| William Laud (abp. of Canterbury.) - 1840 - 420 דפים
...19. 2 Cor. vi. 9. Gal. v. 10. and many other places. Brownist opinions. Ill 8. In the eighth place, almost all of them say, that God from all eternity...stands with His wisdom, justice, and goodness to do. 9. Ninthly, one Lionel Lockier, now or late of Cranbrooke in Kent, among other his errors, rails against... | |
| Charles Hare Simpkinson De Wesselow - 1894 - 328 דפים
...High Churchmen against the doctrine of election as the Puritans taught it, "saying almost all of them that God from all eternity reprobates by far the greater...stands with His wisdom, justice and goodness to do." 2 Nor was the little world of Oxford even in those dull days left unstirred. Foreigners began to hear... | |
| Henry Offley Wakeman - 1897 - 536 דפים
...which the doctrine of reprobation involves : ' Which opinion my very soul abominates,' he cries ; ' for it makes God, the God of all mercies, to be the...most fierce and unreasonable tyrant in the world.' It was the limitation of salvation and of the operations of grace to a few which he thought so intellectually... | |
| Henry Offley Wakeman - 1898 - 548 דפים
...which the doctrine of reprobation involves : ' Which opinion my very soul abominates,' he cries ; ' for it makes God, the God of all mercies, to be the...most fierce and unreasonable tyrant in the world.' It was the limitation of salvation and of the operations of grace to a few which he thought so intellectually... | |
| Hensley Henson - 1900 - 548 דפים
...both Romanists and Puritans ; thus Laud, speaking of the Calvinist doctrine of Reprobation, says : " Which opinion my very soul abominates ; for it makes...most fierce and unreasonable tyrant in the world." And so Chillingworth, against the Roman position that disagreeing Protestants must be damned since... | |
| Henry Offley Wakeman, Leighton Pullan - 1900 - 156 דפים
...appoints the means for their damnation. Laud declared this opinion to be one which his soul abominated, ' for it makes God, the God of all mercies, to be the...most fierce and unreasonable tyrant in the world.' Laud and the Puritans were both right in this, there could not be room for him and them in the same... | |
| Henry Offley Wakeman - 1908 - 540 דפים
...which the doctrine of reprobation involves : 1 Which opinion my very soul abominates,1 he cries ; ' for it makes God, the God of all mercies, to be the most fierce and unreasonable tyrant in the world.1 fit was the limitation of salvation and of the operations of grace txra few which he thought... | |
| 2003 - 264 דפים
...Cf. his summary of the Calvinistic view of predestination in his reply to Lord Saye and Sele : ' . . .which opinion my very soul abominates. For it makes God, the God of all mercy, to be the most f1erce and unreasonable tyrant in the world.' national issues. To the supporters... | |
| L. J. Reeve - 2003 - 344 דפים
...and held to the idea of a real (as opposed to a corporeal) presence in the Eucharist.45 Yet his an eye at all to their sin. Which opinion my very soul...most fierce and unreasonable tyrant in the world'. Ibid., vi (1), p. 133 (I am grateful to John Morrill for this reference); Lake, 'Calvinism and the... | |
| John E. Booty, Stephen Sykes, Jonathan Knight - 1998 - 542 דפים
...theology, but who would have agreed with Laud that an unqualified doctrine of eternal reprobation makes 'the God of all mercies to be the most fierce and unreasonable tyrant in the world'. 31 Like Cranmer, Jewel and Hooker before them, in the interpretation of Scripture the Car-olines gave... | |
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