under convictions, counsels, and his present apprehension of things? |
6049 | How was Esau served for staying too long before he came for the blessing? |
6049 | How was Isaac and Rebecca grieved for the miscarriage of Esau? |
6049 | How was Lot''s wife served for running lazily, and for giving but one look behind her, after the things she left in Sodom? |
6049 | How was the bloody spirit of Saul trod down, when David met him at the mouth of the cave, and also at the hill Hachilah( 1 Sam 24; 26)? |
6049 | How was the hostile spirit of Esau trod down of God, when he came out to meet his poor naked brother, with no less than four hundred armed men? |
6049 | How will men that have before them a little honour, a little profit, a little pleasure, strive? |
6049 | How will the heavens echo of joy, when the Bride, the Lamb''s wife, shall come to dwell with her husband for ever? |
6049 | How will they shine? |
6049 | How will you describe right fear? |
6049 | How, if He had come, having taken a commandment from His Father to damn you, and to send you to the devils in Hell? |
6049 | How, not tempted? |
6049 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that hath not felt the burden of the wrath of God? |
6049 | How, then, can he tell what it is to be saved that never was sensible of the sorrows of the one, nor distressed with the pains of the other? |
6049 | How, then, canst thou stand clear from guilt in thy soul who neglectest to act faith in the blood of the Lamb? |
6049 | How, then, could they object that the time was not come for Christ to be born? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | How? |
6049 | I a m under the force of it, and this is my continual cry, What shall I render to the Lord for all the benefits which he has bestowed upon me? |
6049 | I also ask, in what charger our gospel passover is now dressed up and set before the people? |
6049 | I am Joseph your own brother; And doth my father live? |
6049 | I am baptiz''d, what then? |
6049 | I am not of the number of them that say,"What profit should we have if we pray unto God?" |
6049 | I am sorry that I was so foolish, and am made to wonder that I am not now as Lot''s wife; for wherein was the difference betwixt her sin and mine? |
6049 | I am the basest of creatures, I could even spew at myself? |
6049 | I answer, Art thou sensible that thou hast an action commenced against thee in that high court of justice that is above? |
6049 | I answer, Hast thou well considered the nature of the crime wherewith thou standest charged at the bar of God? |
6049 | I answer, though I have not asserted it, yet let me ask, which is more odious, hell or sin? |
6049 | I ask again, wherein dost thou think the blessedness of heaven consists? |
6049 | I ask thee how it looks, and how thou likest it, suppose there were no guilt or punishment to attend thy love to, or commission of it? |
6049 | I ask, Hast thou entertained him so to be? |
6049 | I ask, What should it do there before, or to what purpose is it there, if it be not acted? |
6049 | I ask, Why has the world such hold of thee? |
6049 | I ask, and wherefore then served the wood by which the sacrifices were burned? |
6049 | I ask, did he tell you so? |
6049 | I ask, then, if there were ever anything that had a being antecedent to, or before God? |
6049 | I asked her if she was sick? |
6049 | I asked him further, how that man''s righteousness could be of that efficacy to justify another before God? |
6049 | I asked him wherein? |
6049 | I believe so; but pray tell me, did any of her other children hearken to her words, so as to be bettered in their souls thereby? |
6049 | I believe that Christ will save me; what hurt is this to my neighbour? |
6049 | I come now to the second thing into which we are to inquire, and that is, WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN? |
6049 | I come now to the third question, namely, But why should we strive? |
6049 | I deem I have half a guess of you; your name is Old Honesty, is it not? |
6049 | I doubt I do not come as I should do? |
6049 | I have also asked those that pass by the way,"if they saw him whom my soul loveth,"and if they had anything to communicate to me? |
6049 | I have given Him my faith, and sworn my allegiance to Him; how, then, can I go back from this, and not be hanged as a traitor? |
6049 | I have often been amazed in my mind at this text, for how could Jesus Christ have said such a word if he had not been able to perform it? |
6049 | I have told you, that this, though it were granted, cometh not up to the question; for we ask not,''whether they were so baptized? |
6049 | I know the wise men of this world, of whom there are many, will say as to what I now press you unto; Who can shew us any good in it? |
6049 | I love Christ because he will save me; what hurt is this to any? |
6049 | I marvel what injury the Lord Jesus hath done this man, that he should have such indifferent thoughts of coming to God by him? |
6049 | I might further add, how often have we agreed in our judgment? |
6049 | I pray let me hear your judgment of extortion, what it is, and when committed? |
6049 | I promise you this was enough to discourage; but did they make an end here? |
6049 | I query, is it possible to come up to the pattern for justification with God? |
6049 | I remember he alleged many a Scripture, but those I valued not; the Scriptures, thought I, what are they? |
6049 | I remember the question that God asked Job,"Where,"saith he,"wast thou when I laid the foundation of the earth? |
6049 | I remember what Abner said to Asahel,"Turn thee aside, from following me; wherefore should I smite thee to the ground? |
6049 | I said, Are they infallible? |
6049 | I say again, how will they strive for this? |
6049 | I say again, if our love is so slender to our own souls, can any think that it should be more full to the souls of others? |
6049 | I say again, should any so conclude hence, would not all experience prove him void of truth? |
6049 | I say again, tell me before the first blow is given, wilt thou turn? |
6049 | I say again, why is it affirmed''without shedding of blood is no remission,''if man''s good deeds can save him? |
6049 | I say how easily might he have said this, and then have popt in those two verses above quoted, and so have killed the old one? |
6049 | I say, Art thou a Pharisee? |
6049 | I say, Art thou sensible of this? |
6049 | I say, How easily might they thus have objected? |
6049 | I say, What hast thou given to God thereby? |
6049 | I say, What hast thou seen in him? |
6049 | I say, Who told thee so? |
6049 | I say, dost thou see thyself in him? |
6049 | I say, dost thou this, or dost thou hunt thine own soul to destroy it? |
6049 | I say, hast thou entertained Jesus Christ for thy lawyer to plead thy cause? |
6049 | I say, he puts great difference between these, and that other sort that say, When will the Sabbath be gone, that we may be at our worldly business? |
6049 | I say, how glorious was it; and how sweet is it to you that have seen yourselves lost by nature? |
6049 | I say, if Mr. Badman was here to object thus unto you, what would be your reply? |
6049 | I say, should he say to the poor, Come to my door, ask at my door, knock at my door, and you shall find and have; would he not be counted liberal? |
6049 | I say, therefore, to thee that art thus, And why despair? |
6049 | I say, was it not worth being in the furnace and in the den to see such things as these? |
6049 | I say, what benefit have we thereby? |
6049 | I say, what excuse can they make for themselves, when they shall be asked why they did not in the day of salvation come to Christ to be saved? |
6049 | I say, what less than a river could do it? |
6049 | I say, what more fearful than to be tormented there for ever with the devil and his angels? |
6049 | I say, what will such say when they shall read that the Publican did only acknowledge his iniquity, and found grace and favour at the hand of God? |
6049 | I say, what wilt thou say to this? |
6049 | I say, where is he that hath taken his flight for salvation, because of the dread of the wrath to come? |
6049 | I say, where is the honour they should put upon them? |
6049 | I say, where, as to justification with God? |
6049 | I say, why are things thus left with us? |
6049 | I say, will thy conscience justify thee here? |
6049 | I say, wouldst thou go to heaven, because it is a place that is holy, or because it is a place remote from the pains of hell? |
6049 | I suppose they did commence much together; for else with whom should this beast make war, and how should the church escape? |
6049 | I tell you this is no easy matter; if it were, what need all those prayers, sighs, watchings? |
6049 | I then demand what precept bids you do this? |
6049 | I think I am cast off from God, says the soul; so thou thoughtest afore, says memory, but thou wast mistaken then, and why not the like again? |
6049 | I think it a high favour that they were hanged before we came hither; who knows else what they might have done to such poor women as we are? |
6049 | I use the means to be saved; and why? |
6049 | I was no sooner fixed upon this resolution, but that word dropped upon me,"Doth Job serve God for nought?" |
6049 | I went out from you full, but now I come, As it hath pleased God, quite empty home: Why then call ye me Naomi? |
6049 | I will do unto them as they have done unto Me; and what unrighteousness is in all this? |
6049 | I will for this worship Christ as he has bid me; what hurt is this to anybody? |
6049 | I wold know by what scripture you do it? |
6049 | I.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED? |
6049 | II.--WHAT IS IT TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6049 | III.--WHO ARE THEY THAT ARE TO BE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6049 | IV.--HOW IT APPEARS THAT THEY THAT ARE SAVED, ARE SAVED BY GRACE? |
6049 | If Christ be the way, verity, and life, how can there be any life then without Christ? |
6049 | If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
6049 | If God be for us, who can be against us?--Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God''s elect? |
6049 | If God be with one, who can hurt one? |
6049 | If God would blow upon a man, who can help it? |
6049 | If God, when man had broke the law, had yet with all severity kept the world to the utmost condition of it, had he then been unjust? |
6049 | If He is, then how doth it appear? |
6049 | If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil; but if well, why smitest thou me? |
6049 | If Jesus be so sweet to faith below, who can tell what He is in full fruition above? |
6049 | If Samson''s riddle was so puzzling, what shall we think of this? |
6049 | If a man can not now go to the throne of grace by prayer, through Christ, and so fetch grace for his support from thence, what can he do? |
6049 | If a sense of some sin,[ for who sees all? |
6049 | If all that build do build to suit The glory of their state, What orator, though most acute, Can fully heaven relate? |
6049 | If all that desire to go to heaven should come thither, verily they would make a hell of heaven; for, I say, what would they do there? |
6049 | If any say, Who''s there? |
6049 | If any say, that these things may argue pride as well as carnal lusts; well, but why are they proud? |
6049 | If grace received would do, what need for more? |
6049 | If he also shall ask me, What hath been my preferment in all the time of my absence from him? |
6049 | If he asks me, By what authority I take upon me thus to reason? |
6049 | If he asks me, How I know that the law will not lay hold of me also? |
6049 | If he asks me, Who have been my companions? |
6049 | If he hath, show us where? |
6049 | If he knows not hell, and the torments thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not himself and the badness of his condition, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not the law, and the severity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not the world, and the emptiness and vanity thereof, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he knows not what death is, wherefore should he come? |
6049 | If he was not willing, why did he promise? |
6049 | If heart- breaking work attend such strokes,''Why should ye be stricken any more?'' |
6049 | If heaven has gates, and they shall be shut, how wilt thou go in thither? |
6049 | If it be asked, Who did appoint that meeting made mention of in Acts 12:12? |
6049 | If it be good and godly, why may it not be accepted? |
6049 | If it be love for a fellow- creature to give a bit of bread, a coat, a cup of cold water, what shall we call this? |
6049 | If it be said water baptism is not there intended, let them shew me how many baptisms there are besides water baptism? |
6049 | If it be, why is it not embraced? |
6049 | If it cost Lot''s wife dear for but looking back, shall not it cost them much dearer, that are going back, that are gone back again? |
6049 | If judgment begins at the house of God, what will the end of them be that obey not the gospel of God? |
6049 | If mercy, what mercy? |
6049 | If no, do you not dissemble? |
6049 | If not, how do they differ? |
6049 | If nothing should by us be had When we are gone from hence, But vanities, while here? |
6049 | If palaces that princes build, Which yet are made of clay, Do so amaze when much beheld, Of heaven what shall we say? |
6049 | If so, I ask, dost thou, according to the exhortation here,''Depart from iniqnity?'' |
6049 | If so, then what is that worth, or value, that is in the grace itself? |
6049 | If so, then, in the next place, what will become of them that are grown weary before they are got half way thither? |
6049 | If so, what had she to say? |
6049 | If so; why do you so much dissemble with all the world, in print; to pretend you submit to others''judgment, and yet abide to condemn their judgments? |
6049 | If the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Ghost, are gracious, if they were not all gracious, what would it profit? |
6049 | If the children of God shall''scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly, and the sinner appear?'' |
6049 | If the conduct of many professors were so vile, as there can be no doubt but that it was, how gross must have been that of the openly profane? |
6049 | If the counsel of Gamaliel was good when given to the enemies of God''s people, why not fit to be given to Christians themselves? |
6049 | If the dead rise not, what shall I be the better for all my trouble that here I meet with for the gospel of Christ? |
6049 | If the first come in and say, Why am I judged? |
6049 | If the life that is attended with so many troubles, is so loath to be let go by us, what is the life above? |
6049 | If the object of the wrath of God, then is his case most dreadful; for who can bear, who can grapple with the wrath of God? |
6049 | If the question be asked, How a just God can save that man from death, that by sin has put himself under the sentence of it? |
6049 | If the rich man should say thus to the poor, would not he be reckoned a free- hearted man? |
6049 | If the very looks of God be so terrible, what will his blows be, think you? |
6049 | If the world, which God sets light by, is counted a thing of that worth with men; what is Heaven, which God commendeth? |
6049 | If there be a difference in the light, show it wherein; whether in the nature, or otherwise?" |
6049 | If there be twenty places where there are assizes kept in this land, yet if I have offended no law, what need have I of an advocate? |
6049 | If therefore all the light that is in thee Be darkness, how great must that darkness be? |
6049 | If these be worth commending then, That vainly show their might, How dare you blame those holy men That in God''s quarrel fight? |
6049 | If they ask what light? |
6049 | If they differ, where lieth the difference? |
6049 | If they farther ask, why, what is that? |
6049 | If they say, they retain the day, but change their manner of observation thereof; I ask, who has commanded them so to do? |
6049 | If this be concluded in the affirmative, what follows but that Christ, though he undertook, came short in doing for us? |
6049 | If this be faith,( sayest thou) to profess him born, dead, risen and ascended without, then is there any unbeliever in England? |
6049 | If this be so, then what should they do here, Who in their antic pranks of pride appear? |
6049 | If this kind of worship may be performed, without their conduct and government? |
6049 | If thou canst go lustily, what mean thy crutches? |
6049 | If thou say, because God hath not chosen them, as well as chosen others: I answer,''Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
6049 | If thou sayest yea, then I ask, Who told thee that thou standest accused for transgression before the judgment- seat of God? |
6049 | If thou sayest, Yea; I ask, How comest thou righteous? |
6049 | If thou wouldst know whether man be still in that state by nature that God did place him in? |
6049 | If thou wouldst know whether the man were first beguiled, or the woman that God made an help- mate for him? |
6049 | If we do take occasion to do so, that we may drop, and be yet distilling some good doctrine upon their souls? |
6049 | If we have such ill speed at our first setting out, what may we expect betwixt this and our journey''s end? |
6049 | If what be possible? |
6049 | If what be possible? |
6049 | If ye be buffeted for your faults, for what God''s word calls faults, what thank have you from God, or good men, though you take it patiently? |
6049 | If yea, then Christ had such; if no, then who can fulfil the law as he? |
6049 | If you bid him wait, do you not encourage him to live in sin, as much as I do? |
6049 | If you say no, as it is your wonted course; then again I ask you, what that was in which he did bear the sins of his children? |
6049 | If you say no, what means your sour carriage to the people of God? |
6049 | If young Badman feared not the damnation of his soul, do you think that the consideration of impairing of his body would have deterred him therefrom? |
6049 | If"judgment must begin at the house of God,--what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
6049 | If''the wrath of a king is as messengers of death''( Prov 16:14), if the wrath of the king''is as the roaring of a lion,''what is the wrath of God? |
6049 | In Job''s day this was bewailed, that none or but a few said,"Where is God my maker, who giveth songs in the night?" |
6049 | In a word, Doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6049 | In a word, are they converted? |
6049 | In a word, doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? |
6049 | In a word, who knows the power of God''s wrath, the weight of sin, the torments of hell, and the length of eternity? |
6049 | In all this, what qualification shows itself as precedent to justification? |
6049 | In his Jerusalem Sinner Saved he thus argues''Why despair? |
6049 | In love to God, in love to men, in holy love, in love unfeigned? |
6049 | In the faith of what? |
6049 | In time of sickness, what so set by as the doctor''s glasses and gally- pots full of his excellent things? |
6049 | In what glory will they appear? |
6049 | In whose judgment art thou righteous? |
6049 | Indeed the Word saith,"He hath blinded their eyes, lest they should see,"& c. But now we are by ourselves, what do you think of such men? |
6049 | Indeed this may be; and therefore no similitude can be found that can fully amplify the matter,''for what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | Indeed who can bear up, and who Can from these shakings run? |
6049 | Instructions did I say? |
6049 | Is Antichrist down and dead to ought but your faith? |
6049 | Is Benhadad yet alive? |
6049 | Is Christ Jesus not only a priest of, and a King over, but an Advocate for his people? |
6049 | Is Christ Jesus the Lord mine Advocate with the Father? |
6049 | Is Christ Jesus the redemption; and, as such, the very door and inlet into all God''s mercies? |
6049 | Is Christ then the image of the Father, simply, as considered of the same divine and eternal excellency with him? |
6049 | Is Christ, as crucified, the way and door to all spiritual and eternal mercy? |
6049 | Is God indeed to be dallied with, and will the end be pleasant unto you? |
6049 | Is He satisfied now in the behalf of sinners by this Man''s thus suffering? |
6049 | Is He the one, the chief object of our soul? |
6049 | Is He the only hope of my soul, and the only confidence of my heart? |
6049 | Is Jesus Christ an Advocate with the Father for us? |
6049 | Is Jesus Christ the Saviour also become our Advocate? |
6049 | Is any fountain of so strange a nature, At once to send forth sweet and bitter water? |
6049 | Is any merry? |
6049 | Is coming to Jesus Christ by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Is coming to Jesus Christ not by the will, wisdom, or power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Is fellowship with God the Father, and His Son, Jesus Christ, so prized by me, as to seek it, and to esteem it above all things? |
6049 | Is godly fear delightful unto thee, That fear that God himself delights to see Bear sway in them that love him? |
6049 | Is grace thy proper element? |
6049 | Is he God''s fellow? |
6049 | Is he a fool that chooseth for himself long lasters, or he whose best things will rot in a day? |
6049 | Is he a godly man, that will serve God for nothing rather than give out? |
6049 | Is he a pleasant child? |
6049 | Is he a second God? |
6049 | Is he ever the worse for coming to Jesus Christ, or for his loving and serving of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Is he in health, or doth he cease to be? |
6049 | Is he merciful; will he help thee? |
6049 | Is he not slothful, is not he careless, is he not without discretion? |
6049 | Is he of the highest order of the angels? |
6049 | Is he present; will he hear thee? |
6049 | Is he qualified for my business? |
6049 | Is he that is a servant to corruption a victor? |
6049 | Is he that is led away with divers lusts a victor? |
6049 | Is he then left to fill up the measure of his iniquities? |
6049 | Is he therefore the author of your perishing, or his eternal reprobation either? |
6049 | Is heaven reserved only for the noble and the learned, like Paul? |
6049 | Is his body dead? |
6049 | Is his heel taken in the spider''s web? |
6049 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6049 | Is his mercy clean gone for ever? |
6049 | Is his name, person, and undertakings, more precious to them, than is the glory of the world? |
6049 | Is it I?'' |
6049 | Is it Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Is it a sign of a fool to agree with one''s adversary while we are in the way with him, even before he delivereth us to the judge? |
6049 | Is it a time to take pleasure, and to recreate thyself in anything, before thou hast mourned and been sorry for thy sins? |
6049 | Is it a way that my parents brought me up in, put me apprentice to, or that by providence I was first thrust into? |
6049 | Is it an inward one? |
6049 | Is it as separate from these, beauteous, or ill- favoured? |
6049 | Is it attended with so many blessed privileges? |
6049 | Is it because I have not accepted thy offering? |
6049 | Is it because I love holiness? |
6049 | Is it because the grace that he receiveth differeth from the grace that the elect are saved by? |
6049 | Is it because they think themselves unworthy of their holy fellowship? |
6049 | Is it because they think themselves unworthy of their holy fellowship? |
6049 | Is it because they would honour God? |
6049 | Is it because thou wouldst be saved from hell, or because thou wouldst be freed from sin? |
6049 | Is it below thee? |
6049 | Is it by something done within them, or by something done without them?" |
6049 | Is it by something that is done within them, or by something done without them? |
6049 | Is it covetousness? |
6049 | Is it fair to make the necessity of a woman in bondage a law to women at liberty? |
6049 | Is it fit to say unto God, Thou art hard- hearted? |
6049 | Is it fleshly lusts? |
6049 | Is it for righteousness''sake that thou sufferest? |
6049 | Is it for the sake of righteousness that thou sufferest? |
6049 | Is it in the judgment of God, or of man? |
6049 | Is it intended to represent that prayerful, watchful, personal investigation into Divine truth, which ought to precede church- fellowship? |
6049 | Is it likely that those should have the Lord Jesus for their Advocate to plead their cause; who despise and reject his person, his Word, and ways? |
6049 | Is it meet to think that a little child should handle Goliath as David did? |
6049 | Is it not a high point of wisdom for a man to be always doing of that which lays him under the conduct of angels? |
6049 | Is it not a sign of wisdom for a man yet more and more to endeavour to interest himself in the love and protection of God? |
6049 | Is it not a sign of wisdom to depart from sins, which are the snares of death and hell? |
6049 | Is it not a wicked thing to make bars to communion, where God hath made none? |
6049 | Is it not a wickedness to make that a wall of division betwixt us which God never commanded to be so? |
6049 | Is it not better that we bear those tokens and marks in our flesh that bespeak us to belong to Christ, than those that declare us to be none of his? |
6049 | Is it not better to say now unto God, Do not condemn me? |
6049 | Is it not common now- a- days, for parents to be brought into bondage and servitude by their children? |
6049 | Is it not for a man to sin willingly after enlightening? |
6049 | Is it not in the four evangelists, the prophets, and epistles of the apostles? |
6049 | Is it not pity, had it otherwise been the will of God, that ever thou wast made a man, for that thou settest so little by thy soul? |
6049 | Is it not rather to be wondered at, that thou hast not caught before this a thousand times a thousand falls? |
6049 | Is it not reasonable that man should believe God in the proffer of the gospel and life by it? |
6049 | Is it not so with you in respect of your beggars that come to your door? |
6049 | Is it not strong as death, cruel as the grave, and hotter than the coals of juniper? |
6049 | Is it not the least in thy thoughts? |
6049 | Is it not the same by the which I have called thee? |
6049 | Is it not therefore a wonderful mercy to be blessed with this grace of fear, that thou by it mayest be kept from final, which is damnable apostasy? |
6049 | Is it not to trick up the body? |
6049 | Is it our flesh that hangeth on our bones, which lusteth against the spirit? |
6049 | Is it possible that he should heedlessly enter the vortex, and be again drawn into wretchedness? |
6049 | Is it possible that this tender, thus offered to the reprobate, should by him be thus received and embraced, and he live thereby? |
6049 | Is it so much to be a fiddle? |
6049 | Is it so much to be a fiddle? |
6049 | Is it so to the present day under a faithful ministry? |
6049 | Is it so, that coming to Jesus Christ is by the Father, as aforesaid? |
6049 | Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will, wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of the Father? |
6049 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6049 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? |
6049 | Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes heartily afraid that he will not receive them? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it so? |
6049 | Is it surprising that the Quakers, at such a time, assumed their peculiar neatness of dress? |
6049 | Is it that our hearts might be estranged from him, and that we still should love the world? |
6049 | Is it that we should live by sense? |
6049 | Is it the substance, is it the thing signified? |
6049 | Is it their duty to help to carry on prayer in public assemblies with men, as they? |
6049 | Is it thy delight to think of Him, hear of Him, speak of Him, abide in Him, and live upon Him? |
6049 | Is not Christ the head, and we the members? |
6049 | Is not God as well mighty to punish as to save? |
6049 | Is not HE called? |
6049 | Is not HE glorified? |
6049 | Is not HE justified? |
6049 | Is not each thing we have a dying? |
6049 | Is not he also the price, the ground, and bottom of our happiness, both in this world and that which is to come? |
6049 | Is not heaven worth thy affection? |
6049 | Is not here a door of hope? |
6049 | Is not here encouragement for those that think, for wicked hearts and lives, they have not their fellows in the world? |
6049 | Is not here the house of the forest of Lebanon mentioned as another besides the temple? |
6049 | Is not love of the greatest force to oblige? |
6049 | Is not such a day, the day that bends us, humbleth us, and that makes us bow before God, for our faults committed in our prosperity? |
6049 | Is not that the very entering ordinance? |
6049 | Is not the devil thy father? |
6049 | Is not the life much more Than meat; Is not the body far before The clothes thereof? |
6049 | Is not the light of God sufficient in itself, to lead to god all that follow it, yea, or nay? |
6049 | Is not the same spirit of rebellion amongst us in our days? |
6049 | Is not the secrets of thy heart open unto him? |
6049 | Is not this God rich in mercy? |
6049 | Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? |
6049 | Is not this a great waster? |
6049 | Is not this a truth? |
6049 | Is not this amazing grace? |
6049 | Is not this an encouragement to the biggest sinners to make their application to Christ for mercy? |
6049 | Is not this blasphemy? |
6049 | Is not this enough to make any poor soul begin his race? |
6049 | Is not this grace? |
6049 | Is not this grace? |
6049 | Is not this love that passeth knowledge? |
6049 | Is not this love the wonderment of angels? |
6049 | Is not this now far off from some professors in the world? |
6049 | Is not this strange? |
6049 | Is not this the experience of all the godly? |
6049 | Is not this to condemn God, that thou mightest be righteous? |
6049 | Is not this to play the fool, in the account of sinners, while angels wonder at and rejoice for thy wisdom? |
6049 | Is not this true as I have said? |
6049 | Is nothing so secret but it will be revealed? |
6049 | Is she drowned I tro? |
6049 | Is she lost? |
6049 | Is she not to be silent before him, and to look to his laws, rather than her own fictions? |
6049 | Is sin so vile a thing? |
6049 | Is that very Man, with that very body, within you, yea, or no? |
6049 | Is the Lamb the nourishment of thy soul, and the portion of thy heart? |
6049 | Is the arm of the Lord shortened that he can not save? |
6049 | Is the blood of Christ, the death of Christ, the resurrection of Christ, of no more virtue than to bring in for us an uncertain salvation? |
6049 | Is the doctrine offered to thee so? |
6049 | Is the doctrine offered unto thee so? |
6049 | Is the fault in God, if any perish? |
6049 | Is the law sin? |
6049 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6049 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6049 | Is the salvation of the sinner by the grace of God? |
6049 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | Is the soul such an excellent thing, and the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | Is the truth? |
6049 | Is the very being of sin rooted out of thy tabernacle? |
6049 | Is the way dangerous in which thou art to go? |
6049 | Is the way of the just an abomination to you? |
6049 | Is the way safe or dangerous? |
6049 | Is the whole world set against thee for thy love to God, to Christ, his cause, and righteousness? |
6049 | Is there a Slough of Despond to be passed, and a hill Difficulty to be overcome? |
6049 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6049 | Is there a man that comes to God by Christ? |
6049 | Is there also hope to be in His children? |
6049 | Is there any among thy sins, thy companions, and foolish delights, that, like Christ, can help thee in the day of thy distress? |
6049 | Is there any good that lives there? |
6049 | Is there any great harm in that? |
6049 | Is there any law now that will curse and condemn this Saviour for standing in our persons to give satisfaction to God for the transgression of man? |
6049 | Is there any vicious propensity, the gratification of which is not included in that character? |
6049 | Is there but one sin among so many millions of sins, for which there is no forgiveness; and must I commit this? |
6049 | Is there grace for me?'' |
6049 | Is there hope? |
6049 | Is there hope? |
6049 | Is there more precepts or precedents for the supper, than baptism? |
6049 | Is there more reason, more equity, more holiness in thy traditions, than in the holy, and just, and good commandments of God? |
6049 | Is there no better merchandise to trade in than what comes from hell, or out of the bowels of the earth? |
6049 | Is there no precept for this practice, that it must be thus despised, as a matter of little use? |
6049 | Is there no truth nor trust to be put in him, notwithstanding all that he hath said? |
6049 | Is there no way to come to God but by the faith of him? |
6049 | Is there not a cause, saith he, lies bleeding upon the ground, and no man of heart or spirit to put a check to the bold blasphemer? |
6049 | Is there not a middle way? |
6049 | Is there not a time coming when the godly may ask the wicked what profit they have in their pleasure? |
6049 | Is there not everywhere in God''s Book a flat contradiction to this, in multitudes of promises, of invitations, of examples, and the like? |
6049 | Is there not palpably high wickedness in every one of the effects of this fear? |
6049 | Is there nothing else to be done but to make a covenant with death, and to maintain thy agreement with hell? |
6049 | Is there nothing of God, of his wisdom and power and goodness to be seen in thunder, and lightning, in hailstones? |
