abhorrence
Old Testament (0)
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Book of Mormon (2)
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Pearl of Great Price (0)
Edwards (185)
Alma 27:28 And they did look upon shedding the blood of
their brethren with the greatest abhorrence; and they never could be prevailed upon
to take up arms against their brethren; and they never did look upon death with
any degree of terror, for their hope
and views of Christ and the resurrection; therefore, death was swallowed up to
them by the victory of Christ over it.
Alma 13:12 Now they, after being sanctified by the Holy
Ghost, having their garments made white, being pure and spotless before God,
could not look upon sin save it were with abhorrence; and there were many, exceedingly great
many, who were made pure and entered into the rest of the Lord their God.
4. Jonathan Edwards. Religious Affections (WJE Online...
[page 108 | Paragraph | SubSect | Section]
or absent, certain or uncertain, probable or improbable,
arise all those other affections of desire, hope, fear, joy, grief, gratitude,
anger, etc. From a vigorous, affectionate, and fervent love to God, will
necessarily arise other religious affections: hence will arise an intense
hatred and abhorrence
of sin, fear of sin, and a dread of God's displeasure, gratitude to
God for his goodness, complacence and joy in God when God is graciously and
sensibly present, and grief when he is absent, and a joyful hope when a future
enjoyment of God is expected, and fervent zeal for the glory of
29. Jonathan Edwards. Ethical Writings (WJE Online Vol....
[page 246 | Paragraph | SubSect | Section]
them all the honor and respect which becomes us. (2) Love to
God tends to an abhorrence
of sin against God, and so to our
being humbled before him for it. So much as anything is loved, so much will its
contrary be hated; therefore so much as anyone loves God, so much will they
have an abhorrence
of sin against God; and having an abhorrence of sin against God will tend to our abhorring ourselves for
it, and so humbling ourselves for it before God. Thus I have shown how divine
love which is the sum of the Christian temper implies and tends to humility.
60. Jonathan Edwards. Sermons and Discourses, 1730-1733...
[page 341 | Paragraph | Sub2Sect | SubSect | Section]
effectually prevent his putting forth his hand and eating
and living forever. 3. If we consider this anger of God as a holy anger. God,
being an infinitely holy being, could do no other than be implacably displeased
with sin. God
could not be an infinitely holy God and not have loathing and abhorrence of sin and of those that are under the guilt of it. God
being so holy a God, therefore he would by no means admit a guilty and filthy
creature to the possession and enjoyment of eternal life. It would have been a
disparagement to the holiness of God if he had so. So that it was
130. Jonathan Edwards. Sermons,
Series II, 1729 (WJE... [Paragraph | Section]
miserable Company they shall be
treated alike at the day of Judgment they shall stand together. and they shall
be turned away together & they shall into the same Everlasting fire and
will be looked
upon with the same abhorrence to all Eternity By the saints and Angels.
_________________________ 4 How much will your Parentage be to your shame now
you are not [-] ashamed of it you hold up your head bold- ly but you Come to be
exposed to
165. Jonathan Edwards. Sermons, Series II, 1733 (WJE...
[Paragraph | Section]
with G. they that see most of G. see most of their own
vilen. men dont Learn their vileness any other way than by a sight of Gods Glory
they that have the most Love to G. they have the Great abhorrence of sin &
the Greatest
Abhorrence of thems. for sin . they
that are of the most humble broken sp. they are most obedient to Gods Command
they will be most Ready to submit to Gods authority a spirit of obedience is a
humble
52. Jonathan Edwards. Sermons and Discourses: 1723-1729...
[page 529 | Paragraph | Sub2Sect | SubSect | Section]
25:41Matthew 25:41]. How dreadful will be those words of the
judge to the poor, wretched, despairing souls on the left hand! How amazing
will every syllable of it be, how will it pierce them to the soul! The words of the
sentence, they show the greatest abhorrence and
wrath. Christ will bid them depart. He'll send them away from his presence,
will remove them forever, far out of his sight, into an everlasting separation from God,
as those [that] are most loathsome and unfit
to be in his presence, and unfit for any sort of communion with him.
Edwards - That what was the especial reason of God's
treating them with such manifestations of abhorrence, and refusing any intercourse with
them, was, that they joined idolatry with a profession of his name under a
pretence of worshipping him, or had a disposition so to
do,
https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=XRBNP3sIueIC&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA323
Edwards - wounded men, in grievous pain on their beds, by
reason of the continual
wars that they had of late been
embroiled in. They howled in pain and distress on their beds, and cried that
God would help them. When he slew them, then they sought him, but it was all in
hypocrisy, and probably they cried in their prayers under distress with a loud
voice, as they used to cry to Baal and other idols, as if they must be awaken
ed, or could be prevailed upon by the loudness of the noise they made ; but
God, to show his abhorrence of it, calls it
howling.
https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=XRBNP3sIueIC&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA417
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