able and sober ministers, and we will contribute largely to their maintenance ; but one thing will mainly help, when no marriages shall hereafter be allowed lawful, but such as are made by the ministers of the Church of England... The Family of Zaccheus Gould of Topsfield - Page 38de Benjamin Apthorp Gould - 1895 - 351 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| John Eliot - 1809 - 528 pages
...writes, " I press for able and " sober ministers, and we will contribute largely to their mainte" nance ; but one thing will mainly help, when no marriages...hereafter be allowed lawful but such as are made by the minis* '' ters of the church of England." In another letter to gov. Hinckley, quoted by Hutchinson,... | |
| Francis William Pitt Greenwood - 1833 - 244 pages
...contribute largely to their maintenance ; but one thing will mainly help, when no marriages hereafter shall be allowed lawful but such as are made by the ministers of the church of England." The length and number of the above extracts will be pardoned, on account of the strong light which... | |
| 1835 - 1040 pages
...contribute largely to their maintenance ; but one thing will mainly help, when no marriages hereafter shall be allowed lawful but such as are made by the ministers of the church of England."* * In Humphrey's account of the Incorporated Society for the Propagiitiou of the Gospel, London, 1730,... | |
| 1835 - 516 pages
...contribute largely to their maintenance ; but one thing will mainly help, when no marriages hereafter shall be allowed lawful but such as are made by the ministers of the church of England."* * In Humphrey's account of the Incorporated Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, London, 1730,... | |
| John Stetson Barry - 1855 - 544 pages
...propagating the gospel among the Indians, should be perverted to this end.3 " Send over," says he, " able and sober ministers, and we will contribute largely...made by the ministers of the Church of England."* And, not satisfied with even these propositions, bold as they were, he insinuated that the " factionists... | |
| John Stetson Barry - 1855 - 544 pages
...propagating the gospel among the Indians, should be perverted to this end. 3 " Send over," says he, " able and sober ministers, and we will contribute largely...such as are made by the ministers of the Church of England."4 And, not satisfied with even these propositions, bold as they were, he insinuated that the... | |
| John Stetson Barry - 1855 - 544 pages
...propagating the gospel among the Indians, should be perverted to this end.3 " Send over," says he, " able and sober ministers, and we will contribute largely...such as are made by the ministers of the Church of England."4 And, not satisfied with even these propositions, bold as they were, he insinuated that the... | |
| Peter Oliver - 1856 - 522 pages
...thing, he added, will mainly ""-v^ help, " when no marriages hereafter shall be allowed lawful, except such as are made by the ministers of the Church of England." > These arbitrary plans of Randolph, provoked by his Arrival of indignation at the tyranny of the elders,... | |
| 1863 - 592 pages
...Boston ! In another letter he proposes, as a means of raising funds, that ' no marriages hereafter shall be allowed lawful, but such as are made by the ministers of the Church of England.'— (Hutch. Coll. 533.) He even intimates that the Congregationalists— the more ' factious ' among them... | |
| John Gorham Palfrey - 1870 - 698 pages
...illiterate planters." " One thing," he concluded, " will mainly help, when no marriages hereafter shall be allowed lawful but such as are made by the ministers of the Church of England." l The vessel that carried this letter also conveyed a letter from Randolph to Sir Lionel Jenkins. He... | |
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