6049 | Is there nothing written therein but what you understand? |
6049 | Is there perfection in that righteousness? |
6049 | Is there room for me?'' |
6049 | Is there so much ground of comfort, and so much cause to be glad? |
6049 | Is there so much store in Christ, and such a ready heart in Him to give it to me? |
6049 | Is there that condition, they must believe? |
6049 | Is there to be a righteousness to clothe them with that is to be presented before Divine justice? |
6049 | Is there unrighteousness with God? |
6049 | Is there, in this place, any relief for pilgrims that are weary and faint in the way? |
6049 | Is this a truth, that the man that truly comes to God in order thereto has had his heart broken? |
6049 | Is this fear of God such an excellent thing? |
6049 | Is this he that professed, and disputed, and forsook us; but now he is come to us again? |
6049 | Is this he that separated from us, but now he is fallen with us into the same eternal damnation with us? |
6049 | Is this the gloomy fanaticism of a Puritan divine? |
6049 | Is this the love and care Of Jesus for the men that pilgrims are? |
6049 | Is this the righteousness you would imitate? |
6049 | Is this the sum of all, namely, That''the fear of the wicked it shall come upon him,''and that''the desire of the righteous shall be granted?'' |
6049 | Is this the way of your retaliation? |
6049 | Is this the way to the Celestial City? |
6049 | Is this to serve God? |
6049 | Is this word more dear unto them? |
6049 | Is thy body to be disfigured, dismembered, starved, hanged, or burned for the faith and profession of the gospel? |
6049 | Is thy business slight; is it not concerning the welfare of thy soul? |
6049 | Is thy conscience awakened and convinced then, that thou art at present in a perishing state, and that thou hast need to cry to God for mercy? |
6049 | Is thy heart hard? |
6049 | Is thy heart slothful and idle? |
6049 | Is thy life at stake-- is that like to go for thy profession, for thy harmless profession of the gospel? |
6049 | Is thy mind always musing on him? |
6049 | Is wisdom to die with you? |
6049 | Is your heart full of mammon, or pride, or debauchery? |
6049 | Is''t not a shame, a stinking shame to be Cast forth God''s vineyard as a barren tree? |
6049 | It casteth out the Word and love of God, without which no grace can grow in the soul; how then should the fear of God grow in a covetous heart? |
6049 | It confirms it; and this is part of the meaning of Paul in those large relations of his sufferings for Christ, saying,''Are they ministers of Christ? |
6049 | It has ofttimes come into my mind to ask, By what means it is that the gospel profession should be so tainted39 with loose and carnal gospellers? |
6049 | It is a neat and acceptable volume, but why altered? |
6049 | It is a sign of a very bad nature when the contrary shows itself; could God have done more for thee than to have put his fear in thy heart? |
6049 | It is an honour for the poor to stand up for the great and mighty; but what honour is it for the great to plead for the base? |
6049 | It is beset everywhere with evil angels, who would rob thee of thy soul, What now? |
6049 | It is counted a heinous crime for a man to run his sword at the picture of a king, how much more to shed the blood of the image of God? |
6049 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at Heaven''s gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it? |
6049 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?" |
6049 | It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see so vile a one knock at heaven- gates for mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?'' |
6049 | It is false, said she; for when they said to him, Do you confess the indictment? |
6049 | It is not a sign of foolishness timely to prevent ruin, is it? |
6049 | It is said elsewhere,''For what is a man advantaged if he gain the whole world, and lose himself?'' |
6049 | It is said in another place;"Can a woman,"a mother,"forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? |
6049 | It is this: Do you experience this first part of this description of it? |
6049 | It is true that you have said; but pray how many sorts of pride are there? |
6049 | It is true, Mephibosheth had a check from David; for, said he,"Why wentest not thou with me, Mephibosheth?" |
6049 | It learnt, It learnt: But of who but of its dam, or of the lioness to whom she had put it to learn to do such things? |
6049 | It makes one tremble to hear those who profess to follow Christ in the regeneration, crying, What harm is there in this game and the other diversion? |
6049 | It mattereth not who brought thee in hither, whether God or the devil, or thine own vain- glorious heart; but hast thou fruit? |
6049 | It may be thou hast a father, mother, brother,& c., going post- haste to heaven, wouldst thou be willing to be left behind them? |
6049 | It may be thy great prayer is to say,"Our Father which art in heaven,"& c. Dost thou know the meaning of the very first words of this prayer? |
6049 | It seems then, his heart was fainting; but what was the cause of his fainting? |
6049 | It was their sore temptation; for still, as some affirmed him to be the Christ, others as fast objected,''Shall Christ come out of Galilee?'' |
6049 | It will never backslide again, will it? |
6049 | It will not be said then, Did you believe? |
6049 | It would not be reckoned of grace, but of debt; and what would follow from hence? |
6049 | Jesus also( saith the apostle) that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered: Where? |
6049 | Job was a man a none- such in his day for one that feared God; and who so bold with God as Job? |
6049 | Job, in order to his repentance, cries unto God,''Show me wherefore thou contendest with me?'' |
6049 | John Bunyan? |
6049 | John, what have you done? |
6049 | Just and justified from all things that would otherwise swallow thee up? |
6049 | Justice Keelin said, that I ought not to preach; and asked me where I had my authority? |
6049 | Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? |
6049 | Know you not that it is written, that he that cometh not in by the door,"but climbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber?" |
6049 | Know you not that this is the judgment of God upon you,"ye despisers, to behold, and wonder, and perish?" |
6049 | Know''st not thy Lord by fruit is glorified? |
6049 | Labour to be patient under this mighty hand of God, and be not hasty to say, When will the rod be laid aside? |
6049 | Lastly, Is there such mercy as this? |
6049 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Lastly, but dost thou think that thy more grace will exempt thee from temptations? |
6049 | Lazarus, who was he? |
6049 | Let me alone, let me fetch my blow, or''Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'' |
6049 | Let our first inquiry be, whether the Saviour intended a fixed form of prayer? |
6049 | Let these things learn us to cease from man,"whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be accounted of?" |
6049 | Let thy conscience speak, I say, is it not prepared for thee, thou being an ungodly man? |
6049 | Let us stand together; who is mine adversary? |
6049 | Lightning and thunder is made a cause of rain, but lightning alone is not:''Who hath divided a water- course for the overflowing of waters? |
6049 | Lights upon a hill, and candles on a candlestick, and shall not they shine? |
6049 | Look again,"Hast thou an arm like God"( Job 40:9), an arm like his for length and strength? |
6049 | Look before thee; dost thou see this narrow way? |
6049 | Look to the heavens, and behold, and consider the stars, how high are they? |
6049 | Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth'': Why, who art thou? |
6049 | Look ye now, did not I tell you so? |
6049 | Look, doth it not go along by the way- side? |
6049 | Lord, I have destroyed myself, can I live? |
6049 | Lord, every one of them are sins of the first rate, of the biggest size, of the blackest line, can I live? |
6049 | Lord, shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou canst pardon my sins, or by believing Thou canst not? |
6049 | Lord, what will be the fruit of these things, when for the doctrine of God there is imposed, that is, more than taught, the traditions of men? |
6049 | Lord, who desired Thee to promise? |
6049 | Lord,"who can understand his errors? |
6049 | Lord,"who can understand his errors?" |
6049 | Lord,"who knoweth the power of thine anger? |
6049 | Lord,"who knoweth the power of thine anger?" |
6049 | Make( saith Christ) the tree good, and his fruit good; or the tree evil, and his fruit evil: Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
6049 | Man knows the beginning of sin, said Spira, but who bounds the issues thereof?'' |
6049 | Manoah said, Now let thy words be true; How shall we use the child, What must we do? |
6049 | Manoah then arose, and went his way, And when he came, he said, Art thou the man That spakest to my wife? |
6049 | Many of this kind there be now in the world, both of men, and women, and children; art not thou that readest this book of this number? |
6049 | Mark how David handleth the messenger that brought him tidings of the death of Saul: says he, How dost thou know that Saul is dead? |
6049 | Mark them; for what? |
6049 | Mark, and when they were ALONE; according to that of the prophet,''Whom shall he teach knowledge, and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? |
6049 | Mark,''a just man,''''a righteous man,''''his righteous soul,''& c. But how obtained he this character? |
6049 | May I be saved by him?'' |
6049 | May I not say before God? |
6049 | May I now go back, and go up to the wicket- gate? |
6049 | May I speak a few words in my own defence? |
6049 | May a man be a visible saint without light therein? |
6049 | May he have a good conscience without light therein? |
6049 | May not the glorified saints become angels? |
6049 | May not these be that sin I trow? |
6049 | May there not come out true men as well as thieves out from thence? |
6049 | May we appeal to our God, Lord, is it I? |
6049 | May we have entertainment here, or must We further go? |
6049 | May you indeed receive persons into the church unprepared for the Lord''s supper; yea, unprepared for that, with other solemn appointments? |
6049 | Meaning, who would be at the charge to have a wife that can have a whore when he listeth? |
6049 | Men will do thus, as I said, in courts below; and why shouldst not thou approach thus to the court above? |
6049 | Met you with nothing else in that valley? |
6049 | Might not their eyes dazzle, and they might think they did see such a thing, when indeed there was no such matter? |
6049 | Mine eyes have seen vileness in the best of my doings; what, then, think you, must God needs see in them? |
6049 | Moreover, I would ask with what face thou canst look the Lord Jesus in the face, whose name thou hast profaned by thine iniquity? |
6049 | Mother, can not you do me some good? |
6049 | Much of your lives are past; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | Must God be called to an account by you, why he giveth more light about the supper than baptism? |
6049 | Must I be a Christian, says the Jew? |
6049 | Must I slight them as they slight me, or nay? |
6049 | Must a gift, and a little of the glory of the butterfly, make thee that thou shalt not do for, and honour to, thy father and mother? |
6049 | Must a little of the glory of the butterfly make thee not honour thy father and mother? |
6049 | Must also the general assembly and church of the first- born wait upon thee for their full portions of glory? |
6049 | Must he do what he lists? |
6049 | Must here be the beginning of my bliss? |
6049 | Must here the burden fall from off my back Must here the strings that bound it to me crack? |
6049 | Must it be, if they turn themselves, or do something to merit of him to turn them? |
6049 | Must it needs be that? |
6049 | Must it needs be the great transgression? |
6049 | Must nobody seek because few are saved? |
6049 | Must not that be much more so accounted? |
6049 | Must the Son of God himself come down from heaven? |
6049 | Must there be redemption by blood added to mercy, if the soul be saved? |
6049 | Must they be bound to their own ruin, by the rebellion of their stubborn wills? |
6049 | Must they not perish rather? |
6049 | Must thy reason, nay, thy lust, be the ruler, orderer, and disposer of his grace? |
6049 | Must we go to hell, and be damned, for want of faith in water baptism? |
6049 | Must we not fear falls? |
6049 | Must we, because of these temptations, incline to fall? |
6049 | My brethren, is it not reasonable that we should stand up for him in this world? |
6049 | My brother, said he, rememberest thou not how valiant thou hast been heretofore? |
6049 | My fifth query was,"Is that very man with that very body within you, yea, or no?" |
6049 | My hope is grounded upon the promises; what else should it be grounded upon? |
6049 | My last argument, you say, is this:''The world may wonder at your carriage to these unbaptized persons, in keeping them out of communion?'' |
6049 | My little bird, how canst thou sit And sing amidst so many thorns? |
6049 | My second query was,"What is the church of God redeemed by from the curse of law? |
6049 | My senses, how were you beguil''d When you said sin was good? |
6049 | My seventh query was,"Hath that Christ that was with God the Father before the world was, no other body but his church?" |
6049 | My sins are more than the sands, can I live? |
6049 | My soul is also sore vexed, but thou, O Lord, how long? |
6049 | My way is hid from the Lord, and my judgment is passed over from my God? |
6049 | Namely, which Peter spake: This is the way in which the Spirit is given? |
6049 | Nay rather, will not this, like a millstone about thy neck, drown thee in the deeps of hell? |
6049 | Nay, God favoured His Son no more, finding our sins upon Him, than He would have favoured any of us; for, should we have died? |
6049 | Nay, are not the very thoughts of it altogether displeasing to thee? |
6049 | Nay, art thou not a desperate persecutor of the children of God? |
6049 | Nay, but why dost thou tempt the Lord thy God? |
6049 | Nay, but, said Mr. Bunyan, have you the very self- same original copies that were written by the penmen of the scriptures, prophets and apostles? |
6049 | Nay, do not even these things declare that you would take it away if you could? |
6049 | Nay, do not many make his Word, and his name, and his ways, a stalking- horse to their own worldly advantages? |
6049 | Nay, do not they rather owe him something for his labour he bestowed on them, as Philemon did to Paul? |
6049 | Nay, do they not rather declare to the world that they have repented of their profession? |
6049 | Nay, do you not see with your eyes daily, that perseverance is a very great part of the cross? |
6049 | Nay, dost thou know what original sin means? |
6049 | Nay, doth not this argue, that thy heart is a rotten, cankered, and besotted heart? |
6049 | Nay, further,"Have we not prophesied in Thy name? |
6049 | Nay, hast thou not learned the wicked ones thy ways? |
6049 | Nay, have not all the prophets from Samuel, with all those that follow after, prophesied, and foretold these things? |
6049 | Nay, in this I will assert nothing, but rather inquire:--What hast thou gained by all this thy righteousness? |
6049 | Nay, is it not the mark of implacable reprobates? |
6049 | Nay, say they, why may not we as well as he? |
6049 | Nay, was he not ready to give the lie to the angel, when he told him God was with him? |
6049 | Nay, what petition of any kind is there in thy vain- glorious oration from first to last? |
6049 | Nay, what world, what people, what nation, for sin and transgression, could or can be compared to Jerusalem? |
6049 | Nay, you must make two questions of this one; that is, what is it for faith to come, and in what manner doth it come? |
6049 | Need I read you a lecture? |
6049 | Neither is baptism any thing? |
6049 | Ninth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | No affection for the God that made thee? |
6049 | No man, when he buildeth his house, makes the principal parts thereof of weak or feeble timber; for how could such bear up the rest? |
6049 | No, saith the child, nor with this hand either; then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a better, a brave golden finger? |
6049 | No; if Isaiah, with his mighty eloquence, again appeared among mortals, again would his cry be heard,''Who hath believed our report?'' |
6049 | No; the poor, the despised in this world, claim kindred with him--''Is not this the carpenter''s son?'' |
6049 | No? |
6049 | Noah and Lot, who so holy as they in the time of their afflictions? |
6049 | Noah and Lot, who so holy as they, in the day of their affliction? |
6049 | Noah and Lot, who so idle as they in the day of their prosperity? |
6049 | Nor are we now, as at the peep of light, To question, is it day, or is it night? |
6049 | Nor can any man propound such an essential way to cut off boasting as this, which is of God''s providing: for what has man here to boast of? |
6049 | Nor was this but the least of what he did, But the outside of what he suffered? |
6049 | Nor yet of thy poor soul some pity take? |
6049 | Not sullenly saying like that wicked king, Why should I wait on the Lord any longer? |
6049 | Nothing of this hath been done by him in this life, and therefore how can any such be recorded for him in the book of life? |
6049 | Now I come to the second question-- to wit, What is it to be saved by grace? |
6049 | Now I have conquered your Diabolus, you come to me for favour, but why did you not help me against the mighty? |
6049 | Now I will add, but what if he that can give a shilling, giveth nothing? |
6049 | Now do we regret our want of greater conformity to his image? |
6049 | Now do you call conscience the light of Christ? |
6049 | Now dost thou mean the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | Now help, Lord; now, Lord Jesus, what shall I do? |
6049 | Now here some may object, and say, Since the way to God by these door were so wide, why doth Christ say the way and gate is narrow? |
6049 | Now here''s the holiness that should them save, Or, as a preparation, go before, To move God to do for them less or more? |
6049 | Now if God noble angels did not spare Because they did transgress, will he forbear Poor dust and ashes? |
6049 | Now if all these and their works as to our justification, are rejected, where, but in Christ, is righteousness to be found? |
6049 | Now if he means their ordinary sabbaths, or that called the seventh day sabbath, why doth he join the winter thereto? |
6049 | Now if it be asked, What promise is entailed to our first day sabbath? |
6049 | Now if the Captain, their king Apollion, be made to yield, how can his followers stand their ground? |
6049 | Now if these things be so, how can the love that saveth us from them be known or understood to the full? |
6049 | Now if you would know who this Lord Jesus is, look into Acts 10:28 and you shall see it was Jesus of Nazareth; would you know who that was? |
6049 | Now let the man that professes the name of Christ religiously, consider with himself, unto what sin or vanity am I most inclined; Is it pride? |
6049 | Now men can let their tongues run at random, as we used to say; now they will be apt to say, Our tongues are our own, who shall control them? |
6049 | Now necessity walks about the streets, crying, Who is on the Lord''s side? |
6049 | Now saith reason, how shall I come thither? |
6049 | Now seeing the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ is so nigh, even at the doors, what doth this speak to all sorts of people( under heaven) but this? |
6049 | Now some may say, But what shall we do to depart from iniquity? |
6049 | Now that the lions are removed, may we not fear that hypocrites will thrust themselves into our churches? |
6049 | Now the Pharisee, like Haman, saith in his heart, To whom would the king delight to do honour, more than to myself? |
6049 | Now the Spirit of Christ that leads also, but whither? |
6049 | Now the question is, who shall prevail? |
6049 | Now the soul is purchased by a price that the Son, the wisdom of God, thought fit to pay for the redemption thereof-- what a thing, then, is the soul? |
6049 | Now then, did the Publican this of his own head, or from his now mind? |
6049 | Now there is both comfort and honour in this; for what comfort like that of being a holy man of God? |
6049 | Now this is a daring thing: I know their lies, saith he; and shall he not recompense for this? |
6049 | Now this righteousness, the apostle casteth away, as was shewn before;''Not having mine own righteousness( saith he) which is of the law''; why? |
6049 | Now we are come to the pinch, viz., Whether it be that of water, or no? |
6049 | Now what can deliver the soul from these but grace? |
6049 | Now what can hell and death do to him that hath this mercy of God upon him? |
6049 | Now what did he do by this his carriage, but testify plainly that he was not for receiving accusations against poor sinners, whoever accused by? |
6049 | Now wherein doth it appear that he was without spot and blemish, but as he walked in the law? |
6049 | Now, I pray, what is it to be a devil, but to be under, for ever, the power and dominion of sin, an implacable spirit against God? |
6049 | Now, I remember that one day, as I was walking into the country, I was much in the thoughts of this, But how if the day of grace be past? |
6049 | Now, I say, when this part of the book of life shall be opened, what can be found in it, of the good deeds and heaven- born actions of wicked men? |
6049 | Now, I would ask, what all this should signify, if a sinner, as a sinner, before he washes, or is washed, may immediately go unto the throne of grace? |
6049 | Now, as they came up to these places, behold, the gardener stood in the way, to whom the Pilgrims said, Whose goodly vineyards and gardens are these? |
6049 | Now, being made free from sin, what follows? |
6049 | Now, how strong the motions or passions of love are, who is there that is an utter stranger thereto? |
6049 | Now, how then do you give them their liberty? |
6049 | Now, if Christ, as an Advocate, pleadeth a propitiation with God, for whose conviction doth he plead it? |
6049 | Now, if God shall count me righteous, who will be so hardy as to conclude I yet shall perish? |
6049 | Now, if a call to come hath such encouragement in it, what is a promise of receiving such, but an encouragement much more? |
6049 | Now, if a child has such tenderness for a useless member, how much more tender is the Son of God to his afflicted members? |
6049 | Now, if he can not know them, from what principle should he will them? |
6049 | Now, if she, with her children, are in bondage, how canst thou expect by them to be made free? |
6049 | Now, if so much safety flows from God''s being for one, how safe are we when God is with us? |
6049 | Now, if they be blind, how shall they come? |
6049 | Now, if this cause be faulty, why doth he live? |
6049 | Now, if thou takest such things for a grant of thy desires, and consequently concludest thyself a righteous man, how mayest thou be deceived? |
6049 | Now, if when she had things to trade with, her dealers left her; how shall she think of a trade, when she has nothing to traffic with? |
6049 | Now, is not this a blessed Christ, coming sinner? |
6049 | Now, it may be asked what is the throne of grace? |
6049 | Now, justification and eternal salvation being both in Christ, and nowhere else to be had for men, who would not come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Now, madam, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Now, shall a soul where the word and Spirit of Christ dwells, be a soul without good works? |
6049 | Now, since I show thee all these mysteries, How canst thou hate me, or me scandalize? |
6049 | Now, since this is so, what can the condemned at the judgment say for themselves, why sentence of death should not be passed upon them? |
6049 | Now, since this is thus, quoth he, can you be kept by any prince in more slavery, and in greater bondage, than you are under this day? |
6049 | Now, the question is, how Abraham found? |
6049 | Now, then, I would be saved; but why? |
6049 | Now, then, it will be demanded, how a soul, before it was a month old, could receive sin to the making of itself unclean? |
6049 | Now, thought Christian, what shall I do? |
6049 | Now, to be taught of God, what like it? |
6049 | Now, what can an intercessor do, if he is not able to answer this question? |
6049 | Now, what doth Christ plead, and what is the ground of his plea? |
6049 | Now, what is faith but a believing, a trusting, or relying act of the soul? |
6049 | Now, what is the result, but that the Advocate goes down, as well as we; we to hell, and he in esteem? |
6049 | Now, what is the signification of this name but SAVIOUR? |
6049 | Now, what remains but that we who are reconciled to God by faith in his blood are quit, discharged, and set free from the law of sin and death? |
6049 | Now, what shall God do to save these men? |
6049 | Now, what shall this man do? |
6049 | Now, what was Paul''s answer? |
6049 | Now, when Jesus was born, it is said,''Where is he that is born King of the Jews?'' |
6049 | Now, when thou hast thought on these things fairly, answer thyself in these few questions: Is not this arrogancy? |
6049 | Now, whence should all this disobedience arise? |
6049 | Now, where lieth the fault? |
6049 | Now, which of these hast thou? |
6049 | Now, who will meet me in this dark entry? |
6049 | Now, will not this last his poor brethren to spend upon a great while? |
6049 | O Lord, thought I, what if I should not, indeed? |
6049 | O blessed face and holy grace, When shall we see this day? |
6049 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
6049 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
6049 | O grave, where is thy victory?'' |
6049 | O how should a poor soul do this? |
6049 | O my brethren,''what manner of persons ought we to be,''who have subscribed to the Lord, and have called ourselves by the name of Israel? |
6049 | O my brother, if He will but go along with us, what need we be afraid of ten thousands that shall set themselves against us? |
6049 | O my reader, would you be one of the glorified inhabitants of that city whose builder and maker is God? |
6049 | O sinner, wilt thou not open? |
6049 | O that godly plea of Samuel:''Behold here I am,''says he,''witness against me, before the Lord, and before his anointed, whose ox have I taken? |
6049 | O that saying of God to them of old,"Why criest thou for thine affliction? |
6049 | O thou that fearest the Lord, what is thy desire? |
6049 | O what an alteration will there be among the ungodly when they go out of this world? |
6049 | O what thunderings and lightnings, what earthquakes and tempests, will there be in every damned soul, at the opening of this book? |
6049 | O what will it profit thy soul to have pleasure in this life, and torments in hell? |
6049 | O''what shall be given unto thee,''thou''deceitful tongue?'' |
6049 | O, but I am but one, and a very sorry one, too; and what is one, especially such an one as I am? |
6049 | O, if he were here one quarter of an hour, to behold, to see, to feel, to taste and enjoy but the thousandth part of what we enjoy, what would he do? |
6049 | O, then we should have you cry out, I must have Christ; what shall I do for Christ? |
6049 | O, therefore, will not this aggravate thy torment? |
6049 | Objection.-But doth not Christ as Advocate plead for his elect, though not called as yet? |
6049 | Observe, I am commanded to believe, but what should I believe? |
6049 | Of God, do I say; if thou wouldst but break this league with this great enemy of thy soul? |
6049 | Of that which is sown, or of that which was never sown? |
6049 | Of what use are these expressions, if the soul of Christ suffered not, if it suffered not when separated from the body? |
6049 | On his arrival, he demanded,''Are all the prisoners safe?'' |
6049 | Once being at an honest woman''s house, I, after some pause, asked her how she did? |
6049 | One chanced mockingly, beholding the carriage of the men, to say unto them, What will ye buy? |
6049 | One reads, he prays, he catechises too; But doth he nothing else, what doth he do? |
6049 | One word also to you that are neglecters of Jesus Christ:''How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation?'' |
6049 | One would have thought that this had been a small request, a small courtesy-- ONE DROP OF WATER-- what is that? |
6049 | Or are we only out of that Egyptian darkness, that in baptism have got the start of our brethren? |
6049 | Or are you afraid lest the truth should invade your quarters?'' |
6049 | Or art thou ignorant of these things, and yet darest thou say, Our Father? |
6049 | Or art thou like the ostrich whom God hath deprived of wisdom, and has hardened her heart against her young? |
6049 | Or art thou not? |
6049 | Or art thou one a going backward thither? |
6049 | Or art thou one agoing backward thither? |
6049 | Or do they altogether make but one Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | Or do they still like and approve of you as well as ever? |
6049 | Or do you count all that yourselves have no hand in, done to your disparagement? |
6049 | Or do you look upon Jesus at that time to be but a shadow, or type of some what that was afterwards to be done within? |
6049 | Or dost thou count they were but painted fears Which from thine eyes did squeeze so many tears? |
6049 | Or dost thou sideling go, and would''st not be Suspected? |
6049 | Or dost thou think that God is at play with thee, and that he threateneth but in jest? |
6049 | Or dost thou wink, because thou would''st not see? |
6049 | Or dost thou wink, because thou would''st not see? |
6049 | Or has it the smell or savour of such a thing? |
6049 | Or have ye not read in the law, how that on the sabbath days the priests in the temple profaned the sabbath, and are blameless?'' |
6049 | Or how is it with thy soul? |
6049 | Or how shall a man be able to give to others a satisfactory account of his unfeigned subjection to the gospel, that yet abides in his impenitency? |
6049 | Or how sincerely righteous they were whom God justified as ungodly? |
6049 | Or how, if the next sight I see with mine eyes be the Lord in the clouds, with all his angels, raining floods of fire and brimstone upon the world? |
6049 | Or if he ask a fish, will he bestow A serpent? |
6049 | Or if he looks no further than to horses, what will he do at the swellings of Jordan( Jer 12:5)? |
6049 | Or if it came to them only?'' |
6049 | Or if it should, would it be a suitable medicine in the least to present to the eyes of a broken and wounded people, as the Jews will be at that day? |
6049 | Or if they had offered that offering, that was to be burnt as a sin- offering, otherwise than it was commanded? |
6049 | Or if they were, would they be afraid that God would not make them welcome? |
6049 | Or is he ever the more a fool, for flying from that which will drown thee in hell- fire, and for seeking eternal life? |
6049 | Or is his grace so far gone, and so near spent, that now he has not enough to pardon, and secure, and save one sinner more? |
6049 | Or is it a way into which I have twisted myself, as not being contented with my first lot, that by God and my parents I was cast into? |
6049 | Or is it muddy, and mixed with the doctrines of men? |
6049 | Or is it not the least of thy thoughts all the day? |
6049 | Or makes as if he would not reconcile To thee again? |
6049 | Or must they neglect the weightier matters, because they want mint, and anise, and cummin? |
6049 | Or of Heman, when he said he was free among them whom God remembered no more? |
6049 | Or shall it come to save us? |
6049 | Or that he should make such ado, By justice, and by grace; By prophets and apostles too, That men might see his face? |
6049 | Or that the promise he hath made, Also the threatenings great, Should in a moment end and fade? |
6049 | Or that there should be the strength of an ox in a wren? |
6049 | Or the epistle of James? |
6049 | Or the highly virtuous dame, Must I sue for mercy upon the same terms as the Magdalene? |
6049 | Or the will of Christ to the will of Satan? |
6049 | Or the will of righteousness to the will of sin? |
6049 | Or theirs that hear the beating of a drum, But not made fly for fear from house and home? |
6049 | Or they who do us scorn? |
6049 | Or those who do our houses waste? |
6049 | Or us, who this have borne? |
6049 | Or was his calling so gainful to him as always to keep his purse''s belly full, though he was himself a great spender? |
6049 | Or was it possible but that after a while these fig- leaves should have become rotten, and turned to dung? |
6049 | Or what careth he for the pinching frost, which burneth with the love of the Lord? |
6049 | Or what do you think of David, when he said he was cast off from God''s eyes? |
6049 | Or what falsehood doth it command thee to receive for truth? |
6049 | Or what if a man should act now as a son, rather than simply as a creature endued with a principle of reason? |
6049 | Or what man is there of you, if his son Shall ask him bread, will he give him a stone? |
6049 | Or what shadow now is left in it since its institution as to divine service is taken long since from it? |
6049 | Or what should be the object of my faith in the matter of my justification with God? |
6049 | Or what will they give in exchange for their souls? |
6049 | Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? |
6049 | Or whether such think that Christ Jesus was subject to be tainted by the badness of the place, had he been there? |
6049 | Or whether that day, as a sabbath, was afterwards by the apostles imposed upon the churches of the Gentiles? |
