| Thomas Hartwell Horne - Bible - 1825 - 854 pages
...interpretation be admitted, we cannot avoid one of two great difficulties : for, either we must assert that the multitude of applications, made by Christ and his apostles, are fanciful and unauthorised, and wholly inadequate to prove the pointa (or which they are quoted ; or, on the other... | |
| Thomas Fanshaw Middleton - Bible - 1828 - 728 pages
...difficulties; for else we must assert, that the multitude of applications made by Christ and his Apoetlee are fanciful and unauthorized, and wholly inadequate to prove the points, for which they are cited; or, on the other hand, we must believe that the obvious and natural sense of such passages was never... | |
| Thomas Fanshaw Middleton - Bible - 1833 - 562 pages
...on any other hypothesis we can avoid one of two great difficulties ; for else we must assert, that the multitude of applications made by Christ and his...inadequate to prove the points for which they are cited ; or, on the other hand, we must believe that the obvious and natural sense of such passages was never... | |
| S. T. Sturtevant - Preaching - 1834 - 662 pages
...interpretation be admitted, we cannot avoid one of two great difficulties ; for either we must assert that the multitude of applications made by Christ and his apostles are fanciful and unauthorised, and wholly inadequate to prove the points for which they are quoted, or, on the other... | |
| Samuel Thomas Bloomfield - 1837 - 656 pages
...he) on no other hypothesis can we avoid one of two great difficulties ; for else we must assert, that the multitude of applications made by Christ and his...and unauthorized, and wholly inadequate to prove the pointe, for which they are cited ; or, on the other hand, we muet believe that the obvious and natural... | |
| Benjamin Fiske Barrett - 1842 - 470 pages
...interpretation be admitted, we cannot avoid one of two great difficulties ; for, either we must assert that the multitude of applications, made by Christ and...inadequate to prove the points for which they are quoted ; or, on the other hand, we must believe that the obvious and natural sense of such passages... | |
| Benjamin Fiske Barrett - New Jerusalem Church - 1852 - 356 pages
...interpretation be admitted, we cannot avoid one of two great difficulties ; for, either we must assert that the multitude of applications, made by Christ and...inadequate to prove the points for which they are quoted ; or, on the other hand, we must believe that the obvious and natural sense of such passages... | |
| J. R. Wolfe - Bible - 1855 - 272 pages
...which they occur in the Old Testament. But, must we then on that account assert, that, " either the applications made by Christ and his Apostles, are...and unauthorized, and wholly inadequate to prove the point for which they were cited ;" or, on the other hand, make Christ and his Apostles the propounders... | |
| Thomas Hartwell Horne - Bible - 1877 - 964 pages
...interpretation be admitted, we cannot avoid one of two great difficulties ; for either " we must assert that the multitude of applications, made by Christ and...inadequate to prove the points for which they are quoted ; or, on the other hand, we must believe that the obvious and natural sense of such passages... | |
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