| John Flavel - Conversion - 1689 - 412 pages
...His incarnation impoverished his reputation. Phil. 2 : 7. How poor was Christ when he said, " But I am a worm, and no man ; a reproach of men, and despised of the people." Psalm 22 : 6. How poor in temporal comforts, when he said, " The foxes have holes, and the birds of... | |
| John Tillotson - Sermons, English - 1757 - 496 pages
...that fee me, •" laugh me to fcorn ; they moot out the lip, they ** make rhe head, faying, He trufled on the LORD, " that he would deliver him : let him deliver him, E e 4 "feeing - " feeinpr he delighted in him." And this was moft . ^punctual!;/ accomplifned Matt.... | |
| Shippie Townsend - Baptism - 1773 - 90 pages
...Lord over us ? — Pfalm xxii. 7,8. tf They moot out the lip, they make the head, faying, he trufted on the Lord, that he would deliver him ; let him deliver him, feeing he delighted in him." — Pfalm xli. 7, 8. " All that hate me, whifpef" together againft me... | |
| Bible - 1788 - 598 pages
...they that fee me, laugh me to fcorn : they moot out the lip, they fhake the head, faying, 8 He trufted on the Lord, that he would deliver him : let him deliver him, feeing he delighted in him. 9 But thou art he that took me out of the womb ; thou didft make me hope,... | |
| Sermons - 1789 - 416 pages
...All that fee me, laugh me to fcorn : they fhoot out the lip, and fbake the head, faying, He trufted on the Lord, that he would deliver him : let him deliver him, feeing he delight eth in him. (h) He was cut off from the land of the living. (i) They Jball took on... | |
| Thomas Robinson - Bible - 1792 - 514 pages
...they that fee me laugh me to fcorn: they {hoot out the lip, they {hake the head, faying, Hs trufted on the Lord, that he would deliver him: let him deliver him, feeing he delighted in him*." How aftoniftiing, that, in their profane fneers, they applied the very... | |
| 310 pages
...pleasant to be only a worm ; all, but it is conformity with Him whoso experience down here was — "I am a WORM, and no man ; a reproach of men, and despised of the people." (Pa. xxii.) Satan is ever seeking to delude us with the thought that much strength is desirable, and... | |
| George Burder - 1835 - 654 pages
...be a poor man— so poor, that he had not a place where to lay his head — to be a despised man—' A worm and no man, a reproach of men, and despised of the people '—to be a ' man of sorrows' and especially ' to bear the contradiction of sinners against himself.'... | |
| Jacques Saurin, Robert Robinson - Sermons, French - 1804 - 442 pages
...indeed the serpent shall bruise his heel ? What would become of this prophetic saying of the psalmist, / am a worm, and no man ; a reproach of men, and despised of the people ? Psal. xxii. 6. What would become of this prophecy of Isaiah, Hehath no form nor comeliness ; when... | |
| John Logan - Sermons, English - 1804 - 504 pages
...that, fee me, " laugh me to fcorn : they fhoot out the lip, they " fluke the head, faying, he trufted on the Lord, " that he would deliver him : let him deliver him, " feeing he delighted in him." There is not a circumftance in the hiflory of mankind fo ignominious,... | |
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