| Jean Claude - 1779 - 566 pages
...ofte, thou /halt but lofe thy laboure. This worde laijue maye not bee underftand heere after mans wayes which teacheth what ought to be done and what ought not to be done, as it goeth with mannes lawe, •where the lawe ys fulfilled with outward workes only, though the hcrt be neuer fo farre... | |
| James Beattie - 1790 - 460 pages
...falsehood. 9. Confcience, or the Moral Faculty, whereby we diftinguifh between virtue and vice, between what ought to be done and what ought not to be done. ii. Whether this diflribution of our perceptive powers be accurate, or fufficiently comprehenfive,... | |
| 1808 - 416 pages
..., '..' ' " ' The utility of biography, appears boundless; it registers, for the examination of all, what ought to be done, and what ought not to be done. By shewing the individual in his different stages of prosperity and adversity, the manner he encountered... | |
| Martin Luther - 1824 - 586 pages
...to be understood according to the manner of philosophy, or reason, as being a doctrine that teaches what ought to be done, and what ought not to be done. For all human laws are fulfilled by external works, even though those works be done contrary to the... | |
| Martin Luther - 1826 - 1226 pages
...to be understood according to the manner of philosophy, or reason, as being a doctrine that teaches what ought to be done, and what ought not to be done. For all human laws are fulfilled by external works, even though those works be done contrary to the... | |
| Martin Luther - 1826 - 586 pages
...to be understood according to the manner of philosophy, or reason, as being a doctrine that teaches what ought to be done, and what ought not to be done. For all human laws are fulfilled by external works, even though those works be done contrary to the... | |
| Joseph CROOLL - 1829 - 32 pages
...are standing by a world of Christians. They have a revelation of God which c2 instructs them to know what ought to be done, and what ought not to be done. But all of them have shed as much the blood of the Jews as ourselves, and more too ; therefore, we... | |
| Charles Hodge - 1835 - 600 pages
...Theodoret, ' the things opposed to each other, righteousness and unrighteousness;' and Theophylact's, ' what ought to be done, and what ought not to be done.' The other view is adopted by the Vulgate, Grotius and our translators, both here and in Phil. 1: 10,... | |
| 1841 - 586 pages
...that will be perfectly intelligible to all classes, into this subject of thesick chamber. He shows what ought to be done and what ought not to be done — follows out every branch of the matter through all classes of diseases — and presents to the... | |
| Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Board of Publication - 1842 - 510 pages
...common manner, and to use Paul's term, after the manner of men, or after man's ways; as that thou should say the law here, in this place, were nothing but learning which teaches what ought to be done and what ought not to be done, as it goes with man's law, where the law... | |
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