Selected quad for the lemma: book_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
book_n authority_n new_a testament_n 2,897 5 7.9529 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A67007 An essay toward a natural history of the earth and terrestrial bodies, especially minerals : as also of the sea, rivers, and springs : with an account of the universal deluge : and of the effects that it had upon the earth / by John Woodward ... Woodward, John, 1665-1728. 1695 (1695) Wing W3510; ESTC R1666 113,913 296

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

such a Natural Form of the Year as is that which is at present establish'd he could scarcely ever do it in so few Words again that were so fit and proper so full and express especially if by Signs in this place Months are intended for then we have here first the Year and that subdivided into its usual Parts the four Quarters or Seasons the twelve Signs or Months and Days nay at the same time from the 19th Verse we learn that this Establishment is within four days as old as the World But further Gen. viii 21 22. And the Lord said in his heart I will not again curse the ground neither will I again smite any more every thing living as I have done While the Earth remaineth Seed-time and Harvest and Cold and Heat and Summer and Winter and Day and Night shall not cease This was pronounc'd upon Noah's Sacrificing at his coming forth of the Ark after the Deluge was over and implies that there had indeed then lately been a mighty Confusion of Things for the time an Interruption and Perturbation of the ordinary Course of them and a Cessation and Suspension of the Laws of Nature but withall gives Security and Assurance that there should never be the like any more to the End of the World that for the future they should all run again in their old Chanel and that particularly there should be the same Vicissitudes of Seasons and Alternations of Heat and Cold that were before the Del●ge FINIS Books Printed for Richard Wilkin at the King's-Head in S. Paul's Church-Yard LEtters concerning the Love of God between the Author of the Proposal to the Ladies and Mr. Iohn Norris wherein his late Discourse shewing that it ought to be entire and exclusive of all other Loves is farther clear'd and justified Octavo A Proposal to the Ladies for the Advancement of their true and greatest Interest By a Lover of her Sex Twelves The Second Edition A Vindication of the Truth of Christian Religion against the Objections of all Modern Opposers By Iames Abbadie D. D. Octavo A second Part of the Enquiry into several remarkable Texts of the Old and New Testament which contain some Difficulty in them with a probable Resolution of them The second Edition Octavo A Discourse concerning the Authority Style and Perfection of the Books of the Old and New Testament with a continued Illustration of several difficult Texts of Scripture throughout the whole work Both by Iohn Edwards B. D. sometime Fellow of St. Iohn's College in Cambridge Octavo The Glorious Epiphany with the Devout Christians Love to it The Second Edition Octavo Search the Scriptures A Treatise shewing that all Christians ought to read the Holy Books with Directions to them therein A Discourse concerning Prayer especially of frequenting the daily Publick Prayers All three by the Reverend Sim. Patrick D. D. The Old Religion demonstrated in the Principles and described in the Life and Practice thereof By I. Goodman D. D. The Second Edition Twelves ‖ I call those Fissures which distinguish the St●ne into Strata Horizontal ones and those which intersect these Perpendicular not so much with respect to the present site of the Strata which as I shall shew is altered in many places as to its original situation concerning which see Part 2. Consect 5. † Part 4. Consect 2. * Concerning these Conchitae Cochlitae c. see Part 4. Cons. 2. and Part 5. Cons. 5. † Part 4. Conf. 2. * Vid. Part 2. Cons. 2. † Vid. Part 2. Cons. 3. * Part 5. Cons. 1. c. † Part 3. Sect. 1. Cons. 8. * Part 2. and Part 5. * Part 2. * Part 2. Cons. 2. c. * Pag. 29 c. supra and Part 2. Cons. 3. † Cons. pag. 28. and Part 2. Cons. 3. ‖ Part 5. Cons. 4. * Confer Part 3. Sect. 2. Cons. 2 3. * Vid. Part 3. Sect. 1. Consect 1. † Confer p. 29 c. * Part 4. Cons●ct 2. ‖ Conf. Conf. 5. supra G●n vi 5. ‖ Matth. xxiv 38. * Gen. vi 2. † Gen. vi 11 12. * Confer Part 6. Dis. 3. † Gen. 6.3 * Gen. vi 13 And behold I will DESTROY them with THE EARTH And again at the Covenant made with Noah after the Deluge more distinctly Gen. ix 11 Neither shall all flesh be cut off any more by the waters of a flood neither shall there any more be A FLOOD TO DESTROY THE EARTH the latter part whereof is render'd somewhat more expresly by the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. And there shall not be any more a-Deluge of Water to destroy the WHOLE EARTH And the vulg Lat. Neque erit deinceps Diluvium dissipans terram i. e. Neither shall there be hereafter a Deluge to dissipate or dissolve the Earth And of this Dissolution of the Earth there was a Tradition amongst the Ancients both Iews and Gentiles † Dr. Burnet Theory of the Earth ‖ Vid. Cons. 2. supra ** Part 4. Cons. 3. ‖ Vid. Cons. 3. supra * Confen p. 55. seq * Conf. Part 6. † Conf. Part 3. Sect. 2. Con● 7. Gen. iii. Gen. iv * Conf. Rom. v. 12. and 1 Cor. xv 21 22. ‖ Gen. ii 17. † Gen. v. 5. * Gen. viii 20 21. * Gen. ix 11. ‖ Gen ix 25 26 27. † Gen. ii 5 * Vid. Part 3. Sect. 1. Consect 1. and Sect. 2. Cons. 2 3 † Confer Part 3. Sect. 1. Cons. 12. * Moss is the Name used all over the North of England instead of Fen. † Conf. Cons. 3. sup●a * Confer Part 5. Consect 2. † Heat and Fire differ but in degree and Heat is Fire only in lesser quantity Fire I shall shew to be a fluid consisting of Parts extremely small and light and consequently very subtile active and susceptive of Motion An Aggregate of these Parts in such number as to be visible to the Eye is what we call Flame and Fire a lesser thinner and more dispers'd Collection Heat and Warmth † Vid. Cons. 10. infra * Pag. 47. † Conf. pag. 12● * Confer pag. 125. † Part 2 Cons. 3. * Vid. Cons. 8. Supra * Conser Cons. 10. supra † Vid. Cons. 2. supra ‖ Conf. Consect 13. infra † Vid. Cons. 14. infra * Vid. Part 2. Cons. 8. * It is ind●e● by this very heat that their Water is borne unto them from our the Abyss Vid. Cens. 8. supra † Vid. Cons. 12. and 13. supra ‖ Pag. 96. * Lib. 1. c. 9. to 12. * AsPart 2. Cons. 4. ‖ As Part 2. Cons. 6. * Cons. 8. supra † Part 4. Cons. 5. ‖ Part 2. Cons. 6 7 8. † Conf. Cons. 8. supra † Gen. 7. 19. ‖ Theory of Earth l. 1. c. 2. ‖ Princ. Pbilos 1. 4. * Gen. vii 20. ‖ Conf. Sect. 1. Cons. 12. † Part 2. Cons. 6. * Sect. 1. supra Cons. 2. † Confer Part 6. Sub finem ‖ Theory of the Earth l. 1.c.6.8