| Isaac Taylor - Enthusiasm - 1834 - 312 pages
...God, who, by such instruments, chooses to accomplish his designs of beneficence. That so prodigous a waste of the highest qualities should take place,...notions which many Christians entertain of the future slate, is indeed hard to imagine. The mind of man, formed as it is to be more tenacious of its active... | |
| Isaac Taylor - Enthusiasm - 1834 - 314 pages
...practical wisdom for its guidance, shall essay new labours — we say not perplexities and perils — in the service of God, who, 'by such instruments,...to accomplish his designs of beneficence. That so prodigous a waste of the highest qualities should take place, as is implied in the notions which many... | |
| Chandos Leigh - English poetry - 1839 - 430 pages
...hard-earned and practical wisdom for its guidance, shall essay new labours, we say not perplexities, perils, in the service of God, who by such instruments chooses to accomplish his design of benevolence. . : . Shall not the very same qualities which are here so sedulously fashioned... | |
| Isaac Taylor - Enthusiasm - 1844 - 300 pages
...practical wisdom for its guidance, shall essay new labours — we say not perplexities and perils, in the service of God, who by such instruments chooses...waste of the highest qualities should take place as in implied in the notions which many Christians entertain of the future state, is indeed hard to imagine.... | |
| Black race - 1857 - 328 pages
...practical wisdom for its guidance, shall essay new labors — we say not perplexities and perils, — in the service of God, who by such instruments chooses to accomplish His designs of beneficence." " The burning pen of inspiration," says Edward Everett, " ranging heaven and earth for a similitude,... | |
| Isaac Taylor - Enthusiasm - 1859 - 310 pages
...practical wisdom for its guidance, shall essay new labors — we say not perplexities and perils — in the service of God, who by such instruments chooses...more tenacious of its active habits than even of its moraldispositions, is, in the present state, trained (often at an immense cost of suffering) to the... | |
| Davis Wasgatt Clark - Death - 1864 - 476 pages
...practical wisdom for its guidance, shall essay new labors—we say not perplexities and perils—in the service of God, who, by such instruments, chooses...to imagine. The mind of man, formed, as it is, to he more tenacious of its active habits than even of its moral dispositions, is, in the present state,... | |
| Davis Wasgatt Clark - Death - 1866 - 468 pages
...its guidance, shall essay new labors—we say not perplexities and perils—in the service of Grod, who, by such instruments, chooses to accomplish his...its moral dispositions, is, in the present state, trained—often at an immense cost of suffering—to the exercise of skill, of forethought, of courage,... | |
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