This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A16998 | Ends on A? |
A16998 | ],[ Amsterdam? |
A36410 | As these inform, accords with the former, the Iudge of quick and dead; where demanded first, What his Name was? |
A36410 | VVhence follows next Simon Magus alias Peter,& c. Saints and Devils become fellows; also Fool and Racha: what not? |
A67506 | Or if unlearn''d in Physick''s crabbed Laws, How the Distemper judge, or guess the Cause? |
A67506 | Pray when, or how, became this Homage due? |
A67506 | What has possess''d your Noddles with this Dream? |
A67506 | Whence can you boast your Knowledge, lest you own, By study of your Files you''re Learned grown? |
A81066 | Brother Revenge, now speak, is this not true? |
A81066 | Have I not made the brother kill the ● ● other, The little infant murther''d by the mother? |
A81066 | Have I not made the man to kill the wife, And made the woman end the husbands life? |
A81066 | How many men have I made, for your good, Most barbarously to shed each others bloud? |
A81066 | How many men have faln by me and you? |
A81066 | How many women have I Witches made, And to revenge their cause lent them my aid? |
A81066 | What is''t but I can doe? |
A81066 | What mischiefe have I left undone in Towns? |
A81066 | Which of your Feends can do more feats than I? |
A45396 | And if you shall demand, why I said not this thus particularly in the Paraphrase and Annotations on the places of the Revelation? |
A45396 | Can it in this case be said that the second Death is worse then this, and yet this second Death defin''d by a swift Annihilation? |
A45396 | For if that which is not, can not be eternally punished, how can the wicked be said to depart to eternal punishment when they are annihilated? |
A45396 | Is it not for this, because Origens Doctrine was deem''d an Heresy in the Church, and that of some ill and dangerous consequence to be believed? |
A45396 | Next then p. i. for Origens opinion, granting it right stated( as I think it is) I demand for what reason that is mention''d? |
A45396 | That according to the Rabbinical Notion, it signifies final and utter destruction? |
A45396 | Whence is all this? |
A45396 | in his life and health, should continue to him? |
A16979 | & vvill you vse the Q. autority to Atheism to force me to rely vpon you? |
A16979 | And vvher God moderateth& mentioneth the vvorld to come, he sayth: Haue the gates of death ben revealed to thee? |
A16979 | And vvill you rush to Gehēna because I vvill not rely vpon you? |
A16979 | Are you all together sold into syn? |
A16979 | But by vvhat diuinity did your G. put R. Codder to his oth to tell vvher I vvas? |
A16979 | Cā she svvear any for any but in some offense? |
A16979 | Greek? |
A16979 | Hovv did you vse Rich Codder Mastres Hiddes man: to make the Q. autority as a dotage? |
A16979 | Novv hovv did the heathen term the place of Torment? |
A16979 | Novv my L. vvhat gain can your G. have in deceaving all the realm to bring an heresie Papisticall into the Creed? |
A16979 | Will you haue the Q. to be a dog in her gouernemēt? |
A16979 | Ys the enforcing of an vnlavvfull oth a small matter vvith your G? |
A16979 | ],[ Amsterdam? |
A16979 | is it an offense to clear an article by 20. yeares study, more then you haue taken, in vvriters currant among all men? |
A16979 | line 16 read shadovv of death? |
A16979 | or canst thou see the gates of the shadovv? |
A16979 | promise vpon a poinct of no sense: that I sought not to you? |
A16979 | vvhere he hath: vvho shall goe beyond the sea? |
A02192 | And what is the cause( I pray) that wicked wretches runne into al excesse and riot of sinne as they do? |
A02192 | And what shall hinder the being of fire in hell, when the extremity of tortures shall be put vpon the damned? |
A02192 | Another, Is it I, Lord? |
A02192 | But where is this religious care and godly resolution? |
A02192 | Diues a great personage, yet tormented in those flames: Quid profuit sibi superbia? |
A02192 | Esay speaking of this terrible fire, sayth: Who is able to dwell in this deuouring fire? |
A02192 | His reason is this, If Wood and the Worme be taken metaphorically, vvhy not then the fire also? |
A02192 | If it be Corporall, whether it burneth the body onely, or soule and body also? |
A02192 | If then it be graunted, that there is Substantiall fire in hell, the next question will bee, Whether it be Materiall, Corporall, or Spirituall? |
A02192 | Is it I, Lord? |
A02192 | Is it not because they lay not to heart this tormenting Tophet? |
A02192 | It is a common saying; But for hope the heart would burst; but they are shut out of all hope: and therefore who can expresse their torments? |
A02192 | Now alas, if a man be bound hand and foot, and cast into a well fiue thousand fadomes deepe, what hope hath he of euer comming out? |
A02192 | So the damned soule may say, Good God, for how short a time of pleasure, how great a Kingdome haue I lost? |
A02192 | To come to later times, in the destruction of Ierusalem by Titus Vespasian, how few escaped there aliue? |
A02192 | What hath pride profited him? |
A02192 | Whether it be true substantiall fire, or fire allegoricall? |
A02192 | Whether there be true fire in Hel? |
A02192 | how shall I be able to indure the paines of Hell fire? |
A02192 | only Lot vvith his daughters: in the destruction of Iericho by the sword, how few escaped there aliue? |
A02192 | only Noah with his Family: in the destruction of Sodome by fire, how few escaped there aliue? |
A02192 | or what hath the pompe of riches done him good? |
A02192 | or whether these words( the burning thereof is fire) be taken allegorically? |
A02192 | or, who shall bee able to dwell in these euerlasting burnings? |
A02192 | quid diuitiarum copia? |
A02192 | what shall become of vs? |
A02192 | yea, when Inquisition shall bee made for the very thoughts of the vngodly: If the iust shall scarce be saued, where shall the sinner appeare? |
A57245 | 10. it being so much opposed, who can utter those many things that are said against the truth? |
A57245 | 13. if some enjoy more prosper prosper ty then others, must they therefore suffer a punishment ● ever to end? |
A57245 | 15. was David born in Hell? |
A57245 | 17. for if you prove all things, and cease from man and his traditions, will they not say ye are mad? |
A57245 | 18. Who hath resisted his will? |
A57245 | 2. would ye have it to be punished to the full in this life, and after in the world to come with a punishment never to end? |
A57245 | 20. and many of them said he hath a devil and is mad, why hear ye him? |
A57245 | 23. at what shall God be angry or unsatisfied? |
A57245 | 3. to endure the said torment without end? |
A57245 | 35. if God should only love them that love him, doe not the Publicans the same? |
A57245 | 6. how is this true if they live for ever, and not die? |
A57245 | 7, 8. if they be anywhere, how are they absent from God? |
A57245 | 7. where shall Hell be? |
