| J. Fawcett - 1759 - 220 pages
...jhould have been carried from the Womb to the Grave. Are not my Days few ? Ceafe then, and let pie alone, that I may t.ake Comfort a little : Before I go whence I Jhall not return, ev^ to the. Land of Darknefs, and the Shadow of Death ; a Land of Darktiefs, as Darknejs... | |
| David Durell - 1772 - 326 pages
...feems to be an Allufion to thefe Words, " Duft thou art, and to Duft (halt thou return." V. 20, 21. Let me alone, that I may take Comfort a little, before I go whence I Jhall not return. So Pf. XXXIX. 13. "Spare me, that I " may recover Strength, before I go hence, and... | |
| Daniel Bellamy - 1789 - 512 pages
...darknefs, that it is "• all but one eternal ivight." MISCELLANEOUS REMARKS on CHAP. X. VERSE XXI. XXII. BEFORE I GO WHENCE I SHALL NOT RETURN, EVEN TO THE...WITHOUT ANY ORDER, AND WHERE THE LIGHT IS AS DARKNESS. " ERE, never to return, my foot defcends *' To realms where death his horrid fhade extends : " Realms,... | |
| London universal society for promotion of the New Church - 1790 - 354 pages
...which may be conftdered here as * proper INTRODUCTION. f It is a Land full of Mifery and Darknefs, and of the " Shadow of Death, without any Order, and where the " Light is as Darknefs." JOB, chap, xv 22. SITUATED like yourfelf, Sir, I am an inhabitant of this lower world, but... | |
| Thomas Secker - 1792 - 624 pages
...may reft, till be Jhall accompliflj, as an hireling, his day *. Are not my days few f Ceafe then, and let me alone, that I, may take comfort a little, before I go whence IJJjall not return,' even to tie land of darknefs, and thcjhadoiv of death-\. 3. The fhortnefs of life... | |
| 1800 - 498 pages
...neither shall his place know him any more." Ch. x. 20, 21. " Are not my days few ? Cease, then, and let me alone, that I may take comfort a little, before...to the land of darkness and the shadow of death." I conclude that the doctrine of a fint, and consequently of * uct*&. resurrection, stands firm, as... | |
| 1800 - 490 pages
...neither shall his place know him any more." Ch. x. 20, 21. " Are not my days few? Cease, then, and let me alone, that I may take comfort a little, before I go whence I shall not return, even to the laud of darkness and the shadow of death," I conclude that the doctrine of a first, and consequently... | |
| Charles Daubeny - 1802 - 512 pages
...nature; the deeper they sunk in ignorance and barbarity. In the strong words of Job, they sat " in a land of darkness, as darkness itself, and of the...without any order, and where the light is as darkness." Job. x. 22. Such was natural Religion, even when accompanied with the boasted advantages of worldly... | |
| Sacred hours - 1804 - 500 pages
...as a man pleadcth for his neighbour ! vOL. I. H When a few years are come, then I shall go the way whence I shall not return, even to the land of darkness...without any order, and where the light is as darkness. There the wicked cease from troubling: and there the weary be at rest. There the prisoners rest together... | |
| Ely Bates - 1804 - 422 pages
...meeting a paradise, he should find himself betrayed into a waste wilderness; a land of darkness and the shadow of death, without any order, and where the light is as darkness -J-. , * Psalm xiv. i. f Job x. 21, 22. Blessed is the man, says the' Psalmist, that zi'alkcth not... | |
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