S. Kneeland
Active Years
Min year: 1718, Max year: 1766, Max count: 85
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1723: Contemplations of the state of man in this life, and that which is to come
- 1727: Boanerges
- 1727: The terror of the Lord
- 1741: A choice drop of honey, from the rock Christ
- 1743: Business and diversion inoffensive to God, and necessary for the comfort and support of human society
- 1745: The Testimony of a number of ministers conven'd at Taunton, in the county of Bristol, March 5. 1744,5. in favour of the Rev. Mr. Whitefield, &c
- 1746: A treatise concerning religious affections
- 1746: Seasonable warning to these churches
- 1746: God's terrible doings are to be observed
- 1746: The usefulness and necessity of gifts: but the transcendent excellency of grace, especially that of charity
- 1746: Remarks on some points of doctrine, apprehended by many as unsound, propagated in preaching and conversation, and since published by the Reverend Mr. William Balch, Pastor of the Second Curch in Bradford
- 1746: Such as have grace fittest to teach the doctrines of grace, explained and proved
- 1749: A Brief account of the rise, progress, and present state of the paper currency of New-England
- 1756: Three sermons on different subjects and occasions
As Printer
- 1718: Proposals for printing by subscription. Psalterium Americanum
- 1718: The young-mans duty, explained and pressed upon him
- 1718: A sermon wherein is shewed, I. That the ministers of the Gospel need, and ought to desire the prayers of the Lord's people for them. II. That the people of God ought to pray for his ministers
- 1718: Vanishing things
- 1719: Reason why, not Anabaptist plunging but infant-believer's baptism ought to be approved, is because the Lord Jesus Christ, and his apostles, preached it and practiced it
- 1719: Sincere piety described; and the trial of sincerity assisted
- 1719: Three practical discourses
- 1719: The Boston gazette
- 1719: An Addition to the present melancholy circumstances of the province considered, &c. March 6th. 1718.9
- 1719: Three practical discourses
- 1719: An heavenly life
- 1720: A year and a life well concluded
- 1720: Awakening soul-saving truths
- 1720: A discourse concerning kindness
- 1720: Of taking heed to, and fulfilling the ministry; with the grand motive thereto
- 1720: A vindication of the remarks of one in the country upon The distressed state of Boston, from some exceptions made against 'em in a letter to Mr. Colman
- 1720: Coheleth
- 1720: A discourse on the great happiness, which God hath laid up for; and which he will at last bestow upon his true fearers and followers
- 1720: Family-religion, excited and assisted
- 1720: The right way to shake off a viper
- 1721: The certain blessedness of all those, whose sins are forgiven
- 1721: Several reasons proving that inoculating or transplanting the small pox, is a lawful practice, and that it has been blessed by God for the saving of many a life
- 1721: The way of the truth laid out
- 1721: Genuine Christianity. Or, A true Christian both in life and in death, glorifying the most glorious Lord
- 1721: A holy and useful life, ending in a happy and joyful death
- 1721: A letter to a friend in the country
- 1722: Christ's fan in his hand, separating the wheat & chaff
- 1722: The truth
- 1722: Pia desideria. Or, The smoaking flax, raised into a sacred flame
- 1722: A discourse concerning prejudice in matters of religion. Or, An essay, to shew the nature, causes, and effects of such prejudices: and also the means of preventing, or removing them
- 1722: Love triumphant
- 1722: Columbanus. Or, The doves flying to the windows of their Saviour
- 1722: Moses a witness to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
- 1722: The Princely convert
- 1722: Elijah's mantle
- 1722: A dying legacy of a minister to his dearly beloved people
- 1723: Another and better country, even an heavenly: in reserve for all true believers
- 1723: Faithfulness in the ministry, derived from Christ
- 1723: The voice of God in a tempest
- 1723: Coelestinus
- 1723: An essay, by several ministers of the Gospel
- 1723: The joy of children walking in truth
- 1724: Two sermons preached at Rutland, September 8th. 1723
- 1724: The shorter catechism
- 1724: A dialogue between a minister and his neighbour, about the Lord's Supper
- 1724: Light in darkness
- 1725: Early piety, exemplified in Elizabeth Butcher of Boston
