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- catalog contributor b3720466.
- catalog created "1965.".
- catalog date "1965".
- catalog date "1965.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1965.".
- catalog description "4. It can never be well with a man while he is in his sins -- 5. Men should become religious without delay -- 6. How welcome should the Gospel be! -- IV. Exhortation and counsel -- 1. Repent -- 2. Believe the Gospel -- 3. Sin no more -- 4. Take heed of living in any sin -- A. Take heed of sinning in thought -- Sinful thoughts defile a man -- They are an abomination in the sight of God -- Thought-sins are root-sins -- We must beg pardon for them -- The Gospel is to bring thoughts to the obedience of Christ -- Conversion is in the thoughts of men -- God keeps as account of thoughts -- Directions: -- Humbly make your address to God -- Hide the Word of God in your heart -- Begin the day with thoughts of God -- Chide and check vain thoughts -- Turn away from beholding vanity -- Beware of idleness -- Love God and his law much -- B. A warning against sinful words -- Sinful words are wholly forbidden -- Unless a man take heed to his words his religion is vain -- They evidence sinful hearts -- ".
- catalog description "As accessory after they are committed.".
- catalog description "D. It has become as a schoolmaster -- E. It silences man from making any complaint -- F. It leaves a man without hope -- VII. The witness of sin itself -- 1. Sin's names -- A. The work of the Devil -- B. All filthiness of flesh and spirit -- Sin is loathsome -- It is polluting and infectious -- In its universality -- How suddenly it infects -- Its infection is almost incurable -- It lives in its effects when we are dead -- 2. The arts sin uses to disguise itself".
- catalog description "Section Four: The application and usefulness of the doctrine of sin's sinfulness -- I. Sin is the worst of evils -- 1. It is worse than any affliction -- 2. Worse than death -- 3. Worse than the Devil -- 4. Worse than Hell -- 5. In every way the worst of evils -- II. Inferences from the sinfulness of sin against God -- 1. The patience and long-suffering of God with sinners is wonderful -- 2. The judgments of God are just -- 3. How precious a mercy is the forgiveness of sin! -- 4. Sin is not to be committed on any account whatsoever -- 5. How transcendently and incomparably beautiful a thing is holiness! -- III. Inferences from the contrariety of sin to the good of man -- 1. They who seek for any good in sin are miserably mistaken -- There is not profit to man by sin -- There is no honour to be gained by sin -- There is no pleasure to be had from sin -- 2. Time spent in sin is worse than lost -- 3. Those who mock at sin are worse than fools and madmen -- ".
- catalog description "Section One: What sin is -- Section Two: The sinfulness of sin -- I. Sin's contrariety to God -- 1. To the nature of God -- 2. To all the names and attributes of God -- 3. To the works of God -- 4. To the law and will of God -- 5. To the image of God -- 6. To the people of God -- 7. To the glory of God -- 8. To the being of God -- II. Sin's contrariety to man -- 1. Sin is against man's present good in this life -- A. In a natural sense -- It is against man's well-being in this life -- It is against man's very being -- 2. In a moral sense -- A. It has degraded man -- B. It has darkened man's understanding -- C. It has made man a fool -- In relation to his chief and ultimate end -- In relation to the means leading to happiness -- As to the non-improvement or mis-improvement of means -- D. It has made man a beast -- Like a beast -- Like the worst of beasts -- Worse than the beasts -- E. It has separated man from God in a moral sense -- Effects of this separation from God -- 3. Sin is against the good of man in the life to come -- The damnation of sinners is privative and positive -- A. Privative damnation -- Sinners will be deprived of all the good things they had in this life -- Of the pleasure they had from them -- All their peace -- Their hopes of Heaven -- All good company -- Heaven -- God himself -- They shall be incapable of any alternation for the better -- B. Positive damnation -- The damnation-state of sinners considered under six headings -- The torment of Hell -- The place with its names -- The thing itself -- The quantity and quality of the torments of Hell -- They will be exceedingly great and terrible -- They will be universal -- They will be without intermission -- The duration of these torments -- The tormentors -- The Devil -- Conscience -- God -- The aggravations of these torments -- The effect of these torments".