A57245 | By what meanes can Dives know Abraham from another, seeing as all confesse, his body is in the grave untill the Resurrection? |
A57245 | Fifthly, How could Dives speak to Abraham, his body being in the grave? |
A57245 | HEre is presented to thy view things new and old, when Christ and his disciples declared the truth: Some mocked, saying? |
A57245 | Have we not all cause to say herein, Where is the Scribe? |
A57245 | How could Dives see so far as Abrahams bosome is from hell? |
A57245 | How readest thou? |
A57245 | I see you are more bold to affirm, than able to prove; doth reason deny the punishment to be just, except it never end? |
A57245 | Is any so weak, as to imagine the earth will ever burn and never be consumed? |
A57245 | Is not this a full testimony against their Opinion of the torments of hell? |
A57245 | It saith, he saw Abraham; yet they say, hell is a place of utter darknesse: how can any thing be seen in a place of utter darknesse? |
A57245 | Know you any of the intention of God that is not revealed in his word? |
A57245 | Ludovick said, if I be saved, I be saved, If I be damned I be damned; the Papists say, if good works save us not, to what purpose shall we doe them? |
A57245 | Must we suffer the torments of Hell? |
A57245 | Ninthly, How shall Abraham send, seeing he hath no communion with us nor passage to us? |
A57245 | O death where is thy Sting? |
A57245 | O grave where is thy Victory? |
A57245 | See ye not the great doubting and uncertainty they are at among themselves? |
A57245 | Seventhly, How comes Dives to have such charity in hell to his Five Brethren, seeing he had none to them when on earth? |
A57245 | Sixthly, How shall Dives hear Abraham at so great a gulf and distance as heaven is from hell? |
A57245 | Tenthly, To what purpose will it be to send? |
A57245 | Therefore as the first death, so the second is a separation of soul and body, else how is it a death or a second death? |
A57245 | What fruit had ye of those things whereof ye are now ashamed? |
A57245 | When Christ declared the truth, the Priests cryed blasphemy; the high Priest rent his clothes, saying, he hath spoken blasphemys, what think ye? |
A57245 | Your opinion is fitter for Heathens than for Christians: if the Heathens do hold as you do, are we to believe in Religion as the Heathen? |
A57245 | [ who hath believed our report, and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?] |
A57245 | and how is the end of those things death? |
A57245 | can any speak without the organ of the body? |
A57245 | for if it be not to be read in the word of God, what have we to do with it? |
A57245 | how shall they be an abhorring to all flesh? |
A57245 | if thou be righteous, what givest thou unto him, or what receiveth he at thy hand? |
A57245 | if ye say Christ was to make satisfaction in both, his Godhead and Manhood: doth the Godhead need the help of the Manhood to make satisfaction? |
A57245 | or if thy righteousnesse be multiplied, what doest thou unto him? |
A57245 | there was not any thing to suffer, but the Manhood of Christ; can the suffering of man satisfie God? |
A57245 | to his Off- spring? |
A57245 | what new doctrine is this? |
A57245 | where is the disputer of this world? |
A57245 | will not the whole world contain a record of the actions of one man? |
A67772 | An ● how am I served accordingly? |
A67772 | And are they to be endured everlastingly? |
A67772 | And indeed, if the gates of the City be of Pearl, and the streets of Gold; what then are the inner rooms, the dining and lodging chambers? |
A67772 | And now for conclusion: Are the Joys of Heaven so unspeakable and glorious? |
A67772 | And what makes the difference? |
A67772 | And what shall I say more? |
A67772 | And withal lose their part and portion in the Kingdom of Heaven, as the Word of God expresly tells us? |
A67772 | As consider, If a dark dungeon here be so loathsom, what is that dungeon of eternal, of utter darkness? |
A67772 | As tell me, Will not their blood be required at your hands, if they perish through your neglect? |
A67772 | As what says the Apostle? |
A67772 | As, Dost thou desire beauty, riches, honour, pleasure, long life, or whatever else can be named? |
A67772 | As, Who would not obtain Heaven at any rate, at any cost or trouble whatsoever? |
A67772 | But, oh wretched Caitiff that I am; how hath the Devil and my own deceitful and devilish heart deluded me? |
A67772 | Christ our Redeemer and Elder- brother? |
A67772 | Dance hoodwinkt into this perdition? |
A67772 | Do we delight in good company? |
A67772 | Do you ask what Heaven is? |
A67772 | FIrst, Is it so, that the torments of Hell are so exquisite? |
A67772 | For as St. Paul tells us, The heart of man is not able to conceive those joyes; which being so, How should I be able to express them in words? |
A67772 | For if the brightness of the body shall match the Sun, what will the glory and splendour of the soul be? |
A67772 | For this incorruptible Crown of Glory in Heaven? |
A67772 | Fourthly, Is it so? |
A67772 | Hath Christ done so much for us, and shall we deny him any thing he requireth of us? |
A67772 | He who brings even idle words to judgment, and forgets not a thought of disobedience, how will he spare our gross negligence and presumption? |
A67772 | Hearken we unto Christs voice, in all that he saith unto us, without being swayed one way or another, as the most are? |
A67772 | Hell in Scripture is called a Lake, that burneth with fire and brimstone; and, than the torment of the former, what more acute? |
A67772 | How does this hang together? |
A67772 | How glorious and wonderful is the Maker thereof, and the City where he keeps his Court? |
A67772 | How is it that we are not more affected therewith? |
A67772 | How sweet then shall our knowledge in heaven be? |
A67772 | How then should we admire the love and bounty of God, and bless his Name, who for the performance of so small a work, hath proposed so great a Reward? |
A67772 | How will it end? |
A67772 | How wouldst thou toss and tumble, and turn from one side to another? |
A67772 | If material fire be so terrible, what is Hell- fire? |
A67772 | If the earnest penny be so precious and promising here; What shall the principal, and full crop and harvest of happiness in Heaven be? |
A67772 | If then the beginning and first fruits of it be so sweet, what shall the fulness of that beatifical Vision of God be? |
A67772 | In whom there is nothing but amiable, comfortable, delectable? |
A67772 | It will put thee to a demur, What have I done? |
A67772 | Now consider, Is one hours twitche of the worm of conscience here? |
A67772 | Now what heart would not bleed, to see men run headlong into those tortures that are thus intolerable? |
A67772 | Oh that men would believe the God of truth( that can not lye) touching spiritual and eternal things, but as they do these temporary and transitory? |
A67772 | Or in case we have peace of conscience, alas, how often is it interrupted with anguish of spirit? |