6049 | Or whether, when the scripture says, God is in hell, it is any disparagement to him? |
6049 | Or who can save alive, when the maker of the world is set against them? |
6049 | Or who shall condemn me-- just judges? |
6049 | Or why must the old sabbath be joined to this new ministration? |
6049 | Or"Shall any teach God knowledge?" |
6049 | Or, Can God repute him so, and yet be holy and just? |
6049 | Or, How could God in justice give it to a person, that by the law stood condemned, before they were quitted from that condemnation? |
6049 | Or, Is it possible that a man that has done as he has, should yet be found a saint, and so in a saved state? |
6049 | Or, are these such as may better be broken, than for want of light to forbear baptism with water? |
6049 | Or, are you become so high in your own phantasies, that none have, or are to have but private means of grace? |
6049 | Or, as another prophet has it,"Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
6049 | Or, as you have it in John, will you love your life till you lose it? |
6049 | Or, how can that man say, I would glorify God, who in his very heart refuseth to stand and fall by his mercy? |
6049 | Or, is this the way that thou takest to mortify sin? |
6049 | Or, must their graces be increased by none but private means? |
6049 | Or, must we now be afraid to say that Christ is better than water baptism? |
6049 | Or, ought none but them that are baptized to have the public means of grace? |
6049 | Or, whether every saint in some sort, hath not the keys of the kingdom of heaven, which are the Scriptures and their power? |
6049 | Otherwise,''Being planted, shall it prosper? |
6049 | Our author, perhaps, will say, I have not spoken to his question; which was,"Whether women, fearing God, may meet to pray together? |
6049 | Paul did not so much as once ask him, What is your end in this question? |
6049 | Perfect righteousness, what to do? |
6049 | Perfecting holiness, what is that? |
6049 | Perhaps the word''satisfaction''will hardly be found in the Bible; and where is it said in so many words,''God is dissatisfied with our sins?'' |
6049 | Perhaps thou wilt not let go now, what, as a hypocrite, thou hast got; but"what is the hope of the hypocrite, when God taketh away his soul?" |
6049 | Peter asks thee another question, to wit,"If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" |
6049 | Pilate''s question,"What is truth?" |
6049 | Ponder the path of thy feet with the greatest seriousness, thy life lies upon it; what thinkest thou? |
6049 | Poor besotted sinner, is this thy last shift? |
6049 | Poor child, thought I, what sorrow art thou like to have for thy portion in this world? |
6049 | Poor drunken sinner, what shall I say to thee? |
6049 | Poor sin- sick soul, do you consider your state more loathsome and dangerous than the leprosy? |
6049 | Poor wretch, quoth the Pharisee to the Publican, What comest thou for? |
6049 | Power to do what? |
6049 | Pray how did he break it? |
6049 | Pray how did she die? |
6049 | Pray in the custody of Giant Despair, in the midst of Doubting Castle, and when their own folly brought them there too? |
6049 | Pray of what disease did Mr. Badman die, for now I perceive we are come up to his death? |
6049 | Pray tell me concerning the first, how he made away with himself? |
6049 | Pray then, and watch, be thou no drowsy sleeper, Grudge, nor refuse, to be thy brother''s keeper, Seest thou thy brother''s graces at an ebb? |
6049 | Pray what were they? |
6049 | Pray, Sir, What may I call you? |
6049 | Pray, did you know him? |
6049 | Pray, how was he in his death? |
6049 | Pray, what count you good thoughts, and a life according to God''s commandments? |
6049 | Pray, what is he? |
6049 | Pray, what may I call your name, that I may tell it to my Lord within? |
6049 | Pray, what principles did he hold? |
6049 | Pray, what was it more that he said unto you? |
6049 | Pray, where did you find all these? |
6049 | Pray, who are your kindred there? |
6049 | Presently with envy they are enraged and cry,"Dost thou not know that every man hath a measure of the spirit given to him? |
6049 | Prithee let me know Thy state? |
6049 | Prithee tell me what moved thee to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Prithee tell me, What seest thou in him to allure thee to forsake all the world, to come to him? |
6049 | Prithee, what new knowledge hast thou got, that so worketh off thy mind from thy friends, and that tempteth thee to go, nobody knows where? |
6049 | Professors such, perhaps, there may be, and who upon earth can help it? |
6049 | Proof.--"Who hath ascended up into heaven, or descended? |
6049 | Put thyself now upon this serious inquiry, Am I indeed come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Q. Hath he indeed made amends for sin? |
6049 | Quest.--But how( may some say) doth the devil make his delusions take place in the hearts of poor creatures? |
6049 | Quest.--But you will say, doth not the scripture make mention of a Christ within? |
6049 | Reader, can you be content with this? |
6049 | Reader, can you solve Mr. Bunyan''s riddle? |
6049 | Reader, have you ever felt thus''in downright earnest''for salvation? |
6049 | Reader, have you ever spoken harshly to, or persecuted, a child of God-- a poor penitent sinner? |
6049 | Reader, have you fled for refuge to the hope set before you in the gospel? |
6049 | Reader, have you had, at any time, equal anxiety for your soul''s health and salvation? |
6049 | Reader, how is your inclination? |
6049 | Reader, in the sight of god, let the heart- searching inquiry of the apostle''s be yours; Lord, is it I? |
6049 | Reader, is this your lot also? |
6049 | Reader, our anxious inquiry should be, Have we entered in by Christ the gate? |
6049 | Reader, what sayest thou to this? |
6049 | Reader, what sayst thou to this? |
6049 | Reader, would''st see what may you never feel, Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel? |
6049 | Reader, wouldst see what you may never feel, Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel? |
6049 | Reason also says the same, for how can Blacks beget white children, when both father and mother are black? |
6049 | Reason will say, Then who will profess Christ that hath such coarse entertainment at the beginning? |
6049 | Received you the Spirit, saith St. Paul, By hearing, faith, or works? |
6049 | Received, into what? |
6049 | Recorder was mad, and so not to be regarded: and for this he urged his fits, and said, If he be himself, why doth he not do thus always? |
6049 | Rejoicing in spirit for the hope of the life to come by Christ, who will that harm? |
6049 | Return again, my daughters, go your way, For I''m too old to marry: should I say I''ve hope? |
6049 | Riches and power, what is there more in the world? |
6049 | SECOND, How it appears that Christ hath power to save or cast out? |
6049 | SECONDLY, What death they must die? |
6049 | Said they anything more to discourage you? |
6049 | Saith not the gospel the very same? |
6049 | Saith the soul, Can not the devil give one such comfort I trow? |
6049 | Samson withstood his Delilah for a while, but she got the mastery of him at the last; why so? |
6049 | Satan often saith of us when we have sinned, as Abishai said of Shimei after he had cursed David, Shall not this man die for this? |
6049 | Satan stronger than the Almighty Redeemer? |
6049 | Saved I would be; and who is there that would not, were they in my condition? |
6049 | Say I these things as a man? |
6049 | Say I this of myself? |
6049 | Say they, if our iniquities be upon us, and we pine away in them, how can we then live? |
6049 | Say you so? |
6049 | Say you so? |
6049 | Says Paul,''They did not like to retain God in their knowledge''; and what follows? |
6049 | Says Satan, Dost thou not know that thou hast horribly sinned? |
6049 | Says Satan, dost thou not know that thou hast horribly sinned? |
6049 | Says Satan, dost thou not know, that thou art one of the vilest in all the pack of professors? |
6049 | Says Satan, doth not thy conscience tell thee that thou art and hast been more base than any of thy fellows can imagine thee to be? |
6049 | Scenes of accomplished bliss, which who can see, Though but in distant prospect, and not feel His soul refresh''d with foretaste of the joy? |
6049 | Second, Art thou come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Second, Because you know that though a man do run, yet if he do not overcome, or win, as well as run, what will he be the better for his running? |
6049 | Second, But what is it for Jesus to be an Advocate for these? |
6049 | Second, But you will say, is there a man made mention of here? |
6049 | Second, The second thing is, who are they that are carried away with this delusion, and why? |
6049 | Second, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners, to the Jerusalem sinners? |
6049 | Secondly, For that he perceived God was with them, though in that dark and dismal state; and why not, thought he, with me? |
6049 | Secondly, How safe they are in the arms of Jesus; would they be here again for a thousand worlds? |
6049 | Secondly, In the time of Elias, which time also was typical of this, what church was there to be seen in Israel? |
6049 | Secondly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed, and must she have an end? |
6049 | Secondly, by whom, and to what, he that is weak in the faith is to be received? |
6049 | See here, a man at the foot of the ladder, now ready in will and mind, to die for his profession; but how will he carry it now? |
6049 | See here, what should we talk any more about such a fellow? |
6049 | See now, did not I tell thee that thy fears were but the consequence of strong desires? |
6049 | Seest thou a professor that prayeth not? |
6049 | Seest thou here, how saints of old were wo nt to do? |
6049 | Seest thou not that many of late have been snatched away, on each side of thee( by that hand that hath been stretched out and is so still)? |
6049 | Sermon being done, up she gets, and away she goes, and withal inquired where this Jesus the preacher dined that day? |
6049 | Seth then was no better than we by nature, but came into the world in the blood of his mother''s filth:"What is man, that he should be clean? |
6049 | Seth, saith the Spirit, was set in the stead of Abel, there as forlorn, to defend religion: Must he not now be swallowed up? |
6049 | Seventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Seventhly, Must Antichrist be destroyed? |
6049 | Shall Christ come down from Heaven to earth to declare this to sinners; and shall sinners stop their ears against these good tidings? |
6049 | Shall Christ think nothing too dear for me? |
6049 | Shall Christ weep to see thy soul going on to destruction, and will though sport thyself in that way? |
6049 | Shall God display his glory before us under the character and title of a Creator, and shall we yet fear man? |
6049 | Shall God enter this complaint against thee? |
6049 | Shall God love me a sinner? |
6049 | Shall God love, shall he keep his faith to me? |
6049 | Shall God speak to man''s soul, and shall not man believe? |
6049 | Shall God the only wise, be arraigned at the bar of thy blind reason, and there be judged and condemned for his acts done in eternity? |
6049 | Shall I be a citizen of that city? |
6049 | Shall I be admitted into, or shut out from, that blessed kingdom? |
6049 | Shall I be proud, because I am sounding brass? |
6049 | Shall I buy the pleasures of this world at so dear a rate as to lose my soul for the obtaining of that? |
6049 | Shall I chide them? |
6049 | Shall I come to particulars with thee? |
6049 | Shall I content myself with a heaven that will last no longer than my lifetime? |
6049 | Shall I entertain thee against my sovereign Lord? |
6049 | Shall I flatter them? |
6049 | Shall I grieve Him with my foolish carriage? |
6049 | Shall I have my sins and lose my soul? |
6049 | Shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou wilt pardon my sins, or by believing Thou wilt not? |
6049 | Shall I intreat them to hold their tongues? |
6049 | Shall I need to mention particularly contests many years past, and presented to us in print? |
6049 | Shall I not be abandoned for this, and sent back from thence ashamed? |
6049 | Shall I now be ashamed of the cause, ways, people, or saints of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Shall I now love ever a lust or sin? |
6049 | Shall I now speak of the place that this saved body and soul shall dwell in? |
6049 | Shall I now yield my members as instruments of righteousness, seeing my end is everlasting life? |
6049 | Shall I save thee? |
6049 | Shall I slight His counsel by following of my own will? |
6049 | Shall I speak of the satiety and of the duration of all these? |
6049 | Shall I speak of their company? |
6049 | Shall I speak of their continuance in this condition? |
6049 | Shall I speak of their heavenly raiment? |
6049 | Shall I tell thee? |
6049 | Shall Jesus Christ be interceding in heaven? |
6049 | Shall another man pray for this, one that knew the goodness and benefit of it, and shall not I meditate upon it? |
6049 | Shall he look to God? |
6049 | Shall he look to himself? |
6049 | Shall he look to the commandment? |
6049 | Shall he not therefore seek for fruit, for fruit answerable to the means? |
6049 | Shall he stay from Christ till his heart is better? |
6049 | Shall he that keeps his promise sure In things both low and small, Yet break it like a man impure, In matters great''st of all? |
6049 | Shall he that speaks in righteousness give place, and he who has nothing but envy and deceit be admitted to stand his ground? |
6049 | Shall he trust to his duties? |
6049 | Shall he turn away, and not return?'' |
6049 | Shall it be said at the last day, that the wicked made more haste to hell than you to Heaven? |
6049 | Shall it be said at the last day, that wicked men made more haste to hell than you did make to heaven? |
6049 | Shall man believe what God says, and nothing at all regard it? |
6049 | Shall not Christ, then, prevail? |
6049 | Shall not I now be holy? |
6049 | Shall not I now study, strive, and lay out myself for Him that hath laid out Himself soul and body for me? |
6049 | Shall not then these mournful groans pierce thy flinty heart? |
6049 | Shall not this lay obligation upon me? |
6049 | Shall pride be found among redeemed slaves? |
6049 | Shall saints, then, like slaves, be afraid of their God, the Creator; of their own God, when he rendeth the heavens, and comes down? |
6049 | Shall that hinder the execution of Shall- come? |
6049 | Shall the beast stand glorying over them while they are dead, with his feet in their neck? |
6049 | Shall the dead arise and praise thee?'' |
6049 | Shall the devil''s kingdom be united, and shall Christ''s be divided? |
6049 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?'' |
6049 | Shall there any man be put to death this day in Israel, for do not I know, that I am king this day over Israel?" |
6049 | Shall they come? |
6049 | Shall they prosper that do such things? |
6049 | Shall this be the burden of the song of heaven? |
6049 | Shall this man lie down and despair? |
6049 | Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6049 | Shall we be ruled by the Giant? |
6049 | Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? |
6049 | Shall we deserve correction? |
6049 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6049 | Shall we do evil that good may come? |
6049 | Shall we forget them? |
6049 | Shall we go back again to my Lord, and confess our folly, and ask one? |
6049 | Shall we sin because we are forgiven? |
6049 | Shall we sin because we are not under the law, but under grace? |
6049 | Shall wood be taken thereof to do any work? |
6049 | Shall you with him live in pleasure as you do now? |
6049 | Shalt thou indeed abide the melting and washing of this day? |
6049 | She said she was afraid; I asked her, why? |
6049 | She, also, that is thine enemy shall see it, and shame shall cover her which saith unto thee, Where is the Lord thy God?" |
6049 | Short- sighted mortal,"shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"'' |
6049 | Should I now be ashamed of His ways and servants, how can I expect the blessing? |
6049 | Should I this night conceive a son? |
6049 | Should a man ask me how he should know that he loveth the children of God? |
6049 | Should one say to some, Art not thou the man that I once saw crying under a sermon, that I once, heard cry out, What must I do to be saved? |
6049 | Should one say to some-- Art not thou that man I saw crying out under a sermon,''What shall I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | Should she stay where she dwells, and retain this her mind, who could live quietly by her? |
6049 | Should we have been made a curse? |
6049 | Should we have undergone the pains of Hell? |
6049 | Should we make Mr. Good- deed our messenger when our petition cries for mercy? |
6049 | Should we pray for communion with God through Christ? |
6049 | Should you ask him that we mentioned but now, How long is it since you began to fear you should miss of this damsel you love so? |
6049 | Since, then, the children have Christ for their advocate, art thou a child? |
6049 | Sinner, art thou thirsty? |
6049 | Sinner, be advised; ask thy heart again, saying, Am I come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Sinner, canst thou read that Jesus Christ was made an offering for sin, and yet go in sin? |
6049 | Sinner, careless sinner, didst thou take notice of this first inference that I have drawn from my second doctrine? |
6049 | Sinner, coming sinner, art thou for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Sinner, hast thou deferred to fear the Lord? |
6049 | Sinner, hast thou obtained a broken heart? |
6049 | Sinner, if this wicked thought be in thy heart, tell me again, dost thou thus think in earnest? |
6049 | Sinner, sick sinner, what sayest thou to this? |
6049 | Sinner, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Sinner, what wilt thou take to make a mountain of sand that will reach as high as the sun is at noon? |
6049 | Sinner, where is now thy righteousness? |
6049 | Sinner, why shouldest thou pull vengeance down upon thee? |
6049 | Sinner, wouldst thou have mercy? |
6049 | Sinners, you have souls, can you behold a crucified Christ, and not bleed, and not mourn, and not fall in love with him? |
6049 | Sir, said I, if I may do good to one by my discourse, why may I not do good to two? |
6049 | Sir, said I, pray what do you mean by calling the people together? |
6049 | Sir, said the least, I was almost beat out of heart? |
6049 | Sir, what is the cause of this? |
6049 | Sir, what think you? |
6049 | Sir, which is my way to this honest man''s house? |
6049 | Sir, you seem greatly concerned at this, but what if I shall say more? |
6049 | Sixthly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6049 | Skill, how does it taste? |
6049 | Skill, saying, Sir, what will content you for your pains and care to, and of my child? |
6049 | Sluggard, art thou asleep still? |
6049 | Snuff- dishes, you may say, what are they? |
6049 | Snuffers, you may say, of what were they a type? |
6049 | So Christ:''Which of you convinceth me of sin?'' |
6049 | So Christiana asked Prudence what it was that made those curious notes? |
6049 | So David,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6049 | So He addressed Himself to Mercy, and said unto her, And what moved thee to come hither, sweet heart? |
6049 | So I asked her, she being a stranger to me, what she had to say to me? |
6049 | So I was, and a sweet dream it was; but are you sure I laughed? |
6049 | So again saith he in the next Psalm after, as afore he had complained of the oppression of the enemy,''Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
6049 | So again:"I was left alone,"says he,"and saw this great vision"; and what follows? |
6049 | So again:''What iniquity have your fathers found in me, that they are gone far from me, and have walked after vanity, and are become vain?'' |
6049 | So also Bunyan-"Every height is a difficulty to him that is loaden; with a burden, how shall we attain the Heaven of heavens? |
6049 | So full is this of consolation and felicity that the apostle exclaims,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6049 | So he came directly to me, and said, Mercy, what aileth thee? |
6049 | So he further asked, if all the men in the town of Mansoul were in this confession as they? |
6049 | So it is here, there is a promise made indeed, but to whom? |
6049 | So that the question is not, Do I find that I am righteous? |
6049 | So that, is there righteousness in Christ? |
6049 | So the guide, Mr. Great- heart, awaked him, and the old gentleman, as he lift up his eyes, cried out, What''s the matter? |
6049 | So then, Doth the law call for righteousness? |
6049 | So then, when the body of Christ is in every sense completed in this life by the light of the sunshine of his holy gospel, what need of this sun? |
6049 | So they began and said, Neighbour, pray what is your meaning by this? |
6049 | So they called her, and said to her, Mercy, what is that thing thou wouldst have? |
6049 | So they came up one to another; and presently Stand- fast said to old Honest, Ho, father Honest, are you there? |
6049 | So when he was come into the chamber of state, Diabolus saluted him with''Welcome, my Lord, how went matters betwixt you to- day?'' |
6049 | So when he was got in, the man of the gate asked him who directed him thither? |
6049 | So when they were come to the gate, the guide knocked, and the Porter cried, Who is there? |
6049 | So, again, in another place, he saith,''Lord, how long wilt thou look on? |
6049 | So, again, speaking of the wicked, he saith,''Ye have said it is vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinance?'' |
6049 | So, did I say? |
6049 | So, of which of them hath He at any time said, This is, or shall be, made in or after Mine image, Mine own image? |
6049 | So, then, what is the axe, that it should boast itself against him that heweth therewith? |
6049 | So, then, wilt thou live by the law? |
6049 | Solomon says,''The word of a king is as the roaring of a lion''; and if so, what is the Word of God? |
6049 | Some make their sighs, their tears, their prayers, and their reformations, their advocates-"Hast thou tried these, and found them wanting?" |
6049 | Some may say, Will God see that which is not? |
6049 | Some of the things of God that are excellent, have not been approved by some of the saints: What then? |
6049 | Some, as I said, that revolt, are shot dead upon the place; and for them, who can help them? |
6049 | Sometimes I look upon myself, and say, Where am I now? |
6049 | Soon after we set out, my father came to my brother''s, and asked his men whom his daughter rode behind? |
6049 | Soul, consider, is it not miserable to lose heaven for twenty, thirty, or forty years''sinning against God? |
6049 | Soul, he suffered and did bear with the manners of Israel forty years in the wilderness; and hast thou tried him half so long? |
6049 | Specially that bitter outcry of his,''What shall I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | Still how common is the question, which one of the disciples put to his master,''Lord, are there few that be saved?'' |
6049 | Stop, my dear reader, have you cast away all useless encumbrances, and all easily besetting sins? |
6049 | Studies that yield far less profit than this, how close are they pursued, by some who have adapted themselves thereunto? |
6049 | Such as are self- evident or evident of themselves; to what? |
6049 | Suppose a child doth grievously transgress against and offend his father, is the relation between them therefore dissolved? |
6049 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should be made to live for ever, but without the enjoyment of God, what good would his life do him? |
6049 | Suppose a man, when he dieth, should go to heaven, that golden place, what good would this do him, if he was not possessed of the God of it? |
6049 | Suppose all, if all these churches were baptized, what then? |
6049 | Suppose he shall against thee shut the door, Knock thou the louder, and cry out the more; What if he makes thee there to stand a while? |
6049 | Suppose it should be urged, that this is a doctrine tending to looseness and lasciviousness; the answer is ready--"What shall we say then? |
6049 | Suppose so many cattle in such a pound, and one goes by whose they are not, doth he concern himself? |
6049 | Suppose such a slip as I told you of before should be in your garden, and there die, would you let it abide in your garden? |
6049 | Suppose that I be cheated myself with a brass half- crown, must I therefore cheat another therewith? |
6049 | Suppose they staid but one quarter of an hour there after their fall, before they were cast out, what sweetness found they there, but guilt? |
6049 | Surely it hath not entered into the heart of man to conceive what ear never heard, nor mortal eye ever saw? |
6049 | Take the THREATENINGS laid down in holy writ, and how are they disregarded? |
6049 | Take the tables for the hearts of the murderers, and the instruments for their sins, and what place more fit for such instruments to be laid upon? |
6049 | Tell me, I say, by this text, whether is here intended the sins of all that shall be saved? |
6049 | Tell me, dost thou not desire to desire? |
6049 | Tell me, now, you that desire to be under the law, can you fulfil all the commands of the law, and after answer all its demands? |
6049 | Tell me, therefore, which of them will love him most? |
6049 | Tell me, when did you see an old drunkard converted? |
6049 | Tenth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Than thought? |
6049 | Than wind? |
6049 | That I may know also, whether the day of grace be past with me or no? |
6049 | That also in the Romans is clear to this purpose,''Who is he that condemneth? |
6049 | That is comparable to the pleasures, profits, and glory of this world? |
6049 | That is true, but what evil is that that he will not do, that is left of God, as I believe Mr. Badman was? |
6049 | That it cleaves to the best, who knows not? |
6049 | That it is disgraceful to profession, who knows not? |
6049 | That of David is for this remarkable,"Who am I,[ said he] and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort? |
6049 | That old friend of publicans and sinners? |
6049 | That our duties are imperfect, follows upon what was discoursed before; for if our graces be imperfect, how can our duties but be so too? |
6049 | That tells thee the world is not, even then when it doth most appear to be; wilt thou set thine heart upon that which is not? |
6049 | That the soul, did I say? |
6049 | That they should lie and rot in their grave eternally? |
6049 | That they would put off the old man; what is that? |
6049 | That this must be so urged for their excuse: Hath God been more sparing in making out his mind in the one, rather than the other? |
6049 | That was extortion, was it not? |
6049 | That which we read is this;''Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?'' |
6049 | That, because these several things will convince of sin, therefore will they needs be the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | The Bible had been to him a sealed book until, in a state of mental agony, he cried, What must I do to be saved? |
6049 | The END of the law-- what is the end of the law but perfect and sinless obedience? |
6049 | The Godhead is indeed invisible; how then is Christ the image of it? |
6049 | The Lord spake unto Manasseh, and to his people, by the prophets, but would he hear? |
6049 | The Pharisees, for that they professed religion, but walked not answerable thereto, unto what doth Christ compare them but to serpents and vipers? |
6049 | The Prince asked further, saying, Could you have been content that your slavery should have continued under his tyranny as long as you had lived? |
6049 | The Ranters would profess that they were without sin: and how far short of his opinion are the Quakers? |
6049 | The Shepherds then answered, Did you not see a little below these mountains a stile that led into a meadow, on the left hand of this way? |
6049 | The answer to the inquiry,"What is man?" |
6049 | The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? |
6049 | The broken- hearted desireth God''s company; when wilt thou come unto me? |
6049 | The children, indeed, have the advantage of an advocate; but what is this to them that have none to plead their cause? |
6049 | The cost of the enterprise is vast indeed; the army is numerous as our thoughts, and who can number''the multitude of his thoughts?'' |
6049 | The creditors asked what he would give? |
6049 | The curse of God hangs over your heads; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | The day of death and judgment is at the door; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | The devil will tempt us, sin will assault us, men will persecute; but can they do it to everlasting? |
6049 | The dragon her assaults, fills her with jars, Yet rests she under her Beloved''s shade, But whence was she? |
6049 | The end, what is that? |
6049 | The first is to question whether any are said to die and rise, by the death and resurrection of Christ? |
6049 | The first observation, or truth, drawn from the words is cleared by the text,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | The forgiveness of sins: But what is meant by forgiveness? |
6049 | The full pitcher can hold no more; then why should it go to the fountain? |
6049 | The godly are called believers; and why believers, but because they are they that have given credit to the great things of the gospel of God? |
6049 | The grace of humility, when is it? |
6049 | The graces of the Spirit-- what like them, or where here are they to be found, save in the souls of men only? |
6049 | The great question is, not as to the means, but the fact-- Have I been born again? |
6049 | The guilt of blood who can bear? |
6049 | The hearing of this is enough to ravish one''s heart; but are these things to be enjoyed? |
6049 | The heart naturally is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; how then should there flow from such an one the fear of God? |
6049 | The inquiry is pursued a step farther,"Can those who differ with me be saved?" |
6049 | The inquiry was then, as, alas, it is too frequent now, Are there many that be saved? |
6049 | The instruments with which they slew the sacrifices, what were they but a bloody axe, bloody knives, bloody hooks, and bloody hands? |
6049 | The judge saith, What canst thou say for thyself that sentence of death should not be passed upon thee? |
6049 | The law is not of faith, why then should grace be by Christians expected by observation of the law? |
6049 | The law of Christ is,"Is any sick among you? |
6049 | The man also at the touching of the bones of Elisha? |
6049 | The man therefore, read it, and looking upon Evangelist very carefully, said, Whither must I fly? |
6049 | The man under the sixth head complaineth for want of temptations, but thou hast enough of them; art thou glad of them, tempted, coming sinner? |
6049 | The men then asked, What must we do in the holy place? |
6049 | The mercy, the pardoning preserving mercy, the mercy of the Lord is upon them, who is he then that can condemn them? |
6049 | The mind becomes entranced, and when sober reflection regains her command, we naturally inquire, Can all this have taken place in my heart? |
6049 | The name of God, what is that, but that by which he is distinguished and known from all others? |
6049 | The name of master is a name of fear--"And if I be a master, where is my fear? |
6049 | The principle, you will say, what do you mean by that? |
6049 | The promise is, that Babylon shall be destroyed: And do we hold our tongues? |
6049 | The question is not, Are they blind? |
6049 | The question is, Do not the scriptures make mention of a Christ within? |
6049 | The question naturally arises-- What is this''furnace of earth''in which the Lord''s words are purified? |
6049 | The question then is, whether the elect and reprobate receive a differing grace? |
6049 | The question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6049 | The questions was answered with that portion of Scripture,''If God be for us, who can be against us?'' |
6049 | The record, you will say, what is that? |
6049 | The riches, honours, and pleasures of this world, what mortal can withstand? |
6049 | The righteous; who is he but the man that loveth God, and his holy will, to do it? |
6049 | The saints of old, they being willing and resolved for heaven, what could stop them? |
6049 | The same saying in effect hath also John in the Revelation--"Who shall not fear thee, O Lord,"said he,"and glorify thy name?" |
6049 | The second part of the inquiry is, to what he that is weak in the faith is to be received? |
6049 | The second question is, How should we strive? |
6049 | The second thing is, How are these brought into this Everlasting Covenant of Grace? |
6049 | The second thing that I would inquire into is this: What it is to be''ready to be offered up''? |
6049 | The smith, what is he? |
6049 | The snare, say you, what is that? |
6049 | The study of those scriptures, in order that the solemn question might be safely resolved,''Can such a fallen sinner rise again?'' |
6049 | The subject I should have preached upon, even then when the constable came, was,''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6049 | The tail, says the Holy Ghost, draws them down; draws down even the stars of heaven; but whither doth he draw them? |
6049 | The text from which he intended to preach was''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6049 | The text says''the desire of the righteous shall be granted''; what then are the desires of the righteous? |
6049 | The thing formed may not say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
