| Richard Cecil, Josiah Pratt - 1816 - 664 pages
...simple religion of the Scriptures, to which, in a greater or less degree, their eyes had been blinded. THE right way of interpreting Scripture, is, to take...in almost the strongest terms : I would not have a man clip and curtail these passages, to bring them down to some system : let him go with them in their... | |
| Richard Cecil - 1817 - 276 pages
...simple religion of the Scriptures, lo which, in a greater or less degree, their eyes had been blinded. THE right way' of interpreting Scripture, is, to take...in almost the strongest terms: I would not have a man clip and curtail these passages, to bring them down to some system: let him go with them in their... | |
| Richard Cecil, Josiah Pratt - 1817 - 286 pages
...religion of the Scriptures, to which, in a greater or less degree, their eyes had been blinded. T HE right way of interpreting Scripture, is, to take it...in almost the strongest terms: I would not have a man clip and curtail these passages, to bring them down to some system: let him go with them in their... | |
| Richard Cecil - 1825 - 488 pages
...simple religion of the Scriptures, to which, in a gieater or less degree, their eyes had been' blinded. THE right way of interpreting Scripture, is, to take...in almost the strongest terms : I would not have a man clip and curtail these passages, to bring them down to some system : let him go with them in their... | |
| 1835 - 444 pages
...simple religion of the Scriptures, to which, in a greater or less degree, their eyes had been blinded. The right way of interpreting Scripture is to take...need not fear to insist on. Many passages speak the VOL. xv. F language of what is called Calvinism, and that in almost the strongest terms ; I would not... | |
| 1836 - 432 pages
...simple religion of the Scriptures, to which, in a greater or less degree, their eyes had been blinded. THE right way of interpreting Scripture, is, to take...in almost the strongest terms : I would not have a man clip and curtail these passages, to bring them down to some system : let him go with them in their... | |
| 1836 - 428 pages
...simple religion of the Scriptures, to which, in a greater or less degree, their eyes had been blinded. THE right way of interpreting Scripture, is, to take...Scripture, we need not fear to insist on. Many passages j speak the language of what is called Calvinism, and that in almost the strongest terms : I would... | |
| Benjamin Elliott Nicholls - 1838 - 304 pages
...speak further ; yea, almost none otherwise, than the text doth, as it were, lead me by the hand." " The right way of interpreting Scripture, is to take it as we find it, without any attempts to force it into any particular system." (Cecil.) "The Scriptures are the mysteries of God,"... | |
| 1843 - 750 pages
...and savours of human poverty and littleness." And again, " The right way of interpreting Scrip, ture is to take it as we find it, without any attempt to press it into any particular system : whatever may be fairly inferred from Scripture, we need not fear... | |
| 1868 - 844 pages
...word. Many of our able expositors recognize this rule as a sound one. This was Cecil's rule. He says, " The right way of interpreting Scripture is to take...any attempt to force it into any particular system." The judicious Hooker says, " I hold it as an infallible rule of exposition of the sacred Scriptures,... | |
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