A67772 | Or that light from whence it receives its light? |
A67772 | SEcondly, Are the Joys of Heaven so unspeakable and glorious? |
A67772 | The Angels and Saints our Comforts and Companions? |
A67772 | The holy Ghost our Comforter? |
A67772 | Then wilt thou say, O that I had been more wise, or that I were now to begin my life again; then would I contemn the world with all its vanities? |
A67772 | What am I now aabout? |
A67772 | What is a thousand years? |
A67772 | What is eternity of hell torments? |
A67772 | What little enough to do, to obtain eternity? |
A67772 | What pleasure shall we take in the company of Saints and Angels? |
A67772 | What then can be more equal, then that thou shouldst suffer everlastingly? |
A67772 | What then will it be to lie in flames of fire? |
A67772 | What though it be usual with men, to have no sense of their souls till they must leave their bodies? |
A67772 | What will it be to enjoy the immediate presence, and glory of God our Father? |
A67772 | What''s a Fetter to a Dungeon? |
A67772 | Whether he finds not his joy to be like to the joy of harvest? |
A67772 | Whether will this course tend? |
A67772 | While we are here, how many clouds of discontent have we to darken the Sunshine of our Joy? |
A67772 | Who would not serve a short Apprenticeship in Gods service here, to be made for ever free in glory? |
A67772 | Will it not be sad to have Children and Servants rise up in judgment against you, and to bring in Evidence at the great Tribunal of Christ? |
A67772 | Will not this be sad? |
A67772 | Yea more, is Heaven so unspeakably sweet and delectable, is Hell so unutterably doleful? |
A67772 | Yea, are all these, and all other pains that can be named put together, but shadows and flea- bitings to it? |
A67772 | Yea, how can we be thankful enough for so great a blessing? |
A67772 | Yea, how little, how nothing, are the poor and temporary enjoyments of this life, to those we shall enjoy in the next? |
A67772 | Yea, how oft do those Russians that deny God at the Tap- house, preach him at the Gallows? |
A67772 | Yea, is one minutes twitch of a tooth pulling out so unsufferable? |
A67772 | Yea, what pain can we think too much to suffer? |
A67772 | Yea, who can utter the sweetness of that peace of Conscience, and spiritual rejoycing in God, which himself hath tasted? |
A67772 | Yea, who would not be a Philpot for a month, or a Lazarus for a day, or a Stephen for an hour, that he might be in Abrahams bosome for ever? |
A67772 | a Gallows to Hell- fire? |
A67772 | and confess that in sincerity of heart, which they oppugned in wantonness? |
A67772 | how would it charm their mouths, appall their spirits, strike fear and astonishment into their hearts? |
A67772 | or as men rejoyce when they divide a spoil? |
A67772 | than the smell of the latter, what more noysome? |
A67772 | the presence chamber of the great Monarch of Heaven and Earth? |
A67772 | the torments of Hell so woful and dolorous? |
A67772 | those delights and pleasures, that are reserved for the glorified Saints, and Gods dearest darlings in heaven? |
A67772 | what then may we think of the maker and builder thereof? |
A86127 | 12, 13. Who can understand his Errors? |
A86127 | Above all, it shall be wholly filled with ● nspeakable Delight and Satisfaction; ● hat, do I say, it shall be filled? |
A86127 | Alas, how shall I present my self before the Majesty of the most righteous and upright Judge? |
A86127 | But dare I presume to think to deceive the all- wise God? |
A86127 | Come my Soul, ascend to higher Thoughts, Hopes and Labours, and away with thy soft Wishes and dull Endeavours are these fit for seeking Eternal Joys? |
A86127 | Hath God told me, that can not lye, and shall I not have the Faith to believe him? |
A86127 | How, O God, hath Corruption depraved me? |
A86127 | How, O God, ● hall Satisfaction restore me? |
A86127 | I have no Heart to ask what hope can I have that I shall obtain? |
A86127 | IS it so? |
A86127 | If our Prison yield such fair contentments what will he do for us in his Royal Court? |
A86127 | If then I ● ashamed to be seen, how shall I be assur''● to be received? |
A86127 | If we find such Comfort in this stormy time of Tears, what may we expect in the sweet Sun shine of Joy? |
A86127 | In what Pollutions have wallowed? |
A86127 | Is it so? |
A86127 | Is this, O Lord, the wages of Sin? |
A86127 | Life, wherefore then dost thou kill Death, and wherefore dost thou then endure? |
A86127 | Lord, do these things for me, and more abundantly than I am able to ask or think, for Jesus Christ his sake? |
A86127 | Master, who shall I do to inherit eternal Life? |
A86127 | Moses saw God but imperfectly, and while, and his Face did shine; how the ● shall they shine, who shall perfectly see 〈 ◊ 〉 Face for ever? |
A86127 | O Christ, how can I forget thy Goodness? |
A86127 | O Glorious City, when shall I enter into thee, when shall I possess and enjoy thee? |
A86127 | O sweet Security ▪ what can be sufficiently said of thee? |
A86127 | O weak Man, wherefore art thou troubled? |
A86127 | O what is Man that thou art 〈 ◊ 〉 ful of him, or the Son of Man that t ● ● hast any regard for him? |
A86127 | Say unto God how terrible In all thy Works art thou? |
A86127 | Shall I be faint- hearted? |
A86127 | Tell me, I pray thee, what Entertainment hath intangled thee into th ● Love of this Life? |
A86127 | W ● ● reward shall I give unto the Lord, for the benefits he hath done for me? |
A86127 | Was it not enough for thee to draw me to destruction, but thou must all so take from me both the sense of my Grief, and the sight of my Danger? |
A86127 | What do you? |
A86127 | What dost thou fin ● therein but wanting and wishing; fro ● whence ariseth two Tortures of the Mind Hope and Fear? |
A86127 | What hast thou done? |
A86127 | What then shall I term thee? |
A86127 | Wherefore stand ye looking about? |
A86127 | Who is this coming out of the Wilderness, leaning upon her Well beloved? |
A86127 | alas, what shall become of me? |
A86127 | altho''thou lov''st not sin in Man; what hath our filthy flesh worthy of this Honour? |
A86127 | an ● consequently the Cure of the one and the Care of the other? |
A86127 | and in what perplexities an now plunged? |
A86127 | and yet, how dare I remember thy Greatness? |
A86127 | comfortless and forsaken Wretch whither shall I go? |
A86127 | doth a slow pace become a Man that is resolv''d for Eternity? |
A86127 | from how high a pitch ● Happiness hast thou dejected me? |
A86127 | how amiable are thy dwellings, thou Lord of ● osts? |
A86127 | how art thou busied there in, as the Spider that consumeth her ow ● Bowels in weaving curious Nets only to catch Flies? |
A86127 | how can I believe thee, and not admire thee? |
A86127 | how can I hope for thee, and not extol thee? |
A86127 | how can I think of thee, and not long for thee? |
A86127 | how do they distress, how do they distract me? |
A86127 | how shall my fearful Face behold him? |
