Puritan Jeremiah Burroughs - The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment (Christian audio book)

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  • čas přidán 8. 10. 2015
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    Puritan Jeremiah Burroughs - The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment
    0:00:00:00 Chapter 1 - Christian Contentment Described
    1:00:30:00 Chapter 2 - The Mystery of Contentment
    1:36:08:00 Chapter 3 - The Mystery of Contentment, Continued
    2:16:58:00 Chapter 4 - The Mystery of Contentment, Concluded
    2:42:53:00 Chapter 5 - How Christ Teaches Contentment
    “Though I cannot know what your afflictions are, yet I know what your mercies are, and I know they are so great that I am sure there can be no afflictions in this world as great as the mercies you have. If it were only this mercy, that you have this day of grace and salvation continued to you: it is a greater mercy than any affliction. Set any affliction beside this mercy and see which would weigh heaviest; this is certainly greater than any affliction. That you have the day of grace and salvation, that you are not now in hell, this is a greater mercy. That you have the sound of the Gospel still in your ears, that you have the use of your reason: this is a greater mercy than your afflictions.” - Jeremiah Burroughs
    Jeremiah Burroughs (sometimes Burroughes; c. 1600 - London, November 13, 1646) was an English Congregationalist and a well-known Puritan preacher.
    Burroughs studied at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and was graduated M.A. in 1624,[1] but left the university because of non-conformity. He was assistant to Edmund Calamy at Bury St. Edmunds, and in 1631 became rector of Tivetshall, Norfolk. He was suspended for non-conformity in 1636 and soon afterward deprived, he went to Rotterdam (1637) and became “teacher” of the English church there. He returned to England in 1641 and served as preacher at Stepney and Cripplegate, London. He was a member of the Westminster Assembly and one of the few who opposed the Presbyterian majority. While one of the most distinguished of the English Independents, he was one of the most moderate, acting consistently in accordance with the motto on his study door (in Latin and Greek): “Opinionum varietas et opinantium unitas non sunt ασυστατα” (“Difference of belief and unity of believers are not inconsistent”).
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