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Prejudices, of education, apt to mislead, 339.

Theological, what, 351. Prepofitions, 374, 375, 376.

Πρεπον, το, what, 22.

Prideaux, Dean, his account, of the Auguftan enrollment, 330.

Of the fuperior glory of the fecond temple, 50.

Of the Roman empire at Chrift's birth, 317.
Of the importance of public preaching, 14.

Priesthood, Jewish, in what ftate when Chrift was born,

324.

Prieft-ridden, a conjecture on the rise of the expreffion, 234.
Primitive church, and chriftians, 271.

Principles, why not cognizable by the civil magiftrate, 247.
Prior ridicules bad fyllogifm, 409.
Prophecies, how to difcufs, 47.

Propofitions, categorical, 57. 64.
How to difcufs, 194, &c.

Profopopeias, what damage Voffius thought they had done,

9.

Proteftants, perfecuting, the only fecurity against them. 249, 250.

Proverbs, popular, beft excluded from fermons, 21.
Ancient, fhould be ftudied, 204.

Providence, doctrine of, 367, 368, 369.

God is to be glorified in the most minute articles of, 363, 364.

A very remarkable ftory of, 278, 279.

Wonderfully difplayed in favour of Cyrus, and Nebu chadnezzar, 280.

Provinciai dialect, S. Paul juftified in the ufe of his, 338. Prudence, how neceffary to a preacher, 416.

Pfalms, how to difcufs many of them, 50.

Yux, meaning of, 67.

Puente, Father, his partial felf-examination, 125. Puffendorf, harmonizes christianity and civil polity, 274. Quoted, 212.

Punctuation, ancient, too trifling to be difcuffed in a fer

mon, 33.

Punishment, future, ridiculed by Cicero, 120.

Vicarious, 128.

Purity, of heart, effential to a preacher, 95.

Purity of diction, the fuperior views of a preacher will excufe his inattention to it in some cases, 12.

Puys, his treatment by the Jefuits, 109.

Q

Qualifications, what required in a minifter, 90.

Quefnel, Father, his plain reflections on John i. 14. 159. Questions, of fome divines indecent and endless, 18. 325, 326.

Four, addreffed to fome divines, 195. Quintilian, his notion of decorum, 24. Of pleafantry, 16.

Recommends perfpicuity, 12. 59. 388.

Divifion, 44.

Imitation, 116.

Modefty, 19.

Extempore fpeaking, 84. 91.

Teaching boys purity of diction by contrast,

29.

Complains of fhort-hand writers, 322.
Quotations, the ufe and abuse of, 35.
From the old teftament, how to difcufs, 49.

Rabbies, poor expofitors, 52.

Their writings ufeful, 320.

R

Radcliffe, Dr. his library, 39.

Rammizini, Dr. his reflections on clerical corpulency, 433. Ramfay, complains of the intolerance of papifts, and fome proteftants, 250.

Ramus, his account of Virgil's fourth Eclogue, 166.
Reading, why fome derive little benefit from it, 365.
Sermons, ftatute of Charles II. against, 84.
Readings, different, best omitted in preaching, 33.
Reafon, four degrees in Locke's account, 71.

Its ufe in revelation, 151, &c.

Right reafon and regenerate reafon diftinguished by divines, 151.

Reasoning, its force, 191.

Popular, the best for common ufe, 30, 31. 70, &c.
The foul of eloquence, 86.

May be overstrained, 30, &c.

Reeve, his fermon at court at Queen Ann's death, 389, 390.

Reformers,

Reformers, ftudied divinity as a fcience, 365.

How they thought the law was to be preached, 122.

Their doctrine better than their practice in regard to

toleration, 227.

Reizius, his opinion of Annas and Caiaphas, 324.

Reland referred to, 302.

Religion, debased by a mixture with extraneous articles,

215.

Retz, Cardinal de, what makes him appear obfcure, 292. Revenues, church, fiduciary, 348.

Reynolds, Bishop, examples from him, 370. 392.

Rhenferd, what mifguided him in expounding fcripture, 276.

Rhymes, Luther employed homely ones to popular edification, 22.

Rib, of Adam, curious account of, 435.

Ribadeneira, his prayer at unchoking a perfon, 266.
Rivet cenfures enthusiasm, 97.

Rivinus, his account of the ferpent, that feduced Eve, 309,

310.

Robinfon, John, his liberal notions of government, 247,

248.

His Just remarks on a difputatious fpirit, 228, 229.
Roche, De, his method of defending myfteries, 305.
Romaine, cenfures Warburton's Legation, 133.
Romans, their alliances, 328.