A86127 | how terrible will he cast his Countenance upon me? |
A86127 | if this be your Country, whether do you range? |
A86127 | if this be your Pasture, whither do you stray? |
A86127 | in what Pat ● have I walked? |
A86127 | is my Case so deplorable and desperate? |
A86127 | is there Mercy in store for such a Rebel? |
A86127 | is this the punishment of wicked Doers? |
A86127 | it shall be inebriated, not having the sence of any other thing; what, do I say wholly? |
A86127 | must my Frolicks die into everlasting Burnings? |
A86127 | must my jolly Hours be turn''d into bitter Weepings and Wailings? |
A86127 | must my sinful Life end in the entring into those eternal Flames? |
A86127 | shall I be a Coward? |
A86127 | shall these and others resolve to part with anything, so much as their very Lives for their Saviour''s Sake? |
A86127 | to enter into this thy Heavenly Habitation, prepared ● or thy glorious estate? |
A86127 | to whom shall I see ● for succour? |
A86127 | what a lamentable loss hast thou incurred? |
A86127 | what a woeful exchange hast thou made? |
A86127 | what do I behold in th ● Infernal Lake? |
A86127 | what dost thou? |
A86127 | what hast thou done? |
A86127 | what shall I term thee? |
A86127 | where ar ● thou? |
A86127 | where is thy Joy ● where is thy Love, wherewith thy though ● shou''d be inflam''d? |
A86127 | which passed ● ay the time of this Life either in Idleness in Evil; what an endless Chain of Calaty have your short Joys linked together? |
A86127 | whither do you wander, if this be your home? |
A86127 | who can be in love with this Life full of misery, that hath any hope, faith and confidence in thy Mercy? |
A86127 | who shall have pity and compassion upon me? |
A86127 | with what a World of Woes hast thou inclos''d me? |
A86127 | 〈 ◊ 〉 how deep a Gulf of Misery hast thou depressed me? |
A02904 | And if thou be death, why doest thou endure? |
A02904 | And if thou doe denie this, then tell mee what kind of sinne is there which thou hast not committed? |
A02904 | And who is blind, but hee that suffereth himselfe to bee sold for a slave? |
A02904 | And who is deafe but ye, unto whom I have sent my messengers? |
A02904 | Hast thou not read in the Gospell, that there shall be weeping& wailing, and gnashing of teeth? |
A02904 | Have men their right sences? |
A02904 | Hearken( sayth Esay) Oyee deafe and yee blind, open your eyes that you may see, Who is blind but my servant? |
A02904 | How did I let pa ● ● ● the fruitfull yeares of aboundance, and did not enrich my selfe? |
A02904 | How long wilt thou tarrie, untill thou fully resolve to doe it? |
A02904 | How was I blinded with things present? |
A02904 | I know not whether I may truly tearme thee, either life or death: for if thou be life, why dost thou kill? |
A02904 | If men be mooved with gaine and commodity, what greater commoditie can there be than to attaine life everlasting? |
A02904 | If the feare of perils doe move us; what greater perill can there bee than death, the houre thereof being so uncertaine, and the account so strait? |
A02904 | If thou beleeve it, and doest not provide for it, how canst thou bee thought a reasonable man? |
A02904 | If thou beleeve not this, how art thou then a Christian? |
A02904 | If thou hadst not feared the dreadful day of judgement? |
A02904 | If thou hadst not looked for any other life? |
A02904 | Is there any wit or judgement in this world? |
A02904 | May it be thoght that men are become beasts, that provide onely for the time present? |
A02904 | O yee scattered sheepe, wandering out of your right way, if this be your sheep- coat, whether goe you backeward? |
A02904 | Oh, what thing could any man imagine more miserable, and more woorthie of compassion? |
A02904 | Or have they peradventure so dimmed their eye sight, that they can not looke before them? |
A02904 | Thou that hast thine eares open, wilt thou not give eare hereunto? |
A02904 | Thou that seest so many things, wilt thou not suffer thy selfe to see this? |
A02904 | Were it not meet, that that time which thou hast hetherto given to the world to thy flesh, and to the devill, should suffice? |
A02904 | What anguish and sorrow shall there be in his heart? |
A02904 | What appetite hast thou left unexecuted, notwithstanding that thou didst beleeve in almightie God, and that thou wert a Christian? |
A02904 | What art thou then? |
A02904 | What greater injurie, what greater despight can bee done, than so to contemne his divine majestie? |
A02904 | What greene meddow is there, in which thou hast not( at the least in desire) feasted thy letcherous lust? |
A02904 | What hath all thy former life been, but a web of sinnes, a sinke of vices, a way full of brambles and thornes, and a froward disobedience of God? |
A02904 | What madnesse can bee greater, than to chuse one torment, to gaine another by; rather than with one rest to gaine another rest? |
A02904 | What meane you? |
A02904 | What smaller request could there bee desired than this? |
A02904 | What travell and paines would not a man willingly take to escape even one onely day, yea, one houre, the very least of these torments? |
A02904 | What tree is there forbidden that thou hast not beholden with thine eyes? |
A02904 | What wise man would not desire, that all labour and paine of the world were imposed unto him? |
A02904 | Where be their wits? |
A02904 | Where is now become the understanding, judgement, and reason, which thou hast of a man? |
A02904 | Where is the applying of thy wits, thy judgement, and the discourse and reason which thou hast of a spirituall man? |
A02904 | Where is the judgement of men nowe become? |
A02904 | Where is their light, where is their force? |
A02904 | Wherefore did I not looke before me? |
A02904 | Who is he that can lament, and will not lament at this? |
A02904 | Who is hee that hath not cause to resolve himselfe wholly into teares to weepe and bewaile his manifold offences? |
A02904 | Who would relie the everlasting affaires of the life to come, upon the gliding ▪ slipperinesse, and running streame of our uncertaine life? |
A02904 | Why art thou not afraid of so horrible, so certaine, and so assured perils and daungers? |
A02904 | Why doest thou not rather give credit unto faith, than to thine owne opinion and judgement? |
A02904 | Why doest thou not then discredit all other witnesses with this one assured testimonie? |
A02904 | Why dost thou then shrinke backe? |
A02904 | Why suffer you such an excellent benefit to bee wilfully lost for not taking so little paines? |
A02904 | and that thou shouldest bestow some little time of that which remaineth, to serve him, who hath given thee all that thou hast? |
A02904 | do they understand what these words import? |
A02904 | or are they peradventure persuaded, that these are onely the fables of Poets? |
A02904 | or doe they thinke, that this appertaineth not to them, orels that it was onely meant for others? |
A02904 | what art thou able to alledge for excuse of thy great negligence? |
