 | Thomas Wright - 1873 - 734 pages
...dangers, the fruits thereof; we profess and declare, before God and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our own sins, and for the sins of these kingdoms ; especially, that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the gospel... | |
 | Philip Schaff - 1877 - 968 pages
...dangers, the fruits thereof, we profess and declare, before God and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our own sins, and for the sins of these kingdoms ; especially, that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the gospel... | |
 | Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - 1888 - 544 pages
...dangers, the fruits thereof, we profess and declare, before God and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our [own] sins, and for the sins of these kingdoms ; especially that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the gospel,... | |
 | Samuel Rawson Gardiner - 1889 - 478 pages
...dangers, the fruits thereof : we profess and declare, before God and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our own sins, and for the sins of these kingdoms; especially that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the Gospel;... | |
 | Great Britain. Parliament - 1889 - 452 pages
...dangers, the fruits thereof : we profess and declare, before God and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our own sins, and for the sins of these kingdoms ; especially that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the Gospel... | |
 | James Kerr - 1895 - 452 pages
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 | Robert Ellis Thompson - 1895 - 480 pages
...ii;.(T. 327 the fruits thereof ; we profess and declare, before GOD and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our own sins, and for the sins of these kingdomes: especially, that we have not as we ought, valued the inestimable beneftt of the gospel;... | |
 | 1888 - 436 pages
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 | Samuel Rawson Gardiner - 1899 - 560 pages
...dangers, the fruits thereof : we profess and declare, before God and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our own sins, and for the sins of these kingdoms; especially that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the Gospel... | |
 | George Burton Adams, Henry Morse Stephens - 1901 - 588 pages
...dangers, the fruits thereof: we profess and declare, before God and the world, our unfeigned desire to be humbled for our own sins, and for the sins of these kingdoms; especially that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the Gospel... | |
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