26 results filtered with: Swearing
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Israel's true safety: offered in a sermon, before His Excellency, the Honourable Council, and representatives, of the province of the Massachusetts Bay in New-England, on March 15th. 1704. Being a day set a part for solemn fasting and prayer. By Samuel Willard. [Four lines of Scripture texts]
Willard, Samuel, 1640-1707.Date: 1704- Books
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A kind caution to profane swearers. By Josiah Woodward, D.D. late minister of Poplar.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1770- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers. By a Minister of the Church of England.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1707- Books
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A letter to a friend, concerning the great sin of taking God's name in vain. Whereto are added, one or two remarks concerning vain or common swearing. By Edward Wells, D. D. Rector of Cotesbach in Leicestershire.
Wells, Edward, 1667-1727.Date: 1710- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers. By a Minister of the Church of England.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1716- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers. By a Minister of the Church of England.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: [1704]- Books
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The fear of an oath. Or, Some cautions to be used about swearing, if we would approve our selves truly godly. As it was discoursed in a sermon, preached at Boston, on the lecture; January 30. 1700,1. By Samuel Willard, teacher of a church in Boston. [Two lines in Latin from Cicero]
Willard, Samuel, 1640-1707.Date: 1701- Books
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A letter from a minister to his parishioners, Shewing the indispensible Duty incumbent on all Persons to give Informations to the Magistrate as well against prophane swearing and cursing, as against other Crimes and Misdemeanours.
Minister.Date: 1703- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1721- Books
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A kind caution to profane swearers. By Josiah Woodward, D.D. minister of Poplar.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: MDCCLXIII. [1763]- Books
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An extract from an ironical sermon, wherein are shewn the advantages, pleasure, and profit of swearing in common conversation. To which is added, Beelzebub's conference.
Date: 1784- Books
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A kind caution to profane swearers. By Josiah Woodward D. D. Minister of Poplar.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: M.DCC.XLVI. [1746]- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers. By a minister of the Church of England.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1701]- Books
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To all those whom it may concern. As I have often, in passing along the streets and high-ways, heard the Most Sacred Name very profanely made use of, both by men and women, and many grievously calling for Damnation on themselves and one on another, my heart has been, and is, deeply afflicted thereat; and therefore I beseech you, in the Name of Jesus Christ, do not defile your souls, which are dear and precious, by any wilful sin: and amongst other things, do not take the Holy Name of God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him or her guiltless that taketh his Holy Name in vain. God would save you; why would any of you lose and destroy yourselves? Observe this attentively; for notwithstanding all what the Lord has done, and is doing for us, such as die in their sins, where he is gone, they can never come. Abstain from drunkenness, and all excess, and from every appearance of evil; love one another, as Jesus Christ hath loved you; apply yourselves to the witness of God within you, which reproves you for evil; submit to, and obey its holy manifestations and discoveries, and it will do much more for you than all you can hear from any man: this witness of God is the Word of his Grace, even the Word of Life, which is able to save your souls. In the love of the gospel, I invite you all to come and taste how good and merciful the Lord is towards all those that return to him with their whole hearts. Farewel. London, the 28th of the Seventh Month 1777. Claude Gay.
Gay, Claude, 1707?-1786.Date: [1777]- Books
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A kind caution to profane swearers. By Josiah Woodward, ...
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1790- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers. By a minister of the church of England.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1705]- Pictures
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A soldier, leaning against the window ledge of a prison window with a large empty flask on the ground, is conversing with a prisoner who is looking through the bars while holding a tankard in his hand. Lithograph after R. Seymour.
Seymour, Robert, 1798-1836.Date: 1830-1839Reference: 31618i- Books
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A discourse against profane swearing. For Mony, Swear by no God, though you Swear truly; (said Isocrates.) Avoid Swearing, wholly, if you can; (said Epictetus.) Forbear Swearing about any Matter, (said Plato.) And diverse the like Precepts occur in other Heathens; the mention whereof may well serve to strike Shame into many loose and vain People, bearing the Name of Christians. It is a Sin, of all others, Provocative of Divine Judgment: 'tis very noxious to Human Society. It often brings the Practiser of it into the most horrible Sin of Perjury. False Swearing naturally springeth out of much Swearing. It disparages him that uses it, and derogates from his Credit. 'tis gross Rudeness. And 'tis an insolent Defiance of the common Profession, the Religion, the Law of our Country, which disalloweth and condemneth it. See Dr. Barrow's Sermon against rash and vain Swearing.
Wright, S. (Samuel), 1683-1746.Date: [1723?]- Books
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A discourse against profane swearing.
Wright, S. (Samuel), 1683-1746.Date: M.DCC.XXXII. [1732]- Books
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A kind caution to profane swearers.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1780?]- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers by a minister of the Church of England.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1724- Books
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A plain and faithful testimony against that abominable, but too fashionable vice of profane swearing. Being the substance of several discourses from James V. 12. which came lately in course to be expounded. By Nathaniel Appleton, A.M. Pastor of the First Church in Cambridge. Proper to be in families for the frequent serious perusal of young people. [Four lines of Scripture texts]
Appleton, Nathaniel, 1693-1784.Date: 1765- Books
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Prophane swearing condemn'd at the bar of reason. Taken from the works of the Reverend Mr. John Flavel. Particularly recommended to the merchants of Boston, &c. as proper to be given to their mariners.
Flavel, John, 1630?-1691.Date: 1731- Books
Graphic language / Ian Williams, Thom Ferrier.
Williams, Ian.Date: 2011- Books
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A kind caution to prophane swearers. By a Minister of the Church of England.
Woodward, Josiah, 1660-1712.Date: 1706]