| Charles Lambert Coghlan - 1832 - 578 pagine
...be received with thanksgiving. For it is sanctified by the word of God, and prayer. 1 Ti. iv. 4, 5. ethren ; And Judas begat Phares 3 Abraham when lie was tried offered up Isaac ; and it nothing pure ; but even their miud and conscience is de[AM 1032. 12 cometh out of the mouth, this... | |
| Charles Lambert Coghlan - 1832 - 486 pagine
...sin not. Let not the sun go down upon your wrath : neither give place to the devil. Ep. iv. 26, 27. Unto the pure all things are pure ; but unto them that are denied and unbelieving is nothing pure ; but even their mind and conscience is defiled : they profess... | |
| James Yonge - 1833 - 472 pagine
...seems to be describing the most desperate state of sin, in which a man can be sunk, when he says, " unto the pure all things are pure ; but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure ; but even their mind and conscience is defiled." For what indeed can be a more hopeless condition,... | |
| John William Whittaker - 1836 - 122 pagine
...constant results on both. Do not our conclusions agree •with the declaration of the apostle in our text: "Unto the pure all things are pure : but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure; but even their mind and conscience is defiled. They profess to know God ; but in works they deny him,... | |
| Thomas Chalmers - 1836 - 574 pagine
...atmosphere of heaven, without one taint of the base or the unholy, while they luxuriated over its pages. " Unto the pure all things are pure ; but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure ; but even their mind and conscience is defiled," Titus i. 15. For the interesting subject of the relation,... | |
| Robert Montgomery Martin - 1836 - 180 pagine
...snare of the devil, who are taken captive by him at his will. [2 Tim. ii. 22-2ti. 10 CHRIsTIAN DUTY. Unto the pure all things are pure : but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure1 but even their mind and conscience is defiled. They profess that they know God 1 but in worka'they... | |
| Jacques Saurin - 1836 - 458 pagine
...to get rid of it, then what can you do so proper as to retreat from an enemy dangerous to virtue? " ion is obvious to understand. Jesus had just cured a demo denied, nothing is pure." VI. In fine, if we wish our ways should be established, let us weigh them... | |
| Thomas Stackhouse - 1836 - 790 pagine
...in strictness, be accounted immodest, though w perhaps may have some such conception of it, since '' unto the pure all things are pure, but unto them that are drMed and unbelieving nothing is pure, but even liiir mind and conscience is defiled.' The Egyptians... | |
| John Wilson - 1837 - 320 pagine
...me. (G.) 1 Tim. vi. 17: .... the living God, who giveth us richly all things to enjoy. 1 Tit. i. 15: Unto the pure all things [are] pure : but unto them...that are defiled and unbelieving [is] nothing pure, &e. — See Isa. xl. 5; Ixvi. 16. Jer. xxvi. 8,9, 12, 16. Matt. iii. 5; xvii. 11; xix. 27. Luke xxi.... | |
| Henry Melvill - 1837 - 160 pagine
...enervates, that the soul, as though sepulchred in the body, can do nothing towards vindicating her origin. "Unto the pure all things are pure; but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure, but even their mind and conscience is defiled." Against sins of the mind — take heed that ye do not... | |
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