Copeland Collection of Special Sermon Series
version 1.0
theWord NT Commentaries Acts
By David Cox
These are all commentaries on Luke’s work on the Acts of the Apostles, or the Acts of the Holy Spirit.
Note that the key phrases in brackets and parentheses () {} like (1pemt) and (2pecmt) are key phrases used to help you make a module set, and get to just these commentaries in a module set so you can quickly flip back and forth between these commentaries on the same books you are studying. You can see my post on theWordtutorial.com where I explain making these module sets in detail for your benefit and ease in searching your theWord module library.
Christian Biographies. In this library we examine different people (outside of the Old and New Testament) that were influential or important people in Christianity, giving the biography of their life and ministry.
These works on Christian biographies can be in any denomination or thought group, and some are more generalized as an overview of many different thought groups or denominations. I have not filtered these Christian biographies as far as good people versus bad people (from my point of view) I am simply offering these as a study material resource so that you have access to material for whomever you wish to study. Continue reading
Edited, with Memoir,
BY THE REV. ALEXANDER BALLOCH GROSART
liverpool
Holy Spirit works TWM.zip pack Multiple Works on the Holy Spirit and spirituality within man, within the redeemed Christians, and also carnality (lack of the Spirit).
Thomas Boston (1676–1732) was a Scottish clergyman. He was born at Duns. His father, John Boston, and his mother, Alison Trotter, were both Covenanters. He was educated at Edinburgh, and licensed in 1697 by the presbytery of Chirnside. In 1699 he became minister of the small parish of Simprin, where there were only 90 examinable persons; previously, he was a schoolmaster in Glencairn. In 1704 he found, while visiting a member of his flock, a book brought into Scotland by a commonwealth soldier. This was the famous Marrow of Modern Divinity, by Edward Fisher, a compendium of the opinions of leading Reformation divines on the doctrine of grace and the offer of the Gospel, which set off the Marrow Controversy.
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These are the works that Henry Law wrote:
The Song of Solomon
Cordials in Temporal Troubles
Beacons of the Bible (continued below)
W. B. Dunkum was a man of extraordinary abilities. He came from a family that has given the Holiness movement many great church leaders.
On this page we host the works of Horatius Bonar in theWord format.
He was the son of James Bonar (1758-1821), Solicitor of Excise for Scotland, and his wife Marjory Pyott Maitland.[1] The family lived in the Broughton district of Edinburgh.[2] He was educated in Edinburgh.
He came from a long line of ministers who served a total of 364 years in the Church of Scotland. One of eleven children, his brothers John James and Andrew Alexander were also ministers of the Free Church of Scotland He married Jane Catherine Lundie in 1843 and five of their young children died in succession. Towards the end of their lives, one of their surviving daughters was left a widow with five small children and she returned to live with her parents.
In 1853, Bonar received an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from the University of Aberdeen.
He died at this home, 10 Palmerston Road[3] in the Grange, 31 July 1889. They are buried together in the Canongate Kirkyard in the lair of Alexander Bonar (and his parents), near the bottom of the eastern extension.