We command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little condemned to death : but rather let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the people, and let not be destroyed for little God's handy-work, and His own purchase... The Quarterly Review - Page 342edited by - 1914Full view - About this book
| Charles MacFarlane - 1844 - 488 pages
...trespass against us. And we command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little, condemned to death, but rather let gentle punishments be decreed, for the benefit of the people ; and let not be destroyed for little God's handiwork, and his own purchase which he dearly bought.'... | |
| William E. Flaherty - 1855 - 448 pages
...mercy on the judge. " We command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little condemned to death : but rather let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the people, and let not be destroyed for little God's handy-work, and His own purchase which he dearly bought."... | |
| William Edward Flaherty - 1855 - 456 pages
...mercy on the judge. " We command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little condemned to death : but rather let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the people, and let not be destroyed for little God's handy-work, and His own purchase which he dearly bought."... | |
| William Edward Flaherty - 1855 - 440 pages
...command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little condemned to death : hut rather let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the people, and let not be destroyed for little God's handy-work, and His own purchase which he dearly bought."... | |
| William Edward Flaherty - 1876 - 694 pages
...mercy on the judge. "We command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little condemned to death : but rather let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the people, and let not be destroyed for little God's handywork, and His own purchase which He dearly bought."... | |
| William Edward Flaherty - 1877 - 268 pages
...mercy on the judge. "We command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little condemned to death : but rather let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the people, and let not be destroyed for little God's handy- work, and His own purchase which He dearly bought."... | |
| James Fitzjames Stephen - 1883 - 606 pages
...dimittimus.' And " we command that Christian men be not on any account '' for altogether too little condemned to death; but rather " let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the " people; and let not be destroyed for little God's handy" work, and His own purchase which he dearly bought."... | |
| 1889 - 382 pages
...nos dimittimus." And we command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little, condemned to death : but rather let gentle punishments be decreed, for the benefit of the people; and let not be destroyed for little God's handy-work, and his own purchase which he dearly bought.... | |
| Dudley Julius Medley - 1910 - 480 pages
...nos dimittimus." And we command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little, condemned to death ; but rather let gentle punishments be decreed for the benefit of the people ; and let not be destroyed for little God's handywork and His own purchase which He dearly bought.... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1914 - 618 pages
...fact that the State, at a very early Anglo. Saxon period, interfered with the private reprisals ol individuals, will demonstrate that the State even...suae.' Further, in the earliest Norman period, if &n accused were acquitted in trial by battle with his accuser, he must nevertheless be tried by the... | |
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