| Methodist Church - 1827 - 512 pages
...sanguinary and painful. So that as a system of observances, St. Peter does not hesitate to declare, that it was a yoke which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear. On the other hand, the Christian worship, though not disdaining all ceremonies, employs those only,... | |
| George Townsend - 1827 - 722 pages
...should be done by them, whereby they might become polluted, and incur the anger of their God. This law was a yoke which neither they, nor their fathers, were able to bear. But in the law which was now to be ushered in by the Messiah, Zacharias announces, in this sublime... | |
| Christian life - 1827 - 418 pages
...of magnifying that law which was within his heart, and thus to exonerate the people from so galling a yoke which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear. Though Lord and Master he becomes servant to the church, and works out for her in that capacity a righteousness... | |
| Baptists - 1827 - 676 pages
...contrary, many of these parents, who have tasted of the word, wish their children to be liberated from a yoke, which neither they, nor their fathers were able to bear. By these means, there are two nan added to the number of avowed converts, in that vicinity, since Uie... | |
| Miles Bland - 1828 - 598 pages
...imposed upon the Jews by Moses, is styled by St. Paul £yyoc cîoi/Xeiaç, Gal. v. l : and by St. Peter a yoke which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear, Acts xv. 10 : by reason of the long and frequent journies to Jerusalem, and the great payments for... | |
| Aeschylus - 1828 - 1078 pages
...ceremonies imposed upon the Jews by Moses, is styled by St. Paul Cvyo? tWXeiac, Gal. v. l : and by St. Peter a yoke which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear, Acts xv. 10 : by reason of the long and frequent journies to Jerusalem, and the great payments for... | |
| Richard Baxter - Theology - 1830 - 620 pages
...power to justify. They were said therefore to be in bondage to the law ; and the law was said to be a yoke, which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear : Acts xv. And by the spirit of adoption is meant, 1. That spirit, or those qualifications or workings... | |
| Richard Baxter - Christian life - 1831 - 638 pages
...power to justify. They were said therefore to be in bondage to the law ; and the law was said to be a yoke, which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear : Acts xv. And by the spirit of adoption is meant, 1 . That spirit, or those qualifications or workings... | |
| William Van Mildert (bp. of Durham.) - 1831 - 542 pages
...acknowledged to be in many respects extremely burdensome; insomuch that St.Peter describes it to be "a yoke which " neither they nor their fathers were able to " bear a ." The multiform religions of the heathen world consisted of little else than ceremonial institutions;... | |
| John Scott - Lutheran Church - 1832 - 644 pages
...of the ceremonies of the Jews might well be applied to those of the church of Rome, that they were a yoke which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear : that it was not by means of ceremonies, but by the promulgation of the word of God, after the example... | |
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