 | John Quincy Adams - 1810
...favors of eloquence, remember, that all your moral duties are multiplied in proportion to your powers ; that to whom much is given, of him shall much be required. But in the course of your pilgrimage through this world of trial and of temptation, if you should occasionally... | |
 | 1816
...imposed upon his creatures, proportionately to their endowments and opportunities, himself telling us, that to whom much is given, of him shall much be required. To the young, eager, and ambitious lawyer, the contemplation of Sir William Follett's career is fraught... | |
 | 1846
...imposed upon his creatures, proportionately to their endowments and opportunities, himself telling us, that to whom much is given, of him shall much be required. To the young, eager, and ambitions lawyer, the contemplation of Sir William Follett's career is franght... | |
 | 1820
...those who are born free, is to remember their responsibility to God. Reason and religion both say, that to whom much is given, of him shall much be required. Whatever the privilege may be, it is a trust confided to our hands. It is not ours ; it is given with... | |
 | Thomas Sherlock - 1830
...the more abundant grace we receive, the more reason we have to expect trials and temptations; and ' that to whom much is given, of him shall much be required.' And if this be the case, as most certainly it is, we may, I think, as necessary consequences, deduce... | |
 | Thomas Sherlock, Thomas Smart Hughes - 1830
...the more abundant grace we receive, the more' reason we have to expect trials and temptations ; and ' that to whom much is given, of him shall much be required.' And if this be the case, as most certainly it is, we may, I think, as necessary consequences, deduce... | |
 | 1830
...insensible ; and the latter he considered as his bounden duty to Him, who has emphatically declared, that to whom much is given of him shall much be required. Yet, sensible that the preservation of health, no less than a due consideration for the wishes of his... | |
 | John Adam - 1833 - 404 σελίδες
...hundred-fold for blessings received, we too often abuse the gifts, withhold the revenue of praise, and forget that " to whom much is given, of him shall much be required." A time of persecution it has been thought is a time of difficulty, and that to profess the faith amid... | |
 | 1833
...principle the very reverse of that set up by the Nazarene Reformer, and sanctioned by common justice, that " to whom much is given of him shall much be required.'* RD O, EQUITABLE LABOUR EXCHANGE. The premises which Mr. Owen has taken for the use of the Exchange,... | |
 | Massachusetts. General Court. Senate - 1833
...those who are born free, is to remember their responsibility to God. Reason and religion both say, that to whom much is given, of him shall much be required. Whatever the privilege may be, it is a trust confided to our hands. It is not ours ; it is given with... | |
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