It is true, the inward worship of the heart is the great service of God, and no service acceptable without it; but the external worship of God in His Church is the great witness to the world, that our heart stands right in that service of God. The Reformation in Great Britain - Page 109de Henry Offley Wakeman, Leighton Pullan - 1900 - 142 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Morris Joseph Fuller - 1897 - 632 pages
...were the true worship of God observed in them, or did the people think that such it were. It is true the inward worship of the heart is the great service...that our heart stands right in that service of God. These thoughts are they, and no other, which have made me to labour so much as I have done for a decency... | |
| Henry Offley Wakeman - 1898 - 548 pages
...of England than the want of uniform and decent order in too many churches of the kingdom. It is true the inward worship of the heart is the great service...that our heart stands right in that service of God. And a great weakness it is not to see the strength which ceremonies — things weak enough in themselves,... | |
| Anne Manning - 1898 - 456 pages
...Nicholas. In Laud's day it was furbished up, in the spirit which made the archbishop write : " It is true, the inward worship of the heart is the great service...that our heart stands right in that service of God." The great oak beam across the chancel arch, with its inscription " CR, 1630," is a memorial of this... | |
| Anne Manning - 1898 - 444 pages
...Nicholas. In Laud's day it was furbished up, in the spirit which made the archbishop write : " It is true, the inward worship of the heart is the great service...that our heart stands right in that service of God." The great oak beam across the chancel arch, with its inscription " CR, 1630," is a memorial of this... | |
| Henry Donald Maurice Spence-Jones - 1898 - 518 pages
...were the true worship of God observed in them, or did the people think that such it were.' It is true the inward worship of the heart is the great service...that our heart stands right in that service of God. Take this away, or bring it into contempt, and what light is then left to shine before men, that they... | |
| William Holden Hutton - 1900 - 320 pages
...Elizabeth's day, was unworthy of the house of God. 'The inward worship of the heart,' Laud wrote, ' is the great service of God, and no service acceptable...that our heart stands right in that service of God.' It was not an age of reverence, and the want of awe in approaching God was as conspicuous in England... | |
| Henry Donald Maurice Spence-Jones - 1900 - 270 pages
...places they have done, were the true worship of God observed in them. ... It is true the inward service of the heart is the great service of God, and no service is acceptable without it ; but the external worship of God in the Sanctuary is the great witness to... | |
| William Laud - 1901 - 520 pages
...were the true worship of God observed in them, or did the people think that such it were. It is true, the inward worship of the heart is the great service...that our heart stands right in that service of God. Take this away, or bring it into contempt, and what light is there left "to shine before men, that... | |
| William Holden Hutton - 1903 - 396 pages
...or did the people think that such it were. It is true, the inward worship of the heart is the true service of God, and no service acceptable without...that our heart stands right in that service of God. . . . These thoughts are they, and no other, which have made me labour so much as I have done for decency... | |
| William Richard Wood Stephens, William Hunt - 1903 - 398 pages
...or did the people think that such it were. It is true, the inward worship of the heart is the true service of God, and no service acceptable without...that our heart stands right in that service of God. . . . These thoughts are they, and no other, which have made me labour so much as I have done for decency... | |
| |