Search for: should have all its work done
1721 History of Protestantism, vol. 1, p. 380.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… would have done had their object been what their enemies alleged, did they cover themselves with the darkness of the night? While so many circumstances throw …
1722 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 105.3 (James Aitken Wylie)
… good works, which are as it were the fruit and signs of faith. In like manner that they who desire it may have the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper given them according …
1723 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 320.2 (James Aitken Wylie)
… Calvin should see, he said, “stupendous and unheard-of things.” The unhappy man had virtually arrived at pantheism, the final goal of all who in these high matters …
1724 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 565.2 (James Aitken Wylie)
… part, it was to act an inhuman part. It was to abnegate the right, not of citizens only, but of men. If they should longer refuse to stand to their defense, posterity …
1725 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 170.4 (James Aitken Wylie)
… to have done. How many score of times had this promise been made, and when had it proved aught save a delusion and a snare? It served, however, as an excuse to the …
1726 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 328.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… he should like to enter the Church of Rome, or had done an act of abjuration twenty years before, or given any occasion in any way for a suspicion or report of …
1727 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 374.3 (James Aitken Wylie)
… , although it should be by convulsing all Europe. The cardinal knew that doubts had begun to trouble the king’s conscience touching the lawfulness of his …
1728 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 568.2 (James Aitken Wylie)
… , having done its work, dissolved. It had promulgated those edicts which placed the Church and State of Scotland at the feet of Charles II, and it left it to the …
1729 History of the Reformation, vol. 1, p. 42.1 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)
… absurd works that had hitherto been in use, men should study geography in Strabo, medicine in Hippocrates, philosophy in Plato, mythology in Ovid, and natural …
1730 History of the Reformation, vol. 2, p. 186.4 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)
… has done is acceptable to God, the work is good, if it were merely the lifting up of a straw; but if he have not this assurance, his work is not good, even should he …
1731 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 729.9 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)
… see all its scope. Had he foreseen it, he would perhaps have recoiled in alarm. He saw indeed that there was a great work to be done, but he believed that all good …
1732 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book III, p. 94.1 (Alfred Edersheim)
… . But it seems to me highly improbable, that so long an interval as nine or ten months should have elapsed between John’s first preaching and the Baptism of …
1733 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book III, p. 404.1 (Alfred Edersheim)
… writers have, without difficulty, shown that it should be qumi, not qum. Nevertheless, the same command is spelt Mwq in the Talmud (as it is pronounced in the Syriac …
1734 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book III, p. 413.1 (Alfred Edersheim)
… must have spread that, notwithstanding all, His own kin—probably His sisters whom He might have been supposed by many to have come to visit—did not own and honour …
1735 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book III, p. 485.1 (Alfred Edersheim)
… men have seen in the miraculous working of the Christ! Perhaps we should not wonder that the miracle itself made no deeper impression, since even the disciples …
1736 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book IV, p. 194.3 (Alfred Edersheim)
… after it, all the more that it has strayed into the wilderness? And, to take these Pharisees on their own ground, should not the Christ have done likewise to the …
1737 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book IV, p. 276.1 (Alfred Edersheim)
… then working its effect, and that, as the face changed, the soul took its final leave from the resting-place of the body. Only one sentence Jesus spake of gentle …
1738 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book V, p. 65.1 (Alfred Edersheim)
… time have been very limited—and we thank God for the teaching of this Parable. And if doubt should still exist, it must be removed by the concluding sentences …
1739 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book V, p. 116.2 (Alfred Edersheim)
… might have rendered the servants who traded more careless, while it also increased the guilt of him, who all this time had not done anything with his Master’s …
1740 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Appendix, p. 140.2 (Alfred Edersheim)
… , deemed it best, before anything new should happen through him, to put him to death, rather than that, when a change should arise in affairs, he might have to repent …