6049 | The united are all the faithful in one body; into whom? |
6049 | The valley of Achor; what is that? |
6049 | The vital question is, Has my heart been conquered; do I love Emmanuel? |
6049 | The waster, what is that? |
6049 | The way that he took, led him directly into this condition; for who can expect other things of one that follows such courses? |
6049 | The which, when he had done, he said, Christiana, knowest thou wherefore I am come? |
6049 | The whole have no need of the physician; then why should they go to him? |
6049 | The whole of this address is descriptive of what the author saw, felt, or heard--''What shall I say? |
6049 | The wicked; who is he but the man that loves not God, nor to do his will? |
6049 | Their covetousness declareth that they are weary of depending upon God; and doth not thy wanton actions declare that thou abhorrest chastity? |
6049 | Their minds and consciences are defiled; how then can sweet and good proceed from thence? |
6049 | Their minds were blinded, saith the text: Whose minds? |
6049 | Their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness; how then can there be found one word that should please God? |
6049 | Their poison-- what is that? |
6049 | Then Christian asked, What is the reason of the discontent of Passion? |
6049 | Then Christian called to Demas, saying, Is not the place dangerous? |
6049 | Then Christian said to him, Come away, man, why do you stay so behind? |
6049 | Then Demas called again, saying, But will you not come over and see? |
6049 | Then Faithful stepped forward again, and said to Talkative, Come, what cheer? |
6049 | Then I ask again, Hast thou committed thy cause to him? |
6049 | Then I ask again, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him?-I say, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him? |
6049 | Then I asked him further, how I must make my supplication to Him? |
6049 | Then I asked him which was his first coming? |
6049 | Then I asked how long time he would have me live with him? |
6049 | Then I said, But how, Lord, must I consider of Thee in my coming to Thee, that my faith may be placed aright upon Thee? |
6049 | Then I said, But, Lord, what is believing? |
6049 | Then Israel said, Why were you so unkind To say you had a brother left behind? |
6049 | Then Mr. Stand- fast blushed, and said, But why, did you see me? |
6049 | Then Naomi said, Shall I not, my daughter, Seek rest for thee, that thou do well hereafter? |
6049 | Then Said Christian to the man, What art thou? |
6049 | Then breaking out in the bitterness of my soul, I said''to myself,''with a grievous sigh, How can God comfort such a wretch as I? |
6049 | Then did he that came in for their relief call out to the ruffians, saying, What is that thing that you do? |
6049 | Then did that scripture seize upon my soul, He is of one mind, and who can turn him? |
6049 | Then did the Judge say to him, Hast thou any more to say? |
6049 | Then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a better, a brave golden finger? |
6049 | Then he asked them, saying, Where did you lie the last night? |
6049 | Then he inquired if they all were well, And said, When you were here I heard you tell Of an old man, your father, how does he? |
6049 | Then he said to his mother, What diet has Matthew of late fed upon? |
6049 | Then ran Innocent in( for that was her name) and said to those within, Can you think who is at the door? |
6049 | Then said Charity to Christian, Have you a family? |
6049 | Then said Christian to Hopeful his fellow, Is it true which this man hath said? |
6049 | Then said Christian to his fellow, If these men can not stand before the sentence of men, what will they do with the sentence of God? |
6049 | Then said Christian to the Interpreter, But is there no hope for such a man as this? |
6049 | Then said Christian to the porter, Sir, what house is this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, May we go in thither? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What is thy name? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What meaneth this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What meaneth this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means that? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Christian, Why doth this man thus tremble? |
6049 | Then said Christian, Why doth this man thus tremble? |
6049 | Then said Christian, You make me afraid, but whither shall I fly to be safe? |
6049 | Then said Christiana, What is the meaning of this? |
6049 | Then said Christiana, Wherefore weepeth my Sister so? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist further, Art not thou the man that I found crying without the walls of the City of Destruction? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, How hath it fared with you, my friends, since the time of our last parting? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, If this be thy condition, why standest thou still? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, Why not willing to die, since this life is attended with so many evils? |
6049 | Then said Evangelist, pointing with his finger over a very wide field, Do you see yonder wicket gate? |
6049 | Then said Gaius, Is this Christian''s wife? |
6049 | Then said Gaius, Whose wife is this aged matron? |
6049 | Then said He, Is there but one spider in all this spacious room? |
6049 | Then said Hopeful, Where are we now? |
6049 | Then said Joseph, Mother, what is it? |
6049 | Then said Matthew, May we eat apples, since they were such, by, and with which, the serpent beguiled our first mother? |
6049 | Then said Mercy to him that was their guide and conductor, What are those three men? |
6049 | Then said Mercy, How knew you this before you came from home? |
6049 | Then said Mercy, What means this? |
6049 | Then said Mnason their host, How far have ye come today? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Bunyan, Have you the original? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Bunyan,''Have you the original?'' |
6049 | Then said Mr. Desires- awake, why should not I do the best I can to save so famous a town as Mansoul from deserved destruction? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Feeble- mind to him, Man, How camest thou hither? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart to the little ones, Come, my pretty boys, how do you do? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, Good Gaius, what hast thou for supper? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, What art thou? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Great- heart, What things? |
6049 | Then said Mr. Valiant- for- truth, Prithee, who is it? |
6049 | Then said Nathaniel to Jesus,''Whence knowest thou me? |
6049 | Then said he that attempted to back the lions, Will you slay me upon mine own ground? |
6049 | Then said he, Who will go with me? |
6049 | Then said he, Who, and what is he that is so hardy, as after this manner to molest the Giant Despair? |
6049 | Then said she, How canst thou pretend to love me, When thus thy doing towards me disprove thee? |
6049 | Then said the Interpreter, Is there no hope, but you must be kept in the iron cage of despair? |
6049 | Then said the Keeper of the gate, Who is there? |
6049 | Then said the Keeper of the gate, Who is there? |
6049 | Then said the Keeper, Whence come ye, and what is that you would have? |
6049 | Then said the Prince again, Are you the men that did suffer yourselves to be corrupted and defiled by that abominable one Diabolus? |
6049 | Then said the Prince, And for what are those ropes on your heads? |
6049 | Then said the Prince, And what punishment is it, think you, that you deserve at my hand for these and other your high and mighty sins? |
6049 | Then said the Prince,''And what is he that is become thy companion in this so weighty a matter?'' |
6049 | Then said the Shepherds one to another, Shall we show these Pilgrims some wonders? |
6049 | Then said the boys, Are we not yet at the end of this doleful place? |
6049 | Then said the damsel to them, With whom would you speak in this place? |
6049 | Then said the giant, Why are you here on my ground? |
6049 | Then said the guide, Why did you not cry out, that some might have come in for your succour? |
6049 | Then said the man to the Prince,''Oh let not my Lord be angry; and why inquirest thou after the name of such a dead dog as I am? |
6049 | Then said the man, Neighbours, wherefore are ye come? |
6049 | Then said the men of Judah, for what reason Are you come up against us at this season? |
6049 | Then said the old man, Thou lookest like an honest fellow; wilt thou be content to dwell with me for the wages that I shall give thee? |
6049 | Then said the other, Do you see yonder shining light? |
6049 | Then said their guide, Come, what cheer, Sirs? |
6049 | Then said they, Have you none? |
6049 | Then said they, We entreat thee let us know, For whose cause we this evil undergo, Whence comest thou? |
6049 | Then said they, What should this be? |
6049 | Then said they, What''s thy riddle, let us know? |
6049 | Then shalt thou say in thine heart, Who hath begotten me these, seeing I have lost my children, and am desolate, a captive and removing to and fro? |
6049 | Then she addressed herself to the eldest, whose name was Matthew; and she said to him, Come, Matthew, shall I also catechise you? |
6049 | Then she said, Come, Joseph( for his name was Joseph), will you let me catechise you? |
6049 | Then such a question as this,"Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?" |
6049 | Then the water stood in mine eyes, and I asked further, But, Lord, may such a great sinner as I am, be indeed accepted of Thee, and be saved by Thee? |
6049 | Then they asked her of her welfare, and if these young men were her husband''s sons? |
6049 | Then they asked the Shepherds what that should mean? |
6049 | Then they cried out to those that were sent, What news from the Prince? |
6049 | Then they stood trembling before him, and he said, Are you the men that heretofore were the servants of Shaddai? |
6049 | Then unto her, her mother- in- law did say, In what field hast thou been to glean to- day? |
6049 | Then were the men exceedingly afraid; And, wherefore hast thou done this thing? |
6049 | Then what doth this speak to the Lord''s own people? |
6049 | Then what mean they, who were to appearance once come out, but now are going thither again? |
6049 | Then what will become of all the profane, ignorant, scoffers, self- righteous, proud, bastard- professors in the world? |
6049 | Then what will become of all those that creep into the society of God''s people without a wedding garment on? |
6049 | Then what will become of all those that mock at the second coming of the Man Christ, as do the Ranters, Quakers, drunkards, and the like? |
6049 | Then will not you yourself confess, that he is deluded, that is persuaded to follow that light that can not reveal Christ unto him? |
6049 | Then would you have none pray but those that know they are the disciples of Christ? |
6049 | Then, I pray thee, let me inquire a little of thee, what provision thou hast made for thy soul? |
6049 | Then, O that I might have a little ease for my deceitful tongue? |
6049 | Then, as it seems, sometimes you got rid of your trouble? |
6049 | Then, directing his speech to Ignorance, he said, Come, how do you? |
6049 | Then, said I, a man, it seems, may report it for a truth? |
6049 | Then, why may not I doubt that I may be one of these? |
6049 | There are but three or four: and can not God miss them, and save me for all them? |
6049 | There are mansion- houses, beds of glory, and places to walk in among the angels; and who knows what they are? |
6049 | There are rewards for services, and labour of love showed to God''s name here; and who knows what they will be? |
6049 | There is but one law- giver, That''s able to destroy and to deliver; Who then art thou that dost condemn thy neighbour? |
6049 | There is death? |
6049 | There is heaven itself, the imperial heaven; does any body know what that is? |
6049 | There is hope, another grace of the Spirit bestowed upon us; and how often is that also, as to the excellency of working, made to flag? |
6049 | There is immortality and eternal life: and who knows what they are? |
6049 | There is in the text an intimation of a sense of torment''Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | There is never a rebel in heaven against God, and if he should so deal on earth, must it not whirl thee down to hell? |
6049 | There is reverence, fear, and standing in awe of God''s Word and judgments, where are the excellent workings thereof to be found? |
6049 | There is the mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, and the innumerable company of angels; doth any body know what all they are? |
6049 | There will be badges of honour, harps to make merry with, and heavenly songs of triumph; doth any here know what they are? |
6049 | Thereat Mercy said, And why so envious, trow? |
6049 | Therefor, speak plainly; Dost thou believe that that man Christ Jesus is ascended from his people in his person? |
6049 | Therefore from that time that he heard that word,"Why persecutest thou me?" |
6049 | Therefore in this sense it may be said,''Where is the fury of the oppressor?'' |
6049 | Therefore is that in the Psalms read both ways, shall I look to the mountains? |
6049 | Therefore let him still humble himself before his God, because his hand is upon him, and say, What sin is this, for which this hand of God is upon me? |
6049 | Therefore the soul is it which is said to love God--''Saw ye him whom my soul loveth?'' |
6049 | Therefore to answer this, here we have a breadth, a spreading breadth;"I spread my skirt over thee": But how far? |
6049 | Therefore try a little, Do they slight God''s Christ, which is the Son of the Virgin? |
6049 | Therefore what need have they that I should work such a miracle, as to send one from the dead unto them? |
6049 | Therefore, I say, this gate was not measured; for what should a rule do here, where things are beyond all measure? |
6049 | Therefore, how can you bear the face to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Therefore, this would still stick with me, How can you tell that you are elected? |
6049 | Therefore, wherefore? |
6049 | These are also taken notice of in Job, and go there also by the name of wicked men:"Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden? |
6049 | These are my fears of him too; but who can hinder that which will be? |
6049 | These bloody sacrifices, what did they signify, what were they figures of, but of the bloody sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | These kill the heart; for who can bear up under the guilt of sin? |
6049 | They added also, We see it is well with you, but how must it go with the town of Mansoul? |
6049 | They are all gone out of the way; how then can they walk therein? |
6049 | They are fallen from grace, and what can help them? |
6049 | They are indeed reprobates who have not Christ within them; but now, how is thy folly manifest? |
6049 | They are the salt of the earth, shall not they be seasoning? |
6049 | They bless, they all bless; they thank, they all thank; and wilt thou hold thy tongue? |
6049 | They gather it indeed, and think to keep it too, but what says Solomon? |
6049 | They may, with confidence, say, Lord, Lord, have we not eaten and drank in Thy presence, and taught in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out devils? |
6049 | They said( it was when I was in my troubles), What shall we do with this woman? |
6049 | They shall come, say you, but how if they be blind, and see not the way? |
6049 | They shall, you say; but how if they will not; and, if so, then what can Shall- come do? |
6049 | They spake not aright, saying, what have I done? |
6049 | They:--Who? |
6049 | Think thus with thyself, What, shall I lose a long heaven for short pleasure? |
6049 | Think you that they upon whom the tower of Siloam fell, were sinners above others? |
6049 | Think, therefore, with thyself thus, What was it that at first did wound my heart? |
6049 | Thinkest thou not, who readest these lines, that all of these who had before committed their soul to God to keep were the fittest folk to die? |
6049 | Thinkest thou that thou shalt weather it out well enough at the day of judgment? |
6049 | Thinkest thou this to be right, that thou didst put the lie upon my Father, and madest him, to Mansoul, the greatest deluder in the world? |
6049 | Thinkest thou this to be right? |
6049 | Thinkest thou, reader, that the scripture hath two faces, and speaketh with two mouths? |
6049 | Third, Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Third, But wilt thou yet plead thy righteousness for mercy? |
6049 | Third, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered in the first place to the biggest sinners? |
6049 | Thirdly, Is Antichrist to be destroyed? |
6049 | Thirdly, What was the dry bones that we read of in the 37th of Ezekiel, but the church of God, and also a figure of what we are treating of? |
6049 | This beginning was bad, but what shall I say? |
6049 | This brings us to the most important of all the subjects of self- examination-- am I one of the''righteous''? |
6049 | This dastardly heart of ours, when shall it be more subdued and trodden under foot of faith? |
6049 | This doctrine Christ teacheth when he saith,"Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not one of them is forgotten before God? |
6049 | This is but a falsehood and a slander, for the unregenerate know him not; how then can they believe on him? |
6049 | This is but reasonable; for if Christ stands up to plead for us, why should not we stand up to plead for him? |
6049 | This is manifest by the very name of the tree; it is called the tree of knowledge of good and evil; and have you that knowledge as yet? |
6049 | This is much; but is God connected with this? |
6049 | This is not a sign that you fear me, ye offer the blind for sacrifices, where is my fear? |
6049 | This is of absolute necessity; for how can or shall a man be willing to come to Christ that knows not what he is, what God has appointed him to do? |
6049 | This is plain, not only to sense, but by the natural scope of the words,''What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
6049 | This is the common language,''if our transgressions be upon us, and we pine away in them, How should we then live?'' |
6049 | This is the fear that made the three thousand cry out,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6049 | This is the reason of this inquiry, Did you come in at the gate? |
6049 | This is the time, then, for Christ to stand up to plead; for now there is room for such a question- Can David''s sin stand with grace? |
6049 | This is your hour, said He, and the power of darkness, when He cried out,''My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?'' |
6049 | This last has the body for his watch- house; the eyes and ears for his port- holes; the tongue therewith to cry, Who comes there? |
6049 | This man is minded to give more to be damned, than God requires he should give to be saved; is not this an extravagant one? |
6049 | This may be answered by the question-- Was Peter justified in leaving the prison, and going to the prayer- meeting at Mary''s house? |
6049 | This question, I briefly ask thee,"Had Christ a body of flesh before the world began?" |
6049 | This righteousness of God- man, this righteousness of Christ? |
6049 | This snare will bring thee back again to the pit, which is hell, and then how wilt thou do to be rid of thy fear? |
6049 | This text utterly excludes the law-- what law? |
6049 | This to reason is very dreadful; for it cuts the soul down to the ground;''for a wounded spirit who[ none] can bear?'' |
6049 | This was honest and plain; but what said Mr. Badman to her? |
6049 | This wicked world doth sentence us for our good deeds, but how then would they sentence us for our bad ones? |
6049 | This word created, is added, on purpose to show that the world is under the power of his hand; for who can destroy, but he that can create? |
6049 | This, I say, is a character above all angels; for, as the apostle said,''To which of the angels said He at anytime,''Thou art my Son?'' |
6049 | This; Which? |
6049 | Those of the children of Israel that went from Egypt, and entered the land of Canaan, how came they thither? |
6049 | Thou art in a strait, wilt thou fly before Moses, or with David fall into the hands of the Lord? |
6049 | Thou biddest them be merry and lightsome; but dost thou not know that"the heart of fools is in the house of mirth?" |
6049 | Thou booby, say''st thou nothing but Cuckoo? |
6049 | Thou didst so wonderfully pour out thy wrath upon him, to the making of him cry out,''My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
6049 | Thou hast already been unfaithful in thy service to Him; and how dost thou think to receive wages of Him? |
6049 | Thou hast been a cumber- ground[104] long already, and wilt thou continue so still? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou has sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou horrible wretch, dost not know, that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? |
6049 | Thou mayest also doubt18 thy thoughts of the damned thus: If these poor creatures were in the world again, would they sin as they did before? |
6049 | Thou mayest by thy fear be driven away from God, from his worship, people, and ways, but what will that avail? |
6049 | Thou professest thou believest in Christ: is he thy joy, and the life of thy soul? |
6049 | Thou professest to believe thou hast a share in another world: hast thou let got THIS, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him? |
6049 | Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the soul that ventured itself upon him?'' |
6049 | Thou seemest angry, why dost on us frown? |
6049 | Thou simple bird, what makes thou here to play? |
6049 | Thou standest to thy righteousness, what dost thou mean? |
6049 | Thou subject are to cold o''nights, When darkness is thy covering; At days thy danger''s great by kites, How can''st thou then sit there and sing? |
6049 | Thou talkest like one upon whose head is the shell to this very day; for what should he pawn them, or to whom should he sell them? |
6049 | Thou talkest of leaving him, but then whither wilt thou go? |
6049 | Thou thinkest that thou art a Christian; thou shouldest be sorry else: Well, But when did God shew thee that thou wert no Christian? |
6049 | Thou thinkest to escape the pit; but what wilt thou do with the snare? |
6049 | Thou wilt say unto me, How should I know that I have done so? |
6049 | Though men that have a great design, do, and must make use of those that in reason are most likely to effect it, yet must the Lord do so too? |
6049 | Though such should climb up to heaven, from thence will God bring them down( Amos 9:2), Still I say, therefore, how shall we get in thither? |
6049 | Through what righteousness? |
6049 | Thus also thou may say when death assaulteth thee-- O death, where is thy sting? |
6049 | Thus did Saul by the light that made him see; by it he came to Christ, and cried,''Who art thou, Lord?'' |
6049 | Thus much have I thought good to speak in answer to this question, What iniquity should we depart from that religiously name the name of Christ? |
6049 | Thus to do is horrible; but mayest thou not judge amiss in this matter? |
6049 | Thus, is Christ formed in me, the only hope of glory? |
6049 | Thus, when the godly among the Jews made prayers that rebellious Israel might not be cast out of the vineyard, what saith the answer of God? |
6049 | Thy answer is nothing to the question, for I did not ask, whether the Spirit of Christ was in thee? |
6049 | Thy first question should be on whom must I believe? |
6049 | Thy people, what people? |
6049 | Thy sin has brought this army to thy walls, and shall it bring it in judgment to do execution into thy town? |
6049 | Time runs; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | Time was, indeed, he could hector, even hector it with God himself, saying,''What is the Almighty, that we should serve him?'' |
6049 | To be made an heir of God, of his grace, of his kingdom, and eternal glory, what is like it? |
6049 | To be saved from sin, from hell, from the wrath of God, from eternal damnation, what is like it? |
6049 | To be thrown o''er the pales, and there to lie, Or be pick''d up by th''next that passeth by? |
6049 | To instance no more, although I could instance many, are not they the words of our Lord? |
6049 | To instance somewhat, Faith in Christ: what harm can that do? |
6049 | To prosper and be in health, as their soul prospers-- what, to thrive and mend in outwards no faster? |
6049 | To see a sea of brimstone burn, Who would it not affright? |
6049 | To the Romans,''I beseech you therefore,''saith he,''by the mercies of God,( What mercies? |
6049 | To this end, I say, how was the Shunammite''s son raised from the dead? |
6049 | To what end should such be comprehended in this of exhortation of his? |
6049 | To what end, O my soul, art thou retired into this place? |
6049 | To what end? |
6049 | To what may such an one attain? |
6049 | To what purpose else is it revealed, made mention of, and commended to us? |
6049 | To which Bunyan replied;''Friend, dost thou speak this as from thy own knowledge, or did any other tell thee so? |
6049 | To whom could he go? |
6049 | To whom did he swear that they should not enter into his rest? |
6049 | To whom they said, Why hath my lord such thought? |
6049 | Touching his working with some, how invisible is it to these in whose souls it is yet begun? |
6049 | Touching the book of my remembrance, who can contradict it? |
6049 | True, he stopped the blow but for a time; but why did he stop it at all? |
6049 | True, the men were but mean in themselves; for what is Paul or what Apollos, or what was James or John? |
6049 | True, the others murmured at him; but what did the Lord Jesus answer them? |
6049 | True, the right of dominion is the Lord''s; but the sinner will not suffer it, but will be all himself; saying''Who is Lord over us?'' |
6049 | True, thou mayest fear as devils do, but what will that profit? |
6049 | Tush, said Obstinate, away with your book; will you go back with us, or no? |
6049 | USE FIFTH, Again, fifthly, Is it so? |
6049 | USE FIRST.--Is justifying righteousness to be found in the person of Christ only? |
6049 | USE SECOND.--Is it so? |
6049 | USE THIRD.--But, thirdly, is it so? |
6049 | Understand,[ O] ye brutish among the people: and ye fools, when will ye be wise? |
6049 | Understandest thou what thou readest? |
6049 | Upon the first day: what, or which first day of this, or that, of the third or fourth week of the month? |
6049 | Upon what terms may he have this life? |
6049 | Upon what terms? |
6049 | Upon whom must these reproaches fall? |
6049 | Us: What us? |
6049 | Use Second, Is it so? |
6049 | Use Second, Is there so great a heart for love, towards us, both in the Father and in the Son? |
6049 | V. What might be the reasons which prevailed with God to save us by grace, rather than by any other means? |
6049 | V.--WHAT MIGHT BE THE REASON MOVED GOD TO ORDAIN AND CHOOSE TO SAVE THOSE THAT HE SAVETH BY HIS GRACE, RATHER THAN BY ANY OTHER MEANS? |
6049 | WHAT SHALL I SAY? |
6049 | Was He not angry with me? |
6049 | Was death strong upon him? |
6049 | Was it God that was offended? |
6049 | Was it before or after thou hadst been a sinner? |
6049 | Was it better than God? |
6049 | Was it for that some special mercies laid obligations upon thee, or how? |
6049 | Was it good also that thou madest a prey of the innocency and simplicity of the now miserable town of Mansoul? |
6049 | Was it not because they had that richer and better thing,''the Lord Jesus Christ?'' |
6049 | Was it not free grace for Christ to give Peter a loving look after he had cursed, and swore, and denied Him? |
6049 | Was it not free grace that met Paul when he was agoing to Damascus to persecute, which converted him, and made him a vessel of mercy? |
6049 | Was it not free grace to save such as those were that are spoken of in the 16th of Ezekiel, which no eye pitied? |
6049 | Was it not grace, absolute grace, that God made promise to Adam after transgression? |
6049 | Was it not the art of the false apostles of old to say thus? |
6049 | Was it not, therefore, well worth the seeing? |
6049 | Was it the removing of thy habitation, the change of thy condition, the loss of relations, estate, or the like? |
6049 | Was it utter nakedness, nakedness in its perfection? |
6049 | Was it, think you, that you might show yourselves women, and that you might go out like a company of innocents to gaze on your mortal foes? |
6049 | Was not I in all places to behold, to see, and to observe thee in all thy ways? |
6049 | Was not every tittle of the law reasonable, both in the first and second table? |
6049 | Was not he a liar? |
6049 | Was not her father a poor Amorite? |
6049 | Was not here like to be a fine bargain, think you? |
6049 | Was not his mind elevated a thousand degrees beyond sense, carnal reasons, fleshly love, self- concerns, and the desires of embracing temporal things? |
6049 | Was not this a strange act, and a display of unthought- of grace? |
6049 | Was not this the way that the Lord was fain to take to make them close in with Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Was that a New Testament church, or no? |
6049 | Was that all that you saw at the house of the Interpreter? |
6049 | Was the Lord displeased against the rivers? |
6049 | Was the serpent then lifted up for them that were good and godly? |
6049 | Was the unjust steward a fool in providing for himself for hereafter? |
6049 | Was there ever a man in the world so capable of describing the miseries of Doubting Castle, or of the Slough of Despond, as poor John Bunyan? |
6049 | Was there no more, think you, but Noah, in his generation, that feared God? |
6049 | Was this only the temper of wicked men then? |
6049 | Was thy soul worth so much, and didst thou so little regard it? |
6049 | Was you awake now? |
6049 | Was your father and mother willing that you should become a pilgrim? |
6049 | Wast robb''d? |
6049 | Wast thou not innocent, perfectly innocent and righteous? |
6049 | Wast thou not told of hell- fire, those intolerable flames? |
6049 | Wast thou one of them, that didst sigh, and afflict thyself for the abominations of the times? |
6049 | We are by faith made good trees, and shall not we bring forth good fruit? |
6049 | We know God, and he is our God, our own God; of whom or of what should we be afraid? |
6049 | We look, said Paul, but whither? |
6049 | We may adopt the language of the poet, and say--''Sinful soul, what hast thou done? |
6049 | We may well say,"Who is like thee, O Lord, among the gods?" |
6049 | We need not lay the reins on its neck and say, What care we? |
6049 | We plead not for indulging,''But are there not with you, even with you, sins against the Lord your God?'' |
6049 | We read, in the book of Revelations, of the holy city, and that it had twelve gates, and at the gates twelve angels; but what did they do there? |
6049 | We received, by our thus being counted in him, that benefit which did precede his rising from the dead; and what was that but the forgiveness of sins? |
6049 | Well might Mr. Doe say,''What hath the devil or his agents got by putting our great gospel minister in prison?'' |
6049 | Well said, and how was it then? |
6049 | Well said, and what after that? |
6049 | Well then, did you not know, about 10 years ago, one Temporary in your parts, who was a forward man in religion then? |
6049 | Well then, do you so run? |
6049 | Well then, sinner, what sayest thou? |
6049 | Well, and how did you answer him? |
6049 | Well, and how did you apply this to yourself? |
6049 | Well, and what conclusion came the old man and you to, at last? |
6049 | Well, and what did he think and do then? |
6049 | Well, but brother, I pray thee tell us what was it that was the cause of thy being upon thy knees even now? |
6049 | Well, but did Mr. Badman and his master agree so well? |
6049 | Well, but how was he received by the lord of the vineyard? |
6049 | Well, but if this in truth be thus, how then comes it to pass that some receive it and live for ever? |
6049 | Well, but is there in truth such a thing as the obedience of faith? |
6049 | Well, but is there no way to come to the Father of mercies but by this man that was born of the virgin? |
6049 | Well, but is thy work required to the finishing of this righteousness? |
6049 | Well, but it seems he did live to come out of his time, but what did he then? |
6049 | Well, but let me ask you one word farther: Do you believe, that of very conscience they can not consent, as you, to that of water baptism? |
6049 | Well, but mark the answer of God,''Son of man, What is the vine- tree more than any tree, or than a branch which is among the trees of the forest? |
6049 | Well, but now we are upon it, pray show me the difference between swearing and cursing; for there is a difference, is there not? |
6049 | Well, but pray return again to Mr. Badman; how did he carry it to his wife, after he was married to her? |
6049 | Well, but what art thou now? |
6049 | Well, but what did he do when all was almost gone? |
6049 | Well, but what judgment hast thou passed upon it while thou livest in thy debaucheries? |
6049 | Well, but what makes you think he is gone to hell? |
6049 | Well, but what of all this? |
6049 | Well, but what says God? |
6049 | Well, but what will you say to this question? |
6049 | Well, but whither must they go? |
6049 | Well, if you will not, will you give me leave to do it? |
6049 | Well, now suppose that a man, by an immediate hand of God, is brought to a morsel of bread, what must he do now? |
