A Treatise on Divine Contentment

الغلاف الأمامي
Puritan Publications, 13‏/04‏/2012 - 151 من الصفحات

Simeon Ashe wrote this work to demonstrate the Christian’s duty in being submissive to God’s providences. This is every Christian’s holy and gracious duty in this life, and the manner of a Christian is found chiefly in his disposition of being in a holy frame of contentment. Ashe says in opposition to contentment, that “discontentment is to the soul, as a disease to the body. It puts it out of temper, and hinders its regular and sublime motions heaven-ward constantly.”

The divines who recommend this work said that it is “one of the best works of the kind ever written.” Ashe is biblical, penetrating, practical, simple, and spreads the richness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ throughout the entire work.  He expounds this treatise from the classic verse in Phil. 4:11, “I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.”

This is not a scan or facsimile, and contains an active table of contents for electronic versions.

 

المحتوى

Reasons Pressing to Holy Contentment
41
Use How a Christian May Make His Life Comfortable
45
Use 2 A Check to the Discontented Christian
47
Use 3 A Persuasive to Contentment
50
Divine Motives to Contentment
76
Three Things Inserted by Way of Caution
117
Use 4 Has He learned this Divine Art
124
Rules About Contentment
130

The Resolving of Some Questions
36
Showing the Nature of Contentment
38

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نبذة عن المؤلف (2012)

Simeon Ashe (d. 1662) was an English nonconformist minister of the Gospel and a member of the Westminster Assembly. Edmund Calamy (1600-1666) said of him that Ashe was, “a man of great sincerity, humility, benevolence, prudence, and patience: as eminently diligent in preaching the glorious gospel of the grace of God in season and out of season.” When he died, it was said that the church had lost a choice pillar and that the city of London had lost an ancient, faithful minister. 

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