ABBADIE, Dr. quoted, vi. 387, 388, 412, 413, 451—454 Abel, why God had respect to him and his offering, iii. 521
Abraham, his works of faith, ii. 333—his justification, iii. 489-493
Academy, Royal of Paris, the judicious award of, vi. 332 Acceptance with God, the condition of, i. 266–271— different degrees of, i. 462-464
Account of Mr. Fletcher's conversion, vii. 329
Adam, his sin not necessary to the manifestation of the Eternal Word, iv. 61, 62—his moral state before his apostacy, v. 286
Addison, Mr., quoted, note, iii. 502
Address to earnest seekers of salvation, i. 213
Adonai, the import of, vi. 382
Advent of Christ, the difference between the 1st & 2d,
iii. 473, 474
Advocate, what? v. 448
Affections, their disorder and irregularity, i. 62, 63 Afflicted persons, suitable advice to, v. 414-417, 457, 458.
Afflictions, the utility of, v. 411, 412
Agency, moral, consistent with natural and revealed religion, i. 232-free, of the checks, does not cross the designs of God, iii. 360-free, does not make man independent of God, iv. 64-67-does not re- present God as disappointed when he says, "I would and ye would not," iv. 67-69-free, how it applies to God, angels, and glorified saints, iv. 118—121— involuntary, renders sinners excusable, iv. 122 Agony of Christ, what? iv. 571-573
Air, reflections on the, vi. 403
Albans, St., Archdeacon of, mentioned, vi. 308 Alexandrinus, Cyrillus, ascribed man's sin to himself, iii. 321-Clemens, his thoughts on man's free agency, iii. 322
Alienation from God, evidences of, i. 64-67
Alipius, charged with the rebuilding of Jerusalem, iv.506 Alleine, Joseph, a quotation from his Alarm to the Unconverted, ii. 247
Alms-deeds, their importance, i. 559
Alpha and Omega, titles given to Christ, vi. 391
Ambrose, St. a strenuous defender of the 2d gospel- axiom, iii. 318
America, the case of, widely different from that of Ireland and the Palatinate of Chester, v. 32-34 Animal kingdom, reflections on the, vi. 404, 405 Amos the prophet, foretold the coming of Christ, vii. 43 Anabaptists, German, their Antinomianism, ii. 337— the turbulent spirit of, in the time of Cromwell, ▾. 44, 45, 51-56-how Cromwell served them, v. 56— some mild and moderate, v. 111, 112
Anecdotes, illustrative of the incomprehensibility of God, vi. 332
Andrews, Bishop, his judgment of the doctrine of the Fathers respecting election and reprobation, iii. 329 Angels, the fall of, iv. 9, 10—and men made to enjoy a day of salvation, iv. 164
Anger of God, what? i. 493, 494
Ammianus Marcellinus, referred to, iv. 506
Antinomianism, a gigantic foe to Christianity, i. 364 -366
Antinomianism defined, i. 366; iii. 206—its prevalence
amongst congregations and ministers, i. 371-384- practical, few professors free from, i. 395-403- more danger from this than from Pharisaism, i. 414, 415-why good men fall into it? ii. 7-the princi- pal errors of, ii. 8, 9—scripture and experience, an- tidotes against, ii. 9, 10-inseparably connected with Calvinism, ii. 92-of hearers, often occasioned by that of preachers, ii. 319-separates faith and works, ii. 338-nearly allied to Popish Pharisaism, ii. 340 -drives men into Socinianism, infidelity, and fatalism, ii. 346-defiles the sounder part of the Ro- mish and Protestant churches, ii. 350, 351-un- masked, what, iv. 354-356
Antinomians, their execrable persecution of the Quakers, ii. 339-deceive the simple by fair speeches, note, ii. 390
Anti-evangelical, what, note, ii. 372
Apostasy, the possibility of, proved, i. 503—and mi- sery of man proved from scripture and reason, vii. 344-362
Apostates, what the inspired writers say of, ili. 236 -245
Apostle, what it signifies, vi. 37, 38
Apostles, false, the portrait of, vi. 25—32
Appeal to matter of fact, its design, i. 213—the last, to be made to scripture, in proof of any article of faith, vi. 312
"Appointed to be disobedient," the true sense of, iii. 158
Aquinas, Thomas, leaned towards the doctrines of Augustine, iii. 442
Arius, what he taught concerning the Father and the Son, vi. 327
Arminius, James, an assertor of general redemption, i. 229-what concession he ought to have made, ii. 278-deemed an heretic by Antinomians, ii. 339-
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