Christian chymistrie extracting the honey of instruction from variety of objects. Being an handfull of observations historicall, occasionall, and out of scripture. With applications theologicall and morall. By Caleb Trenchfield, sometime minister of the church at Chipsted in Surrey.

About this Item

Title
Christian chymistrie extracting the honey of instruction from variety of objects. Being an handfull of observations historicall, occasionall, and out of scripture. With applications theologicall and morall. By Caleb Trenchfield, sometime minister of the church at Chipsted in Surrey.
Author
Trenchfield, Caleb, 1624 or 5-1671.
Publication
London :: printed by M.S. for H. Crips, at his shop in Popes-head Alley next Lombard Street,
1662.
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Subject terms
Bible -- Commentaries -- Early works to 1800.
History -- Early works to 1800.
Christian life -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"Christian chymistrie extracting the honey of instruction from variety of objects. Being an handfull of observations historicall, occasionall, and out of scripture. With applications theologicall and morall. By Caleb Trenchfield, sometime minister of the church at Chipsted in Surrey." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A63127.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 7, 2024.

Pages

(11)

William Wickham being appoynted by King Edward in building a stately Church, wrote in in the windows, This work made William Wickham; for which being charged by the King, as assuming the honour of that work to him∣self, as the author being onely overseet, he an∣swered, that, He meant not he made the work, but that the worke made him, being before but beggarly, and then in great credit. Lord, when we read in thy Word that we must work out our own Salvation, thy meaning is not, that our Salvation should be the effect of our work, but our work the evidence of thy Salvation.

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