6049 | Well, said I, shall I send to your master, while you abide out of sight, and make your peace with him before he sees you? |
6049 | Well, said Mr. Great- heart, will you have the Pilgrims up into their lodging? |
6049 | Well, said he, to conclude, but will you promise that you will not call the people together any more? |
6049 | Well, then, said Faithful, what is that one thing that we shall at this time found our discourse upon? |
6049 | Well, then, tell me, sinner, if Christ should now come to judge the world, canst thou abide the trial of the book of life? |
6049 | Well, what judgment now doth God, the righteous judge, pass upon the damsel for this? |
6049 | Well, what shall be done for this man? |
6049 | Well, when they had, as I said, thus saluted each other, Mr. Money- love said to Mr. By- ends, Who are they upon the road before us? |
6049 | Well, will things that are less satisfy thy soul? |
6049 | Well, you have told me what were Mr. Badman''s thoughts now, being sick, of his condition; pray tell me also what he then did when he was sick? |
6049 | Were a man to plead for a limb, or a member of his own, how would he plead? |
6049 | Were all the world gracious, if God were not gracious, what was man the better? |
6049 | Were ever the Pharisees so profane; to whom Christ said, Ye vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
6049 | Were ever the Pharisees so profane; to whom Christ said, ye vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell; doth not the ground groan under you? |
6049 | Were it granted that you kept the law, and that no man on earth could accuse you; were you therefore just before God? |
6049 | Were the thunder- claps of the law so terrible, and didst thou so slight them? |
6049 | Were there no enemies but in Jerusalem? |
6049 | Were there no good men but at Jerusalem? |
6049 | Were there no objects of pity among those that in the old world perished by the flood, or that in Sodom were burned with fire from heaven? |
6049 | Were there none but thieves there, or were the rest of that company out of his reach? |
6049 | Were they sinners above all men upon whom the tower in Siloam fell and slew them? |
6049 | Were they troubled at it? |
6049 | Were we by sin subject to death? |
6049 | Were we under the curse of the law by reason of sin? |
6049 | Were you dead, and are you made alive? |
6049 | What Christian must I be; of what sect must I be of? |
6049 | What a devil then is sin? |
6049 | What a dishonour to posterity was the death of Balaam, Agag, Ahithophel, Haman, Judas, Herod, with the rest of their companions? |
6049 | What a many private things have we now brought out to public view? |
6049 | What a pitiful thing it is to be left in such a case? |
6049 | What acts of self- denial, hast thou done for the name of the Lord Jesus, among the sons of men? |
6049 | What agreement then hath the temple of God with idols? |
6049 | What ails this fly thus desperately to enter A combat with the candle? |
6049 | What are all these but such as Badman, and such as the young man but now mentioned? |
6049 | What are good thoughts concerning God? |
6049 | What are our desires? |
6049 | What are professors more than other men? |
6049 | What are the desires of a righteous man? |
6049 | What are the gleanings to the whole crop? |
6049 | What are the honours and riches of this world, when compared to the glories of a crown of life? |
6049 | What are the pleasures and delights of thy soul now? |
6049 | What are the privileges of those that are actually brought into this free and glorious grace of the glorious God of Heaven and glory? |
6049 | What are the signs and tokens that thou bearest about thee, concerning how it will go with thy soul at last? |
6049 | What are the things you seek, since you leave all the world to find them? |
6049 | What are they? |
6049 | What argument can any man produce, Why we should be intemperate in the use Of any worldly good? |
6049 | What arguments would he use? |
6049 | What art thou fit for, O Mansoul, if mercy preventeth not, but to be hewn down, and cast into the fire and burned? |
6049 | What back will such a suit of apparel fit, that is set together just cross and thwart to what it should be? |
6049 | What be good thoughts respecting ourselves? |
6049 | What became of him that had, and would have, two stools to sit on? |
6049 | What better warrant canst thou have to come, than to be bid to come of God? |
6049 | What black, what ugly crawling thing art thou? |
6049 | What can a divided army do, or a disordered army, that have lost their banners, or, for fear or shame, thrown them away? |
6049 | What can a man do in this case? |
6049 | What can a man do to procure Christ, or procure faith, or love? |
6049 | What can a man say more, but that he stands in the rank of the biggest sinners? |
6049 | What can be added? |
6049 | What can be fitter spoken? |
6049 | What can be more express? |
6049 | What can be more plain than this beautiful text? |
6049 | What can be more plain? |
6049 | What can be more plain? |
6049 | What can be more plain? |
6049 | What can be more suitable to the most desponding spirit in any man? |
6049 | What can follow more clearly from this, but that amends were made by him for those souls for whose sins he suffered upon the tree? |
6049 | What can more fully declare the commonness of a thing? |
6049 | What can the body do as to these? |
6049 | What can the lady or mistress do to defend herself against thieves and sturdy villains, if there be none but she at home? |
6049 | What can we hold? |
6049 | What can we keep from flying From us? |
6049 | What canst thou have more from the sweet lips of the Son of God? |
6049 | What care I, saith he, though I be seven years in chilling your heart if I can do it at last? |
6049 | What care hast thou had of securing of thy soul, and that it might be delivered from the danger that by sin it is brought into? |
6049 | What care have they taken that thou mightest have wherewith to live and do well when they were dead and gone? |
6049 | What care they for God? |
6049 | What comeliness hast thou seen in his person? |
6049 | What comfort is here? |
6049 | What condition is this man in? |
6049 | What could the king of Babylon''s golden image have done, had it not been for the burning fiery furnace that stood within view of the worshippers? |
6049 | What could the temple do without its watchmen? |
6049 | What countryman art thou? |
6049 | What demand of thine have I not fully answered? |
6049 | What designs, desires, and reachings out are there? |
6049 | What did Constantine see in Christ, when he used to kiss the wounds of them that suffered for him? |
6049 | What did Daniel and the three children find in him, to make them run the hazards of the fiery furnace, and the den of lions, for his sake? |
6049 | What did baptism teach you? |
6049 | What did you do then? |
6049 | What did, or what doth, the Lord Jesus see in us to be at all this care, and pains, and cost to save us? |
6049 | What didst thou come away from, in thy coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What do men meddle with religion for? |
6049 | What do they do in the vineyard? |
6049 | What do they mean? |
6049 | What do they think of themselves? |
6049 | What do you count prayer? |
6049 | What do you do when you meet with such places therein that you do not understand? |
6049 | What do you find in the Word of God against such a practice as this of Mr. Badman''s is? |
6049 | What do you mean by need? |
6049 | What do you think of Paul? |
6049 | What do you think of the Bible? |
6049 | What do you think of the jailer? |
6049 | What do you think of the three thousand? |
6049 | What do you think that might be? |
6049 | What do you think the prophet desired, when he said,''O that thou wouldest rend the heavens and-- come down?'' |
6049 | What doctrine did it preach to you? |
6049 | What does he call them but hypocrites, whited walls, painted sepulchres, fools, and blind? |
6049 | What dost thou bear? |
6049 | What dost thou here, Christian? |
6049 | What dost thou mean by can not? |
6049 | What dost thou there? |
6049 | What dost thou think? |
6049 | What doth he there? |
6049 | What doth the law require? |
6049 | What doth this place signify? |
6049 | What doth this word strive import? |
6049 | What doth this word strive import? |
6049 | What else dost thou mean, when thou sayest,"God I thank thee, that I am not as other men are?" |
6049 | What else is the use of thy adding of laws to God''s laws, precepts to God''s precepts, and traditions to God''s appointments? |
6049 | What else means the complaints of masters and of fathers in this matter? |
6049 | What else means your hearkening to the tyrant, and your receiving him for your king? |
6049 | What evidence have you for heaven and glory, and an inheritance among them that are sanctified? |
6049 | What feeling or compassion can a stone be sensible of? |
6049 | What followeth? |
6049 | What follows now? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What follows? |
6049 | What folly can be greater than to labour for the meat that perisheth, and neglect the food of eternal life? |
6049 | What fool would sell his part in paradise, That has a soul, and that of such a price? |
6049 | What force, I say, is there in a faith that is begotten by truth, managed by truth, fed by truth, and preserved by the truth of God? |
6049 | What forewarning is here? |
6049 | What fruit, barren fig- tree, what degree of heart holiness? |
6049 | What good motions? |
6049 | What good will all my companions, fellow- jesters, jeerers, liars, drunkards, and all my wantons do me? |
6049 | What good will my profits do me? |
6049 | What greater argument to holiness than to be made the members of the body, of the flesh, and of the bones of Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What greater argument to holiness than to have our soul, our body, our life, hid and secured with Christ in God? |
6049 | What greater contempt can be thrown upon the saints than for their brethren to cast them off, or to debar them church communion? |
6049 | What ground can a man have to believe that Christ is his Saviour, if he do not believe that He suffered for sin in his nature? |
6049 | What ground now is here for despair? |
6049 | What ground then to despair? |
6049 | What ground? |
6049 | What had Paul committed to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What had he to do in God''s house? |
6049 | What has God been doing for and to his church from the beginning of the world, but extending to and exercising loving- kindness and mercy for them? |
6049 | What has he done? |
6049 | What has he done? |
6049 | What hast THOU found in him, sinner? |
6049 | What hast thou done, man, for God in this world? |
6049 | What hast thou done, that thou art emboldened to venture, to stand and fall to the most perfect justice of God? |
6049 | What hast thou done? |
6049 | What hast thou done? |
6049 | What hast thou found in him, since thou camest to him? |
6049 | What hast thou left behind thee? |
6049 | What hast thou thought of thy soul? |
6049 | What hath this man done against thee, that is coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What hath this man done now, but lied in the dispraising of his bargain? |
6049 | What have I here? |
6049 | What have I lost more than present ease and quiet by my sins that I have committed? |
6049 | What have I to do with you, that accuse the coming sinners to me? |
6049 | What have they to look at? |
6049 | What have you met with, and how have you behaved yourselves? |
6049 | What higher affront or contempt can be offered to God, and what greater disdain can be shown against the gospel? |
6049 | What hinders the conversion of the Jews, but the divisions of Christians? |
6049 | What hinders? |
6049 | What hope therefore can I have? |
6049 | What hope, help, stay, or relief then is there left for the merit- monger? |
6049 | What if God will be silent to thee, is that ground of despair? |
6049 | What if I did? |
6049 | What if a man had all the parts, yea, all the arts of men and angels? |
6049 | What if a man have no grace? |
6049 | What if he had pinched a little, and gone to journey- work for a time, that he might have known what a penny was, by his earning of it? |
6049 | What if he were never so willing, if he were not of ability sufficient, what would his willingness do? |
6049 | What if it should be applied thus? |
6049 | What if she had acquainted some of her best, most knowing, and godly friends therewith? |
6049 | What if she had engaged a godly minister or two to have talked with Mr. Badman? |
6049 | What if we must go now to heaven, and what if he is thus come down to fetch us to himself? |
6049 | What ignorance is this? |
6049 | What infirmities? |
6049 | What instruction is here? |
6049 | What is Christ''s doctrine, Paul''s doctrine, scripture doctrine, but the truth couched under the words that are spoken? |
6049 | What is God''s design in saving, of poor men? |
6049 | What is God''s majesty to a sinful man, but a consuming fire? |
6049 | What is Heaven? |
6049 | What is Jerusalem that stood in Canaan, to that new Jerusalem that shall come down from heaven? |
6049 | What is Jordan? |
6049 | What is a house full of treasures, and all the delights of this world, if thou be empty of grace,''if thy soul be not filled with good?'' |
6049 | What is a pilgrim without knowledge? |
6049 | What is a remnant of people to the whole kingdom? |
6049 | What is a sheep, a bull, an ox, or calf, to Christ, or their blood to the blood of Christ? |
6049 | What is a woman''s breast to a horse? |
6049 | What is baptism? |
6049 | What is he that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What is he that is not coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What is head- knowledge without heart- experience? |
6049 | What is heaven without God? |
6049 | What is hell? |
6049 | What is here in chief asserted, but the doctrine only which water baptism preacheth? |
6049 | What is here omitted that might have been inserted, to make the promise more full and free? |
6049 | What is his calling? |
6049 | What is his name, and what is his son''s name, if thou canst tell?" |
6049 | What is his name? |
6049 | What is it that embitters church- communion, and makes it burdensome, but divisions? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it then? |
6049 | What is it to be saved by grace? |
6049 | What is it to be saved? |
6049 | What is it to repent of sin? |
6049 | What is it, then? |
6049 | What is it? |
6049 | What is it? |
6049 | What is leaven, or a grain of mustard seed, to the bulky lump of a body of death? |
6049 | What is like it? |
6049 | What is man that God should so unweariedly attend upon him, and visit him every moment? |
6049 | What is man? |
6049 | What is meant by the drum of Diabolus, which so terrified Mansoul? |
6049 | What is meant by this word"law"? |
6049 | What is meant or to be understood by the granting of the desires of the righteous? |
6049 | What is one in ten? |
6049 | What is our remedy? |
6049 | What is sixteen cubits to him who would enter in here with all the world on his back? |
6049 | What is supposed by his being saved by the Trinity? |
6049 | What is supposed by this word''saved''? |
6049 | What is that? |
6049 | What is that? |
6049 | What is that? |
6049 | What is the Scripture? |
6049 | What is the best physician alive, or all the physicians in the world, put all together, to him that knows no sickness, that is sensible of no disease? |
6049 | What is the breadth, and length, and depth? |
6049 | What is the cause that sinners can play so delightfully with sin? |
6049 | What is the cause? |
6049 | What is the church of God redeemed by, from the curse of the law? |
6049 | What is the church? |
6049 | What is the fruit they here found? |
6049 | What is the meaning of your laughter? |
6049 | What is the promise without God''s grace, and what is that grace without a promise to bestow it on us? |
6049 | What is the vine, more than another tree? |
6049 | What is there in the Lord''s supper, in baptism, yea, in preaching the Word, and prayer, were they not the appointments of God? |
6049 | What is there? |
6049 | What is thine occupation? |
6049 | What is this faith that doth justify the sinner? |
6049 | What is this? |
6049 | What is your name? |
6049 | What it was for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6049 | What it was for this Jesus to be of the seed of David? |
6049 | What judgment hast thou made of the present state of thy soul? |
6049 | What judgment shall he make how God will deal with him, by beholding the lamblike death of his companion? |
6049 | What kind of a YOU am I? |
6049 | What kind of oaths would she have? |
6049 | What kind of secret wishes hast thou in thy soul when thou feelest the lusts of thy flesh to rage? |
6049 | What kind of thoughts hast thou of thyself, now thou seest these desires of thine that are good so briskly opposed by those that are bad? |
6049 | What laid the cornerstone of this throne, but grace? |
6049 | What less now can be mine than the heavenly kingdom and glory? |
6049 | What life is in Christ? |
6049 | What life is in Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What life is it that is thus the ground of his priesthood? |
6049 | What love to the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | What made he ready for? |
6049 | What makes grace so good to us as sin in its guilt and filth? |
6049 | What makes sin so horrible and damnable a thing in our eyes, as when we see there is nothing can save us from it but the infinite grace of God? |
6049 | What man or angel could have thought that the Jerusalem sinners had been yet on this side of an impossibility of enjoying life and mercy? |
6049 | What man would count himself beloved of his wife that knows she hath a bosom for another? |
6049 | What man? |
6049 | What mattereth it what a man gets, if by the getting thereof he loseth himself? |
6049 | What matters besides, above, or beyond the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ, and of our acceptance with God through him? |
6049 | What may one learn by hearing the cock crow? |
6049 | What may we learn from that? |
6049 | What may we understand by it? |
6049 | What mean those swarms of opinions that are in the world? |
6049 | What means dust thou use to mortify thy sins? |
6049 | What means else all those delays and put- offs, saying, Stay a little longer, I am loth to leave my sins while I am so young, and in health? |
6049 | What means else your rejecting of the laws of Shaddai, and your obeying of Diabolus? |
6049 | What means he here by Lebanon but the church under persecution, and the fruitful field? |
6049 | What meant he by turning Adam out of paradise, by drowning the old world, by burning up Sodom with fire and brimstone from heaven? |
6049 | What messenger of Satan buffeted Paul? |
6049 | What more abominable than sin? |
6049 | What more can be objected? |
6049 | What more certain? |
6049 | What more could have been said? |
6049 | What more insupportable than the dreadful wrath of an angry God? |
6049 | What more strong Than is a lion? |
6049 | What moved you at first to betake yourself to a pilgrim''s life? |
6049 | What must I say then? |
6049 | What must he do now? |
6049 | What must he do therefore? |
6049 | What must it be above? |
6049 | What must we understand by that? |
6049 | What nation, what people, what kind of sinners have not been subdued by the preaching of a crucified Christ? |
6049 | What need we be so backward to it? |
6049 | What need we go to the throne of grace for more? |
6049 | What need we pray for more? |
6049 | What needs that? |
6049 | What now are all other titles of grandeur and greatness, when compared with this one sentence? |
6049 | What now is wanting to the help of him that has committed his soul to God to keep it while he is suffering according to his will in the world? |
6049 | What now must be done with this fig- tree? |
6049 | What now must be done? |
6049 | What now? |
6049 | What now? |
6049 | What or where wilt thou find in the Bible, so many privileges so affectionately entailed to any grace, as to this of the fear of God? |
6049 | What or who is he that would not also have ease from the guilt of sin? |
6049 | What or who is he that would not go to heaven? |
6049 | What other evil effects attend this sin? |
6049 | What other matters? |
6049 | What other sign can you give me that Mr. Badman died without repentance? |
6049 | What other things follow upon the commission of this beastly sin? |
6049 | What place was that? |
6049 | What ponderous thoughts hast thou had of the greatness and of the immortality of thy soul? |
6049 | What power has he that is dead, as every natural man spiritually is, even dead in trespasses and sins? |
6049 | What power hath he, then, whereby to come to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What proof canst thou make of the truth of this story? |
6049 | What provision hast thou made for thy soul? |
6049 | What reason can I have to hope for an inheritance in eternal life? |
6049 | What reason hath he that is left in this case to quarrel against his Maker? |
6049 | What reason, then, have you to think yourself a pilgrim? |
6049 | What resemblance hath his crying, and groaning, and bleeding, and dying, wrought in thee? |
6049 | What said God unto him? |
6049 | What said that gentleman to you? |
6049 | What saith he? |
6049 | What saith the King of him? |
6049 | What say you to John of Leyden? |
6049 | What say you to Mr. Badman now? |
6049 | What say you to breaking of bread, which the devil, by abusing, made an engine in the hand of Papists, to burn, starve, hang and draw thousands? |
6049 | What say you to that?" |
6049 | What say you to the church all along the Revelation quite through the reign of Antichrist? |
6049 | What say you to the church in the wilderness? |
6049 | What say you to,''This is my body?'' |
6049 | What say you, O you wounded sinners? |
6049 | What say you, do you believe the resurrection of the body after it is laid in the grave? |
6049 | What say''st thou, wilt not yet unto him come? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, backslider? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou now, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou now? |
6049 | What sayest thou to this, poor sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou, child of God? |
6049 | What sayest thou, man? |
6049 | What sayest thou, poor heart, to this? |
6049 | What sayest thou, poor soul? |
6049 | What sayest thou, sinner? |
6049 | What sayest thou, soul? |
6049 | What sayest thou, wilt thou turn? |
6049 | What sayest thou? |
6049 | What sayest thou? |
6049 | What says Christ? |
6049 | What says Job? |
6049 | What sayst thou, O wicked man? |
6049 | What scripture can be plainer spoken than this? |
6049 | What scripture have you to prove, that Christ is, or was crucified within you, dead within you, risen within you, and ascended within you? |
6049 | What scripture have you to prove, that Christ is, or was crucified within you, dead within you, risen within you, ascended within you? |
6049 | What shall I do unto thee? |
6049 | What shall I do unto thee? |
6049 | What shall I do, when I at such a door For Pilgrims ask, and they shall rage the more? |
6049 | What shall I do? |
6049 | What shall I do? |
6049 | What shall I say besides what hath already been said? |
6049 | What shall I say of David? |
6049 | What shall I say of them who had trials,''not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say then? |
6049 | What shall I say to thee? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall I say? |
6049 | What shall he do now? |
6049 | What shall his companion say to this? |
6049 | What shall profit a man that has lost his soul? |
6049 | What shall the fly do now? |
6049 | What shall we do to be rid of him? |
6049 | What shall we do unto thee, then they said, That so the raging of the sea be stay''d? |
6049 | What shall we do? |
6049 | What shall we say of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat? |
6049 | What shall we say then? |
6049 | What shall we say then? |
6049 | What shall we say to these things? |
6049 | What shall we then say to these things? |
6049 | What shall, what shall not, a man, if he had it, if it would answer his design, give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | What should I do then? |
6049 | What should be the reason of that? |
6049 | What should we learn by seeing the flame of our fire go upwards? |
6049 | What sin is it that a child of God is not liable to commit, excepting that which is the sin unpardonable? |
6049 | What society, but to be abandoned of all? |
6049 | What solace can he that is without God, though he were in heaven, have with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the prophets and angels? |
6049 | What spirit possesseth thee, and holds thee back from a sincere closure with thy Saviour? |
6049 | What stay, but a continual fall of heart and mind? |
6049 | What stronger argument to holiness than this:''If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous?'' |
6049 | What stronger than a free forgiveness of sins? |
6049 | What than this bubble? |
6049 | What then becomes of the purity and dignity of human nature, so vainly boasted of? |
6049 | What then can accrue to our enemy? |
6049 | What then doth he get thereby, that getteth by dishonest means? |
6049 | What then if the church made the first assault? |
6049 | What then is the acceptable form, and what the appointed medium consecrated for our access to God, by which prayer is sanctified and accepted? |
6049 | What then shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | What then shall we do, will you say? |
6049 | What then shall we say, when we see a first practice turned into holy custom? |
6049 | What then should be the meaning? |
6049 | What then should be the reason? |
6049 | What then, Is he a righteous man because he hath done him no hurt? |
6049 | What then, Is it faith and works together that doth justify? |
6049 | What then, said I, are any of your children ill? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What then? |
6049 | What they are in themselves, or what they have done and been? |
6049 | What thing so deserving as to turn us out of the way to see it? |
6049 | What things are they? |
6049 | What things so pleasant( that is, if a man hath any delight in things that are wonderful)? |
6049 | What things were they? |
6049 | What things? |
6049 | What things? |
6049 | What think you now of Mr. Badman? |
6049 | What think you now of going on pilgrimage? |
6049 | What think you of Mr. Badman now? |
6049 | What think you of him who, when he tempted the wench to uncleanness, said to her, If thou wilt venture thy body, I''ll venture my soul? |
6049 | What think you of the first man, by whose sins there are millions now in hell? |
6049 | What think you? |
6049 | What this Jesus is? |
6049 | What this Jesus is? |
6049 | What this street is? |
6049 | What though you do not preach? |
6049 | What thoughts, words, or actions can be clean, sufficiently to answer a perfect law that flows from this original? |
6049 | What time is that? |
6049 | What time is this that Jesus speaks of? |
6049 | What time, you may ask, was required? |
6049 | What twig, or straw, or twined thread is left to be a stay for his soul? |
6049 | What unreasonable thing doth the gospel bid thee credit? |
6049 | What visible living church was now in the land, I mean, either with reference to a godly spirit for it, or the form and constitution of it? |
6049 | What was he? |
6049 | What was he? |
6049 | What was it for Jesus to be of David''s seed? |
6049 | What was it for Jesus to be of this man''s seed according to the promise? |
6049 | What was it for Jesus to be raised thus up of God to Israel? |
6049 | What was it then, dear heart, that hath prevailed with thee to do as thou hast done? |
6049 | What was said of eating, or the contrary, may as to this be said of water baptism: neither if I be baptized, am I the better? |
6049 | What was that baptism but his death? |
6049 | What was that? |
6049 | What was that? |
6049 | What was the matter that you did laugh in your sleep tonight? |
6049 | What was the matter? |
6049 | What was the providence that God made use of as a means, either more remote or more near, to bring thee to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | What was the reason why they did put him to death, but this, He did say that he was the Christ the Son of God? |
6049 | What was this king of Assyria but a type of the beast made mention of in the New Testament? |
6049 | What wast thou once? |
6049 | What will all say, or what will they conclude, even upon the very first hearing of this story? |
6049 | What will become of me, think you?'' |
6049 | What will become of you, if you die in this condition? |
6049 | What will become of you? |
6049 | What will he get of us by the bargain but a small pittance of thanks and love? |
6049 | What will it then avail them that they have gained much? |
6049 | What will men say if you shrink and winch, and take your sufferings unquietly, but that if you yourselves were uppermost, you would persecute also? |
6049 | What will not love bear with? |
6049 | What will they say then? |
6049 | What will thy gallant, generous mind do here? |
6049 | What will you do, when God shall come to reckon for these things? |
6049 | What wilt thou do at this day, and the day of thy trial and judgment? |
6049 | What wilt thou do when thou shalt be damned in hell, because thou couldst not find in thine heart to ask for heaven? |
6049 | What wilt thou do, poor sinner? |
6049 | What wilt thou do-- wilt thou after enlargement suffer thy privileges to be invaded and taken away? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou do? |
6049 | What wilt thou have me to do? |
6049 | What wisdom, I say, what holiness, what grace and life will be found in all their words and actions? |
6049 | What wonderful love doth there appear by this in the heart of our Lord Jesus, in suffering such things for our poor bodies and souls? |
6049 | What words wilt thou use to move him to compassion? |
6049 | What work did he make by the abuse of the ordinance of water baptism? |
6049 | What workman thence will take a beam or pin, To make ought which may be delighted in? |
6049 | What worth or value then can there be in any of their doings? |
6049 | What would have become of thy trade as a brazier? |
6049 | What would he leave undone? |
6049 | What would he not give? |
6049 | What would he not part with at that day, the day in which he will see himself damned, if he had it, in exchange for his soul? |
6049 | What would he suffer? |
6049 | What would man have more? |
6049 | What would she say? |
6049 | What would they have us do? |
6049 | What would you have a man do that is in his creditor''s debt, and can neither pay him what he owes him, nor go on in a trade any longer? |
6049 | What would you have me do? |
6049 | What would you have me to do? |
6049 | What would you say? |
6049 | What would you think? |
6049 | What wouldest thou have thought of a system by which all would have been taught to tag their laces and mend their own pots and kettles? |
6049 | What wouldst thou have? |
6049 | What zeal? |
6049 | What''s lighter than the mind? |
6049 | What, I say, should be the reason, but that death assaulted him with his sting? |
6049 | What, Lord, any him? |
6049 | What, a Christian, and live as does the world? |
6049 | What, again; is there no breaking of the league that is betwixt sin and thy soul? |
6049 | What, and come to Christ as a sinner? |
6049 | What, because believers are members one of another, must they therefore be also one in another? |
6049 | What, do you think that I am a spirit? |
6049 | What, do you think that every heavy- heeled professor will have heaven? |
6049 | What, has the voice of danger lost the art To raise the spirit of neglected care? |
6049 | What, hast thou run thy race, art going down? |
6049 | What, is baffling and befooling the enemies of God''s church nothing? |
6049 | What, is preservation nothing? |
6049 | What, my true servant, quoth he, my old servant, wilt thou forsake me now? |
6049 | What, not so much as a respect to the matter or end? |
6049 | What, or who is the righteous man? |
6049 | What, resolved to be a self- murderer, a soul murderer? |
6049 | What, said I, is your husband amiss, or do you go back in the world? |
6049 | What, said Obstinate, and leave our friends and our comforts behind us? |
6049 | What, saith the merit- monger, will you look for life by the obedience of another man? |
6049 | What, seek''for the living among the dead? |
6049 | What, then, is the Word against the Word? |
6049 | What, then, must it rely upon or trust in? |
6049 | What, then, should the sinner, if he could come there, do at this bar to plead? |
6049 | What, thought I, must it be no sin but this? |
6049 | What, to lose all these brave things that my eyes behold, for that which I never saw with my eyes? |
6049 | What, to lose my pride, my covetousness, my vain company, sports, and pleasures, and the rest? |
6049 | What, to run back again, back again to sin, to the world, to the devil, back again to the lusts of the flesh? |
6049 | What, were they so lowly? |
6049 | What, what shall I say? |
6049 | What, will you go, saith the devil, without your sins, pleasures, and profits? |
6049 | What, will your husband leave preaching? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What? |
6049 | What[ evil] hath he done?" |
6049 | When Christ said,"Do you know all these things?" |
6049 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6049 | When God made me sigh, they would hearken, and inquiringly say, What''s the matter with John? |
6049 | When God roars( as ofttimes the coming soul hears him roar), what man that is coming can do otherwise than tremble? |
6049 | When God speaks, when God works, who can let it? |
