| Joseph Mede - 1836 - 296 pages
...language, — " We exhort you in the name of our " Lord Jesus Christ, that ye have in remembrance, into " how high a dignity and to how weighty an office and " charge ye are called : that is to say, to be messengers, watchmen, and stewards of the Lord ; to teach, and... | |
| Edward Edwards (of Marsden.) - 1837 - 170 pages
...— "Now, again we exhort you,, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you have in remembrance into how high a dignity and to how weighty an office and charge ye * Ezek. xxxiv. 4, &c. are called ; that is to say, to be messengers, watchmen, and stewards of the... | |
| Thomas Stuart L. Vogan - 1837 - 172 pages
...present, when the services of the day call our attention to the subject, and should remind his people " into how high a dignity, and to how weighty an office and charge, he hath been called" ;" and should tell them, that there are duties consequently incumbent upon them,... | |
| Church of England preacher - 1837 - 632 pages
...office ? In the Ordination of Priests, she exhorts them with pathetic solemnity to have in remembrance into how high a dignity and to how weighty an office and charge they are called ; that is to say, to be messengers, and watchmen, and stewards of the Lord, to teach... | |
| Henry Stebbing - 1838 - 776 pages
...called. And now again we exhort you, in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you have in remembrance, into how high a Dignity, and to how weighty an Office and Charge ye are called : that is to say, to be Messengers, Watchmen, and Stewards of the Lord ; to teach, and... | |
| Edward Copleston (bp. of Llandaff.) - 1839 - 340 pages
...and anxious for the souls of men. We must show to all the world that we indeed " have in remembrance into how high a dignity, "and to how weighty an office...be messengers, watchmen, and stewards of the Lord." We may not, we dare not, silently and calmly witness the transfer to others of the most important,... | |
| Christopher Benson - 1839 - 164 pages
...being confined within its proper bounds. Neither can it be maintained as true, that " the consciousness into how high a dignity, and to how weighty an office and charge he has been called, will, universally, or even generally, humble the individual, and oppress him with... | |
| William Nicholson - 1840 - 370 pages
...described ? " We " exhort you, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, " that you have in remembrance into how high a " dignity, and to how weighty an office and charge " ye are called ; that is to say, to be messengers, " watchmen, and stewards of the Lord, to teach... | |
| John Henry Newman - 1840 - 616 pages
...individual, most oppress him with the overwhelming sense of his own insufficiency, is the consciousness "into how high a dignity, and to how weighty an office and charge" he has been called; an office " of such excellency, and of so great difficulty." I would now rather... | |
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