| Randolph Sinks Foster - 1889 - 360 Seiten
...to that of religious belief. Will the change of subjects change the law ? Let the proposition be, " Jesus Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man," or any other essential doctrine of the Christian religion. The question is, What relation has reason... | |
| 1890 - 652 Seiten
...everlasting life!" "It is appointed unto man once to die, and from this death none are exempt; but Jesus Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man. This was the second death — the bitter cup which he drank to the dregs, and through the drinking... | |
| Louis Albert Banks - 1891 - 278 Seiten
...then, in regard to these warnings I have this to say : I am sent out to preach a gospel that declares that Jesus Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man. I am sent out to preach by virtue of a commission which says, Go ye into all the world, and preach... | |
| William Nast Brodbeck - 1898 - 330 Seiten
...but also for the sins of the whole world ; " the great truth announced by the apostle when he says Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death " for every man;" the great truth which enables every human being born into the world to say, with the apostle, " The... | |
| Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society - 1898 - 60 Seiten
...were under the I/aw, ' ' — but the value of his death extended beyond that people, as it is written, "Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death for every man." (Heb. 2:9.) And it was after he had thus "died for all" and had risen again, that he gave his disciples... | |
| Samuel Walter Gamble - 1900 - 214 Seiten
...remembrance of the blessings resulting from deliverance, and the life of freedom in the temporal Canaan. But Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death for every man. And as the human family is more than the children of Israel, as freedom from sin is higher than freedom... | |
| Bishop Oscar Penn Fitzgerald - 1901 - 378 Seiten
...foreknowledge and the free agency of man, and all correlated facts, we are easily confounded ; but when we read that Jesus Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man, the doctrine of election seems clear enough. Here it is: "The elect are whosoever will; the nonelect... | |
| William Alfred Quayle - 1901 - 292 Seiten
...though, to be sure, we gain in the world conception, yet in so gaining we lose in individual conception. "Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death for every man" — a wide, celestial notion unquestionably, but one which, in its ampleness, in effect lessens our... | |
| W. T. Dale - 1905 - 200 Seiten
...spirit," proclaiming that "Yet there is room" that "the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin" and that "Jesus Christ by the grace of God tasted death for every man." TELL OTHERS. — As we rejoice in the fact that Cumberland doctrines are good for everybody, for the... | |
| Henry True Besse - 1908 - 594 Seiten
...Millennium. — Rev. 15: 5-8. " That the basis of Hope, for the Church and the World, lies in the fact that ' Jesus Christ, by the grace of God, tasted death for every man,' a ransom for all, and will be ' the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world,'... | |
| |