A02904 | what thing hath been set before thine eyes, that thou hast not wantonly desired? |
A02904 | what wouldest thou have done more, if thou hadst not had any faith at all? |
A02904 | who shall bee those so fortunate and happie that are elected for thee? |
A02904 | why dost thou refuse peace and true quietnesse? |
A02904 | why dost thou refuse the gentle offers and sweet callings of thy pastor? |
A02904 | yea, Where is at the least their selfe- love, which seeketh evermore for his own profite, and is much afraid of any losse? |
A03406 | Ah that a creature frozen in despaire These flames should''bide, and not dissolue to aire Curst that I am, how can my heart containe So vast a sorrow? |
A03406 | And stony fruits are hard vnfruitfull hearts? |
A03406 | Are there no Serpents on the Libian sand, But hither all transported to torment With scorching stings, and poisons deadly sent? |
A03406 | But stay, what wonders doe mine eyes behold? |
A03406 | But what I heard, what mortall tongue can tell, Or eare containe, and not in sunder riue? |
A03406 | But whither runnes my madnesse? |
A03406 | Can not I plucke one feather from thy wing, Recall one houre of thousands vainely spent, Wherein I might my wretched age lament? |
A03406 | Can not these cries, that drowne th''harmonious chime Of all thy spheares, some tender pittie moue? |
A03406 | Cracke all mine arteries with tortures tride, Yet must more stormes, more wrackfull woes abide? |
A03406 | Did I at once my treasures all designe? |
A03406 | Did I enioy,( or were they all but dreames?) |
A03406 | Did all like leaues, fly with your flitting breath, And leaue you naked in that storme of death? |
A03406 | Doe all my veines with liquid sulphur swell? |
A03406 | Fond wretched soule to chase a wild desire To this sad fall, and for fraile earthly toyes Loose an eternall Iubile of ioyes? |
A03406 | Hath Nilus left no issue on his strand, But all his monsters in this dungeon pent? |
A03406 | Hath onely here dire Mischiefe chose to dwell, And heauiest Sorrow sunke his caue to Hell? |
A03406 | How deepe ingulfed in this caue of night? |
A03406 | How far, how far from all supernall Light Am I thrust downe by rude imperious hands? |
A03406 | How fast chain''d vp in euerlasting bands, Here to abide th''Almighties fiercest ire, Whose frowne a flash, whose wrath''s eternall fire? |
A03406 | How haue I rauell''d out the knotty thread Of mortall life, that in our prime of yeeres Hides wormes and dust within a flowery bed? |
A03406 | How oft the sword of vengeance did we see Brandisht ag ● inst our Luxury, and pride, Voluptuous surfets, lust, and tyranny? |
A03406 | How wrackt, and swallow''d, as in Seas, and Sands? |
A03406 | In one dead sea are all my pleasures drown''d, All comforts wrackt, and neuer to be found? |
A03406 | Infernall sergeants, whether will yee hale A wretched creature? |
A03406 | Is all my flesh a fire? |
A03406 | Is there no beame of mercy shines aboue? |
A03406 | Must I for anguish euer howle among These hideous fiends, and gnaw this banefull tongue? |
A03406 | Must woe and mischiefe euer be my theame? |
A03406 | My bones the brands? |
A03406 | My sinewes all divul''st with passion fell? |
A03406 | My swarmes of friends? |
A03406 | Nor( that which fairer seem''d,) my glittering Gold? |
A03406 | O eares, why deafe vnto the prophets sound: O hands, why were yea lame to render right? |
A03406 | O eyes, why were yea blind to heauenly light? |
A03406 | O feet, why slow to haue safe vertue found? |
A03406 | O knees, why stiffe, and strange to hallowed ground? |
A03406 | Of friends and parasites your pompous traine? |
A03406 | Rather two Saints, that in that State appeare? |
A03406 | Rich Vales? |
A03406 | Shall I nere more thy ioyfull face behold, Thy face, O Heauen, where lasting beauties shine? |
A03406 | Still must I call for death, yet keepe the graue? |
A03406 | Still must I howle at heauen, and bite my chaine, And gnash my teeth through horrour of my paine? |
A03406 | The angry engines of hot Heauen, to fright, And start old Chaos from the deepes of night? |
A03406 | The wrath of Heauen who feeles and trembles not? |
A03406 | Those bounteous Fields with Oliue blest, and Vine? |
A03406 | Those slumbering yeeres, I did in pleasure spend, Why did they wake in death, in woe expire? |
A03406 | Those swelling Hils, the lofty walkes of pride? |
A03406 | Through rage and anguish must I still blaspheame, And fry, and freeze, with heat, and cold extreame? |
A03406 | Two sunnes at once embeam''d with flaming Gold? |
A03406 | What Diademes they weare? |
A03406 | What Fury in my bowells built her Hell? |
A03406 | What change is this? |
A03406 | What heauy darknesse, highest Lord of Light, Doth thus oppresse me in this dreadfull place? |
A03406 | What hideous storme of all confused woes My sense with paine, my soule with horrour smites? |
A03406 | What is lifes winter to this spring of yeeres, But a loose meteor in fraile beauties skies, Disperst with sighes, and dropt away in teares? |
A03406 | What strange impressions in so high a spheare? |
A03406 | What thrones they hold? |
A03406 | What tyrant ioyn''d these adamantine bands? |
A03406 | When first I suckt the poysons of the world, Why drew I not destruction from the skies? |
A03406 | Where are my Robes? |
A03406 | Where is that coast, where safety doth reside? |
A03406 | Where now your roabes so gorgeous to behold? |
A03406 | Where''s now that wealth would counter- poize my woes? |
A03406 | Where''s now your power, you, that proudly could Lead your blind Goddesse in a golden chaine? |
A03406 | Which how it doth,( all comfort quite to kill,) With banefull steames this odious prison fill? |
A03406 | Who sees the Sunne enthron''d in burning Gold, And not the Father of all heauenly light, That doth aduance this mirrour to the sight? |
A03406 | Why dost thou mocke with euer- blazing fires These ceaslesse torments, to enrage my woe? |
A03406 | Why were not sheetes of flaming sulphur hurl''d Vpon my cradle? |
A03406 | Wrackt is my hope? |
A03406 | Your mounts of Gold rais''d in your worldly raigne? |
A03406 | and my Wine? |
A03406 | and to this desert bay Will my lost comfort neuer find the way? |
A03406 | faire Brooks, whose straying course, like mine, So pleasant seem''d, and downeward did decline? |
A03406 | how I raue? |
A03406 | how sadly slow Was vengeance, arm''d to strike the deadly blow? |
A03406 | if here they once arriue, How sharply will their miseries rebound Vpon my heart, and gall each bleeding wound? |
A03406 | my junkets? |
A03406 | my torments in this fiery Lake, At whose dread Name the peccant soule should quake, Who can expresse? |
A03406 | nor did mischiefe rise In earthly damps to blast my hatefull eyes, That neuer fixt on Heauen? |
A03406 | thy highest straine What voyce can reach, to sing thy happi''st raigne? |
A03406 | to what depth of woe Must I descend in this Cimmerian vale? |
A03406 | what Palmes in triumph beare? |
