An exposition with practicall observations continued upon the thirty second, the thirty third, and the thirty fourth chapters of the booke of Job being the substance of forty-nine lectures / delivered at Magnus neare the Bridge, London, by Joseph Caryl ...

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Title
An exposition with practicall observations continued upon the thirty second, the thirty third, and the thirty fourth chapters of the booke of Job being the substance of forty-nine lectures / delivered at Magnus neare the Bridge, London, by Joseph Caryl ...
Author
Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673.
Publication
London :: Printed by M. Simmons, and are to be sold by Thomas Parkhurst ...,
1661.
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Subject terms
Bible. -- O.T. -- Job XXXII-XXXIV -- Commentaries.
Sermons, English -- 17th century.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A35535.0001.001
Cite this Item
"An exposition with practicall observations continued upon the thirty second, the thirty third, and the thirty fourth chapters of the booke of Job being the substance of forty-nine lectures / delivered at Magnus neare the Bridge, London, by Joseph Caryl ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A35535.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

S

  • Scorners are the worst sort of men. 536
  • Scorning two wayes taken. 534
  • Seales, a threefold use of sealing. 294 Sealing of instruction what it is. 294 295
  • Senators, why so called. 37
  • Season to be observed for speaking. 106 Such speake to most advantage. 108 Season, to hit a right season of speak∣ing very advantageous. 36. Season, the danger of neglecting it. 268, 269
  • Selfe-love, a bad glasse for any man to see himselfe in. 311
  • Service of God, to account it unprofi∣table, how sinfull. 546
  • Shadow of death, what it signifieth in Scripture. 667
  • Shew-bread, why so called. 435
  • Sick persons should be wisely minded of death. 361. They should pray and desire prayers. 423. A sick man be∣ing recovered should report the good∣ness of God to him. 445
  • Sicknes, three expressions gradually set∣ting it forth. 336. Sickness comes not by chance, nor only from naturall causes. 341. Sickness brings downe the strongest men. 342. Severall ends for which God sends sickness. 343, 344. In sickness, all creature-comforts

Page [unnumbered]

  • are vaine and tastless to us. 347. Sickness brings great decay upon the body. 351, 352. Sickness, in what sense called a spending time. 356. Sickness makes a wonderfull change in man. 358. Sicknes neere the grave; three inferences from it. 361, 362. Other cautions from the nature of sickness. 367, 368.
  • Sight, twofold. 816
  • Silence, or holding our peace, Vid: peace.
  • Sincere persons doe not affect to be seene. 770
  • Sin, to say we have no sin, how ex∣treamly sinfull it is, shewed in foure things. 202, 203. That shewed further. 515. Sin, three things in it. 31. How man is sinned against, God only sinned against properly. 167. All sin reducible to three heads. 198. Sin a defection from God. 198. Sin is a defilement. 199. Sin a hurtfull thing, three wayes. 201. Every step in sin is a step to misery. 331. What sin is. 448, 450. Sin pretends to bring in profit to the sinner. 454. No good can be gotten by sin. 455. Sin is ex∣ceeding dangerous and destructive. 455. Sinners shall confesse at last, there is no profit in sin. 456. The heart strongly set to sin. 472, 473. The more easily any man sinneth, the greater is his sin. 537. Sins of o∣thers, how they may become ours. 562 Sin unpardoned a great burden, yet by some unfelt. 809. We have many unknowne sins. 818. A godly man desires God would shew him his sins. 824. A godly man may live free from grosse sins. 826. Sin, conside∣red three wayes. 827. A godly man may commit sin after sin, but he doth not adde sin to sin. 828. The additi∣on of sin to sin a great and most dan∣gerous sio. 830. To sin rebelliously, what. 856. When a sin may be cal∣led rebellion, shewed in foure things. 857, 858. 'Tis the burden of a god∣ly man to sin, and 'tis his care not to sin. 858, 859
  • Sinners would but cannot hide them∣selves either from the eye or reveng∣ing hand of God. 669, 670. Sinners would hide themselves upon a twofold account. 670. Foure things upon which sinners thinke themselves hid from God 672, 673
  • Sirnames or titles of two sorts. 126
  • Sleepe, what it is. 280. Three words in the Hebrew signifying sleepe. 284
  • Soveraignty of God shewed. 255, 839 Man is never displeased with what God doth, till he forgets what him∣selfe is. 840. Soveraignty of God, in afflicting the most innocent person. 515. The Soveraignty of God shew∣ed in five things. 580. Three infe∣rences from it. 581. God hath an absolute power to pull downe and set up whom he pleaseth. 683
  • Soule of man why called the breath of the Almighty. 169. The soule floweth immediately from God. 169, 170, 594. Three inferences from it. 170. Soule, put for the whole man. 359

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  • Speaker, he that speaketh is at the mercy of his hearers. 530
  • Speaking, twofold. 46. 'Tis very pain∣full not to speake in some cases. 114 He that speaketh his mind, easeth his mind. 116. The right end of speaking. 116. To neglect speaking where duty calls very dangerous. 117 A fourfold consideration is to be had of what we speake. 149. We should first try and tast what we are about to speake. 152. Three sorts who speake amisse doctrinally. 156, 157 How or when God is sayd to speake. 264. Severall wayes of Gods speak∣ing to man. 265
  • Speech, they who have most ability are usually most sparing of speech. 45
  • Spirit, often taken for the soule of man. 51. Spirit of God free, not tyed to age nor to any order of men. 66, 67 Spirit, an imposing Spirit how bad. 193. Spirit of God mightily over∣powers some men both to doe and speake. 114. Why our making is attributed to the Spirit. 162. The Spirit of God is God. 165. Eight reasons from Scripture proving that the holy Ghost is God. 165, 166, 167, 168. The Spirit supplyes the absence of Christ in the Church. 685
  • Spirituall things are not understood by a naturall or unregenerate man. 275 Two reasons of it. 276. They that are spirituall doe not alwayes per∣ceive spirituall things. 277. Three grounds of it. 277, 278
  • Striving, fourefold described. 243. Man is apt to strive with God. 248. Foure wayes shewed in which man striveth with God. 249. Striving with God very uncomely and sinfull. 250. Stri∣ving with God a presumptuous sin. 251. Striving with God an irratio∣nall thing. 252. Striving with God of two sorts. 255, 256. Seven con∣siderations why we should not strive with God. 258. Seven preservatives against striving with God. 259, 260 Three things to be striven with, 261
  • Submission with silence to the will of God alwayes a duty. 479
  • Sufferings, we may not will our suffer∣ings, though we must suffer wil∣lingly. 793
  • Suspition, a godly man suspects him∣selfe, that he is worse and hath done worse then he knows by himselfe. 825
  • Sword, put for all violent calamities. 330
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