- catalog description "Section Three: The witnesses against sin I. God himself bears witness against sin -- 1. He has forbidden sin and made a law against it -- 2. He will not allow us to do evil that good may come -- 3. By threatening man -- 4. He is angry with the wicked -- 5. Sin alone made God repent that he had made man -- 6. By many great and severe judgments -- On sinners -- On his own people -- On his own Son -- 7. He sent his Son into the world to condemn sin and destroy it -- Christ's sufferings were for sinners -- They were exceedingly great -- He suffered all kinds of suffering -- He suffered from all kinds of persons -- He had all kinds of aggravating circumstances united in his sufferings -- 3. Their greatness is a full witness against the sinfulness of sin -- II. Angels bear witness against sin -- 1. Good angels -- 2. Evil angels -- III. The witness of men -- 1. Good men -- A. Against other men's sins -- B. Against their own sin -- Objections against the witness of good men answered -- ".
- catalog description "They abhor sin as sin -- They still sin -- But they hate sin nevertheless -- 2. Wicked men -- A. They are ashamed of sin before and when they commit it -- B. They are ashamed after they have committed it -- They dare not own their sin -- They dare not look into their actions -- They decry and punish in others sin which they themselves are guilty of -- They usually fly to forms of godliness -- They desire to die the death of the righteous -- The most hardened sinners at one time witness against sin -- 4. The whole creation witnesses against sin -- A. As having done it a great deal of wrong -- B. With respect to God and man -- The creatures teach man his duty -- They convince men of many sins -- C. The creatures are instruments in the hand of God to punish sinners -- V. The law witnesses against sin -- Before it is committed -- After it is committed -- A. The law will not pardon the least sin -- B. It cannot justify any man -- C. It makes sin abound -- ".
- catalog description "They corrupt men and manners -- The tongue is man's glory or shame -- God will judge us for and by our words -- Directions: -- Let your words be few -- Let us speak as we ought -- C. Beware of sinning in deed -- (1) Take heed of sins of omission -- Some of the best men have been guilty of this -- It is a great affliction to good men to be forced to omit duties -- It is a sin to be willing to omit a duty -- One omission makes way for another -- the more knowledge we have of a duty, the worse is the omission of it -- Sins of omission are bad examples -- They are sins which God has judged and will judge -- (2) Take heed of sins of commission -- Of your besetting sin -- Of sins as relatives -- Of the sins of the age and place where you live -- Of the sins that attend your callings -- Of 'little' sins -- Of secret sins -- Of the occasions and appearances of sin -- Of being guilty of other men's sins -- In giving occasion for them before -- As co-helpers of them -- ".
- catalog extent "284 p.".
- catalog isPartOf "Puritan paperbacks".
- catalog issued "1965".
- catalog issued "1965.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "London, Banner of Truth Trust,".
- catalog subject "BT715 .V4 1965".
- catalog subject "Sin Christianity Early works to 1800.".
- catalog subject "Sin Early works to 1800.".
- catalog tableOfContents "4. It can never be well with a man while he is in his sins -- 5. Men should become religious without delay -- 6. How welcome should the Gospel be! -- IV. Exhortation and counsel -- 1. Repent -- 2. Believe the Gospel -- 3. Sin no more -- 4. Take heed of living in any sin -- A. Take heed of sinning in thought -- Sinful thoughts defile a man -- They are an abomination in the sight of God -- Thought-sins are root-sins -- We must beg pardon for them -- The Gospel is to bring thoughts to the obedience of Christ -- Conversion is in the thoughts of men -- God keeps as account of thoughts -- Directions: -- Humbly make your address to God -- Hide the Word of God in your heart -- Begin the day with thoughts of God -- Chide and check vain thoughts -- Turn away from beholding vanity -- Beware of idleness -- Love God and his law much -- B. A warning against sinful words -- Sinful words are wholly forbidden -- Unless a man take heed to his words his religion is vain -- They evidence sinful hearts -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "As accessory after they are committed.".
- catalog tableOfContents "D. It has become as a schoolmaster -- E. It silences man from making any complaint -- F. It leaves a man without hope -- VII. The witness of sin itself -- 1. Sin's names -- A. The work of the Devil -- B. All filthiness of flesh and spirit -- Sin is loathsome -- It is polluting and infectious -- In its universality -- How suddenly it infects -- Its infection is almost incurable -- It lives in its effects when we are dead -- 2. The arts sin uses to disguise itself".
