| August Neander - Christianity - 1855 - 398 pages
...justice could be so propitiated, say the council, on the other side, Christ would not have said, " How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven." In the regulations touching church penance, which belong to the Carolingian period, allusion is constantly... | |
| Wisconsin State Agricultural Society - Agriculture - 1880 - 550 pages
...acquirement of wealth gets no opportunity to think of things beyond this life. So it may be truly said, " How hardly shall a rich man enter into the Kingdom of Heaven." I am pleased, Mr. President, with the remarks to which we have listened this afternoon. And if I was... | |
| Stephen Olin - Christian life - 1852 - 458 pages
...to be the steward of an impartial, omnipresent, inexorably just God. Well did our Savior exclaim, " How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven !" Methinks he might also have said, how honorably, how triumphantly shall he get there, how abundant... | |
| Arthur Henry Dyke Acland - Bible - 1852 - 474 pages
...them. Have I done so? Rom. i. 19-21. Yet I have more than they, One from the dead — JESUS. Cept. How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven .' S. Matt. xix. 23. — , — . THE UNJUST JUDGE AND THE WIDOW. Bead S. Luke xviii. 1-8. I. Mm, might... | |
| Richard Whately - Future life - 1853 - 448 pages
...other trial. Health, and power, and wealth, are also great trials ; as our Lord implied when He said, " how hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven !" and any one who withstands such a temptation, and makes a christian use of these advantages, will... | |
| Henry Rogers - Skepticism - 1854 - 290 pages
...all who desired perfection. When the young man went away sorrowing, Jesus moralised on it, saying, ' How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven:' which again shows that an abrupt renunciation of wealth was to be the general and ordinary method of... | |
| Henry Rogers - Faith - 1854 - 304 pages
...all who desired perfection. When the young man went away sorrowing, Jesus moralized on it, saying : " How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven ! " which again shows, that an abrupt renunciation of wealth was to be the general and ordinary method... | |
| Henry Rogers - Apologetics - 1856 - 298 pages
...all who desired perfection. When the young man went away sorrowing, Jesus moralized on it, saying : " -How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven ! " which again shows, that an abrupt renunciation of wealth was to be the general and ordinary method... | |
| Francis William Newman - Faith - 1858 - 222 pages
...all who desired perfection. When the young man went away sorrowing, Jesus moralized on it, saying : " How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven :" which again shows, that * Indeed we have in Luke vi. 20-24, a version of the Beatitudes so much... | |
| William Bentley Fowle - Readers - 1859 - 356 pages
...you Scribes, Pharisees, Hypocrites ! " Did he aim to impose upon the Rich? Then the exclamation, " How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of Heaven," was either madness or folly. Did he endeavor to impose upon the Poor ? If he did, it was by preaching... | |
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