Familiar letters upon a variety of religious subjects . Viz. 1. The danger of infidelity. 2. The evidences of Christianity. 3. The history of our saviour, collected from the prophecies of the Old Testament. 4. The certainty of the facts reported in the Gospel. 5. The internal evidences of Christianity. 6. Objections against the internal evidences answered. 7. God's sovereign grace vindicated, &c. 8. A true and false faith distinguished. 9. A legal and evangelical repentance distinguished. 10. The characters in Rom. vii. distinctly illustrated. 11. Moravian and antinomian justification considered. 12. Imputed righteousness explained and vindicated. 13. The new law of grace examined and disproved. 14. First and secondary justification, a groundless distinction. 15. Justification by works, in James II. considered. 16. Our obligations to good works distinctly stated. 17. The nature and necessity of our union to Christ. 18. Antinomian pleas for licentiousness considered. 19. Directions for a close and comfortable walk with God. By Jonathan Dickinson, A.M. president of the college at New-Jersey.
- Dickinson, Jonathan, 1688-1747.
- Date:
- MDCCLXXV. [1775]
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Familiar letters to a gentleman
Familiar letters upon a variety of religious subjects. Viz. 1. The danger of infidelity. 2. The evidences of Christianity. 3. The history of our saviour, collected from the prophecies of the Old Testament. 4. The certainty of the facts reported in the Gos
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Glasgow : Printed by John Bryce, and sold at his Shop, opposite Gibson's-wynd, Salt-Market, MDCCLXXV. [1775]
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The fourth edition.
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- Full text available: 1775.