| John Jortin - 1847 - 212 pages
...literal sense. It may be used in the sense expressed by Dr. Scott, in the paraphrase given above. city ; who lecture, and threaten, and castigate, and bruise, and call this family government," cannot be too severely reprobated. While a firm and decided government is maintained in the family,... | |
| Enoch Lewis, Samuel Rhoads - 1848 - 856 pages
...orthodox symbol of parental duly, but who might really as well be heathens as Christians ; who 'only storm about their house with heathenish ferocity ; who lecture,...It is frightful to think how they batter and bruise the delicate, tender souls of their children, extinguishing in them what they ought to cultivate, crushing... | |
| 1859 - 748 pages
...orthodox symbol of parental duty, but who might really as well be heathens as Christians; who only storm about their house with heathenish ferocity, who lecture,...It is frightful to think how they batter and bruise the delicate, tender souls of their children, extinguishing in them what they ought to cultivate, crushing... | |
| 1853 - 442 pages
...orthodox symbol of parental duty, but who might really as well be heathens as Christians ; who only storm about their house with heathenish ferocity ; who lecture,...It is frightful to think how they batter and bruise the delicate, tender souls of their children, extinguishing in them what they ought to cultivate, crushing... | |
| Elizabeth Nicholson - 1853 - 412 pages
...orthodox symbol of parental duty, but who might really as well be heathens as Christians ; who only storm about their house with heathenish ferocity ; who lecture,...It is frightful to think how they batter and bruise the delicate, tender souls of their children, extinguishing in them what they ought to cultivate, crushing... | |
| Horace Bushnell - 1861 - 448 pages
...orthodox symbol of parental duty, but who might really as well be heathens as Christians; who only storm about their house with heathenish ferocity, who lecture,...It is frightful to think how they batter and bruise the delicate, tender souls of their children, extinguishing in them what they ought to cultivate, crushing... | |
| Horace Bushnell - 1916 - 400 pages
...orthodox symbol of parental duty, but who might really as well be heathens as Christians; who only storm about their house with heathenish ferocity, who lecture,...It is frightful to think how they batter and bruise the delicate, tender souls of their children, extinguishing in them what they ought to cultivate, crushing... | |
| Richard H. Brodhead - 1993 - 260 pages
...the orthodox symbol of parental duty," then "storm about their house with heathenish ferocity, [and] lecture, and threaten, and castigate, and bruise, and call this family government." '8 Cobb's book, entitled The Evil Tendencies of Corporal Punishment as a Means of Moral Discipline... | |
| Gary J. Dorrien - 2001 - 534 pages
...parental duty "might really as well be heathens as Christians." Bushnell censured those "who only storm about their house with heathenish ferocity, who lecture,...dare to speak of this as the nurture of the Lord." It was painful to him to reflect on "how they batter and bruise the delicate, tender souls of their... | |
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