Watson, Bishop, quoted, 147. Wiljon, Bishop, his cuftom of frequently preaching in his Words, to be chofen with a view to things, 338. World, fuperiority to it, a Chriftian minifter's ftrength, 364— 368. Worldly-minded clergymen, defcribed, 29–31. Worldly intereft, two ways of purfuing it, 367. Worship, religious, the vaft numbers in the metropolis who Young, quoted, 110. Y. Young men at the university educating for the church, hints on Z. Zeal, with what qualifications and difpofitions it fhould be Zeal in ecclefiaftical fuperiors, its influence on the parochial By the worldly minded this book will be rope Methodistical, by the rigid Calvinist & Ente inst it will be despised as tame & operibley, & if by sober-munded senous Christians (fore it is intended) it be read with! Caute on there great Zenits Enthusiastic notions, greater dans of their in bibing from it day indeed thane from any other work whis have met with it for these reasons, etir :: tie with much temper sability, & with wat appearan of Candour & the dreadful : sequences of indulging Enthusiastic, sconnecting oneself wit's Error fully concealed. Such is the Industry Aso many Ivasion are the Artifices now employed to passag Enthusiasme on the one hand & Socinsan on the other, as the dints of a Banister. that it is scaredy posibles to be sufficen qua safer to tada against them. It is hardly new Edition. Old One. It is the duly of the watchfi Shepherd to warn his flock of lucking. Fiddlers dangers Imischiefs. All. Unders more especially formale teaders, the be cautions in reading " excu Law and Gilbert, Printers, St John's Square, Clerkenwell. scale with innovations. ather works that comes from the sam It requires some reading & much that seperate the sound from the still more to resist the play upon the to " feelings. More than ever do to inforce the admirables saying of andreellen Christian "There are some subjects which these ought not to read a Book, without first carnestly praying to God that it ater h. pervert principles. |