Frank Harper: or, Beginning life1862 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
afraid Aunt Esther auntie began Bible boarding-house Boggs and Buncombe Broadway Brooks Cato Chambers Street CHAPTER church clerks country boy Coventry crowd dear Denton Dey Street door employers evil eyes faithful saying father feel fellow fire Frank felt Frank Harper gave girls Halsted hand happy hear heard heart hour Jesus Christ John Street Joseph kneeled knew letter lodgings looked Lord Jesus Christ Messrs Boggs mind morning mother Ned and Joe ness never night old Roan parents Pharisee playmates poor pray prayer Psalm Sabbath save sinners scarcely seemed shew sins sisters soon sorry Sunday Sunday-school tell thank Thanksgiving-day theatre thing thought Frank tion took town tract trouble trying voice walk warehouse weeks wonder words world to save young friend youth
Populaire passages
Pagina 87 - This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that JESUS CHRIST came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief.
Pagina 88 - Christ, the God who made all things, came into the world to save sinners like Joseph ; and this is true ; and it is a faithful saying." Not long after this Joseph was seized with a fever, and was dangerously ill. As he tossed upon his bed, his constant language was, " Joseph is the chief of sinners ; but Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners ; and Joseph loves Him for this.
Pagina 88 - O sir, you are the friend of the Lord Jesus, whom I heard speak so well of Him. Joseph is the chief of sinners ; but it is a
Pagina 88 - God hath chosen the weak things of this world to confound the things which are mighty...
Pagina 102 - By humility and the fear of the LORD are riches, and honour, and life.
Pagina 88 - Jesus Christ, the God who made all things, came into the world to save sinners like Joseph ; and this is true ; and it is a
Pagina 85 - Understand this well. To think you must be more contrite, more humble, more grieved, more sensible of the weight of sin, before you can be justified, is to lay your contrition, your grief, your humiliation, for the foundation of your being justificxl; at least, for a part of the foundation.
Pagina 87 - A poor, unlearned man, named Joseph, whose employment was to go on errands and carry parcels, passing through London streets one day, heard psalm-singing in a place of worship, and went into it, having a large parcel of yarn hanging over his shoulders. It was Dr Calamy's church, St Mary's, Aldermanbury. A very well dressed congregation surrounded the doctor.
Pagina 60 - Brooks's room, where there was a fire, and wrote a long letter to his father and mother; in which he gave them a full account of all that had taken place.