A03406 | what Roabes, that shine( Not like my purple, but) like rayes Diuine? |
A03406 | what wonder strikes mine eare? |
A03406 | will the ioyfull day Of gracious mercy neuer dawne againe? |
A64987 | 10. Who shall lay any thing to your charge, when God hath justified you? |
A64987 | 14. Who among us shall dwell with devouring Fire? |
A64987 | 22. and how feircely then will it burn? |
A64987 | 4. Who would set the Briers and Thorns against me in Battel? |
A64987 | 6. Who can stand before his indignation? |
A64987 | ANd now Sinners what will you do? |
A64987 | And alas ● … what will you( that are Ungodly) do in a time of general calamity? |
A64987 | And by consequence every moment, while such, in danger of being drag''d sorth to execution? |
A64987 | And if the skirts of England were turned up, what filthiness would there appear under them? |
A64987 | And to whom can this be applyed? |
A64987 | As if they should have said: Pray who are you that take upon you to speak thus unto us? |
A64987 | B ● … sides how can we conceive that any Subterranean fire should have power to reach and dissolve the Heavens? |
A64987 | Do you know whom you serve? |
A64987 | Hath Sodom and Gomorrah provoked God to destroy them with Fire from Heaven? |
A64987 | Have you been under convictions of Sin? |
A64987 | How happy are those who have made their Peace with God, when some men will not be at peace with them? |
A64987 | How long will Eternity last? |
A64987 | How long will ye slumber in such imminent danger, ye Graceless and Christless persons? |
A64987 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation? |
A64987 | I beseech you all with the greatest seriousness to examine your selves, whether you be in a state of Nature, or in a state of Grace? |
A64987 | I beseech you examine which of the two ways you are walking in; is it the broad way of Sin and wickedness? |
A64987 | If a short time of misery here on Earth seem long, what will an eternity of misery seem to be in Hell? |
A64987 | Is it desirable to dwell with devouring Fire? |
A64987 | Is not destruction to the wicked, and a strange punishment unto the workers of Iniquity? |
A64987 | Let me therefore exhort you without any delay to come out of the broad way of Sin, It is the way of Hell, and will you proceed any further in it? |
A64987 | Look doest thou not see a horrible deep and large pit filled with horribly burning Fire, and that Fire filled with damned Men and Women? |
A64987 | Need you value then the wrath of men, when you are delivered from the wrath of God? |
A64987 | O what an evil thing and a bitter is it to Sin against God, and hereby to provoke him unto anger? |
A64987 | O whether can we flee to hide us from the wrath of God, and shelter us from his fiery indignation? |
A64987 | Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy Conversation and Godliness? |
A64987 | The spirit of man will sustain his infirmity, but a wounded spirit who can bear? |
A64987 | Thirdly, Abundance of Idleness was the third Sin of Sodom, and when did this Sin more prevail then in our licentious age? |
A64987 | Thus blind and sottishly Superstitions these people are; But is the anger of the Lord hereby appeased? |
A64987 | Use of Reproof and Terrour for the awakening of the Wicked and Ungodly, out of their carnal security ▪ HOw long will ye sleep O ye Sinners? |
A64987 | W ● … o knoweth the power of thine anger? |
A64987 | What is more common than this Sin of drunkenness both in City and Countrey? |
A64987 | When awakened by the Earth- quake, and the impression of guilt made by God upon his conscience; Sirs, what shall we do to be saved? |
A64987 | When will Eternity end? |
A64987 | Whoredom and Adultrey, what more common in this debauched generation? |
A64987 | and are they indeed prepared for the wicked, and all graceless, Christless persons as their deserved portion? |
A64987 | and do you think what your wages will be? |
A64987 | and doest thou not perceive thy self hastning forward in the way to this place of burning? |
A64987 | and who can abide in the feirceness of his anger? |
A64987 | and will nothing rouze you, and awaken you out of this sleep? |
A64987 | and wilt thou go forward still? |
A64987 | are they changed? |
A64987 | are they reformed? |
A64987 | are they so dreadful, beyond any burnings that ever have been, both in regard of feirceness and duration? |
A64987 | are you resolved it shall prove the sleep of death? |
A64987 | do you know what Hell is? |
A64987 | do you know what is before you? |
A64987 | do you know whom you speak to? |
A64987 | do you lead new and Holy lives? |
A64987 | do you see the end of a sinful course? |
A64987 | do you think to escape in this way? |
A64987 | have no Heavenly dews and showers of the Word yet melted and softned you, no Fire and Hammer new- moulded and framed you? |
A64987 | have you been called already so long, so loud, so frequently, so fervently, and yet do you deafen your ear? |
A64987 | have you been threatned with Death, and Wrath, and Misery for ever, and yet not startled, yet stupid and senseless? |
A64987 | have you been told so often of your guilt and danger, and yet harden your ● … art? |
A64987 | have you new and clean hearts? |
A64987 | have your hearts been like so many brazen walls, beating back all the Arrows of reproof, and threatnings which have been shot at you? |
A64987 | how dreadful the lashes of your consciences will be, when they are let loose( as Gods executioners) with full rage upon you? |
A64987 | how little reason have those to fear the wrath of any here, who are delivered from the wrath to come? |
A64987 | how many are there that guzzle, and swill in drink without measure? |
A64987 | how many golden seasons do they let slip, wherein they might make provision for eternity? |
A64987 | how safe is that treasure, which is laid up in Heaven, far beyond the reach of Thief or Rust or Flames of Fire? |
A64987 | how would you be affrighted? |
A64987 | if God let fall some scalding drops of his wrath upon the spirit, if he kindle a spark of Hell- fire in ye conscience, who can endure it? |
A64987 | if you can not endure the sparks of Hell- fire, how will you endure the flames, and most burning heat thereof? |
A64987 | or are they like Cley and Mud, which groweth the more hard and obdurate under the Sun and Light of the Gospel which hath shined upon you? |
A64987 | or is it the narrow way of Faith and Holiness? |
A64987 | pray stay untill we make choice of you and place you in that office: shall we submit our selves to be judged by one so contemptible? |
A64987 | shall it insensibly and effectually usher you to Hell before you are aware? |
A64987 | shall we indeed be judg''d by such a fellow as you? |
A64987 | thought he, what a wicked place is Sodom, that it should not yeild Ten righteous persons? |
A64987 | what comfort can you have upon a Bed of Sickness? |
A64987 | what is Fire fed by Wood in comparison with Fire fed by the breath of God? |
