LXXX sermons preached at the parish-church of St. Mary Magdalene Milk-street, London whereof nine of them not till now published / by the late eminent and learned divine Anthony Farindon ... ; in two volumes, with a large table to both.

About this Item

Title
LXXX sermons preached at the parish-church of St. Mary Magdalene Milk-street, London whereof nine of them not till now published / by the late eminent and learned divine Anthony Farindon ... ; in two volumes, with a large table to both.
Author
Farindon, Anthony, 1598-1658.
Publication
London :: Printed by Tho. Roycroft for Richard Marriott,
CIC DC LXXII [i.e. 1672]
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Subject terms
Church of England -- Sermons.
Sermons, English -- 17th century.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A40888.0001.001
Cite this Item
"LXXX sermons preached at the parish-church of St. Mary Magdalene Milk-street, London whereof nine of them not till now published / by the late eminent and learned divine Anthony Farindon ... ; in two volumes, with a large table to both." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A40888.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 11, 2024.

Pages

Q.

  • QUestions. The various use of Que∣stions in Scripture, 108. 385. 727. They add oftentimes great emphasis and force, 70, 71. 385. Needless Questions to be let alone, 94. Many Questions in Di∣vinity we may be ignorant of without danger, 866.
  • Quiet. To be quiet, what, 198. 200. Many seem Quiet persons, and are nothing less, 198, 199. 211. Some are Quiet perforce; but, assoon as the curb is out of their jaws, most turbulent, 199, 200. Quiet∣ness is an Evangelical virtue, 201. How much of this in the primitive times, how little afterwards, 203, 204. But let who∣so will be unquiet, true Christians are not, cannot be, so, 204. Quietness is to be laboured for, 205. and made our me∣ditation, 206. and practiced, 207. Self-love, a great enemy to Qu. is to be cast out, 207. and so must Covetousness, and Ambition, & Evil-surmising, 208. Three things cannot be disquieted, 209. This virtue is truly religious, Christian, ho∣nourable, 209. The best way to be Qui∣et, is, to abide every man in his own calling, 212 Every thing is Quiet in its own place, 214. The unquiet condition of Tyrants, 215. 217.
  • Quintinus, 415.
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