| Charles Hodge - Religion - 1839 - 266 pages
...exceedingly careful that this evil do not get footing in the churches of this kingdom," &c. &c. p. 467. There are many acts of these synods which would make...prove that American Presbyterianism in its strictest form, was a sucking dove compared to that of the immediate descendants of the Reformers. To maintain... | |
| Charles Hodge - 1839 - 290 pages
...exceedingly careful that this evil do not get footing in the churches of this kingdom," &c. &c. p. 467. There are many acts of these synods which would make...prove that American Presbyterianism in its strictest form, was a sucking dove compared to that of the immediate descendants of the Reformers. To maintain... | |
| William Hill - 1839 - 260 pages
...document in defence of them. But let us hear the Princeton Professor now, MI propria persona, p. 19 : " There are many acts of these Synods which would make...prove that American Presbyterianism, in its strictest form, was a sticking dove, compared to that of the immediate descendants of the Reformers." £Alas... | |
| William Pratt Breed - Presbyterianism - 1872 - 252 pages
...suppose that French Presbyterianism was more mild than that of Scotland. There are many acts of her synods which would make modern ears tingle, and which...that of the immediate descendants of the Reformers." Some idea of the kind of Presbyterianisrn which prevailed in France may be gathered from the fact that... | |
| Nathaniel S. MacFetridge - Calvinism - 1882 - 174 pages
...Hist. Bef. J Dr. Breed's Presbyterianism Three Hundred Years Ago. says the late Dr. Charles Hodge, " which would make modern ears tingle, and which prove...American Presbyterianism, in its strictest forms, is a sucking dove compared to that of the immediate descendants of the Reformers." * There was, of... | |
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