A64987 | what is the Fire of Mans kindling in comparison with the Fire of Gods kindling? |
A64987 | what mean ● … this hast? |
A64987 | what means this eager pursuance of lust? |
A64987 | what refuge in a time of trouble? |
A64987 | what shall we think of the flanting apparel, the Antique and Apish fashions, of the ruffling Gallants in our Nation? |
A64987 | what sleep under the light? |
A64987 | what sleep upon the brinks of the burning Lake? |
A64987 | what then will become of us, who have shared with them in the same guilt, and have deserved the same punishment? |
A64987 | what though you should lose your estates? |
A64987 | who among us shall Inhabit everlasting burnings? |
A64987 | who can bear such horrible burnings? |
A64987 | who can endure such devouring fire? |
A64987 | who shall condemn you when God hath acquitted you? |
A64987 | why so furious? |
A64987 | will you dare to go on in that broad way of Sin, which ere long will open under you, and let you down into the horrible gulp of unquenchable burnings? |
A64987 | yet since you are not in danger of losing your Souls; what though you should be thrown into a Prison on Earth? |
A64987 | yet will you hold fast your sins, resolving not to let them go what ever they cost you? |
A64987 | you are a bold and saucy fellow to tell us of wickedness; Will you needs be our Iudge? |
A64987 | you are partakers of the Humane Nature, are you partakers of the Divine Nature? |
A64987 | you have been all born once, have you been born again? |
A64987 | you have been born of the Flesh, have you been born of the Spirit? |
A64987 | you have born the Image of the Earthly Adam, do you bear the Image of the Heavenly Adam? |
A30203 | & c. appear with gladness against thee at the terrible day? |
A30203 | 26. saith he, Nevertheless they were disobedient for all thy goodness towards them, and rebelled against thee,( but how?) |
A30203 | 6. that is comparable to the pleasures, profits, and glory of this World? |
A30203 | Again, If they hear not Moses, and the Prophets,& c. As if he had said, Thou would''st have me send one from the Dead unto them, what needs that? |
A30203 | All they, that is, that are in hell shall say, Art thou become weak as we? |
A30203 | Amaziah having sinned against the Lord, he sends to him a Prophet to reprove him: But Amaziah sayes, ● orbear, wherefore shouldst thou be smitten? |
A30203 | And did they make them welcome? |
A30203 | And do you think the Lord will sit still( as I may say) and let thy Tongue run as it lists, and yet never bring you to an account for the same? |
A30203 | And must we be all alone? |
A30203 | And why so? |
A30203 | And why? |
A30203 | Art thou become like unto us? |
A30203 | Art thou such an one as regards not these things? |
A30203 | Art thou troubled with cross Children, cross Relations, cross Neighbours? |
A30203 | As first, Dost thou delight to sin against plain commands? |
A30203 | As if he should say, What need have they that one should be sent to them from the dead? |
A30203 | Besides, was the Gospel so freely, so frequently, so fully tendered to thee, and yet hast thou rejected all these Things? |
A30203 | But for all this, how thick, and by heaps, do these wretches walk up and down our streets? |
A30203 | But now, when didst thou feel the power of this first part of the Scripture, the Law, so mighty as to strike thee dead? |
A30203 | But why is it said, Let him dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue? |
A30203 | But ye ungodly fathers, how are your ungodly children, roaring now in hell? |
A30203 | But you will say, How doth the Law kill and strike dead the poor Creature? |
A30203 | But you will say, What needs all this ado, and why is all this time and pains spent in speaking to this, that is surely believed already? |
A30203 | Canst thou read this, O thou wicked sinner, and yet go in sin? |
A30203 | Canst thou think of this, and defer Repentance one hour longer? |
A30203 | Consider thus with thy self; Would I be glad to have all, every one of my sins to come in against me to inflame the justice of God against me? |
A30203 | Cry, why so? |
A30203 | Did we not found an Alarum in thine Ears, by the Trumpet of God''s Word day after day? |
A30203 | Did we not run, ride, labour, and strive abundantly( if it might have been) for the good of thy Soul,( though now a damned Soul? |
A30203 | Did we not tell thee of these Things? |
A30203 | Did we not tell thee sin would damn thy Soul? |
A30203 | Did we not tell thee, that without Conversion, there was no Salvation? |
A30203 | Did we not venture our Goods, our Names, our Lives? |
A30203 | Didst thou never hear of the intollerable Roarings of the Damned Ones that are therein? |
A30203 | Do but mark the words, All Scripture is profitable: All, take it where you will, and in what place you will; All is profitable, for what? |
A30203 | Doest thou believe the Scripture to be the word of God? |
A30203 | Dost thou believe the Scriptures to be the word of God? |
A30203 | Dost thou examine thy self whether thou be in the Faith or no, having a command in Scripture so to do? |
A30203 | Dost thou give diligence to make thy Calling and Election sure, because God commandeth it in Scripture? |
A30203 | Dost thou not hear them say, Send one from the dead to prevent my father, my brother, and my fathers house from coming into this place of torment? |
A30203 | Examine again Dost thou labour after those qualifications that the Scriptures do describe a child of God by? |
A30203 | Examine, dost thou stand in awe of sinning against God, because he hath in the Scriptures commanded thee to abstain from it? |
A30203 | For had ye believed Moses( saith he) ye would have believed me? |
A30203 | From what? |
A30203 | Hark, dost thou not hear the bitter Cryes of them that are but newly gone before? |
A30203 | Hast thou valued sin at a higher rate than thy soul? |
A30203 | Have they not Moses and the Prophets? |
A30203 | He that was in darkness, or he that was in light? |
A30203 | He that was in everlasting joy, or he that was in everlasting torments? |
A30203 | How long ye simple ones, will you love simplicity? |
A30203 | How long? |
A30203 | How loth wilt thou be, to be thrust away from the Gates of Heaven, and how loth wilt thou be to be deprived of the Mercy of God? |
A30203 | How many Souls do you think Balaam, with his deceit, will have to answer for? |
A30203 | How many Souls have they been the means of destroying, by their Ignorance, and corrupt Doctrine? |
A30203 | How many blows and wounds doth it cause? |
A30203 | How many poor Souls hath Bonner to answer for think you? |
A30203 | How many times doth it( as James saith) curse man? |
A30203 | How many, Mahomet? |
A30203 | How many, the Pharisees, That hired the Souldiers to say the Disciples stole away Jesus? |
A30203 | How oft didst thou read the sweet counsels and admonitions of the Gospel, to accept of the grace of God? |
A30203 | How often didst thou hear us tell thee of these Things? |
