A Practical Treatise upon Christian Perfection, Volume 3

Framsida
Wipf and Stock Publishers, 12 mars 2001 - 254 sidor
 

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THE HE Nature and Design of Christianity that its sole End is to deliver us from the Misery and Dis
11
CHAPTER II
23
CHAPTER III
36
CHAPTER IV
48
CHAPTER V
62
CHAPTER VI
79
CHAPTER VII
98
CHAPTER IX
134
CHAPTER X
150
CHAPTER XI
170
CHAPTER XII
195
CHAPTER XIII
215
CHAPTER XIV
232
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Om författaren (2001)

William Law, born in 1686, became a Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge in 1711, but in 1714, at the death of Queen Anne, he became a non-Juror: that is to say, he found himself unable to take the required oath of allegiance to the Hanoverian dynasty (who had replaced the Stuart dynasty) as the lawful rulers of the United Kingdom, and was accordingly ineligible to serve as a university teacher or parish minister. He became for ten years a private tutor in the family of the historian Edward Gibbon (who, despite his generally cynical attitude toward all things Christian, invariably wrote of Law with respect and admiration), and then retired to his native King's Cliffe. Forbidden the use of the pulpit and the lecture-hall, he preached through his books. These include Christian Perfection, the Spirit of Love, the Spirit of Prayer, and, best-known of all, A Serious Call To a Devout and Holy Life, published in 1728.

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