The Claims of Religion Upon Medical Men: A Discourse Delivered in the Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, on Sunday Evening, Nov. 24, 1844Book and Job Printing Office, Ledger Building, 1844 - 24 pages |
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Page 5
... thing . The Rabbins entertained so bad an opinion of " physi- cians , " that they said " the very best of them deserved hell ; " and they advised " faithful Jews not to live in a city where the chief man was a physician . " The art ...
... thing . The Rabbins entertained so bad an opinion of " physi- cians , " that they said " the very best of them deserved hell ; " and they advised " faithful Jews not to live in a city where the chief man was a physician . " The art ...
Page 13
... , and Christians ; and disprove and undo both performances , as far as in me lies , in every thing that does not strictly and barely relate to the argument . " 2 t The Supreme Being challenges the power of healing as 13.
... , and Christians ; and disprove and undo both performances , as far as in me lies , in every thing that does not strictly and barely relate to the argument . " 2 t The Supreme Being challenges the power of healing as 13.
Page 19
... thing that is needed to allay an excitement which is fast precipitating their malady to a fatal issue . A few words of spiritual counsel , kindly offered , have , in some instances of this sort , done much to tranquilize the system ...
... thing that is needed to allay an excitement which is fast precipitating their malady to a fatal issue . A few words of spiritual counsel , kindly offered , have , in some instances of this sort , done much to tranquilize the system ...
Page 20
... . Such an insensibility to things of the most tremen- dous consequences , in a heart so keenly alive to the merest tri- * Thoughts on Religion , Ch . vi . fles , is an astonishing prodigy , an incomprehensible enchant- 20.
... . Such an insensibility to things of the most tremen- dous consequences , in a heart so keenly alive to the merest tri- * Thoughts on Religion , Ch . vi . fles , is an astonishing prodigy , an incomprehensible enchant- 20.
Page 23
... things in the way prescribed by himself , and not according to our own fool- ish imaginations . " I was once an infidel , as I told you in the West Indies ; I became a Christian from conviction , produced by the candid in- quiry ...
... things in the way prescribed by himself , and not according to our own fool- ish imaginations . " I was once an infidel , as I told you in the West Indies ; I became a Christian from conviction , produced by the candid in- quiry ...
Other editions - View all
The Claims of Religion Upon Medical Men: A Discourse Delivered in the Tenth ... Henry Augustus Boardman No preview available - 2017 |
The Claims of Religion Upon Medical Men: A Discourse Delivered in the Tenth ... Henry Augustus Boardman No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
A. H. HOFF argument B. C. SNOWDEN believeth Bible blessing C. C. CAMPBELL CARGILL character Christianity cian CLAIMS OF RELIGION clergyman countenance D. R. ROACH discourse disease Divine DRAUCHAN DUFFIELD duties E. B. JONES eternity feel Gospel gratifying H. A. BOARDMAN H. R. BRANHAM H. Y. WEBB habit happiness heal Heaven honor human importance infidelity J. E. HILL J. E. TYLER J. P. ANDREWS J. S. WELLFORD J. W. DULLES JAMES E Jesus Christ KING LEONARD live liveth means Medical Class medical men medicine mind N. C. JOHN nished numbers P. P. CLUFF patients PERSONAL RELIGION PHILADELPHIA physi physician profes professional promote public schools religion is adapted RELIGION TO MEDICAL RELIGION UPON MEDICAL repent reputation S. G. WHITE S. P. ZIEGLER sick sion skepticism society soul South Carolina thou tient TIMOTHY THORP true piety UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY OF Pennsylvania utter vanity WARREN ROYER wisdom
Popular passages
Page 21 - At thirty man suspects himself a fool ; Knows it at forty, and reforms his plan ; At fifty chides his infamous delay, Pushes his prudent purpose to resolve; In all the magnanimity of thought Resolves and re-resolves; then dies the same.
Page 14 - If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not, and it shall be given him,
Page 12 - For it was not an enemy that reproached me ; then I could have borne it : neither was it he that hated me that did magnify himself against me ; then I would have hid myself from him : 13 But it was thou, a man mine equal, my guide, and mine acquaintance. 14 We took sweet counsel together, and walked unto the house of God in company.
Page 8 - Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; he that believeth not shall be damned.
Page 15 - ... may succeed, as, without it, the ablest must prove unavailing. " Save me from all sordid motives ; and endow me with a spirit of pity and liberality towards the poor, and of tenderness and sympathy towards all ; that I may enter into the various feelings by which they are respectively tried ; may weep with those that weep, and rejoice with those that rejoice. " And sanctify thou their souls, as well as heal their bodies.
Page 24 - I am the Resurrection and the Life, saith the Lord ; he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live, and whoso liveth and believeth in me shall never die.
Page 23 - They put on as smooth a face as they can, to impose on the spectators and die firmly. But this is all deception ; the true state of their minds at the very time, nine times out of ten, is worse than the most horrible imaginings even of hell itself. Some who have led lives adapted to sear their...
Page 8 - ... friends. Medicine, of all professions, should be the least suspected of leading to impiety. An intimate acquaintance with the works of nature elevates the mind to the most sublime conceptions of the Supreme Being, and at the same time dilates the heart with the most pleasing prospects of Providence.
Page 15 - I may enter into the various feelings by which they are respectively tried ; may weep with those that weep, and rejoice with those that rejoice. " And sanctify thou their souls, as well as heal their bodies. Let faith and patience, and every Christian virtue they are called upon to exercise, have their perfect work : so that in the gracious dealings of thy Spirit and of thy providence, they may find in the end, whatever that end may be, that it has been good for them to have been afflicted. " Grant...
Page 13 - The defence of that book," says he, " against the learned and acute Mr. Abr. De Moivre, being written in a spirit of levity and resentment, I most sincerely retract, and wish undone, so far as it is personal or peevish and ask him and the world pardon for it ; as I do for the defence of Dr. Pitcairn's ' Dissertations' and the 'New Theory of Fevers,' against the late learned and ingenious Dr.