A30203 | How often didst thou read the promises, yea, the free promises of the common salvation? |
A30203 | How rightly hath God met with thee? |
A30203 | How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation? |
A30203 | How so? |
A30203 | How willingly wilt thou set foot forward towards the Lake of Fire? |
A30203 | How willingly would''st thou hang on them, and not let them go? |
A30203 | How would we have laboured to have closed in with it? |
A30203 | I remember he alledged many a Scripture, but those I valued not; the Scriptures, thought I, what are they? |
A30203 | I ● there hope? |
A30203 | If you say, No: What means your sowr carriage to the People of God? |
A30203 | Lazarus, Who was he? |
A30203 | Men and brethren, what shall we do to be saved? |
A30203 | Mother, can not you do me some good? |
A30203 | Nay, I do not like of that answer; Hear Moses and the Prophets? |
A30203 | No, But mocked the Messengers of God, and despised his words: And was that all? |
A30203 | O Father, can not you help me? |
A30203 | O Lord Jesus, what a Load didst thou carry? |
A30203 | O how righteously doth his Sentence pass upon thee? |
A30203 | O how will the Drunkard cry, for leading their Neighbours into drunkenness? |
A30203 | O therefore, will not this aggravate thy torment? |
A30203 | Oh how unwilling wilt thou be, to let thy Father go to Heaven without thee, thy Mother or Friends,& c. go to Heaven without thee? |
A30203 | One would have thought that this had been a small request, a small courtesie, one drop of water, what is that? |
A30203 | Or how is it with thy soul? |
A30203 | Secondly, Dost thou slight and scorn the counsels contained in Scriptures, and continue in so doing? |
A30203 | Shall I content my self with a Heaven, that will last no longer than my life ▪ time? |
A30203 | Shall not then these mournfull groans pierce thy flinty heart? |
A30203 | Soul consider, is it not miserable to lose Heaven for 20, 30, or 40 Years sinning against God? |
A30203 | The Record, you will say, what is that? |
A30203 | The promises that are in the Gospel, Oh, how do they comfort them? |
A30203 | The tongue, how much mischief will it stir up 〈 ◊ 〉 a very little time? |
A30203 | There was a certain rich man,& c. But why are the ungodly held forth under the notion of a rich man? |
A30203 | Think thus with thy self; What ▪ shall I lose a long Heaven for short pleasure? |
A30203 | Think you ▪ that they upon whom the ● ● ower of Siloe fell, were sinn ● rs above others? |
A30203 | To whom did he swear that they should not enter into his rest? |
A30203 | Was thy Soul worth so much, and didst thou so little regard it? |
A30203 | Wast thou not told of Hell- fire, those intollerable flames? |
A30203 | Were the Thunder- Claps of the Law so terrible, and didst thou so slight them? |
A30203 | What good will all my companions, fellow jesters, jeerers, lyars, drunkards, and all my wantons do me? |
A30203 | What good will my profits do me? |
A30203 | What sayest thou sinner, will not this perswade thine heart, nor make thee bethink thy self? |
A30203 | What, shall I lose Heaven for this World? |
A30203 | What, shall I regard Lazarus? |
A30203 | What, shall I so far dishonour my fair sumptuous and gay house, with such a scabbed creep- hedg as he? |
A30203 | Why do you look on them, as if you would eat them up? |
A30203 | Why? |
A30203 | Will it not be glorious for thee to be in glory with them, while others are in unu ● terable torments? |
A30203 | Will it not be glorious to enter then with the Angels and Saints into that glorious Kingdome? |
A30203 | Will my sins do me good then? |
A30203 | Wilt thou be like that simple one named in the 7. of Proverbs, That will be drawn to the slaughter by the cord of a silly lust? |
A30203 | Wilt thou be like the Bird that hasteth to the snare of the Fowler? |
A30203 | Wilt thou be like the silly flie, that is not quiet, unless she be either intangled in the spiders web, or burned in the Candle? |
A30203 | Wilt thou stop thine ears, and shut thy eyes? |
A30203 | Would I be glad to have all, and every one of the Ten Commandements, to discharge themselves against my soul? |
A30203 | Wouldest thou be glad to be kept out of heaven with a back well cloathed, and a belly well filled with the dainties of this world? |
A30203 | Wouldest thou be glad to have all thy good things in thy life time, to have thy heaven to last no longer then while thou dost live in this world? |
A30203 | Wouldest thou be willing to be deprived of eternal happiness and felicity? |
A30203 | Yea, did we not even kill our selves, with our earnest intreatings of thee to consider of thine Estate, and by Christ to escape this dreadful day? |
A30203 | Yet did we not tell thee, that God, out of his love to sinners, sent Christ to die for them, that they might( by coming to him) be saved? |
A30203 | You will say, what is that? |
A30203 | [ 10], 199 p. Printed for F. Smith..., London:[ 1666?] |
A30203 | and several filthy blind Priests? |
A30203 | and what good will my vanities do, when death sayes he will have no nay? |
A30203 | and wilt thou not regard? |
A30203 | and ye scorners delight in scorning, and ye fools hate knowledg? |
A30203 | but thou wouldst not, thou regardest it not, thou didst slight all? |
A30203 | have they not Moses and the Prophets? |
A30203 | have they not had my Ministers and Servants sent unto them, and coming as from me? |
A30203 | how comfortable to those that believe them? |
A30203 | how didst thou discover thy Love to Man in thy thus suffering? |
A30203 | how would I affect his Doctrine, and close in with it? |
A30203 | how would I square my life thereby? |
A30203 | sc ● ubbed, beggarly Lazarus? |
A30203 | shall I buy the pleasures of this world at so dear a rate, as to lose my soul for the obtaining of that? |
A30203 | such a promise, and such a promise, O how sweet is it? |
A30203 | than God, Christ, Angels, Saints, and Communion with them in Eternal Blessedness and Glory? |
A30203 | that some body would stop them from coming, lest they also come into this place of Torment, and be damned as I am: How will it torment me? |
A30203 | that you did but believe this, that you did but consider this, and say within your selves, What, shall I be contented with my portion in this World? |
A30203 | what place in Hell will be hot enough for thee to have thy Soul put into, if thou shalt persist, or go on still to adde Iniquity to Iniquity? |
A30203 | what, seek for the living among the dead? |
A30203 | whither shall I go when I die? |
A30203 | who would not be in the rich mans state? |
A30203 | will these help to turn the hand of God from inflicting his fierce anger upon me? |
A30203 | will they be able to help me when I come to fetch my last breath? |
A30203 | will they help to ease the pains of hell? |
A30203 | ▪ T is true, I do love my sins, my lusts, and pleasures; but what good will they do me at the day of death, and of judgement? |