6049 | When Israel came out of Egypt, they were led of God into the wilderness; but why? |
6049 | When Israel went into Canaan, God did command them not so much as to ask, How those nations served their gods? |
6049 | When Philip, under a mistake, thought of seeing God some other way, than in and by this Lord Jesus Christ; What is the answer? |
6049 | When a man hath got a profession, and is crowded into the church and house of God, the question is not now, Hath he life, hath he right principles? |
6049 | When a man thinks he has only to prepare for an assault by footmen, how shall he contend with horses? |
6049 | When didst thou see that: And in the light of the Spirit of Christ, see that thou wert under the wrath of God because of original sin? |
6049 | When do our thoughts of ourselves agree with the Word of God? |
6049 | When he was come into the house he sent for me out of my chamber; who, when I was come unto him, he said, Neighbour Bunyan, how do you do? |
6049 | When he was taken this last time, he was preaching on these words, viz.,"Dost thou believe on the Son of God?" |
6049 | When heart and strength fail; when the body is writhing in agony, or lying an insensible lump of mortality; is that the time to make peace with God? |
6049 | When justice itself is pleased with a man, and speaks on his side, instead of speaking against him, we may well cry out, Who shall condemn? |
6049 | When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? |
6049 | When shall Christ ride Lord, and King, and Advocate, upon the faith of his people, as he should? |
6049 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
6049 | When shall Jesus Christ our Lord be honoured by us as he ought? |
6049 | When summ''d, what comes it to more than the halter? |
6049 | When the apostle had taken such a view of himself as to put himself into a maze, with an outcry also,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6049 | When the day that he must go hence was come, many accompanied him to the river- side, into which as he went, he said,''Death, where is thy sting?'' |
6049 | When the good shepherd went to look for his sheep that was lost in the wilderness, and had found it: did it go one step homewards upon its own legs? |
6049 | When the jailer said,"Sirs, What must I do to be saved?" |
6049 | When the jailor cried out,''Sirs, what must I do to be saved?'' |
6049 | When the people lusted for flesh, Moses said,''Shall the flocks and the herds be slain for them to suffice them? |
6049 | When they came at the gate, Christiana asked the Porter if any of late went by? |
6049 | When they were also set down, the Shepherds said to those of the weaker sort, What is it that you would have? |
6049 | When this was read, the clerk of the sessions said unto me, What say you to this? |
6049 | When thou art called to an account for thy neglects of so great salvation, what canst thou answer? |
6049 | When thou shalt see less sinners than thou art, bound up by angels in bundles, to burn them, where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6049 | When thy life is done, thy heaven is also done? |
6049 | When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hands, to tread my courts? |
6049 | When? |
6049 | Whence came the invisible power that struck Paul from his horse? |
6049 | Whence came this strange idea-- not limited to the poor negro, but felt by thousands who have watched over departing saints? |
6049 | Whence came those sudden suggestions, those gloomy fears, those heavenly rays of joy? |
6049 | Whence come you? |
6049 | Where Antichrist dwelt? |
6049 | Where are the tables of stone and this law as therein contained? |
6049 | Where are the victors of the world, With all their men of might? |
6049 | Where are they found? |
6049 | Where do we find the churches to gather together thereon? |
6049 | Where doth Christ Jesus require such a qualification of those that are coming to him for life? |
6049 | Where doth it lay its head, but in their laps? |
6049 | Where has He called them His love, His dove, His fair one? |
6049 | Where have the clouds their water? |
6049 | Where is Paul that would not eat meat while the world standeth, lest he made his brother offend? |
6049 | Where is he that is coming[ but has not come], to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Where is he that is thus under pangs of love for the grace bestowed upon him by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Where is he that is''clothed with humility,''and that does what he is commanded''with all humility of mind''? |
6049 | Where is he that seeks and groans for salvation? |
6049 | Where is he? |
6049 | Where is it to be found? |
6049 | Where is now any room for the righteousness of men? |
6049 | Where is our Pharisee then, with all his works of righteousness, and with his boasts of being better than his neighbours? |
6049 | Where is our Pharisee then, with his brags of not being as other men are? |
6049 | Where is repentance, reformation, and amendment of life amongst us? |
6049 | Where is that jot or tittle of the law that is able to object against my doings for want of satisfaction?" |
6049 | Where is that? |
6049 | Where is the man that is zealous of moral holiness? |
6049 | Where is the man that pursues with all his might what but now he seemed to ask for with all his heart? |
6049 | Where is the man that so pleaseth God, and consequently, that in equity and reason should be beloved of God like me? |
6049 | Where is the man that walketh with his cross upon his shoulder? |
6049 | Where is the man that will forbear some lawful things, for fear of hurting the weak thereby? |
6049 | Where is thy fruit, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Where is thy heart? |
6049 | Where is thy long- suffering? |
6049 | Where is thy self- abhorrence, thy blushing before God, for the sin that is yet behind? |
6049 | Where is thy self- denial and contentment? |
6049 | Where is thy tenderness of the name of God and his ways? |
6049 | Where is thy watching, thy fasting, thy praying against the remainders of corruption? |
6049 | Where now is the man that feareth the Lord? |
6049 | Where now is the sound and healthful complexion of soul? |
6049 | Where shall we begin? |
6049 | Where shall we begin? |
6049 | Where was the righteous forsaken? |
6049 | Where will you be found in another world? |
6049 | Where wilt thou appear, sinner? |
6049 | Where''s he that thaws our ice, drives cold away? |
6049 | Where''s he whose goodly face doth warm and heal, And show us what the darksome nights conceal? |
6049 | Where( say some) is the spirit and life of communion? |
6049 | Where, also, is thy sweet, meek, and gentle spirit? |
6049 | Where, barren fig- tree, is the fruit of these people''s repentance? |
6049 | Where, now, is room for man''s righteousness, either in the whole, or as to any part thereof? |
6049 | Where? |
6049 | Wherefore a self- righteous man is but a painted Satan, or a devil in fine clothes; but thinks he so of himself? |
6049 | Wherefore art thou come to torment me, and to cast me out of my possession? |
6049 | Wherefore dost Thou keep so cruel a dog in Thy yard, at the sight of which, such women and children as we, are ready to fly from Thy gate for fear? |
6049 | Wherefore has God put this sword, WE HAVE AN ADVOCATE, into thy hand, but to fight thy way through the world? |
6049 | Wherefore has he given us grace? |
6049 | Wherefore has he sometimes visited us? |
6049 | Wherefore hast thou anything of the truth of Christ in thy heart? |
6049 | Wherefore have I commanded a watch, and that you should double your guards at the gates? |
6049 | Wherefore have I endeavoured to make you as hard as iron, and your hearts as a piece of the nether millstone? |
6049 | Wherefore in answer to this conceit it is, that the Lord asketh, saying,"Is my hand shortened at all that it can not redeem?" |
6049 | Wherefore is it said, Begin at Jerusalem, if the Jerusalem sinner is not to have the benefit of it? |
6049 | Wherefore is it that thou Hast done this thing, to bring this evil now, Upon us, let us know it? |
6049 | Wherefore puttest thou thy hand in thy bosom, as being afraid to touch the hem of the garment of the Lord? |
6049 | Wherefore saith he thus? |
6049 | Wherefore say thus to thy soul, thou that art like to suffer for righteousness, How is it with the most inward parts of my soul? |
6049 | Wherefore then served the cross? |
6049 | Wherefore then should we complain? |
6049 | Wherefore thou that hast a broken heart take courage, God bids thee take courage; say therefore to thy soul,''Why are thou cast down, O my soul?'' |
6049 | Wherefore, I ask again, hast thou been with him? |
6049 | Wherefore, at present, lay the thoughts of thy election by, and ask thyself these questions: Do I see my lost condition? |
6049 | Wherefore, dost thou think, art thou told of all this, but to encourage thee to come to the throne of grace? |
6049 | Wherefore, he falls to crying out, What shall I do? |
6049 | Wherefore, the same prophet, speaking of the destruction of the same Sheshach, saith,''How is Sheshach taken? |
6049 | Wherefore, wouldst thou be a praying man, a man that would pray and prevail? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherefore? |
6049 | Wherein is he to be accounted of? |
6049 | Whereto the man of God made this reply, Why askest thou, since''tis a mystery? |
6049 | Whether Mordecai and the good men then did not pray and fast as well as she? |
6049 | Whether any under Eternal Reprobation have just cause to quarrel with God for not electing of them? |
6049 | Whether goes the child, when it catcheth harm, but to its father, to its mother? |
6049 | Whether in the nature, or in the degree, or in the management thereof? |
6049 | Whether is there a difference in the light? |
6049 | Whether the seventh day sabbath did not fall, as such, with the rest of the Jewish rites and ceremonies? |
6049 | Whether the seventh day sabbath is of, or made known to, man by the law and light of nature? |
6049 | Whether to be reprobated be the same with being appointed before- hand unto eternal condemnation? |
6049 | Which is the greatest sinner; he who invents scandal, or he who encourages the inventor to retail it? |
6049 | Which of the twelve ever thought that Judas would have proved a devil? |
6049 | Which of them therefore was it that died? |
6049 | Which of these two covenants art thou under, soul? |
6049 | Which of you can By taking thought add to his height one span? |
6049 | Which wouldest thou have prevail? |
6049 | While I was on this sudden thus overtaken with surprise, Wife, said I, is there ever such a scripture, I must go to Jesus? |
6049 | While Jacob was afraid of Esau, how heavily did he drive even towards the promised land? |
6049 | While one saith, I am of Paul, and another I am of Apollos, are ye not carnal? |
6049 | Whither are you going? |
6049 | Whither art wand''ring? |
6049 | Whither canst thou go? |
6049 | Whither did his desires bring him? |
6049 | Whither did they carry him? |
6049 | Whither is he like to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Whither is he to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Whither may he arrive, and yet be an undone man, under this covenant? |
6049 | Whither shall I go when I die? |
6049 | Whither will thy zeal, thy pride, and thy folly carry thee? |
6049 | Whither will you go? |
6049 | Whither wilt thou go? |
6049 | Whither wilt thou go? |
6049 | Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? |
6049 | Who are brought in?] |
6049 | Who are so lawless, so little advanced in civilization, as the poor Irish, Spaniards, or Italians? |
6049 | Who are they that are saved by grace? |
6049 | Who are they that must be saved? |
6049 | Who are you? |
6049 | Who art thou? |
6049 | Who believes as he desires to believe? |
6049 | Who bid the boar come there? |
6049 | Who bid you go this way to be rid of thy burden? |
6049 | Who but Jesus Christ would have undertaken such a task as the salvation of the sinner is, if Jesus Christ had passed us by? |
6049 | Who but an idiot or a maniac would attempt to reduce the mental powers of all men to uniformity? |
6049 | Who can A wounded spirit bear? |
6049 | Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? |
6049 | Who can charge the Waldenses, Albigenses, or Lollards with that spirit of Antichrist? |
6049 | Who can contradict it? |
6049 | Who can eat fire, drink fire, and lie down in the midst of flames of fire? |
6049 | Who can know The miseries that these poor people felt While they did underneath those burnings melt? |
6049 | Who can know it? |
6049 | Who can make them see that Christ has made blind? |
6049 | Who can reach them, touch them, destroy them, but the Creator? |
6049 | Who can stand before Great- heart? |
6049 | Who can stand before his indignation? |
6049 | Who can tell how many heart- pleasing thoughts Christ had of us before the world began? |
6049 | Who can tell what kind of delight the Father had in the Son before the world began? |
6049 | Who could have hoped that Israel should have returned again from the land, from the hand, and from under the tyranny of the king of Babylon? |
6049 | Who could have thought that anyone could so far have been blinded by the power of lust? |
6049 | Who could have thought that sin would have opposed that which is just, but especially mercy and grace, had we not seen it with our eyes? |
6049 | Who could have thought that the three children could have lived in a fiery furnace? |
6049 | Who could have thought that this path should have led us out of the way? |
6049 | Who dares charge the Quakers with a persecuting spirit? |
6049 | Who dares limit the Almighty? |
6049 | Who did Christ bring it into the world for, for the righteous or for sinners? |
6049 | Who dost expose it, yet claw those that crave it? |
6049 | Who ever was mad enough to ask Moses to intercede for him, and surely he is as able as Mary or any other saint? |
6049 | Who hath babbling? |
6049 | Who hath bound the waters in a garment? |
6049 | Who hath contentions? |
6049 | Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord,''or who hath been his counsellor?'' |
6049 | Who hath gathered the wind in his fists? |
6049 | Who hath redness of eyes? |
6049 | Who hath sorrow? |
6049 | Who hath wounds without cause? |
6049 | Who is He? |
6049 | Who is THE BLESSED? |
6049 | Who is able to make war with him?'' |
6049 | Who is able to separate us from the love of Jesus Christ our Lord? |
6049 | Who is he also that purifies his heart, but he that looketh for the second coming of Christ from heaven to judge the world? |
6049 | Who is he that condemneth me? |
6049 | Who is he that condemneth? |
6049 | Who is he that condemneth?'' |
6049 | Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God? |
6049 | Who is he? |
6049 | Who is it that would not have the benefit of grace, of a throne of grace? |
6049 | Who is mine adversary? |
6049 | Who knows if God will yet be pleas''d to spare, And turn away the evil that we fear? |
6049 | Who knows the power of his anger? |
6049 | Who knows what will become of the ark of God? |
6049 | Who knows, but that God that made the world may cause that Giant Despair may die? |
6049 | Who must we now believe, the Apostle or you? |
6049 | Who prays not, is not like to play the man? |
6049 | Who put''a new song''into the mouth of David? |
6049 | Who said it? |
6049 | Who shall declare his way to his face? |
6049 | Who shall do so? |
6049 | Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
6049 | Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?'' |
6049 | Who so bold as blind Bayard? |
6049 | Who so ready to fly to the physician as those who feel their case to be desperate? |
6049 | Who so vilified as the righteous? |
6049 | Who they are that are actually brought into His free and unchangeable Covenant of Grace, and how they are brought in? |
6049 | Who thought yesterday, would one say, that this day would have been such a day to us? |
6049 | Who told thee so? |
6049 | Who told thee so? |
6049 | Who told thee that thy heart and life agree together? |
6049 | Who understands them unto perfection? |
6049 | Who was it that scared Job with dreams, and terrified him with visions? |
6049 | Who watches, should know who and who''s together: Know we not friends from foes, how know we whether Of them to fight, or which to entertain? |
6049 | Who were his members? |
6049 | Who will grieve for thy sorrow, that didst not count mercy worth asking for? |
6049 | Who will say unto him, What doest thou?'' |
6049 | Who will stand up for me against the workers of iniquity?" |
6049 | Who would knowingly go over a pearl, and yet not count it worth stooping for? |
6049 | Who would not be here? |
6049 | Who would not fear thee, said Jeremiah, O king of nations, for to thee doth it appertain? |
6049 | Who would not hope to enjoy life eternal, that has an inheritance in the God of Israel? |
6049 | Who, I say, that was so faint- hearted as I, that would not have knocked with all their might? |
6049 | Who, now seeing all this is so effectually done, shall lay anything, the least thing? |
6049 | Who, that sees a house on fire, will not give the alarm to them that dwell therein? |
6049 | Who, that sees the devils as roaring lions, continually devouring souls, will not make an out- cry? |
6049 | Who, then, shall condemn when Christ has died, and doth also make intercession? |
6049 | Who? |
6049 | Who? |
6049 | Whose hungry belly hast thou fed? |
6049 | Whose naked body hast thou clothed? |
6049 | Whose prayers were used, or who was the mouth? |
6049 | Whose son is he? |
6049 | Why I trow he was no highwayman, was he? |
6049 | Why am I reckoned with the Ranters? |
6049 | Why are they for going with their bull''s foretops,[63] with their naked shoulders, and paps hanging out like a cow''s bag? |
6049 | Why art thou so tart, my brother? |
6049 | Why at his trial? |
6049 | Why before them? |
6049 | Why betook not I myself to the holy Word of God? |
6049 | Why blameless? |
6049 | Why came you not in at the gate, which standeth at the beginning of the way? |
6049 | Why comest thou then so slowly? |
6049 | Why cumbereth it the ground? |
6049 | Why did Adam hide himself, but because, as he said, he was naked? |
6049 | Why did I judge of his ability to save me by the voice of my shallow reason, and the voice of a guilty conscience? |
6049 | Why did I not humbly cast my soul at his blessed footstool for mercy? |
6049 | Why did he not do execution? |
6049 | Why did he rise again from the dead, with that very body? |
6049 | Why did he say he would receive the coming sinner? |
6049 | Why did not Little- faith pluck up a greater heart? |
6049 | Why did not he cut it down? |
6049 | Why did not he fetch out the axe? |
6049 | Why did they not stay, that we might have had their good company? |
6049 | Why did you only cavil at words? |
6049 | Why do I haunt and frequent places and ordinances appointed for worship? |
6049 | Why do I hear? |
6049 | Why do I pray? |
6049 | Why do I read? |
6049 | Why do not I also, as well as they, shun persecution for the cross of Christ? |
6049 | Why do some of the springs rise out of the tops of high hills? |
6049 | Why do the springs come from the sea to us, through the earth? |
6049 | Why do they believe in Christ? |
6049 | Why do they call themselves by the name of the Lord Jesus, if they have not the grace of God, if they have not the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | Why do they empty themselves upon the earth? |
6049 | Why do they go by fives, nines, and seventeens? |
6049 | Why do you doubt of it? |
6049 | Why do you look on them as if you would eat them up? |
6049 | Why do you mock us, to bid us go on in our sins? |
6049 | Why does physic, if it does good, purge, and cause that we vomit? |
6049 | Why dost thou listen to her enchantments? |
6049 | Why dost thou make him the object of thy scorn? |
6049 | Why dost thou put him off? |
6049 | Why dost thou sin and provoke the eyes of his glory? |
6049 | Why dost thou stop thine ear? |
6049 | Why doth the fire fasten upon the candlewick? |
6049 | Why doth the pelican pierce her own breast with her bill? |
6049 | Why for them? |
6049 | Why friend? |
6049 | Why have I not made shipwreck of faith? |
6049 | Why have we not a catalogue of some holy men that were so in their own eyes, and in the judgment of the world? |
6049 | Why he saith not streets, but street, as of one? |
6049 | Why in his name, if he be not accepted of God? |
6049 | Why is Christ bid to gird his sword upon his thigh? |
6049 | Why is covetousness called idolatry? |
6049 | Why is it a free and unchangeable grace? |
6049 | Why is it then, that thou livest when they are dead, and that thou hast a promise of pardon when they had not? |
6049 | Why is man made the head of the woman in worship, in the worship now under debate, in that worship that is to be performed in assemblies? |
6049 | Why is man''s heart compared to fallow ground, God''s Word to a plough, and his ministers to ploughmen? |
6049 | Why is the conversion of the soul compared to the grafting of a tree, if that be done without cutting? |
6049 | Why is the love of this world so forbidden? |
6049 | Why is the rainbow caused by the sun? |
6049 | Why is the wick and tallow, and all, spent to maintain the light of the candle? |
6049 | Why may not I expect the same when anguish and guilt is upon me?'' |
6049 | Why not another? |
6049 | Why not familiar with sinners, provided we hate their spots and blemishes, and seek that they may be healed of them? |
6049 | Why not fellowly with our carnal neighbours? |
6049 | Why not go to the poor man''s house, and give him a penny, and a Scripture to think upon? |
6049 | Why not live before him? |
6049 | Why salvation? |
6049 | Why shall thy deceived heart turn thee aside, that thou canst not deliver thy soul,''nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?'' |
6049 | Why should God beseech us to reconcile to him, but that we might hope in him? |
6049 | Why should I be thought to be against a fire in the chimney, because I say it must not be in the thatch of the house? |
6049 | Why should Satan molest those whose ways he knows will bring them to him? |
6049 | Why should anything have my heart but God, but Christ? |
6049 | Why should not devils and damned souls despair? |
6049 | Why should not others arise as extensively to bless the world as Bunyan did? |
6049 | Why should the righteous partake of the same plagues with the wicked? |
6049 | Why should the righteous partake of the same plagues with the wicked? |
6049 | Why should the saints look for any good from thee? |
6049 | Why should we strive? |
6049 | Why should you be holden in ignorance and blindness? |
6049 | Why should you not be enlarged in knowledge and understanding? |
6049 | Why sittest thou still? |
6049 | Why so, I pray you? |
6049 | Why so, saith the apostle, ought the wife to carry it towards her husband? |
6049 | Why so, seeing circumcision is not one of the ten words[ commandments]? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why so? |
6049 | Why the gates should look in this manner every way, both east, west, north, and south? |
6049 | Why then did not these days live? |
6049 | Why then do you despise my rank, my state, and quality in the world? |
6049 | Why then dost thou not break loose from her hold? |
6049 | Why then is the gospel offered them? |
6049 | Why then should there be any to share with him in his executing of the second part thereof? |
6049 | Why then should we think that our innocent lives will exempt us from sufferings, or that troubles shall do us such harm? |
6049 | Why then were you baptized? |
6049 | Why there should be three, just three, on every side of this city? |
6049 | Why this street is called by the term of pure gold? |
6049 | Why was it? |
6049 | Why was their name, for all that, blotted out, and this day only kept alive in the churches? |
6049 | Why wilt thou not come to Jesus Christ, since thou art a Jerusalem sinner? |
6049 | Why wouldest thou go to Heaven? |
6049 | Why wouldst thou go to heaven? |
6049 | Why"doth a living man complain, a man for the punishment of his sins?" |
6049 | Why, Christian, what is thy experience? |
6049 | Why, I am to believe in Christ, I am to have faith in his blood? |
6049 | Why, I trow[110] you did not consent to her desires? |
6049 | Why, Sir, did you not answer these things? |
6049 | Why, are you weary of my relating of things? |
6049 | Why, art thou weary of this discourse? |
6049 | Why, did he take this counsel? |
6049 | Why, did you ever hear any man say so? |
6049 | Why, did you hear him tell his dream? |
6049 | Why, did you not serve your own son so? |
6049 | Why, he asked me whither I was going? |
6049 | Why, he might, if he would, might he not? |
6049 | Why, he that saith, They shall come, shall he not make it good? |
6049 | Why, he would say, I have yet with my father in store for my brethren, wherefore then seekest thou to stop his hand? |
6049 | Why, how dost thou think in this matter? |
6049 | Why, is not worshipping of God, well- doing? |
6049 | Why, is this Christian''s wife? |
6049 | Why, it will be said unto them, Friends, how came you hither? |
6049 | Why, man, do you think we shall not be received? |
6049 | Why, man, doth the fear of God make a man idle and slothful? |
6049 | Why, my brother? |
6049 | Why, prithee, what dost thou with them? |
6049 | Why, so it is here; art thou inquiring the way to heaven? |
6049 | Why, soul? |
6049 | Why, then, is it said God beholdeth every one that is proud, and abases him? |
6049 | Why, then, should we conceit that the Son will forgive these that come not to the Father by him? |
6049 | Why, then, should you not judge of those that differ from you herein, as you judged of yourselves when you were as they now are? |
6049 | Why, then, wilt thou set thy heart upon that which is not? |
6049 | Why, thou must have a safe- conduct to heaven? |
6049 | Why, truly thus-- Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly, and with very cold devotion? |
6049 | Why, was there more of them than one? |
6049 | Why, what did he say to you? |
6049 | Why, what did you think? |
6049 | Why, what difference is there between crying out against, and abhorring of sin? |
6049 | Why, what had Jonathan done? |
6049 | Why, what is it? |
6049 | Why, what is the matter? |
6049 | Why, what is thine end in coming to Christ? |
6049 | Why, what other sins was he addicted to, I mean while he was but a child? |
6049 | Why, what was it that brought your sins to mind again? |
6049 | Why, what wilt thou make of God? |
6049 | Why, what wouldest thou ask for, sinner? |
6049 | Why, when the Lord comes; what will he do? |
6049 | Why, where is he then? |
6049 | Why, where is it to be found?" |
6049 | Why, who are thou? |
6049 | Why, with the Lord there is great mercy for thee? |
6049 | Why, would you have us do nothing? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Why? |
6049 | Wicked men talk of heaven, and say they hope and desire to go to heaven, even while they continue wicked men; but, I say, what would they do there? |
6049 | Will He esteem thy riches? |
6049 | Will He within Open to sorry me, though I have been An undeserving rebel? |
6049 | Will a less thing than heaven, than glory and eternal life, answer thy desires? |
6049 | Will a man give a penny to fill his belly with hay; or can you persuade the turtle- dove to live upon carrion like the crow? |
6049 | Will any say we can not believe that God hath received any but such as are baptized[ in water]? |
6049 | Will he always call upon God? |
6049 | Will he esteem thy riches? |
6049 | Will he hold him when Shall- come puts forth itself, will he then let12 him, for coming to Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Will he leave him to recover himself by the strength of his now languishing graces? |
6049 | Will he let him alone in his apostasy? |
6049 | Will he plead against me with his great power? |
6049 | Will he show wonders to such a dead dog as I am? |
6049 | Will he suffer them To break his law, and sin, and not condemn Them for so doing? |
6049 | Will he take this advantage to destroy the sinner? |
6049 | Will he urge that he will plead against us? |
6049 | Will his God humour him, and answer his desires? |
6049 | Will it not amaze them to be unexpectedly excluded from life and salvation? |
6049 | Will it not be a dishonour to thee to see the very boys and girls in the country to have more wit than thyself? |
6049 | Will it not be amazing to some of the damned themselves, to see some come to hell that then they shall see come thither? |
6049 | Will it not be glorious for thee to be in glory with them, while others are in unutterable torments? |
6049 | Will it not be glorious to enjoy those things that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath entered into the heart of man to conceive? |
6049 | Will it not be glorious to enter then with the angels and saints into that glorious kingdom? |
6049 | Will it, think you, be always thus with you? |
6049 | Will my profession, or the faith I think I have, carry me through all the trials of God''s tribunal? |
6049 | Will my sins do me good then? |
6049 | Will not a humble posture best become us when we have humbling providences in prospect? |
6049 | Will not the thoughts that we have one Father quiet us, and the thoughts that we are brethren unite us? |
6049 | Will not this persuade thine heart, nor make thee bethink thyself? |
6049 | Will she venture To clash at light? |
6049 | Will temporal things make thy soul to live? |
6049 | Will the blood- hounds let him escape? |
6049 | Will the sheep couple with a dog, the partridge with a crow, or the pheasant with an owl? |
6049 | Will the wrath of God be a pleasant dish to thy taste? |
6049 | Will these be excuses for them, as the case now standeth with them? |
6049 | Will these help to turn the hand of God from inflicting his fierce anger upon me? |
6049 | Will they be able to help me when I come to fetch my last breath? |
6049 | Will they do me any good when Christ comes? |
6049 | Will they fortify themselves? |
6049 | Will they help to ease the pains of hell? |
6049 | Will they make an end in a day? |
6049 | Will they not also be amazed one at another, while they remember how in their lifetime they counted themselves fellow- heirs of life? |
6049 | Will they not rather imitate Korah, Dathan, and Abiram''s friends, even rail at me for condemning him, as they did at Moses for doing execution? |
6049 | Will they not rather put him upon all tricks, evasions, irreligious consequences and conclusions, such as will serve to cherish sin? |
6049 | Will they revive the stones out of the heaps of the rubbish which are bunt?'' |
6049 | Will they sacrifice? |
6049 | Will those, who have us hither cast? |
6049 | Will ye render me a recompence? |
6049 | Will you leave your friends and companions behind you? |
6049 | Will you not go in, and stay till morning? |
6049 | Will you not hear the errand of Christ, although He telleth you tidings of peace and salvation? |
6049 | Will you now desert your old friend, or do you think of standing by me?'' |
6049 | Will you rebel against the king? |
6049 | Will you take up the cross, come after Me, and so preserve your souls from perishing? |
6049 | Will you trust to the blood that was shed upon the cross, that run down to the ground, and perished in the dust? |
6049 | Wilt neither tidings from heaven or hell awake thee? |
6049 | Wilt not thou serve him with joyfulness in the enjoyment of all good things, even him by whom thou art to be made blessed for ever? |
6049 | Wilt thou answer this question now, or wilt thou take time to do it? |
6049 | Wilt thou be like that simple one named in the seventh of Proverbs, that will be drawn to the slaughter by the cord of a silly lust? |
6049 | Wilt thou be like the bird that hasteth to the snare of the fowler? |
6049 | Wilt thou be like the silly fly, that is not quiet unless she be either entangled in the spider''s web, or burned in the candle? |
6049 | Wilt thou be so sottish and unwise, as to venture thy soul upon a little uncertain time? |
6049 | Wilt thou break a leaf driven to and fro? |
6049 | Wilt thou by thus doing endeavour to keep them wrapt up still in the dust of the earth, there to dwell with the worm and corruption? |
6049 | Wilt thou continue to contemn and reproach the living God? |
6049 | Wilt thou hearken unto me if I give thee counsel? |
6049 | Wilt thou not cry? |
6049 | Wilt thou not hear yet, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | Wilt thou not then be afraid of the power? |
6049 | Wilt thou not yet awake? |
6049 | Wilt thou provoke him to do it? |
6049 | Wilt thou provoke still? |
6049 | Wilt thou run? |
6049 | Wilt thou say still,''Yet a little sleep, a little slumber,''and''a little folding of the hands to sleep?'' |
6049 | Wilt thou stand by thy doings? |
6049 | Wilt thou stop thine ears, and shut thy eyes? |
6049 | Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee, I am god? |
6049 | Wilt thou yet turn thyself in thy sloth, as the door is turned upon the hinges? |
6049 | Wilt thou, then, lose this Christ, this food, this pleasure, this heaven, this happiness, for a thing of nought? |
6049 | With how many oaths, declarations, attestations, and proclamations, is it avouched, confirmed, and established? |
6049 | With promises, did I say? |
6049 | With respect to thy desires, what are they? |
6049 | With that, one of them said, Who is your God? |
6049 | Without a watch, resist a foe who can? |
6049 | Witness they that live in hell; if it be proper to say they live in hell? |
6049 | Women may, yea ought to pray; what then? |
6049 | Would God else have given him the heaven to dispose of to us that believe, and would he else have told us so? |
6049 | Would I share in this salvation by faith in him? |
6049 | Would a heathen god refuse to answer such prayers in which the supplicants were not agreed; and shall we think the true God will answer them? |
