| William Mason - 1803 - 402 pages
...he be favorable no more? is his mercy clean gone for ever? doth his promise fail for evermore? fiath God forgotten to be gracious ? hath he, in anger, shut up his tender mercies?" So that you see, O tossed, tempted, tried believer, fhis is the way saints in all ages have gone to... | |
| Philip Doddridge - 1803 - 676 pages
...believe that they shall be any longer supported ? But on the contrary are ready to cry out, Hath the Lord forgotten to be gracious ? hath. he in anger shut up his tender mercies^? To them does this compassionate Saviour appear, to Lift up the hands that hang down, and to strengthen... | |
| Philip Doddridge - 1803 - 666 pages
...believe that they shall be any longer supported ? But on the contrary are ready to cry out, Hath the Lord forgotten to be gracious ? hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies^? To them does this compassionate Saviour appear, to Lift up the hands that hang down, and to strengthen... | |
| William Giles - 1804 - 280 pages
...' Will the Lord,' he asks, ' cast off for ever ? and will he. be favourable no more ? Is his mercy clean gone for ever ? Doth his promise fail for evermore...gracious ? hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies ? — O my God, my soul is cast down within me — all thy waves and thy billows are gone over me.... | |
| William Huntington - 1804 - 606 pages
...for ever? and will he be favourable no more? Is his mercy clean gone for ever? Doth his promise fa;: for evermore? Hath God forgotten to be gracious" Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies: Selah." What a production of unbelief is here' and he was brought to confess it as evil ; " Arid I... | |
| Thomas Wilson - 1804 - 140 pages
...forever ? Will . he be no more intreated ? Hath God forgoten to be gracious ? I faid, it is my own infirmity ; but I will remember the years of the right . hand of the Moll High. Luke xii. 33.. Sell all, that- ye have, and-' give to the poor. . That is, renounce... | |
| Robert Leighton, George Jerment - 1805 - 504 pages
...It is a change of the right hand of the Most High, as the Latin reads that word in Psal. lxxvii. 10. I said, This is my infirmity, but I will remember the years of the right hand of the Most High; mutatio devtrce Excelsi: a touch of that will cleanse and heal ; the all-purifying virtue... | |
| Job Orton, Robert Gentleman - 1805 - 504 pages
...he be favourable no more ? Is his mercy clean gone for ever? deth [his] promise fail forevermore? 9 Hath God forgotten to be gracious ? hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies ? have 1 so highly provoked him, (hat ч he will show me no mercy. Selah. But I checked these gloomy... | |
| Robert Leighton, George Jerment - 1806 - 468 pages
...what sad expostulations are these the Psalmist uses, l fill he be favourable no more ? Is his mercy clean gone for ever ? Doth his promise fail for evermore...gracious ? Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies ? But see how he corrects them, Ver. 10. Then I said, this is my infirmity, but I will remember the... | |
| Alexander Geddes - 1807 - 290 pages
...illuftration.— Ver. n.has, I think, been generally mifunderftood. Our common verfion is, " And " I faid : This is my infirmity : but I -will remember the years of the "right hand of the Mod High:" making up a fort of meaning by a long eke of Italics ; which after all is hardly fenfe.... | |
| |