Download files
Complete book:
Individual page:
Thumbnail gallery: Grid view | List view
THE DOCTRINE
OF,THE
CROSS OF CHRIST
STATED AND IMPROVED.
Where shall the guilty who hath lost
Jehovah’s favour by his sin,
! Find worth which he can safely trust,
A righteousness to glory in ?
Behold the cross! the blood divine
W Inch there for sons of wrath was spilt!
Here’s worth enough to glory in.
Enough to cleanse the foulest guilt.
The refined system of religion, which is at
;his day adopted by many, is unsuitable to
he case of anxious guilty criminals. It is
usuffiqient to give substantial peace to a
bounded conscience ; insufficient to furnish
proper reply to that most important ©f all
iquiries, “ What must I do to be saved?”
OF,THE
CROSS OF CHRIST
STATED AND IMPROVED.
Where shall the guilty who hath lost
Jehovah’s favour by his sin,
! Find worth which he can safely trust,
A righteousness to glory in ?
Behold the cross! the blood divine
W Inch there for sons of wrath was spilt!
Here’s worth enough to glory in.
Enough to cleanse the foulest guilt.
The refined system of religion, which is at
;his day adopted by many, is unsuitable to
he case of anxious guilty criminals. It is
usuffiqient to give substantial peace to a
bounded conscience ; insufficient to furnish
proper reply to that most important ©f all
iquiries, “ What must I do to be saved?”
Set display mode to: Universal Viewer | Mirador | Large image | Transcription
Images and transcriptions on this page, including medium image downloads, may be used under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence unless otherwise stated.
Chapbooks printed in Scotland > Religion & morality > Doctrine of the cross of Christ, stated and improved > (2) |
---|
Permanent URL | https://digital.nls.uk/117717759 |
---|
Description | Over 3,000 chapbooks published in Scotland in the 18th and 19th centuries. Subjects include courtship, humour, occupations, fairs, apparitions, war, politics, crime, executions, Jacobites, transvestites, and freemasonry. Chapbooks are small booklets of 8, 12, 16 and 24 pages, often illustrated with crude woodcuts. Produced cheaply and sold by peddlars on the streets, they formed the staple reading material of the common people, along with broadsides. |
---|---|
Additional NLS resources: |
|
More information |