Danger! Or,
Wounded in the House of a Friend!
By Timothy Shay Arthur, 1875
This is a fiction work.
Danger! Or,
Wounded in the House of a Friend!
By Timothy Shay Arthur, 1875
This is a fiction work.
by Thomas Arnold, D.D, Head Master of Rugby School, and Late Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford.
From the Fifth London Edition.
1856.
“As far as the principle on which Archbishop Laud and his followers acted went to re-actuate the idea of the church, as a co-ordinate and living power by right of Christ’s institution and express promise, I go along with them; but I soon discover that by the church they meant the clergy, the hierarchy exclusively, and then I fly off from them in a tangent.
“For it is this very interpretation of the church, that, according to my conviction, constituted the first and fundamental apostasy; and I hold it for one of the greatest mistakes of our polemical divines, in their controversies with the Romanists, that they trace all the corruptions of the gospel faith to the Papacy.”–COLERIDGE,
Literary Remains, vol. iii. p. 386.
This is a book of 30+ sermons on different aspects of the Christian life.
by William Arthur
(1858)
This work is 6 chapters on the baptism of the Holy Spirit, referring principally to the work at Pentecost. Speaking in tongues is addressed as an effect of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. But boldness in witnessing is the effect. Obviously the tongues they spoke in were known languages, as Acts 2 elaborates
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1. The Promise of a Baptism of Fire
2. The Waiting for the Fulfillment
3. The Fulfillment of the Promise
4. Effects which immediately Followed the Baptism of Fire.
5. Permanent Benefits resulting to the Church
6. Practical Lessons
Arnold, G. – The Principles of N.T. Giving is a very short single chapter work defending the end of the tithe for NT believers.
Bertha and Her Baptism,
by Nehemiah Adams
This is a 11 chapter work on water baptism, written from a person’s view, but dealing with issues surrounding water baptism. It examines the biblical evidence about baptism. This work is kind of similar to “William the Baptist” by James M Chaney (first published 1877).