A Sermon Preached at St. Aldate's Church, Oxford, on Behalf of a Proposed Church and Parsonage House at Headington QuarryJ. Vincent, 1847 - 15 páginas |
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Página vii
... whilst the elder people seem , for the most part , drowned in the impenetrable apathy of hardened ignorance . The one remedy for this evil is to plant the pre- sence of a truly Christian pastor amongst them . By ministering to them ...
... whilst the elder people seem , for the most part , drowned in the impenetrable apathy of hardened ignorance . The one remedy for this evil is to plant the pre- sence of a truly Christian pastor amongst them . By ministering to them ...
Página 8
... whilst the gnawings of de- spair make every other being , yea , and its own self also , only the fit subjects for its active malignity and hate . And from all this , brethren , surely some impor- tant practical lessons flow with the ...
... whilst the gnawings of de- spair make every other being , yea , and its own self also , only the fit subjects for its active malignity and hate . And from all this , brethren , surely some impor- tant practical lessons flow with the ...
Página 11
... whilst we labour for Him He will bless us - standing by us in our boats as we cast the net - joining Himself to us as we walk on the way - feeding us from the fire of coals which He has kindled , as we drag to shore the nets which He ...
... whilst we labour for Him He will bless us - standing by us in our boats as we cast the net - joining Himself to us as we walk on the way - feeding us from the fire of coals which He has kindled , as we drag to shore the nets which He ...
Página 14
... whilst under it a gross animal sensuality of uncleanness and drunkenness too often reigns unrebuked by better examples and un- relieved by higher aspirations . There is , moreover , this special reason for helping such places ; they are ...
... whilst under it a gross animal sensuality of uncleanness and drunkenness too often reigns unrebuked by better examples and un- relieved by higher aspirations . There is , moreover , this special reason for helping such places ; they are ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A Sermon Preached at St. Aldate's Church, Oxford, on Behalf of a Proposed ... Samuel Wilberforce Sin vista previa disponible - 2017 |
A Sermon Preached at St. Aldate's Church, Oxford, on Behalf of a Proposed ... Samuel Wilberforce Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
ALDATE'S CHURCH amidst amongst Archdeaconry of Surrey asked Balliol College Bishop of Ox BISHOP OF OXFORD blessed brethren brother cast CHARGE Christ Church Rev Christ's redeemed CHURCH AND PARSONAGE claim cleanse Clergy Coll Corpus Christi CUDDESDON PALACE curse Edmund Hall Endowment evil eyes F. S. Gawthorne Rev fallen nature furnished our hearts glected grace gratification Hall Rev hamlets hate HEADINGTON QUARRY Holton Rectory HOUSE AT HEADINGTON I. H. PARKER ington lesson LORD BISHOP Magdalen College Rev Merton College Rev MINISTRY natural instincts natural selfishness neigh neighbour Nuneham Offering at St Old Bank Oriel College ourselves passed pathies Patron peculiar pleasure population PROPOSED CHURCH PROVOST OF WORCESTER PUBLISHED BY REQUEST Queen's College robbed and wounded Samaritan Second Edition SERMONS Preached shewed mercy signs of faith Souls College spiritual strive sufferer T. H. WHORWOOD Thos thou likewise Trinity College University of Oxford unto Warden whilst Wintle WOOLLCOMBE Worcester College
Pasajes populares
Página xi - And on the morrow when he departed, he took out two pence, and gave them to the host, and said unto him, Take care of him, and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I come again I will repay thee.' Which now of these three, thinkest thou, was neighbour unto him that fell among the thieves?" And he said, "He that showed mercy on him." Then said Jesus unto him, "Go, and do thou likewise.
Página 5 - He who loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how shall he love God whom he hath not seen ? You, Mr.
Página 7 - And lo, a spirit taketh him, and he suddenly crieth out ; and it teareth him that he foameth again, and bruising him, hardly departeth from him. 40. And I besought thy disciples to cast him out, and they could not.
Página 2 - ... nature, attached pleasure to the performance of acts of kindness to others : and this He has done to help us to bear the first trouble, self-denial, and sacrifice, which is implied in imparting to others what we might consume upon ourselves. He has placed us in the midst of objects fitted to draw out these emotions. Thus He has provided for us a system of natural discipline and training in order that we by acting up to its requirements may, through the help of His grace, form a character of beneficence...
Página 2 - Himself, in which is the creature's only true happiness. Now the work of our natural selfishness is the exact opposite of all this. It begins by leading us to find our gratification in those pleasures which relate especially to ourselves. Thus it clogs the exercise of those benevolent instincts of the heart which are not simply either right or wrong, since the acts prompted by them are done merely as being...
Página 3 - ... all this. It begins by leading us to find our gratification in those pleasures which relate especially to ourselves. Thus it clogs the exercise of those benevolent instincts of the heart which are not simply either right or wrong, since the acts prompted by them are done merely as being pleasurable, not as being right, but yet which are intended to help us in the first labour of doing right. And as these natural gifts are neglected, selfishness grows greater in the contracting heart. The man...
Página 2 - GOD has furnished our hearts with instinctive sympathies for those around us. He has, by the constitution of our nature, attached pleasure to the performance of acts of kindness to others; and this he has done to help us to bear the first trouble, self-denial, and sacrifice, which is implied i» imparting to others what we might consume upon ourselves.
Página 5 - How shall he who kills within himself the natural instinct of aftection for those he sees, ever rise to the high gift of loving God, whom he can know only by his faith ? This conduct must be most offensive to the Spirit of God; and under a dispensation of the Spirit, such as is that under which we live, it must therefore be most ruinous to man. It is an intense denial of the work of Christ's cross, whereby ha made all men one in the unity of his own body. For the second Adam thus restored all the...
Página 4 - For from giving up the sense of wider relationship, he soon goes on to lose all real sense of the nearest and the closest. First it is himself, and those who are wellnigh part of himself, against the world; but let a question rise, or seem to rise, between himself and even those closest to him, and even they shall be sacrificed. Be they parent, wife, or child, the thoroughly selfish man is ready to use them too, merely as the instruments of gratifying an all-grasping self.