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vi, 214-concerning false apostles, vi. 27-an excel-
lent quotation from, vi. 68, 69

Outlines of Sermons, thirty; (1) on Gen. i. 26; (2)

2 Cor. vi, 2; (3) Matt. xxi, 38; (4) Acts iii, 14, 15;
(5) Acts i. 5; (6) Isa. lii. 1; (7) Acts xi. 18; (8)
Jer. xvii. 19; (9) 1 Cor. i. 30; (10) Rev. iii. 21;
(11) Luke v. 10; (12) Zech. iv. 6, 7; (13) Luke
xxiii. 42, 43; (14) Matt. xiv. 30; (15) 1 Kings xxii.
8; (16) Colos. i. 26, 27, 28; (17) Gen. xlv. 4; (18)
1 Cor. i. 23; (19) Acts xiii. 40, 41; (20) John vii.
37, 38; (21) Gen. xxvii. 38; (22) 1 Tim. iv. 1, 2,
3; (23) Luke ii. 14; (24) Amos vi. 12; (25) 1 Cor.
xvi. 22; (26) John iii. 14, 15; (27) Phil. iii. 8;
(28) Heb. iv. 2; (29) Joel ii. 13; (30) Ezek. xviii.
31, in the Seventh Vol. 462-519

Owen, Dr., asserts justification by works in the day of
judgment, i. 565; ii. 247

Pagan authors, have spoken of Jesus Christ, but slightly
or indirectly, iv. 507

Pagans, shewed their belief of human depravity by their
religious rites, i. 99, 100-have acknowledged the
existence of Jesus Christ, iv. 508

Papists, their error concerning infants, i. 144-some of
them hold election and reprobation, ii. 239, 240
Party-spirit should be opposed by faithful ministers,
v. 535

"Passing by men," what it imports, iv. 112, 113
Paschal, vi. 508—a remarkable saying of, v. 449; vi. 539
Patriarchs, expected a divine Messiah, vii. 11-30
Paul, a persecutor, v. 492, 493-his Christian piety
and union with Christ, v. 495-503-his vocation to
the ministry, v. 506—his devotion to Christ, and
spiritual armour, v. 512-516-his power to bind
and loose, v. 516-his zeal and diligence, v. 520—
524-his fidelity and humility, v. 524-527-readily
acknowledged and repaired his errors, v. 531-de-
tested party-spirit, and divisions, v. 534-loved all,
and especially the faithful, v. 540-545-his charity
towards the poor, and sinners, v. 547-550-his en-

gaging condescension, v. 554-his courage and pru-
dence, v. 557-562-his tenderness to others, and
severity to himself, v. 562-565-his disinterested-
ness, v. 571, 572-labours with his own hands, v. 573,
574-the ardour of his love, fears, and consolations,
v. 581-586-the grand subject of his glorying, v. 586
-his fortitude under the severest trials, v. 588-590
-consoles his persecuted brethren, vi. 1-4-is
ready to seal the truth with his blood, vi. 10, 11-
his triumph over the terror of death, vi. 14-17—
his virtues not inimitable, vi. 32—36—his extraordi-
nary conversion, vi. 417, 418-establishes the doc-
trine of our Lord's divinity, vi. 362–371; vii. 93-
101, 106
Peace and brotherly love, how obtained, iii. 566-577
Pearson, Bishop, on the Creed, quoted and referred to,
vi. 360, 361, 363, 382-385, 411, 412, 427, 428, 457
-466, 476, 480-484, 489-what he says of the
priority of the Father to the Son, vi. 474-476
Pelagianism, the tendency of,iii.446-448, 506-destroys
the throne of God's partial grace, iii. 520-the errors
of, what?, iii. 432, 484
Pelagians, their errors respecting infants, note, i. 144
-the principles of, iii. 345-347

Pelagius, his writings destroyed, iii. 432-how he
preached free will, iii. 436. wherein right and

wherein wrong, iv. 390-392

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Penitents, cautions proper for, i. 170-an address to,
ii. 548-555

Pentecostal church, what?, v. 449

Perfection, Christian, what?, ii. 71, 252-founded on
the Christiau dispensation, ii. 586, 587-the proper
import of the word, note, iv. 199, 200-sinless, re-
marks on, iv. 201-205-Christian, Mr. Henry and
Bishop Hopkins quoted, iv. 206, 207-what Arch-
bishop Leighton says of, iv. 207-209-why not en-
forced by pious Calvinists, iv. 210-214-objections
to it answered, iv. 214, 219-not contrary to the
articles of the church, iv. 224-228-the Church of
England holds it forth in her daily services, &c., iv.