6049 | Would either of you stay till he is grown? |
6049 | Would he be afraid of friends, or shrink at the most fearful threatenings that the greatest tyrants could invent to give him? |
6049 | Would he favour sin? |
6049 | Would he love this world below? |
6049 | Would he not sometimes talk of his wife when she was dead? |
6049 | Would it not be counted an high affront, for a base inferior fellow, to call himself the head of the queen? |
6049 | Would it not have been so to any of us, had we been used as he, to be robbed, and wounded too, and that in a strange place, as he was? |
6049 | Would not By- ends, Facing- both- ways, and Save- all, have jumped to the same conclusion? |
6049 | Would not Heaven be better to me than my sins? |
6049 | Would not His dying only of a natural death have served the turn? |
6049 | Would not this make Satan fall from heaven like lightning? |
6049 | Would she not say, You mock me? |
6049 | Would such an one, thinkest thou, run again into the same course of life as before, and venture the damnation that for sin he had already been in? |
6049 | Would the people learn to be wanton? |
6049 | Would they be here again for a thousand worlds? |
6049 | Would they learn to be drunkards? |
6049 | Would they learn to be drunkards? |
6049 | Would they not, I say, have concluded that he was a righteous man? |
6049 | Would you act thus by God''s holy commandments? |
6049 | Would you be saved by keeping the law? |
6049 | Would you be willing to be damned for slothfulness? |
6049 | Would you choose one and reject another? |
6049 | Would you have us make Christ such a drudge as to do all, while we sit idling still? |
6049 | Would you have us run into temptation, to try if they be sound or rotten? |
6049 | Would you make my Lord''s people to transgress? |
6049 | Would you not say, I did not think of covenants, or study the nature of them? |
6049 | Would you serve your prince so? |
6049 | Would you so long without an husband[3] live? |
6049 | Would you stand just before God thereby? |
6049 | Would you think that such an one did all this while retain the shape, form, or similitude of a man? |
6049 | Wouldest thou be content that I should judge thee, because thou canst not for my light give thanks with me? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this fear of God? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou grow in this grace of godly fear? |
6049 | Wouldest thou have MERCY for thy righteousness, or JUSTICE for thy righteousness? |
6049 | Wouldest thou know whether Christ is thine Advocate or no? |
6049 | Wouldest thou sit upon their place of ease? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world for his name? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be glad to be kept out of heaven with a back well clothed, and a belly well filled with the dainties of this world? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be glad to have all thy good things in thy lifetime, to have thy heaven to last no longer than while thou dost live in this world? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be saved from guilt and filth too? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be saved with a thorough salvation? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be saved? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be that within thou dost appear, Or seem to be in outward exercise Before the most devout, and godly wise? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be the servant of thy Saviour? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be very upright and sincere? |
6049 | Wouldst thou be willing to be deprived of eternal happiness and felicity? |
6049 | Wouldst thou fare deliciously every day, and have thy soul delight itself in fatness? |
6049 | Wouldst thou have the kingdom of God come indeed, and also his will to be done in earth as it is in heaven? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how God could still love his creatures, and do his justice no wrong? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how God''s heart stood affected toward man before the world began? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how far a man may go on in a profession of the gospel, and yet fall away? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know how hard it is to go to heaven? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know man''s inclination so soon as he is born? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know somewhat concerning that? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what is the wages of sin? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what that Christ that died for sinners is doing in that place whither he is gone? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what thou art, and what is in thine heart? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know what, or who they are that shall go to heaven? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know where God did place man after he had made him? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether God looked upon Adam''s eating[ the fruit of] the forbidden tree to be sin or no? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether God''s love did still abide towards his creatures for anything they could do to make him amends? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine Advocate, whether he has taken in hand to plead thy cause? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine advocate? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether a man by nature be a friend to God, or an enemy? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether a man by nature may know something of the invisible things of God? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he did eat or drink with his disciples after he rose out of the grave? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he did in that body bear all our sins, and where? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he did rise again after he was crucified, with the very same body? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he made them of something or nothing? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether he put forth any labour in making them, as we do in making things? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether it be the desire of the heart of man by nature, to follow God in his own way or no? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether it were the devil who beguiled them, or whether it was a natural serpent, such as do haunt the desolate places? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man be defiled in every part of him by the sin he hath committed? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man once fallen from God by transgression, can recover himself by all he can do? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man was cursed for his sin? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether man''s obedience will obtain that Christ should die for them, or save them? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether natural man can abstain from the outward act of sin against the law, merely by a principle of nature? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether righteousness, justification, and sanctification do come through the virtue of Christ''s blood? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether sin were sufficient to draw God''s love from his creatures? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether that man did live there all his time or not? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether that sin be imputed to us? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether the curse did fall on man, or on the whole creation with him? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether they that live and die in their sins shall go to heaven or not? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whether this Saviour had a body of flesh and bones before the world was, or took it from the Virgin Mary? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know whither those do go that die unconverted to the faith of Christ? |
6049 | Wouldst thou know, sinner, what thou art? |
6049 | Wouldst thou then know this throne of grace, where God sits to hear prayers and give grace? |
6049 | Wouldst thou wade? |
6049 | Wouldst thou willingly hold out, stand to the last, and be more than a conqueror? |
6049 | Wouldst thou, then, know the greatest things of God? |
6049 | Wouldst thou, with all thy heart, be saved by Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy?'' |
6049 | Ye are the salt o''th''earth; but wherewith must The earth be season''d when the savour''s lost? |
6049 | Ye do not furnish them with what they need, Wat boots it? |
6049 | Ye stand upon your sword, ye work abomination, and ye defile every one his neighbour''s wife: and shall ye possess the land?" |
6049 | Yea more, why are the elders of the churches called watchmen, overseers, guides, teachers, rulers, and the like? |
6049 | Yea whether it doth not tend to make them unruly and headstrong? |
6049 | Yea, I say again, if judgment must begin at them, will it not make thee think, What shall become of me? |
6049 | Yea, and if he ask me, Why I came home no sooner? |
6049 | Yea, and it has its followers ready at its heels continually to blow its applause abroad, saying,''Who will show us any[ other] good?'' |
6049 | Yea, and why is death suffered to slay the body? |
6049 | Yea, are they not hurtful in the day of grace? |
6049 | Yea, art thou thus when no eye doth thee see But that which is invisible? |
6049 | Yea, canst thou appeal to the Lord Jesus, who knoweth perfectly the very inmost thought of thy heart, that this is true? |
6049 | Yea, canst thou say, My soul, my soul waiteth upon God, my soul thirsteth for Him, my soul followeth hard after him? |
6049 | Yea, did we not even kill ourselves with our earnest intreaties of thee to consider of thine estate, and by Christ to escape this dreadful day? |
6049 | Yea, did we not tell thee that God, out of his love to sinners, sent Christ to die for them, that they might, by coming to him, be saved? |
6049 | Yea, do we not grow worse and worse? |
6049 | Yea, dost thou not vehemently desire to desire to depart and to be with Christ? |
6049 | Yea, hath the truth itself bestowed it upon us, and shall those to whom it is given, even given by Scripture of truth, be yet deprived thereof? |
6049 | Yea, how can you now, though he is at a distance, endure to think of such a mighty one? |
6049 | Yea, how did those ravenous creatures, the ravens, bring the prophet bread and flesh twice a day, but by immediate instinct from heaven? |
6049 | Yea, if any that see her should say, Why do you so? |
6049 | Yea, if the works of a sanctified man are blameworthy, how shall the works of a bad man set him clear in the eyes of Divine justice? |
6049 | Yea, is it not meet that to every one they should confess what sorry ones they are? |
6049 | Yea, is it not reason that in all things we should study his exaltation here, since he in all things contrives our honour and glory in heaven? |
6049 | Yea, open thy heart, and take this man, not into judgment, but into mercy with thee? |
6049 | Yea, or for their neglect of it either? |
6049 | Yea, or nay?" |
6049 | Yea, our faith is faulty, and also imperfect; how then should remission be extended to us for the sake of that? |
6049 | Yea, shall my Jesus die To reconcile me to my God? |
6049 | Yea, suppose the child should now, through ignorance, cry, and say, This man is now no more my father; is he, therefore, now no more his father? |
6049 | Yea, the passover being to be eaten on the even of his sufferings, with what desires did he desire to eat it with his disciples? |
6049 | Yea, was he not now in the combat? |
6049 | Yea, was it better than the tree of life? |
6049 | Yea, what a word of worth, and goodness, and blessedness, is it to him that lies continually upon the wrath of a guilty conscience? |
6049 | Yea, what conformity unto him, to his sorrows and sufferings? |
6049 | Yea, what do you think John desired, when he cried out to Christ to come quickly? |
6049 | Yea, what means this your taking up of arms against, and the shutting of your gates upon us, the faithful servants of your King? |
6049 | Yea, what shall we say of such that are the inventors and promoters of wickedness, as of oaths, beastly talk, or the like? |
6049 | Yea, what should they do among that company that are saved alone by grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ? |
6049 | Yea, what wilt thou then do, if death and hell shall come to visit thee, and thou in thy sins, and under the curse of the law? |
6049 | Yea, what works of that man doth God impute to him that he yet justifies as ungodly? |
6049 | Yea, wherefore hath God also given it out that there is none other name given to men under heaven whereby we must be saved? |
6049 | Yea, why did not the Pharisee, if he was a heathen, lay that to his charge while he stood before God? |
6049 | Yea, why do you taunt those ministers that persuade us to renounce our own righteousness, and those also that follow their doctrine? |
6049 | Yea, why is he commanded to let it be so, if the people would bow and fall kindly under him, and heartily implore his grace without it? |
6049 | Yea, wrap thy head with clouds and hide thy face, As threatening to withdraw from us thy grace? |
6049 | Yea,"how oft is the candle of the wicked put out?" |
6049 | Yes; for I think if I were deceived before, if I were comforted by a spirit of delusion before, why may it not be so again? |
6049 | Yes; the Lord Jesus denied himself for thee; what sayest thou to that? |
6049 | Yes;''What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?'' |
6049 | Yet the question is, Are they absolutely or conditionally promised? |
6049 | Yet, hast thou fallen? |
6049 | You add,''Is it a person''s light that giveth being to a precept?'' |
6049 | You ask again,''Suppose men plead want of light in other commands?'' |
6049 | You ask me next,''How long is it since I was a Baptist?'' |
6049 | You ask,''Can not you give yourself a reason, that their moving, travelling state made them incapable, and that God was merciful? |
6049 | You ask,''Was circumcision dispensed with for want of light, it being plainly commanded?'' |
6049 | You came in at the gate, did you not? |
6049 | You may ask me what that is? |
6049 | You may ask me, What is it to come boldly? |
6049 | You may ask me, what those things are? |
6049 | You may ask, How should I know those shepherds? |
6049 | You read they come weeping and mourning, and with tears; they knock and they cry for mercy; but what did tears avail? |
6049 | You say he was proud; but will you show me now some symptoms of one that is proud? |
6049 | You say true; but did you meet nobody else in that valley? |
6049 | You say well, for what fellowship hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6049 | You speak mystically, do you not? |
6049 | You talk of rubs; what rubs have you met withal? |
6049 | You tell me also, that some of the sober Independents have shewed dislike to my writing on this subject: What then? |
6049 | You that live in adultery, know not ye The friendship of the world is enmity With God? |
6049 | You will say, Are these graves spoken of here, the graves that are made in the earth? |
6049 | You will say, How should I know that? |
6049 | You will say, what is that? |
6049 | Your souls are worth a thousand worlds; and will you be slothful? |
6049 | Your twelfth argument is,''Why should professors have more light in breaking of bread, than baptism? |
6049 | [ 108] What is meant by the Hill Difficulty? |
6049 | [ 112] Examine, which do you like better, self- soothing or soul- searching doctrine? |
6049 | [ 12]"Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him, saith the Lord? |
6049 | [ 130] Reader, can you feed upon Christ by faith? |
6049 | [ 134] But did I laugh? |
6049 | [ 138] Can we wonder that the pilgrims longed to spend some time with such lovely companions? |
6049 | [ 140] Now the King, at the sight of the petition, was glad; but how much more think you, when it was seconded by his Son? |
6049 | [ 148] When he had left her, Prudence said, Did I not tell thee, that Mr. Brisk would soon forsake thee? |
6049 | [ 14] But I beheld in my dream, that a man came to him, whose name was Help, and asked him what he did there? |
6049 | [ 15] But now, when did the day of grace end with this man? |
6049 | [ 15] Was this love of God extended to him because of his personal virtues? |
6049 | [ 162] Is not this too much the case with professors of this day? |
6049 | [ 163] Can a man enter upon the work of the ministry from a better school than this? |
6049 | [ 163] What is this something that By- ends knew more than all the world? |
6049 | [ 167] Pretended friends come with such expostulations as these: Why, dear Sir, will you give such offence? |
6049 | [ 17] But is he now quit? |
6049 | [ 17] Can it be imagined that when the wicked are in this distress, but that they will desire to be saved? |
6049 | [ 192] Look, said Christian, did not I tell you so? |
6049 | [ 192]What must the pure and holy Jesus have suffered when He tasted death in all its bitterness? |
6049 | [ 194] So on they went, and Joseph said, Can not we see to the end of this Valley as yet? |
6049 | [ 1] Was Christ slothful in the work of your redemption? |
6049 | [ 217] Mr. Wingate asked Bunyan why he did not follow his calling and go to church? |
6049 | [ 21] What do all their acts declare, but this, that they either know not God, or fear not what he can do unto them? |
6049 | [ 21]If it be asked, Why take your unregenerate children, and invite the ungodly, to the place of worship? |
6049 | [ 228] Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | [ 231] Then said Hopeful to the Shepherds, I perceive that these had on them, even every one, a show of pilgrimage, as we have now; had they not? |
6049 | [ 238] Now, is it not very common to hear professors talk at this rate? |
6049 | [ 242] Then they asked Mr. Feeble- mind how he fell into his hands? |
6049 | [ 248] What was this good thing? |
6049 | [ 24] Seest thou the poor? |
6049 | [ 254] Who can stand in the evil day of temptation, when beset with Faint- heart, Mistrust, and Guilt, backed by the power of their master, Satan? |
6049 | [ 257] Then said Mr. Contrite to them, Pray how fareth it with you in your pilgrimage? |
6049 | [ 25] The trial we have before God is of otherguise importance,[26] it concerns our eternal happiness or misery; and yet dare we affront him? |
6049 | [ 267] Also, are we not now to walk by faith? |
6049 | [ 268] What can not Great- heart do? |
6049 | [ 276] Then said the Pilgrims, What means this? |
6049 | [ 27] Well, but whither do they go, that are thus gone out of the temple or church of God? |
6049 | [ 284] Then said Christian to Hopeful( but softly), Did I not tell you he cared not for our company? |
6049 | [ 288] How, then, dost thou say, I believe in Christ? |
6049 | [ 296] Then they said- Well, Ignorance, wilt thou yet foolish be, To slight good counsel, ten times given thee? |
6049 | [ 2] And why is MY rank so mean, that the most gracious and godly among you, may not duly and soberly consider of what I have said? |
6049 | [ 2] He asked the constable what we did, where we were met together, and what we had with us? |
6049 | [ 2]( Psa 8:3,4) Now in the creation of the world we may consider several things; as, What was the order of God in this work? |
6049 | [ 309] My soul, what''s lighter than a feather? |
6049 | [ 311] Who are these ministering spirits, that the author calls"men"? |
6049 | [ 312] Is she not rightly named Bubble? |
6049 | [ 312] What are these two difficulties? |
6049 | [ 31] And how many times are they that fear God said to be delivered both by God and his holy angels? |
6049 | [ 338]''Why was the brazen laver made of the women''s looking- glasses? |
6049 | [ 33] What is this to me, O law, that thou accusest me, and sayest that I have committed many sins? |
6049 | [ 35]This should prompt every professing Christian to self- examination-- Am I of the raven class, or that of the dove? |
6049 | [ 38] But is our present need all the need that we are like to have, and the present work all the work that we have to do in the world? |
6049 | [ 39] Then said Christian, What means this? |
6049 | [ 39] Will it be comfort to thee to see the Saviour turn Judge? |
6049 | [ 3]"What shall I do?" |
6049 | [ 44] Sir, is it not time for me to go on my way now? |
6049 | [ 45]"In the midst of these heavenly instructions, why in such haste to go?" |
6049 | [ 47] Then said the Interpreter to Christian, Hast thou considered all these things? |
6049 | [ 59] What is this garden but the world? |
6049 | [ 5] The genuine disciple"who thinketh no evil"will say, Can this be so now? |
6049 | [ 5] Where is the man, except he be a willful perverter of Divine truth, who can charge the doctrines of grace with licentiousness? |
6049 | [ 60] What are these ill- favoured ones? |
6049 | [ 62] But why go back again? |
6049 | [ 6] I looked then, and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,"Where fore dost thou cry?" |
6049 | [ 6] Would you be ready to die in peace? |
6049 | [ 77] What say you, O my Mansoul? |
6049 | [ 78] But shall we be flattered out of our lives? |
6049 | [ 89]''Thou hast given credit to the truth''; what is this but faith-- the faith of the operation of God? |
6049 | [ 8] Barren fig- tree, can it be imagined that those that paint themselves did ever repent of their pride? |
6049 | [ 8] Before they took him his intent was to preach on these words,''Dost thou believe on the Son of God?'' |
6049 | [ 8] If thou now say, Which is the way? |
6049 | [ 99] Is there righteousness in Christ? |
6049 | [ But, pray, what talk have the people about him? |
6049 | [ Does it stun them?] |
6049 | [ How should we strive?] |
6049 | [ I reply] If thou hadst said, I worship her Son, thou hadst said truly( I hope) But is not thy spite more against her son, than her? |
6049 | [ WHAT ARE THE DESIRES OF A RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6049 | [ WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS MAN?] |
6049 | [ Why should we strive?] |
6049 | [ that is, to bring Christ down from above:] or, Who shall descend into the deep? |
6049 | a promise that declares, yea, that engageth Christ Jesus to open his heart to receive the coming sinner? |
6049 | a promise that looks at the first moving of the heart after Jesus Christ? |
6049 | afraid to go to Joseph''s house? |
6049 | all who? |
6049 | always at it? |
6049 | and again, He beholds the proud afar off? |
6049 | and again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son? |
6049 | and again,"O death, where is thy sting? |
6049 | and also how God doth make a man righteous with it? |
6049 | and are not men the more noble part in all the churches of Christ? |
6049 | and are notions and whimsies of such credit with thee that thou must leave the foundation to follow them? |
6049 | and are these Christian''s children? |
6049 | and are you stronger than He? |
6049 | and art thou for ever resolved so to do? |
6049 | and be The words of God in truth thy prop and stay? |
6049 | and behold the height of the stars, how high they are?" |
6049 | and by seeing the beams and sweet influences of the sun strike downwards? |
6049 | and canst thou find in thy heart to labour to lay more sins upon His back? |
6049 | and comes as it were to the borders of doubt, saying,''Who shall deliver me?'' |
6049 | and darkness and tempests? |
6049 | and did no more of them but you come out to escape the danger? |
6049 | and do not the members receive their whole light, guidance, and wisdom from it? |
6049 | and do you question the resurrection of the body? |
6049 | and dost thou mingle thy tears with thy drink? |
6049 | and dost thou sigh and mourn in secret? |
6049 | and doth God testify that thy desire is true, not feigned? |
6049 | and doth your life and conversation testify the same? |
6049 | and falsify their words for thee? |
6049 | and fears as he desires to fear God''s name? |
6049 | and for what are they hanged there? |
6049 | and from whence would the flaming flame ascend highest, and make the most roaring noise? |
6049 | and going on pilgrimage too? |
6049 | and hast not thou been led by a lying spirit also, in wresting of my words as thou hast done? |
6049 | and have you consented to stand by their opinion? |
6049 | and he that is called to glory and virtue, shall not he add to his faith virtue? |
6049 | and he which is born of a woman, that he should be righteous?" |
6049 | and how could Abel be yet pleasing in his sight, for the sake of his own righteousness, when it is plain that Abel had not yet done good works? |
6049 | and how far go you this way? |
6049 | and how if all our faith, and Christ, and Scriptures, should be but a think- so too? |
6049 | and how shall he be convinced of eternal judgment, if you persuade him, that when he is dead, he shall not at all rise? |
6049 | and how they hold back good from us? |
6049 | and how we may be more holy and more humble towards God, and more charitable and more serviceable to one another? |
6049 | and how? |
6049 | and if I be a Master, where is my fear? |
6049 | and if they think they shall know and do these, why not know others, and rejoice in their welfare also? |
6049 | and if to two, why not to four, and so to eight? |
6049 | and in Thy name have cast out devils?" |
6049 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6049 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
6049 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6049 | and in thy name have cast out devils? |
6049 | and is God''s love and care of the salvation of the souls of sinners infinitely greater than is their own care for their own souls? |
6049 | and is all that thou hast to be ventured for his name in this world? |
6049 | and is also the life of Jesus''made manifest in thy mortal body?'' |
6049 | and is goodness seen in thy seeking the life or the damage of thy enemy? |
6049 | and is he more precious to thee than the whole world? |
6049 | and is not that a good life that is according to God''s commandments? |
6049 | and is not the light of God sufficient in itself, to lead to God all that follow it, yea, or nay?" |
6049 | and is not this thus much, are not all they reprobates( say you) but they in whim Christ is within? |
6049 | and is there knowledge in the Most High?'' |
6049 | and is there not like reason for it? |
6049 | and loves as he desires to love? |
6049 | and may I lodge here tonight? |
6049 | and of choosing what you judge is right, whether they conclude with you or no? |
6049 | and says another, Would you have us make ourselves ridiculous? |
6049 | and shall I Not love a saint? |
6049 | and shall I count anything too dear for Him? |
6049 | and shall I hate his child, nor hear his wants that call For my little assisting of him? |
6049 | and shall none be angry at it? |
6049 | and shall not I exercise my mind about it? |
6049 | and should a man full of talk be justified? |
6049 | and so, consequently, say unto God,"Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways; or, What is the Almighty that we should serve him? |
6049 | and that Christ hath marked and recorded for such an one? |
6049 | and that also against which the spirit lusteth? |
6049 | and that eternal life with God''s favour, is better than a temporal life in God''s displeasure? |
6049 | and that made the jailer cry out, and that with great trembling of soul,"Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" |
6049 | and that, AFTER the angel had fled through the midst of heaven, preaching the gospel to those that dwell on the earth? |
6049 | and the company of God, Christ, saints, and angels, be better than the company of Cain, Judas, Balaam, with the devils in the furnace of fire? |
6049 | and therefore that it ought to be departed from, who knows not? |
6049 | and thou, O God, which didst not go out with our armies?" |
6049 | and to be had upon no lower rates than thy immortal soul? |
6049 | and to say now, Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner? |
6049 | and to what did they make him stoop? |
6049 | and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?" |
6049 | and unquiet and troublesome, discontented, and seeking to be revenged of thy persecutors; where is, or what kind of grace hast thou got? |
6049 | and until you could by faith own it as done for you, and counted yours by reputation, yea, or no? |
6049 | and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols?'' |
6049 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
6049 | and what communion hath light with darkness? |
6049 | and what course should I take to be delivered from this sad and troublesome condition? |
6049 | and what fruits in all their labour? |
6049 | and what hath Emmanuel said? |
6049 | and what he would have? |
6049 | and what is the criterion of Christian charity, except it be''zeal for the salvation of others in his heart?'' |
6049 | and what is the reason of that, but a persuasion that there is no help for him in God? |
6049 | and what is your business here? |
6049 | and what must they do that have none?" |
6049 | and what profit should we have if we pray unto him?'' |
6049 | and what still wilt thou further do, if mercy, and blood and grace doth not prevent thee? |
6049 | and what would you have? |
6049 | and when did I do the other? |
6049 | and when it is committed? |
6049 | and when so like to be weary, as when almost at their journey''s end? |
6049 | and when thou mockest, shall no man make thee an answer[ unashamed?]'' |
6049 | and whence he came? |
6049 | and where is the place of my rest? |
6049 | and where will they be safe in such days? |
6049 | and where, when He speaketh of them, doth He express a communion that they have with Him by the similitude of conjugal love? |
6049 | and whether the holy Scriptures were not rather a fable, and cunning story, than the holy and pure Word of God? |
6049 | and while they thus call themselves, they should be the veriest rogues for all evil, sin, and villainy imaginable, who could help it? |
6049 | and whither are you bound? |
6049 | and who hath brought up these? |
6049 | and who shall repay him what he hath done? |
6049 | and why I did not content myself with following my calling? |
6049 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6049 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
6049 | and why did he dispraise it, but of a covetous mind to wrong and beguile the seller? |
6049 | and why did he so long for it, but of desire to do us good? |
6049 | and why dost Thou pass such a sad sentence of condemnation upon us? |
6049 | and why is thy countenance fallen?" |
6049 | and why may we not go to Christ in the name of the Father, as well as to the Father in the name of Christ? |
6049 | and why must he make his arrows sharp, and all, that the heart may with this sword and these arrows be shot, wounded, and made to bleed? |
6049 | and will he judge a man just that is a sinner? |
6049 | and will he not be as good to us as to them that have gone before us? |
6049 | and with what body do they come?" |
6049 | and yet all this is included in this word saved, and in the answer to that question,"Are there few that be saved?" |
6049 | and yet doth it yield no good unto us? |
6049 | and, I say, as I said before, in whom is it, light, like so to shine, as in the souls of great sinners? |
6049 | and, Will it go well with the town of Mansoul? |
6049 | and, that some time ago I heard speak well of the holy word of God? |
6049 | and,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?'' |
6049 | and,''What wouldst thou have me do?'' |
6049 | any him that cometh to thee? |
6049 | are not even ye that have been converted by us? |
6049 | are not the poor saints now in this city? |
6049 | are not the things that are eternal best? |
6049 | are not they concerned in these instructions? |
6049 | are not thy kindred as hardened as thou wast? |
6049 | are these the effects of a purblind spirit? |
6049 | are these the tokens of a blessed man? |
6049 | are they all Esau''s indeed? |
6049 | are they forgotten? |
6049 | are they not rather the fruits of an eagle- eyed confidence? |
6049 | are they thrown over the bar? |
6049 | are they weaned from that milk, and drawn from the breasts? |
6049 | are we better than they? |
6049 | are we better than they? |
6049 | are we better than they?" |
6049 | are we stronger than He?'' |
6049 | are ye made to be taken and destroyed? |
6049 | are you not ashamed of your doings? |
6049 | are you not ashamed of your doings? |
6049 | are you that countryman, then? |
6049 | arise: why standest thou still? |
6049 | art thou become like unto us?'' |
6049 | art thou one of them that hast cast off fear? |
6049 | art thou resolved to sleep the sleep of death? |
6049 | art thou weary? |
6049 | art thou willing? |
6049 | be persuaded to pause a moment, and ask yourself the question- What is my case? |
6049 | because Christ is our pattern, is he not our passover? |
6049 | because they would adorn the gospel? |
6049 | because they would beautify religion, and make sinners to fall in love with their own salvation? |
6049 | behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens can not contain thee; how much less this house that I have built?'' |
6049 | besides there is hell itself, the place itself, the fire itself, the nature of the torments, and the durableness of them, who can understand? |
6049 | but can it turn all things into grace? |
6049 | but doth thy life and conversation declare thee to be such an one? |
6049 | but how much is there of it?'' |
6049 | but how shall I come by them? |
6049 | but may it not be as strongly supposed that the presence and blessing of the Lord Jesus, with his ministers, is laid upon the same ground also? |
