The Pastor and His People ; Or, The Word of God and the Flock of ChristJames Duffy, 1869 - 337 |
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Strona 7
... bring the great rudiments of their faith home to the comprehen- sion of those who , perhaps , have but little capacity to understand , and less leisure to devote to the consider- ation of those momentous truths upon the right appre ...
... bring the great rudiments of their faith home to the comprehen- sion of those who , perhaps , have but little capacity to understand , and less leisure to devote to the consider- ation of those momentous truths upon the right appre ...
Strona 8
... Christian year is surely to bring the object of these festivals prominently before her children , that their faith may be awakened , their love inflamed , and their wills moved to salutary resolutions . And , 8 MODERN PULPIT ELOQUENCE .
... Christian year is surely to bring the object of these festivals prominently before her children , that their faith may be awakened , their love inflamed , and their wills moved to salutary resolutions . And , 8 MODERN PULPIT ELOQUENCE .
Strona 10
... bring that festival before the minds and hearts of his hearers , will also aspire to do so with such graces of diction , and such charm of delivery , as will be worthy , as least as far as he can make it so , of the solemnity on which ...
... bring that festival before the minds and hearts of his hearers , will also aspire to do so with such graces of diction , and such charm of delivery , as will be worthy , as least as far as he can make it so , of the solemnity on which ...
Strona 20
... bring forth more and more plentifully the fruit of good works . These great truths are said to be treated from a moral point of view , when they are presented by the preacher , more as motives for the practice of Christian virtue , than ...
... bring forth more and more plentifully the fruit of good works . These great truths are said to be treated from a moral point of view , when they are presented by the preacher , more as motives for the practice of Christian virtue , than ...
Strona 21
... bringing before them the leading dogmas of their religion , establishing those dogmas by solid reasoning and by logical proofs , which shall acquire a double- force from the accents of true and deep conviction , in which he shall give ...
... bringing before them the leading dogmas of their religion , establishing those dogmas by solid reasoning and by logical proofs , which shall acquire a double- force from the accents of true and deep conviction , in which he shall give ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
The Pastor and His People; Or, the Word of God and the Flock of Christ Thomas Joseph Potter Podgląd niedostępny - 2020 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
action audience beauty Benedict XIV Bishop of Orleans Bossuet bound Bourdaloue catechetical instruction catechism catechist Cavan Christian truths Church Communion Council of Trent dæmon delivery develop discourse divine dogmatic Dublin duty dwell earnest efficacious employed equally essential Eucharist explain expression faith flock Francis of Sales fruit gesture Gospel grace hearers heart hence holy Homily ideas ignorant infinite inspire Jesus Christ John Chrysostom labour less Lord Bishop manner Massillon matter means method mind moral mystery nature necessary necessity never obligation ourselves panegyric passion pastor of souls perfect perhaps piety possess prayer preaching preparation priest principles propose prudence pulpit quæ Quintilian religion render rules sacraments Sacred Eloquence sacred orator saint salvation scarcely Second Point SECTION sentiments Set Sermon simple sinner speak spirit style sufficiently teaching tion treat virtue or vice voice whilst words young preacher zeal zealous pastor
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 282 - Probably not a single instance could be found of any one who has attained, by the study of any system of instruction that has hitherto appeared, a really good Delivery ; but there are many, — probably nearly as many as have fully tried the experiment, — who have by this means been totally spoiled...
Strona 296 - good articulation consists in giving every letter in a syllable its due proportion of sound, according to the most approved custom of pronouncing it, and in making such a distinction between the syllables of which words are composed, that the ear shall, without difficulty, acknowledge their number, and perceive at, once to which syllable each letter belongs.
Strona 219 - Solomon refers to the power of hábil when he says, " train up a child in the way in which he should go ; and when he is old he will not depart from it ;" a power which cannot be employed too early in the aid of virtue and religion.
Strona 151 - Ego sum resurrectio et vita ; qui credit in me, etiam si mortuus fuerit, vivet ; et omnis qui vivit et credit in me, non morietur in aeternum.
Strona 206 - Scriptum est: Non in solo pane vivit homo, sed in omni verbo, quod procedit de ore Dei.
Strona 284 - For, let it be considered, whenever we address ourselves to others by words, our intention certainly is to make some impression on those to whom we speak ; it is to convey to them our own ideas ami emotions.
Strona 284 - We often see, that an expressive look, or a passionate cry, unaccompanied by words, conveys to others more forcible ideas, and rouses within them stronger passions, than can be communicated by the most eloquent discourse. The signification of our sentiments, made by tones and gestures, has this advantage above that made by words, that it is the language of nature.
Strona 304 - For nature has given every passion its peculiar expression in the look, the voice, and the gesture ; and the whole frame, the look and the voice of a man, are responsive to the passions of the mind, as the strings of the musical instrument are to the fingers that touch them.
Strona 128 - ... non desit, ne illud impleatur parvuli petierunt panem, et non erat qui frangeret eis itaque ubi ab episcopo moniti trium mensium spatio muneri suo...
Strona 309 - Mr. Burke has a very ingenious thought on this subject in his ' Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful.' He observes, that there is such a connexion between the internal feeling of a passion and the external expression of it, that we cannot put ourselves in the posture or attitude of any passion, without communicating a certain degree of the passion itself to the mind. The same may be observed of the tone of voice which is peculiar to each passion : each passion produces an agitation of...