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William Nevins

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Born January 1, 1797
Died January 1, 1835 (38 years old)
8 books
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Books

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Sermons

Henry Melvill, Frederick William Robertson, William Paley, William Nevins, Caesarius of Arles, Saint, Adolphe Monod, Robert Smith Candlish, Thomas De Witt Talmage, Henry Martyn, Phillips Brooks, Henry Edward Manning, George J. Mountain, John L. Girardeau, Mark Pattison, Peter Chrysologus, Saint, Archbishop of Ravenna, William Bernard Ullathorne, Jay, William, Laurence Sterne, Davies, Samuel, William Whiting, William Morley Punshon, Gregory T. Bedell, Henry Norman Hudson, Jean Le Rond d'Alembert, Samuel Cooper Thacher, Hugh Mackintosh, Lowell, Charles, Thomas Thellusson Carter, Archibald Alison, Charles Robert Maturin, Howard Crosby, John Guyse, Alfred Gatty, Augustine of Hippo, Henri-Dominique Lacordaire, Edward Dorr Griffin, Chapman, George T., Thomas Bradbury, Artom, Benjamin, Richard Winter Hamilton, John Donne, Logan, John, Jacques Bénigne Bossuet, Arnold, Thomas, Hedge, Frederic Henry, C. H. Spurgeon, Abiel Abbot, Henry Grattan Guinness, Thomas Chalmers, Charles Churchill, Patrick Augustine Sheehan, Charles Pettit McIlvaine, Hugh Blair, Thomas Gisborne, James Richards, Matthew Simpson, Thomas Binney, Samuel Stanhope Smith, John Owen, Rose Burghley, Bruce, Robert, Hugh Latimer, Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Joseph Butler, Samuel Horsley, George W. Bethune, Joseph Addison Alexander, Reginald Heber, Jean-Baptiste Massillon, Oscar A. Romero, Joseph Barber Lightfoot, Samuel Wilberforce, Erskine, Ralph, Clement Clarke Moore, John Caird, Thomas Somerville, Fuller, Richard, Ephraim Peabody, Henry Scott Holland
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These forty-six devotional newspaper articles were published in 1834 and 1835. The focus is on practical outward expressions of the Christian faith. Topics covered include prayer, generosity, enjoyment of religion, and heaven. The Introduction from the book is as follows: “The following pages consist of miscellaneous articles published by the lamented author within the year 1834, and the months of January and February, 1835, chiefly in the New York Observer, with the signature 'M. S.,' the finals of his name. They were written after the insidious disease by which God was pleased to transplant him to a higher sphere of labor had so affected his voice as in a great degree to disable him from his stated public ministrations. This discipline was evidently blessed in his rapid sanctification, his obtaining uncommonly clear views of truth and duty, and his ardent desire to do something to rouse Christians to greater attainments in personal holiness, and through their efforts and prayers to bless the world. His mind acted with unwonted vigor; he panted to speak to multitudes for God and eternity, and adopted the only means then remaining to him—his pen. When about two-thirds of the articles were written, he was called suddenly to part with his beloved wife; and the hallowed influence of the affliction is most apparent in the subsequent articles, the last of which, 'Heaven’s Attractions,' with the additional fragment, seemed almost prophetic of the event which was soon to follow.”