6049 | but what was that gospel you preached? |
6049 | but where are thy fruits, barren fig- tree? |
6049 | but why did you not shew me my evil in thus calling it, when opposed to the substance, and the thing signified? |
6049 | but why didst thou not confess what thou hadst done then? |
6049 | but why offended at this? |
6049 | but, Hath he fruit? |
6049 | but, Were you doers, or talkers only? |
6049 | can he judge through the dark cloud?" |
6049 | can it make all things work together for good? |
6049 | can not you be satisfied without you have peace with God? |
6049 | can not you help me? |
6049 | can the floods drown it? |
6049 | can these be possessed with this grace of fear? |
6049 | can we suppose he will now admit of the wit and contrivance of men in those things that are, in comparison to them, the heavenly things themselves? |
6049 | canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?'' |
6049 | canst thou give no better counsel touching those whom God hath wounded, than to send them to the ordinances of hell for help? |
6049 | canst thou imagine that such a gnat, a flea, a pismire as thou art, can take and possess the heavens, and mantle thyself up in the eternal glories? |
6049 | canst thou judge no better? |
6049 | canst thou think that God hath given thee this that thou mightest thereby make a prey of thy neighbour? |
6049 | cast a world behind thy back for the welfare of a soul? |
6049 | consent and nothing else? |
6049 | count convictions for sin, mournings for sin, and repentance for sin, melancholy? |
6049 | deeper than hell; what canst thou know? |
6049 | did he die before he was born again? |
6049 | did he die in unbelief? |
6049 | did he light upon you? |
6049 | did he not behave himself valiantly? |
6049 | did they now choose him to be their king? |
6049 | did they say, did they do nothing while they sat before the throne? |
6049 | did you see how I turned again to those vanities from which some time before I fell? |
6049 | did your neighbours talk so? |
6049 | do they not tend to surfeit the heart, and to alienate a man and his mind from the things that are better? |
6049 | do they use to show such kind of favours to traitors? |
6049 | do ye judge uprightly, O ye sons of men?'' |
6049 | do you design the glory of God, in the salvation of your soul? |
6049 | do you not understand that God is resolved to have the mastery one way or another? |
6049 | do you think she will go? |
6049 | dost the wanton play, Or doth thy testy humour tend its way? |
6049 | dost thou know what thou art? |
6049 | dost thou not know that thou by so doing deferrest the coming of thy dearest Lord? |
6049 | dost thou say that that which thou callest the light of Christ, is the Spirit of Christ? |
6049 | dost thou think that God, Christ, Prophets, and Scriptures, will all lie for thee? |
6049 | dost thou think to run fast enough with the world, thy sins and lusts in thy heart? |
6049 | doth his coming to Jesus Christ offend thee? |
6049 | doth his forsaking of his sins and pleasures offend thee? |
6049 | doth his pursuing of his own salvation offend thee? |
6049 | doth not this man deserve to be ranked among the extravagant ones? |
6049 | doth she give up her faith and hope, and return to that fear that begot the first bondage? |
6049 | doth this yield thee inward pleasedness of mind, and a kind of secret sweetness, or bow? |
6049 | fear God and a liar, and one that cries for mercies to spend them upon thy lusts? |
6049 | fear God and be proud, and covetous, a wine- bibber, and a riotous eater of flesh? |
6049 | fear God without a change of heart and life? |
6049 | fear God, and in a state of nature? |
6049 | flow they not, think you, from faith of the finest sort, and are they not bred in the bosom of a truly mortified soul? |
6049 | for a man must know before he does, else how should he divert[13] himself to do? |
6049 | for it is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? |
6049 | for legal grounds, though not expressed? |
6049 | for providing friends to receive him to harbour when others should turn him out of their doors? |
6049 | for to do things, but not in God''s fear, to what will it amount? |
6049 | for to him I would deliver my message?'' |
6049 | had he faith and holiness? |
6049 | has God bestowed a contrite spirit upon thee? |
6049 | has not this river pleasant streams? |
6049 | hast thou cried out? |
6049 | hast thou cried? |
6049 | hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not? |
6049 | hath it ears? |
6049 | hath it eyes? |
6049 | have I been unfaithful to Him? |
6049 | have they not in them power to loose the bands of nature, and to harden the soul against sorrow? |
6049 | having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh?'' |
6049 | he that chastiseth the heathen, shall not he correct? |
6049 | he that formed the eye, shall he not see? |
6049 | he that teacheth man knowledge, shall not he know?" |
6049 | how came the prophet by this sight? |
6049 | how can he see? |
6049 | how can that be, since they are hurtful? |
6049 | how canst thou deal so unkindly with such a sweet Lord Jesus? |
6049 | how could he bear the face to do it? |
6049 | how crossly he thinks? |
6049 | how doth he behave himself in his presence? |
6049 | how few be there in the world whose heart and mouth in prayer shall go together? |
6049 | how he found that which some of his children sought and missed? |
6049 | how hot will that make wrath? |
6049 | how long has it lasted? |
6049 | how many lashes with God''s iron whip dost thou deserve? |
6049 | how much of his Spirit, and the grace of his Word? |
6049 | how poorly will these be able to plead the virtues of the law to which they have cleaved, when God shall answer them,''Whom dost thou pass in beauty? |
6049 | how readest thou? |
6049 | how shall I come at Christ? |
6049 | how shall I pass through this dark entry into another world? |
6049 | how she flies and sings,[20] But could she do so if she had not wings? |
6049 | how then can we be offended at things by which we reap so much good, and at things that God makes so profitable for us? |
6049 | how then should I hold up my face to Joab thy brother?" |
6049 | how they grieve the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | how they spoil our prayers? |
6049 | how they tempt Christ to be ashamed of us? |
6049 | how they weaken faith? |
6049 | how they weaken our graces? |
6049 | how will they die and languish in their souls? |
6049 | how will they faint? |
6049 | how would Thy heart and pulse beat after heav''nly things, After the upper and the nether springs? |
6049 | if it were not for these three or four words, now how might I be comforted? |
6049 | if, at any time, any of them are mentioned, how seemingly coldly doth the record of scripture present them to us? |
6049 | in each part What flames appear? |
6049 | in sinking into the bottom of the sea with company? |
6049 | in storms? |
6049 | in the body of his flesh,[ that then must be first: to what?] |
6049 | in the fifth verse, in one Lord Jesus Christ: by what? |
6049 | in this so good a soil? |
6049 | into what particular church was Lydia baptized by Paul, or those first converts at Philippi? |
6049 | is all right with my soul? |
6049 | is he a pleasant child? |
6049 | is he''formed in me the hope of glory?'' |
6049 | is it in the holiness that is there, or in the freedom that is there from hell? |
6049 | is it little in thine eyes that our King doth offer thee mercy, and that, after so many provocations? |
6049 | is justifying, saving faith, nothing more than a belief of the truth? |
6049 | is man such a fool as to believe things, and yet not look after them? |
6049 | is not this excellent water? |
6049 | is old Good- deed yet alive in Mansoul? |
6049 | is she not a tall, comely dame, something of a swarthy complexion? |
6049 | is sitting alone, pensive under God''s hand, reading the Scriptures, and hearing of sermons,& c., the way to be undone? |
6049 | is the celestial glory of so small esteem with him, that he counteth it not worth running the hazards of a few difficulties to obtain it? |
6049 | is the soul so precious a thing? |
6049 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | is the soul such an excellent thing, and is the loss thereof so unspeakably great? |
6049 | is there not life and mettle in them? |
6049 | is thy heart still so stubborn as not to say yet,"Let us fear the Lord?" |
6049 | it is the gift of the Father--"how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him( Luke 11:13)? |
6049 | it was for sufferings; and why made he ready for them but because he saw they wrought out for him a''far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory?'' |
6049 | joyful, and glad, and merry at heart at the thoughts of the richness of the booty? |
6049 | know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you,--and ye are not your own?" |
6049 | may not, therefore, the spirit of bondage be sent again to put me in fear, as at first? |
6049 | more fools still? |
6049 | must all men that have not so large acquaintance of their duty herein be excommunicated? |
6049 | must he save them all? |
6049 | must now the devil make thee wise? |
6049 | must these for this be cast out of the church? |
6049 | must we seek for justification by the works of the law, because the law convinceth? |
6049 | must ye utterly perish in your own corruptions? |
6049 | must you mind this world to the damning of your souls? |
6049 | nay, may they not both fall short? |
6049 | neighbour Christian, where are you now? |
6049 | neither hit last year nor this? |
6049 | neither if I be not, am I the worse? |
6049 | no Mount Zion? |
6049 | none for his loving Son that has showed his love, and died for thee? |
6049 | not fear in the day of evil? |
6049 | not in bed?]. |
6049 | not when the iniquity of thy heels compasseth thee about? |
6049 | now what shall we do? |
6049 | of a wicked man dying in despair? |
6049 | of works? |
6049 | of works? |
6049 | or a way for the lightning of thunder to cause it to rain on the earth, where no man is: on the wilderness wherein there is no man?'' |
6049 | or art thou none of those that should look after the salvation of their soul? |
6049 | or art thou through the ignorance that is in thee as[ one] unacquainted with these things? |
6049 | or can any give truer signs of false prophets than Isaiah and Micah give, yea or nay?" |
6049 | or can repentance be where the fruits of repentance are not? |
6049 | or can that be called a justifying faith, that has not for its fruit good works? |
6049 | or can there be no salvation? |
6049 | or can we be without such holy appointments of God? |
6049 | or did he die with ease, quietly? |
6049 | or do the scriptures only help you to seeming imports, and me- hap- soes[17] for your practice? |
6049 | or dost think thou mayest lose thy soul, and save thyself? |
6049 | or dost thou but dream thereof? |
6049 | or dost thou think that thou shalt escape the judgment? |
6049 | or doth grace teach you to plead for the flesh, or the making provision for the lusts thereof? |
6049 | or doth your King countenance you in ways that are so bad? |
6049 | or has the day of grace been suffered to pass by never to return? |
6049 | or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?'' |
6049 | or he which is born of a woman, that he should be righteous?'' |
6049 | or how doth the ignorance discover itself? |
6049 | or how is that? |
6049 | or how shall man be righteous before God? |
6049 | or how would she frame an answer? |
6049 | or how? |
6049 | or if Christ is the throne of grace and mercy- seat, how doth he appear before God as sitting there, to sprinkle that now with his blood? |
6049 | or if it so may be said; yet whether thou art one of them? |
6049 | or in going to hell, in burning in hell, and in enduring the everlasting pains of hell, with company? |
6049 | or is it because the devil and wicked men, the inventors of these vain toys, have outwitted the law of God? |
6049 | or is it muddy, and mixed with the doctrines of men? |
6049 | or is my flesh of brass?'' |
6049 | or is not the church by these words at all directed how to carry it to those that were not yet in fellowship? |
6049 | or must the effectualness of Christ''s merits, as touching our perseverance, be helped on by the doings of man? |
6049 | or must this silver palace be of that nature either? |
6049 | or naked, and clothed thee not? |
6049 | or naked, and clothed thee? |
6049 | or no forgiveness of sins--"If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?" |
6049 | or of restoring what he had oft taken away? |
6049 | or shall all the fish of the sea be gathered together for them to suffice them?'' |
6049 | or shall the cold flowing waters that come from another place be forsaken?'' |
6049 | or shall the saw magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
6049 | or shall we be base in life because God by grace hath secured us from wrath to come? |
6049 | or shall we not much matter what manner of lives we live, because we are set free from the law of sin and death? |
6049 | or standeth your religion in word or in tongue, and not in deed and truth? |
6049 | or that dare say, What you see and hear to be in me, do,''and the God of peace shall be with you?'' |
6049 | or that he may, in a short time, have another of his fits before us, and may lose the use of his limbs? |
6049 | or that he was to be buried in Joseph''s sepulchre? |
6049 | or that he will speak for them to God for whom he will not plead against the devil? |
6049 | or that if they had known him and his life, yet to see him die so quietly, would they not have concluded that he had made his peace with God? |
6049 | or that our Lord should have risen again from the dead? |
6049 | or that those that pursue this world did ever repent of their covetousness? |
6049 | or that those that walk with wanton eyes did ever repent of their fleshly lusts? |
6049 | or that thou shouldest receive it at the hand of God, when the day shall come that every man shall have praise of him for their doings? |
6049 | or that when the gate of mercy is shut up in wrath, he will at thy pleasure, and to the reversing of his own counsel, open it again to thee? |
6049 | or that your prayers come from the braying, panting, and longing of your hearts? |
6049 | or that, at some time or other, he may forget to lock us in? |
6049 | or the Gospel, which is the word of faith preached by us? |
6049 | or the devil endure that Christ Jesus should be honoured both by faith and a heavenly conversation, and let that soul alone at quiet? |
6049 | or the gospel declared by us? |
6049 | or the saw, that it should magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
6049 | or the tabernacle made with corruptible things, to the body of Christ, or heaven itself? |
6049 | or thirsty, and gave thee drink? |
6049 | or those either who are so far off from sense of, and shame for, sin, that it is the only thing they hug and embrace? |
6049 | or to say, all this is mine, but have nothing to show for it? |
6049 | or to see this great appearance of this great God, and the Lord Jesus Christ? |
6049 | or was not this man like to be a gainer by so doing? |
6049 | or what advantage can he get by his thus vexing and troubling the children of the Most High? |
6049 | or what is a remnant of wheat to the whole harvest? |
6049 | or what is he? |
6049 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6049 | or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? |
6049 | or what profit have we if we keep his ways?" |
6049 | or what profit shall I have if I keep his commandments? |
6049 | or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue? |
6049 | or what wilt resolve with thyself? |
6049 | or when wast thou sick, or in prison, and we did not minister unto thee? |
6049 | or who are they that by this exhortation are called upon to come? |
6049 | or who can forego them? |
6049 | or who can help himself thereby? |
6049 | or who did Christ come into the world to save, but the chief of sinners? |
6049 | or who has reverence for them? |
6049 | or who hath given understanding to the heart?" |
6049 | or whom have I defrauded? |
6049 | or whose ass have I taken? |
6049 | or will all our exquisite happiness centre in the glory of God? |
6049 | or will men take a pin of it to hang any vessel thereon?'' |
6049 | or will that penny that supplied my want the other day, I say, will the same penny also, without a supply, supply my wants today? |
6049 | or will that seasonable shower which fell last year, be, without supplies, a seasonable help to the grain and grass that is growing now? |
6049 | or will the law slay both him and us, and that for the same transgression? |
6049 | or will you hate your life, and save it? |
6049 | or will you not mind your callings at all? |
6049 | or will you shun the cross to save your lives, and so run the danger of eternal damnation? |
6049 | or wilt thou be desperate, and venture all? |
6049 | or wouldst thou know if thou hast? |
6049 | or''him,''by believing thou neither wilt nor canst? |
6049 | or, Can the merits of the Lord Jesus reach, according to the law of heaven, a man in this condition? |
6049 | or, as he was in the flesh? |
6049 | or, because we should in these things follow his steps, died he not for our sins? |
6049 | or, by acts and works of the flesh? |
6049 | or, do you by thus and thus doing submit to the laws of your king? |
6049 | or, in other words,''am I born again?'' |
6049 | or, in the humble hope that your course is accomplished, are you patiently waiting the heavenly messenger? |
6049 | or, that I would come to God in the best of my performances? |
6049 | or, what is a handful out of the rest of the world? |
6049 | or, what need you trouble us with these nice distinctions? |
6049 | ought not I also to set this day apart to sing the songs of my redemption in? |
6049 | poor dust and ashes, that he should crowd it up, and go jostlingly in the presence of the great God? |
6049 | poor man, what wilt thou do when these three things beset thee? |
6049 | pull no longer; why shouldest thou be thine own executioner? |
6049 | room, I say, for man''s righteousness, as to his acceptance and justification? |
6049 | said Faithful to his brother, Who comes yonder? |
6049 | said Mr. Feeble- mind, is he slain? |
6049 | said old Honest, what should I think? |
6049 | said she,''and what the son of my womb? |
6049 | said she; will she not take warning by her husband''s afflictions? |
6049 | said the Porter, was he your husband? |
6049 | saith God; what a fig- tree is this, that hath stood this year in my vineyard, and brought me forth no fruit? |
6049 | saith Satan; why, that will I. Ay, saith he, but who can do it, and prevail? |
6049 | saith he,''Is thine eye evil, because I am good?'' |
6049 | saith not the scriptures the same? |
6049 | saith the Lord; shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this?" |
6049 | saith the Lord; will ye not tremble at my presence?" |
6049 | saith the backslider that is returned, did you see how I left my God? |
6049 | saith the child, pray do not hurt me: I then have replied, Canst thou do nothing with this finger? |
6049 | sayest thou; but is this the way to go to God in prayer? |
6049 | says the honourable man, must I take mercy upon no higher consideration than the thief on the cross? |
6049 | see''s not how thou hast trod Under thy foot, the very Son of God? |
6049 | seek the living among the dead? |
6049 | seest thou the fatherless? |
6049 | seest thou thy foe in distress? |
6049 | set more by thy soul than by all the world? |
6049 | shall Christ become a drudge for you; and will you be drudges for the devil? |
6049 | shall I destroy thee? |
6049 | shall I fall upon thee and grind thee to powder, or make thee a monument of the richest grace? |
6049 | shall I threaten them? |
6049 | shall I unfaithful be? |
6049 | shall it not utterly wither, when the east- wind toucheth it? |
6049 | shall not the worthiness of the Son of God be sufficient to save from the sin of man? |
6049 | shall that knowledge of him, I say, be counted such, as only causes the soul to behold, but moveth it not to good works? |
6049 | shall the desire of the righteous be granted? |
6049 | shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? |
6049 | shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?'' |
6049 | shall we sin that grace may abound? |
6049 | should thy lies make men hold their peace? |
6049 | should we pray for faith, for justification by grace, and a truly sanctified heart? |
6049 | sin, what art thou? |
6049 | so truly doth thy voice cause heaven to echo again upon thy head, Cut him down; why doth he cumber the ground? |
6049 | so was he: are we tempted to commit idolatry, and to worship the devil? |
6049 | so was he: are we tempted to murder ourselves? |
6049 | so was he: are we tempted with the bewitching vanities of this world? |
6049 | such a length in the arm of the Lord, that he can reach those that are gone away, as far as they could? |
6049 | such highly- favoured Christians in Doubting Castle? |
6049 | such privileges as these? |
6049 | teach men to put God and his Word out of their minds, by running to merry company, by running to the world, by gossiping? |
6049 | tempted to destroy thyself? |
6049 | than He that shook hands with the Father in making of the covenant? |
6049 | that Daniel could have been safe among the lions? |
6049 | that I heard speak well of the holy Word of God? |
6049 | that Jonah could have come home to his country, when he was in the whale''s belly? |
6049 | that he was to be crowned with thorns? |
6049 | that he was to be crucified between two thieves, and to be pierced till blood and water came out of his side? |
6049 | that he was to be scourged of the soldiers? |
6049 | that is, he is so;''is he a pleasant child?'' |
6049 | that remember thy triumphant victory? |
6049 | that the damned shall never be burned out in hell? |
6049 | that thou mightest thereby go beyond and beguile thy neighbour? |
6049 | that word came suddenly upon me,"What shall we then say to these things? |
6049 | the desires of the flesh, or the lusts of the spirit, whose side art thou of? |
6049 | the disciples] said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone?'' |
6049 | the people were surprised, and cried, What, is this Naomi? |
6049 | the query in page 13. runs thus,"Will that faith which is without works justify?" |
6049 | then how should I come? |
6049 | then let old Good- deed save you from your distresses? |
6049 | then they may be coming to him, for aught you know; and why will ye be worse than the brute, to speak evil of the things you know not? |
6049 | there is yet a question, Whether it may be well with thy soul at last? |
6049 | they think that she will be run down with a push, or, as they said,''What do these feeble Jews? |
6049 | this question I ask thee, did or doth Christ obtain salvation for any, without that body which he took of the Virgin? |
6049 | thou thinkest to escape the fear; but what wilt thou do with the pit? |
6049 | thy God has bidden thee''open thy mouth wide''; he has bid thee open it wide, and promised, saying,''And I will fill it''; and wilt thou not desire? |
6049 | to be in my case, who that so was could but have done so? |
6049 | to believe great things, and yet not to concern himself with them? |
6049 | to contemn him when he is on the throne, when he is on the throne of his glory? |
6049 | to hear this trump of God? |
6049 | to see him that wept and died for the sin of the world now ease his mind on Christ- abhorring sinners by rendering to them the just judgment of God? |
6049 | to the salvation of the soul? |
6049 | to truck+ with the devil?'' |
6049 | to what value will an imputative righteousness amount?'' |
6049 | was he I say, within his disciples, or without them, when he said,"I am the light of the world?" |
6049 | was he a lover and a worshipper of God by Christ according to his word? |
6049 | was he found among thieves? |
6049 | was made the curse of God for me? |
6049 | was not his mind elevated a thousand degrees beyond sense, carnal reason, fleshly love, and the desires of embracing temporal things? |
6049 | was thine anger against the rivers? |
6049 | was thy wrath against the sea, that thou didst ride upon thine horses and thy chariots of salvation?" |
6049 | were they silent? |
6049 | what a fool has sin made of thee? |
6049 | what a privilege is this, but who believes it? |
6049 | what agreement? |
6049 | what aileth the man thus to express himself? |
6049 | what an ass art thou become to sin? |
6049 | what are you doing? |
6049 | what better melody can be heard? |
6049 | what better words can come from man? |
6049 | what can be more full? |
6049 | what care they for his Word? |
6049 | what comfort in their greatness? |
6049 | what communion can there be in such marriages? |
6049 | what concord? |
6049 | what does a righteous man desire? |
6049 | what does not the world owe to thee and to the great Being who could produce such as thee? |
6049 | what feats not perform? |
6049 | what is a promise to a carnal man? |
6049 | what is deliverance from hell without the enjoyment of God? |
6049 | what is ease without the peace and enjoyment of God? |
6049 | what is faith to possession? |
6049 | what is he adoing now? |
6049 | what is he advantaged by his rich adventure? |
6049 | what is her pedigree? |
6049 | what is like being saved? |
6049 | what is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
6049 | what is the reason that some are carried about as clouds, with a tempest? |
6049 | what is there wrapped up in this Christ, this secret of God? |
6049 | what is this but to count him less wise than thyself? |
6049 | what is this to the loss about which we have been speaking all this while? |
6049 | what is this to the purpose( See Col 1:26- 30)? |
6049 | what is thy country, and of what people art thou?" |
6049 | what less than a river could quench the thirst of more than six hundred thousand men, besides women and children? |
6049 | what mean men''s waverings, men''s changing, and interchanging truth for error, and one error for another? |
6049 | what meaneth the heat of this great anger?'' |
6049 | what need we stand to prove the sun is light, the fire hot, the water wet? |
6049 | what sayest thou? |
6049 | what says James in the third chapter of his epistle? |
6049 | what shall I do unto thee? |
6049 | what victories not gain? |
6049 | what was it that he spake? |
6049 | what will become of you if you die in this condition? |
6049 | what will that do? |
6049 | what''s the matter? |
6049 | what, must we With you lift up our voice? |
6049 | what, none at all? |
6049 | what, resolved to murder thine own soul? |
6049 | when God shall bind one over for his sin, to eternal judgment, who then can release him? |
6049 | when he is in the Spirit, and sees in the Spirit, do you think his tongue can tell? |
6049 | when saw we thee a stranger, and took thee not in? |
6049 | when thou should''st hope, dost thou despond? |
6049 | when we believed, or before? |
6049 | when? |
6049 | whence shall I seek comforters for thee?'' |
6049 | whence should my help come?" |
6049 | where are they that feed the hungry and clothe the naked, and send portions to them, for whom nothing is prepared? |
6049 | where are you commanded to do it? |
6049 | where are you? |
6049 | where are you? |
6049 | where is it, if it is not here? |
6049 | where is the man, if he want God''s Spirit, that will care for the flourishing state of religion? |
6049 | where is the scripture that saith that this Lord of the sabbath commanded his church, from that time, to do any part of church service thereon? |
6049 | where is thy joy under the cross? |
6049 | where is thy peace when thine anger has put thee upon being unquiet? |
6049 | where is thy sting? |
6049 | where is thy victory? |
6049 | where shall I see myself anon, after a few times more have passed over me? |
6049 | where will they leave their glory? |
6049 | where? |
6049 | wherefore have they the word, their closet, and the grace of meditation, but to build up themselves withal? |
6049 | wherefore? |
6049 | wherein art thou bettered by the profession, than the wicked? |
6049 | wherein has he offended? |
6049 | whether only unto mutual affection, as some affirm, as if he were in church fellowship before, that were weak in the faith? |
6049 | which has most advantage to live in godly largeness of heart, and is most at liberty in his mind? |
6049 | which is all one as if he had said, Why dost thou commit murder? |
6049 | which is strongest, thinkest thou, God or thee? |
6049 | which of these have also most in readiness to resist the wiles of the devil, and to subdue the power and prevalency of corruptions? |
6049 | which of these two have the greatest advantage to believe, and the greatest engagements laid upon him to love the Lord Jesus? |
6049 | which the law as a Covenant of Works calleth for; and canst thou, being carnal, do that? |
6049 | whither can you flee from the punishment of sin, but to the Saviour''s bosom? |
6049 | whither shall I go when I die, if sweet Christ has not pity for my soul?'' |
6049 | whither will they fly then? |
6049 | whither wilt thou fly for help? |
6049 | who among the sons of the mighty can be likened unto the Lord?'' |
6049 | who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" |
6049 | who are they that are thus unspeakably blessed? |
6049 | who believes this talk? |
6049 | who can abide in the fierceness of his anger? |
6049 | who can act reason that hath not reason? |
6049 | who can deliver me? |
6049 | who compelled Thee to swear? |
6049 | who could blame them, since their dead friends were come to life again? |
6049 | who do you think saw themselves in the best condition? |
6049 | who do you think was in the best condition? |
6049 | who has a thimbleful thereof? |
6049 | who is able to conceive the inexpressible, inconceivable joys that are there? |
6049 | who is there that is weaned from the world, and from their sins and pleasures, to fly from the wrath to come? |
6049 | who knows that is yet alive, what the torments of hell are? |
6049 | who knows the power of God''s wrath? |
6049 | who knows what it is? |
6049 | who knows what it is? |
6049 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
6049 | who smells the stink of sin? |
6049 | who so bold with God, and who so bold with men as he? |
6049 | who speaks to their aged parents with that due regard to that relation, to their age, to their worn- out condition, as becomes them? |
6049 | who then that hath the faith of him can do otherwise but desire to be with him? |
6049 | who thinks of this? |
6049 | who would not be a subject to it? |
6049 | who would not be in the rich man''s state? |
6049 | who would not be in this condition? |
6049 | who would not be in this glory? |
6049 | who would not but worship before it? |
6049 | who would slight convictions that are on their souls, which( if not slighted) tend so much for their good? |
6049 | whom have I oppressed?'' |
6049 | why am I damned? |
6049 | why could not you make the same work with the other scriptures, as you did with these? |
6049 | why did not I give glory to the redeeming blood of Jesus? |
6049 | why do you think they consider that? |
6049 | why else do men so soon grow weary? |
6049 | why in his name if his undertakings for us are not well- pleasing to God? |
6049 | why shouldest thou pull vengeance down from heaven upon thee? |
6049 | why then do the fallen angels tremble there? |
6049 | why then should he judge me, for that I can not give thanks with him for his? |
6049 | why was it not sufficient to say''he rose again,''or, he rose again the third day? |
6049 | why, what shall they see? |
6049 | why? |
6049 | why? |
6049 | wife and children, and all? |
6049 | will he be able to stand to his refusal? |
6049 | will he pursue his desperate denial? |
6049 | will it avail? |
6049 | will this content thee, the Lord will fulfil thy desires? |
6049 | will you not believe your own eyes? |
6049 | wilt thou comfort thyself with this? |
6049 | wilt thou go to hell for sin, or to life by grace? |
6049 | wilt thou not desire? |
6049 | wilt thou not yet set open thy gate to receive us, the deputies of thy King, and those that would rejoice to see thee live? |
6049 | wilt thou still be unwilling to hasten righteousness? |
6049 | wilt thou turn, or shall I smite? |
6049 | wilt thou yet loiter in the work of thy day? |
6049 | works that are done by virtue of great grace, and the abundance of the gifts of the Holy Ghost? |
6049 | would promote righteousness, because I love to see godliness show itself in others, and because I would feel more of the power of it in myself? |
6049 | would they neglect salvation as they did before? |
6049 | would they not call thee a thousand fools? |
6049 | would they not have a more comfortable house and home for their souls?'' |
6049 | would you have men to receive it with such consciences? |
6049 | would you have us trust to what Christ, in His own person, has done without us? |
6049 | would you not readily give him by SCORES? |
6049 | wouldst thou be saved? |
6049 | wouldst thou swim? |
6049 | yea, and to do it more and more? |
6049 | yea, couldest thou be willing even now to partake of the means that would help thee to that means, that can cure thee of this disease? |
6049 | yea, it is impossible else that he should ever cry out with all his heart,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" |
6049 | yea, what can make that man happy that, for his not coming to Jesus Christ for life, must be damned in hell? |
6049 | yea, what like to be taught in the way that thou shalt choose? |
6049 | yea, what means else thy commending of thyself because of that, and so thy implicit prayer, that thou for that mightest find acceptance with God? |
6049 | yea, why should not man despair of getting to heaven by his own abilities? |
6049 | you may say, what judgments? |