Rome, church of, its cruelty and immorality, 249.

Idolatry, 183.
Superftition, 254.
Enthufiafm, 248, &c.

Reafoning, 265, &c.

On what principles founded, 233. 341.

Rollin, his remarks on pagan ignorance, 121, 122.
On metaphors, 29.

On obfcurity,

11.

On ftudying the fathers, 102.

Rouffeau, his notions of civil fociety, 242, 243.

Rowe, Mrs. her letters, a conjecture concerning them, 357. Rudd, Sayer, his arguments for pre-existence, 311, 312. Rules, mere, their inefficacy, 292.

Dangerous without tafte, 379.

Ruft, Bishop, endeavoured to revive Origenifm, 311.

Sabellians,

S

Sabellians, who, 311.

Sacheverell, a feditious preacher, 407, 408.

Sagan, who, 324.

Saints, invocation of, 9. 266.

Saldenus, wrote well on the ufe and abuse of books, 104.
Salvation,

295.

Samuel, Prophet, various opinions of his apparition, 301.
Sancroft, Archbishop, his extravagant fophitry, 197..
Sanctius, his notion of grammatical figures, 423.

Sandius, his rash affertion concerning the pentateuch, 143.
Satisfaction for fin, 126. 128, 129.

Saumaife, Claude de, his notion of meffengers, 174.

His account of the variations in enumerations of scripture verses, 414.

Saurin, James, examples from him, 20. 31. 47. 49. 53. 79. 86. 193. 371. 411.

Scaliger, Jofeph, whom he thought the best criticks, 101.
His opinion of Chryfoftom, 103.

Of Calvin,

232.

Laments the want of literature of his contemporaries, 262: Why he wished himself illiterate, 156.

His emendation of Mark ix. 49. 261.

Referred to, 319.

Schifm, whether proteftant diffenters are guilty of it, 258. Schifmaticks, how Chrift treated them, 77..

Schlichting, his expofition of Rom. iv. 1. 73.

Scholaftick divinity too curious for the pulpit, 16, 17.
Schulzius, what he thought of Adam, 308.

Sclater, Dr. his inaccuracy, 414.

Scripture, holy, its evidence, 142.

Perfection, 143. 146.

Sufficiency, 316.

Variety, 392. 413.
General ftyle, 336.

Peculiar phraseology, 335.

Beft expounded by itself, 269.

Scrupulofity, what, 256, 257.

Scultetus, his fenfe of apayyas, 212.

Secundianus converted by reading Virgil, 166.

Sedulius, his notion of S. Paul's cloak, 437.

Selden, corrected, 161.,

Unites truth and love, 229.

Selle,

Selle, Father, his fermon on Mary Magdalen, 237.
Self-denial, what, effential to a minister, 347-
Seneca, his ftyle, 390.

Hurt the latin language, 26.

His opinion of great libraries, 104.

Thought adverfity effential to moral greatnefs, 364, 365. Senfe, good common, a good expofitor of scripture, 39. Sepher, what, 144.

Septuagint, fometimes mified the fathers, 434

Sermons, the beft, what, 167. 205. 192. 113. 359-
Sets cf, what, 7.

Serpent, various opinions of, 309, 310.

Shaftfbury, Earl of, cenfures loofe writers, 208, 209.
Defcribes and reproves fuperftition, 255, 256.

Shakespear's fool, his murky manner of moralizing, 117,

118.

Sherlock, Dean, his doctrine of providence, 367.
Sherlock, Bishop, wrote well against deifm, 318.
Shining thoughts obfcure a fubject, 391.

Short hand writing recommended to youth, 322.

Simon, Father, his hypothefis on the archives of religion,

329.

His opinion of the maforetical lectio n 143. Simony, what, 325.

Simple terms, 205, &c.

Simplicity of revelation, 313.

Of a fermon,

21.

TO SIMPLIFY a fubject, the highest pulpit-excellence, 359. Sin, the only formidable in nature, 364.

Sine-cures, encourage idleness, 325.

Single eye, what, 364.

Sinigaglia, Bishop, his convenient method of creed-making, 380.

Exλpas, what it means, 106, 107.

Smallbrooke, Bishop, wrote well against deifm, 318.

Smalridge, Bishop, example from him, 387.

Smedtymnuus, fcout the cant No bishop-No king, 432.

Snape, Dr. example from him, 409.

Sobriety of preaching, what, 15.

Social religion, on what founded, 243.
Socinians, who, 311.

Their notion of the use of reason in religion, 152, 153.

Socinians,

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