- catalog tableOfContents "Section Four: The application and usefulness of the doctrine of sin's sinfulness -- I. Sin is the worst of evils -- 1. It is worse than any affliction -- 2. Worse than death -- 3. Worse than the Devil -- 4. Worse than Hell -- 5. In every way the worst of evils -- II. Inferences from the sinfulness of sin against God -- 1. The patience and long-suffering of God with sinners is wonderful -- 2. The judgments of God are just -- 3. How precious a mercy is the forgiveness of sin! -- 4. Sin is not to be committed on any account whatsoever -- 5. How transcendently and incomparably beautiful a thing is holiness! -- III. Inferences from the contrariety of sin to the good of man -- 1. They who seek for any good in sin are miserably mistaken -- There is not profit to man by sin -- There is no honour to be gained by sin -- There is no pleasure to be had from sin -- 2. Time spent in sin is worse than lost -- 3. Those who mock at sin are worse than fools and madmen -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Section One: What sin is -- Section Two: The sinfulness of sin -- I. Sin's contrariety to God -- 1. To the nature of God -- 2. To all the names and attributes of God -- 3. To the works of God -- 4. To the law and will of God -- 5. To the image of God -- 6. To the people of God -- 7. To the glory of God -- 8. To the being of God -- II. Sin's contrariety to man -- 1. Sin is against man's present good in this life -- A. In a natural sense -- It is against man's well-being in this life -- It is against man's very being -- 2. In a moral sense -- A. It has degraded man -- B. It has darkened man's understanding -- C. It has made man a fool -- In relation to his chief and ultimate end -- In relation to the means leading to happiness -- As to the non-improvement or mis-improvement of means -- D. It has made man a beast -- Like a beast -- Like the worst of beasts -- Worse than the beasts -- E. It has separated man from God in a moral sense -- Effects of this separation from God -- 3. Sin is against the good of man in the life to come -- The damnation of sinners is privative and positive -- A. Privative damnation -- Sinners will be deprived of all the good things they had in this life -- Of the pleasure they had from them -- All their peace -- Their hopes of Heaven -- All good company -- Heaven -- God himself -- They shall be incapable of any alternation for the better -- B. Positive damnation -- The damnation-state of sinners considered under six headings -- The torment of Hell -- The place with its names -- The thing itself -- The quantity and quality of the torments of Hell -- They will be exceedingly great and terrible -- They will be universal -- They will be without intermission -- The duration of these torments -- The tormentors -- The Devil -- Conscience -- God -- The aggravations of these torments -- The effect of these torments".
- catalog tableOfContents "Section Three: The witnesses against sin I. God himself bears witness against sin -- 1. He has forbidden sin and made a law against it -- 2. He will not allow us to do evil that good may come -- 3. By threatening man -- 4. He is angry with the wicked -- 5. Sin alone made God repent that he had made man -- 6. By many great and severe judgments -- On sinners -- On his own people -- On his own Son -- 7. He sent his Son into the world to condemn sin and destroy it -- Christ's sufferings were for sinners -- They were exceedingly great -- He suffered all kinds of suffering -- He suffered from all kinds of persons -- He had all kinds of aggravating circumstances united in his sufferings -- 3. Their greatness is a full witness against the sinfulness of sin -- II. Angels bear witness against sin -- 1. Good angels -- 2. Evil angels -- III. The witness of men -- 1. Good men -- A. Against other men's sins -- B. Against their own sin -- Objections against the witness of good men answered -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "They abhor sin as sin -- They still sin -- But they hate sin nevertheless -- 2. Wicked men -- A. They are ashamed of sin before and when they commit it -- B. They are ashamed after they have committed it -- They dare not own their sin -- They dare not look into their actions -- They decry and punish in others sin which they themselves are guilty of -- They usually fly to forms of godliness -- They desire to die the death of the righteous -- The most hardened sinners at one time witness against sin -- 4. The whole creation witnesses against sin -- A. As having done it a great deal of wrong -- B. With respect to God and man -- The creatures teach man his duty -- They convince men of many sins -- C. The creatures are instruments in the hand of God to punish sinners -- V. The law witnesses against sin -- Before it is committed -- After it is committed -- A. The law will not pardon the least sin -- B. It cannot justify any man -- C. It makes sin abound -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "They corrupt men and manners -- The tongue is man's glory or shame -- God will judge us for and by our words -- Directions: -- Let your words be few -- Let us speak as we ought -- C. Beware of sinning in deed -- (1) Take heed of sins of omission -- Some of the best men have been guilty of this -- It is a great affliction to good men to be forced to omit duties -- It is a sin to be willing to omit a duty -- One omission makes way for another -- the more knowledge we have of a duty, the worse is the omission of it -- Sins of omission are bad examples -- They are sins which God has judged and will judge -- (2) Take heed of sins of commission -- Of your besetting sin -- Of sins as relatives -- Of the sins of the age and place where you live -- Of the sins that attend your callings -- Of 'little' sins -- Of secret sins -- Of the occasions and appearances of sin -- Of being guilty of other men's sins -- In giving occasion for them before -- As co-helpers of them -- ".
- catalog title "The plague of plagues.".
- catalog type "Early works. fast".
- catalog type "text".