| James R. Jacob - 2002 - 236 páginas
...despite his Greek, cannot be trusted because of' his juggling carriage and his trimming,' 34 becoming ' all things to all men that he might by all means save some.' 35 The second of Stubbe's four pivotal transformations, the next 'revolution' in the history of the... | |
| Thomas F. X. Noble, Thomas Head - 1995 - 436 páginas
...oppressing and browbeating the freedmen and slaves but, in the words of the apostle, he had "become all things to all men that [he] might by all means save some" (1 Cor 9.22). He did not take upon himself the office of preacher either as an expression of his caprice... | |
| Lee Witness - 1996 - 302 páginas
...of good things— 10:14-15. 5. To enslave himself to all that he might gain the more and to become all things to all men that he might by all means save some, doing all things for the sake of the gospel; otherwise, it would be a woe to him, for he was entrusted... | |
| Nicholas Tyacke - 2001 - 372 páginas
...for his attacks on Arminian heresy. In his sermon of 1605 he took as his model St. Paul, who became 'all things to all men' that he might 'by all means save some', and placed ceremonial conformity firmly in the context of the elect's calling to salvation by the sowing... | |
| William Gibson - 2004 - 396 páginas
...gentle towards all men' and in particular that 'he became as a Jew that he might gain the Jews . . . he was made all things to all men, that he might by all means save some.' A clearer statement of Benjamin Hoadly's own objectives for the Dissenters could not be found. St Paul,... | |
| Anthony L. Chute - 2005 - 256 páginas
...inhabitants therein would have repented (Matthew 1 1 :24); and the Apostle Paul determined to become "all things to all men, that [he] might by all means save some."75 If Primitive Baptists wished to determine one's doctrine by a simple statement or two, then... | |
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