Jones, Sir William, a champion for Christianity, [348].
K.
Kenyon, Lord Chief Justice, commendations of, [302].
L.
Language, common, concerning the importance of Christianity, [5].
— concerning human corruption, [15].
— concerning affections towards our Saviour, and Holy Spirit’s operations, [51], [52].
— concerning terms of acceptance with God, [85]—[87].
— concerning mode of relaxing the strictness of Christian precept, [132], [133].
— concerning human judicatures, [133].
— concerning amiable tempers and useful lives, [179].
— common to people desirous of repenting, [235].
Learning, votaries of, [127].
Life, Christian, illustrated under figure of a traveller, [217]—[219].
— Christian’s, a life of faith, [137]—[140].
Liturgy, bad effects to be feared from its disuse, [297].
Lives, several mentioned, [336].
Love, true signs of it, [46], [47].
— of God, its essential characters, [110].
— of Christ, justly to be expected of us, [69], [70], [77], [78], [107], [108].
— means of exciting it, [99], [100].
— of God, defective in nominal Christians, [219], [220].
— of God, proofs of its being defective, [220]—[224].
— of fellow-creatures, nominal Christians defective in, [225].
— of fellow-creatures, true marks of, [226]—[229].
— of God, best enforced by Christianity’s peculiarities, [242].
— Christians to cultivate this grace above all others, [324].
— its excellent effects in the true Christian, [325].
— of fellow-creatures best enforced by peculiar doctrines, [243], [244].
Low standard of practice generally prevailing, [102], [103], [117]—[135].
Lower classes, not unfit that true doctrine of acceptance should be stated to them, [93], [94].
M.
McLaurin, his essays and sermons referred to, [83], [97].
Maurice, Mr. a defender of Christianity, [348].
Maxims, which prove human corruption, [21].
Medium, religious, almost lost, [130].
Milton, quoted, [43].
Moral, attainments rated above intellectual, by Christianity, [257].
— attainments, how much more we can excel in them than in intellectual ones, [259].
Moravians, commendation of, [56].
N.
Natural condition of man without Christianity, [31]—[33].
Nature, essential, of true practical Christianity, [129].
Necessity, excuse on the plea of, stated, and answered, [36]—[42].
— opponent on the ground of, how best opposed, [37], [38].
Nominal and real Christian, distinction between them most important, [306].
Novels, prove how peculiarities of Christianity have fallen into neglect, [277], [278].