228-239-St. Peter and James contend for it, iv.
241-248-St. Paul professed to have attained it, iv.
248, 249-absolute, what?, iv. 250-absolute, pecu-
liar to God, iv. 297-Christian, absurd to adduce
Solomon, &c. to disprove, iv. 313-318-the differ-
ent sorts and degrees of, iv. 250-256-how taught
by St. John in his epistles, iv. 302-310-not to be
deferred till death, iv. 323-329-does not supersede
the blood of Christ, iv. 335-337-three kinds of,
iv. 344-why those who desire it do not obtain it, iv.
353-not a popish doctrine, iv. 368, 383-law of,
given to the Jews that they might obey it, iv. 369-
law of, not the anti-mediatorial law of Paradisaical
perfection, iv. 371, 372-personal, inculcated by
Christ and his apostles, iv. 372-380-humility an
essential part of, iv. 399--405--in ourselves, but not of
ourselves, iv. 449-451 often eclipsed by confounding
what God has distinguished, iv. 389, 390—exalts the
adorable Trinity, iv. 409, 410—the advantages of
pressing towards it, iv. 412-418-should be strongly
urged by preachers, note, iv. 420—prayed for by
Christ, John xvii, iv. 431, 432-how far instantaneous
and how far gradual, iv. 435, 459-the importance
of understanding the precepts and promises on which
it is founded, iv. 436-the way to attain it, iv. 424—
444-encouragement to seek it, iv. 469-how Paul
followed after, iv. 491, 492-the danger of falling
from, iv. 477-479-queries for those who deny it,
iv. 428, 429

Perfections of God in harmony with each other, iv.
155, 156

Perfect, in what sense St. Paul was not, iv. 258-260
-Christian, St. Paul's portrait of a, iv. 291-294-
Christians, their advantages above those sold under
sin, iv. 420-422-Christians, an address to, iv. 475
-495

Perronet, Mr. Wm., short acccount of, vii. 426-letters
to, vii. 435;-457;-his relatives at Berne, vii. 429,
433; his illness, vii, 450, 456, 458;-his death,
vii. 461

Perseverance, the conditionality of, conceded by Mr.
Berridge, ii. 263–267—on what it depends, iii. 209
-244-must close the Christian race, iii. 244, 245
Person, why adopted to distinguish the Father, Son,
and Holy Ghost, vi. 239

Peter's faith failed, how?, iii. 232

Peter, St. the epistles of, overturn Socinianism, vii. 162
-167-proves the divinity of Christ, vii. 32, 75, 76,
162-167

Pharisaim, its hurtful influence in the church, ii. 342,
399-what?, iii. 205 - subverts the first gospel
axiom, iii. 399-Jewish, what?, iii. 428

Pharisees, Christian, who?, iv. 398

Pharaoh fitted by himself for destruction, iii. 159-how
raised to make God's' power known, iii. 139, 140
Phenomenon, dreadful, in Shropshire, described, v.
207-217-the causes of, v. 219-improved in a ser-
mon, v. 224

Philemon, asserts the divinity of Christ, vii. 149
Philippians, epistle to, establishes the doctrine of our
Lord's divinity, vii. 130-134

Philo, the Jew, what he said of the word of God,
vi. 362

Philosophers, modern, some have given up the immor-

tality of the soul, vi. 312-addressed, iv. 502-Chris-
tian, eulogy on, vi. 507-gainsaying, how to resist,
vi. 203-209

Piety essential to the office of the ministry, v. 493,
-495

Planets, reflections on the, vi. 402, 403

Pleasure, four sorts of, how to be denied, iv. 554, 555.
Pliny, his testimony concerning the first Christians, vi.
249-his letters to Trajan the Emperor, respecting
the primitive Christians iv. 504—his letter to Trajan,
note, i. 114

Plutarch, a quotation from, on inspiration, iv. 521, 522
Polemical Essay, why so called, iv. 194

Polycarp, an anticalvinist, iii. 354

Polytheism, see "Tritheists"

Poole, Matthew, his Synopsis quoted, iii. 189

Pope of Rome, signified by the horn mentioned by
Daniel, iv, 534-a remark on the increase of his
power, iv. 535

Portrait of St Paul, the design of, v. 487

Power, the origin of, v. 39, 138

Praise, God worthy of, for his goodness, iii. 308-
313-how rejected by the faithful minister, v. 537
-540

Prayer and praise, imply every other act of divine wor-
ship, vi. 451-the difference between Pagans and
modern philosophers concerning, iv. 525-527
Prayers of Christ, how offered for the finally impeni-
tent, ii. 297, 298 - when acceptable to God, v.
410, 411

-

Praxeas, referred to, vi. 314

Preaching, modern method of, censured, vi. 62, 64—
without premeditation, censured, vi. 65, 66

Predestination, scriptural, what?, ii. 36, 37-to sin
and death, the doctrine of Calvinism, iv. 93, 94
Prescience, diviue, the Arminian notion of, iv. 154
-162

Prejudice unfits the mind for receiving the truth,
iii. 143

Preterition, what?, iv. 122

Pride feeds on the praises it procures i. 72

Priestley, Dr., the views of, concerning the account
given by the Prophets, of the Messiah, disproved,
vii. 4-10-in effect, represents the apostles as des-
titute of common sense, vii. 95-123-the inconsis-
tency of, vi. 316, 317, 333-confronted with St. Paul,
vii. 93-101-asserts the doctrine of the Trinity and
of our Lord's divinity, to be irrational, and to have
no foundation either in the Old or New Testament,
vii. 134-his emblematical frontispiece referred to,
vi. 309, 310-destroys the foundation of Christianity,
by rejecting the doctrine of the Trinity, vi. 319-his
inconsistency in citing Tertullian, vi. 316-321-the
inconsistency and unreasonableness of his conduct,
vi. 332-337, 446, 447-charges St. Paul with rea-
soning inconclusively, vi. 327, 328-how he attacks

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