| Thomas Gregory - Booksellers' catalogs - 1708 - 368 pages
...with him freely give us all things? He, who fpar^J not himfelf, but, when he war in tne Form or Nature of God, and thought it no Robbery to be equal with God, made himfelf of no Reputation, but took upon him the Form or Nature of a Servant, and was made in the... | |
| Daniel Wilcox - Sermons, English - 1744 - 454 pages
...brightnefs of his Father's glory, and the exprefs image of his perfon : he ftooped to this, who was in the form of God, and thought it no robbery to be equal with him : he that was rich, became poor, to the enriching of fouls that were ready to perifh, but whom... | |
| Essay - 1747 - 198 pages
...ought, idly, To confider what our blefied Lcrd has done and fuffered for us: That altho' our Saviourwas God, and thought It no Robbery to be equal with God, yet he made Umfelf- of no Reputation ft, and left the Throne of his Glory to dwell among us ||J ; not in a... | |
| Ralph Erskine - Bible - 1763 - 586 pages
...his loving undertaking and engagement. But, Secondly, Who is this ? It is one, who, though he was in the form of God, and thought it no robbery to be equal •with God, yet took upon him the form of a fervanf, and was made in the likencfs of man ; and being Jound in fajhion... | |
| John Flavel - 1770 - 520 pages
...and will. His next neigh* bonr. His other felf. You have the fenfe of it in Phil. ii. 6. He was in the form of God, and thought it no robbery to be equal with God. A aa 2 * ~OJ Evigilavit, fufcitavit. Buxtorf. . . f Paftaram vocat Chriftum, a.^mui^a.,, animarnm nojtrarum.... | |
| George Whitefield - Presbyterian Church - 1772 - 490 pages
...that; GOD might be juft in juftifying the ungodly, though " he was in the form of GOD, and therefore thought it no robbery to be equal with GOD ; yet he took upon him the form of a fervant," even human nature. In that nature he obeyed, and thereby fulfilled the whole moral law in... | |
| Nathaniel Spinckes - Church work with the sick - 1775 - 468 pages
...for our fakes he became poor, that we through bis poverty might be rich. And (r) though he were in the form of God, and thought it no robbery to be equal with God, yet made he himfelf of no reputation, but took upon himfelf the form of a fervant, and was made in the... | |
| John Newton - Messiah - 1786 - 512 pages
...MESSIAH was manifefted in the flefli. 3. In the fulnefs of time, he veiled his glory. He who -was in the form of Go'd, and thought it no robbery to be equal with God, took upon him the form ofafervant, and was made vf a 'woman, 'made under the law *. Then the union... | |
| John Brown - Devotional literature - 1792 - 362 pages
..." no plealure in the death of the wicked ;" and ly blejjmg he 'will blefs me. THERE, he, who was in the form of God, and thought it no robbery to be equal with God, emptied himlelf of his glory : HERE, he confers on me, an exceeding and ettrnal weight of glory; the... | |
| George Whitefield, Josiah Smith - Methodist Church - 1794 - 312 pages
...And that God might be juft in juftifying the ungodly, though he was in the form of God, and therefore thought it no robbery to be equal with God, yet he took upon him the form, of a fervant, even human nature. In that nature he ofceyed, and thereby fulfilled the whole moral law ia... | |
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