| Richard Allestree - 1677 - 722 pages
...peculiar ; made it the repofitory of his truth , aud the vifible flock from whence the Meffias lliould come , in whom all the Nations of the earth were to be blejjed, Gen. 18. 18. fo that in this one people of the Jews , was virtually infolded the higheft and... | |
| Richard Allestree, John Fell, Lady Dorothy Coventry Pakington, Richard Sterne - 1696 - 268 pages
...peculiar; made it the repofitory of his truth, and the vifible flock from whence the Meffias fhould come, in whom all the Nations of the earth were to be bleJJed,Gen. 18. 18. fb that in this one people of the Jews, was virtually infolded the higheft and... | |
| 1800 - 528 pages
...would otherwife have been foon loft out of it, was the Law added, until the . promifed feed fhould come, in whom all the nations of the earth were to be " blefled, and in whom all the promifes of God from the foundation of the world are-" Yea," and " Amen."... | |
| Henry Kett - 1801 - 442 pages
...predicted, that " Whofo hearkened not unto him, the Lord would require it of him" — the " MESSIAH" " IN WHOM ALL THE NATIONS OF THE EARTH WERE TO BE BLESSED," The hiftorical account which has been given of the accomplifhment of the foregoing Prophecies, leads... | |
| Richard Graves - 1807 - 520 pages
...enabled to preserve the worship of the true God, and a lively expectation of the promised Messiah, in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed ; an expectation not confined to the Jews alone, but certainly prevailing, though perhaps indistinctly... | |
| 1810 - 722 pages
...with each other, as members of society. 2. The doctrine of Messiah, the promised seed of the woman, in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed....ceremonial law, and the great subject of whom the prophet spake, to whom the pious Israelites were directed for a better righteousness than their own,... | |
| 1810 - 724 pages
...: And the political law, which regulates their intercourse with each other, as members of society. to be blessed. He is the substance of the ceremonial law, and the great subject of whom the prophet spake, to whom the pious Israelites were directed for a better righteousness than their own,... | |
| James Macknight - 1810 - 594 pages
...was offered when God confirmed all his promises to Abraham by an oath, he shewed him that his seed, in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed, was to die as a sacrifice for the ain of i In : world ; also that he had commanded him to offer up... | |
| William Huntington (works.) - 1811 - 436 pages
...times of angels. In these forms he appeared unto our father Abraham, to give him the promise of a seed in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed. These Abraham offered sacrifices to, worshipping and addressing as Lord ; and no doubt but in one of... | |
| Montagu Pennington - 1811 - 424 pages
...desire of all nations shall come. This was a well known and sufficiently obvious description of him in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed * ; of him who was the expectation of the people *f- ; of him who was accordingly styled in the New... | |
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