The Works of the Reverend John Fletcher, Volym 3

Framsida
Lane & Scott, 1851
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His power to bind to loose and to bless in the name of the Lord
26
The earnestness with which he began and continued to fill up the duties of his vocation
28
The manner in which he divided his time between prayer preaching and thanksgiving
29
con
30
solitary promises of the Gospel
31
His profound humility
32
The ingenuous manner in which he acknowledged and repaired his errors
35
His detestation of party spirit and divisions
36
His rejection of praise
38
His universal love
40
His particular love to the faithful
41
His love to those whose faith was wavering XVIII His love to his countrymen and his enemies
42
His love to those whom he knew only by report
43
His charity toward the poor in giving or procuring for them temporal relief
44
His charity toward sinners in offering them every spiritual assistance
46
The engaging condescension of his humble charity
48
His courage in defence of oppressed truth
50
His prudence in frustrating the designs of his enemies
51
His tenderness toward others and his severity toward himself
53
His love never degenerated into cowardice but reproved and consoled as occasion required
54
His perfect disinterestedness
58
His condescension in labouring at times with his own hands that he might preach industry by example as well as by precept
59
The respect he manifested for the holy estate of matrimony while Christian prudence engaged him to live in a state of celibacy
61
The ardour of his love
64
His generous fears and succeeding consolations
65
The grand subject of his glorying and the evangelical manner in which he maintained his superiority over false apostles
67
His patience and fortitude under the severest trials
68
His modest firmness before magistrates
69
His courage in consoling his persecuted brethren
70
His humble confidence in producing the seals of his ministry
72
His readiness to seal with his blood the truths of the Gospel XXXVIII The sweet suspense of his choice between life and death
76
The constancy of his zeal and diligence to the end of his course
77
His triumph over the evils of life and the terrors of death
78
APOSTLES
80
con cá 82 79 5 588AF 11
84
13
86
29
94
31
108
He preaches true repentance toward God
111
38
116
40
117
faith
121
The different preachers under these different dispensations
179
THE PORTRAIT OF ST PAUL PART THIRD AN ESSAY
198
The great influence of doctrines upon morality
206
The connection of morality with the third part of the apostles creed
213
An appeal to experience Page
215
The same subject continued
222
The advantages of redemption are extended in different degrees to
230
DEDICATION
245
The doctrine of mans corrupt estate stated
251
Man considered as an inhabitant of the natural world
257
As a citizen of the moral world
276
As belonging to the Christian world
309
Inferences from the whole
330
Concluding address to the serious reader
343
CAUTIONS against many false ways of healing a conscience wounded by
352
50
355
Appendix
373
VINDICATION OF THE CATHOLIC FAITH OF THE TRINITY
379
INTRODUCTION showing the occasion of the work and addressing the reader
387
51
397
A general view of the catholic faith concerning the Father Son
398
God the Father has a proper Son by whom he made and governs
407
61
414
77
419
The apostles apply to Christ many passages of the Old Testament mani
422
The inspired writers give Christ the names and titles and ascribe
431
works whether of creation or preservation
440
The apostles represent Christ as the immediate author of the Divine
446
Christ is the final and universal Judge
453
Divine worship was paid to him by patriarchs prophets and apostles
461
Christ is also very man
475
Objections answered
483
The use of the doctrine of Christs divinity
491
PREFACE by the editor
501
To Dr Priestley proving that our first parents expected a Divine
507
The subject continued
511
All the prophets exhibit Christ as the bruiser of the serpent and
519
The testimony borne by the prophets to the Godhead
530
The Epistles to Timothy Titus and Philemon are also inconsistent
565
The Epistle of St James and those of St Peter exhibit a doctrine
589
The same doctrine of Christs mere humanity represents the apostle John
595

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