- 1725: The young-man's duty, explained and pressed upon him
- 1726: A good old age
- 1726: Practical discourses on the holiness of Heaven
- 1726: The psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, of the Old and New-Testament
- 1729: A thankful memorial of God's sparing mercy
- 1730: Man's frailty practically exhibited in his life and death
- 1730: The pleas of Gospel-impenitents examined & refuted
- 1730: Divine songs attempted in easy language for the use of children
- 1730: The shorter catechism composed by the Reverend Assembly of Divines
- 1730: Observations historical and practical on the rise and primitive state of New-England
- 1730: Dying in peace in a good old age
- 1731: The temple of God to be measur'd by his ministers, according to the Word, as it's [sic] rule
- 1731: The woful condition of impenitent souls in their separate state
- 1731: Sighs from hell
- 1731: Christ's compassion on the multitudes scatter'd abroad, as sheep without a shepherd
- 1731: A funeral discourse deliver'd at Marlborough
- 1731: Evangelical obedience the way to eternal life
- 1731: Money the sinews of trade
- 1732: The loss of the soul, which sinners themselves contribute to, by their personal transgressions, & especially by their obstinate rejecting the offer'd remedy
- 1732: Grace abounding to the chief of sinners; in a faithful acount of the life and death of John Bunyan. Or, A brief relation of the exceeding mercy of God in Christ to him
- 1732: The dying prayer of Christ, for His people's preservation and unity
- 1732: Early piety recommended and exemplify'd
- 1732: The faithful servant approv'd at death, and entring [sic] into the joy of his Lord
- 1732: The temporal safety of the Lord's people, until they forsake Him
- 1732: Ministers and people under special obligations to sanctity, humility & gratitude
- 1732: Poems on several subjects
- 1732: The Triumphs of justice over unjust judges
- 1732: Of the evidence of Christ's death, burial and resurrection; it's plainness to our senses &c
- 1732: The New-England psalter: or, Psalms of David
- 1732: Serious exhortations address'd to young men
- 1733: The benefactors of Yale-College
- 1733: The shorter catechism composed by the Reverend Assembly of Divines
- 1733: Jethro's advice recommended to the inhabitants of Boston, in New-England
- 1733: An essay for reviving religion
- 1733: The validity of Presbyterian ordination
- 1733: The Scripture-bishop vindicated
- 1733: A sermon preached at the ordination of the Reverend Mr. Elisha Kent, at New-Town, in Connecticut, September 27. 1732
- 1734: Character and overthrow of Laish considered and applied
- 1734: The duty of renewing their baptismal covenant
- 1734: The prophet Jeremiah's resolution to get him unto great men, and to speak unto them, considered and applied
- 1735: Reliquiae Turellae, et lachrymae paternae. The father's tears over his daughter's remains
- 1735: The duty of a Christian church to manage their affairs with charity
- 1735: Pure and undefiled religion, the highest obligation, and truest glory of civil rulers
- 1735: The nature of religious thanksgiving opened
- 1735: A companion for communicants. Or, The Christian instructed in the great duty of worthy approaching the table of the Lord
- 1735: Meat out of the eater, and sweetness out of the strong
- 1735: Jehovah's character as a man of war, illustrated and applied
- 1735: At a conference held at Deerfield in the county of Hampshire, the twenty seventh day of August, anno regni Regis Georgii Secundi, Magnae, Britanniae, Franciae et Hiberniae, &c. nono, annoq; Domini, 1735
- 1735: Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints
- 1735: A solemn warning to the secure world, from the God of terrible majesty. Or, The presumptuous sinner detected, his pleas consider'd, and his doom display'd
- 1735: Instructions for the cultivating and raising of flax and hemp
- 1735: Private Christans [sic] helpers of their ministers in Christ Jesus
- 1735: The Scripture-grounds of the baptism of Christian infants, and the mode of administration by affusion or sprinkling, briefly asserted and defended, in a letter
- 1735: A sinners prayer for converting grace; or, The necessity and efficacy of the grace of God in the conversation of a sinner
- 1736: The peaceful end of a perfect and upright life
- 1736: A Latin grammar
- 1736: Martyrology, or, A brief account of the lives, sufferings and deaths of those two holy martyrs, viz. Mr. John Rogers, and Mr. John Bradford
- 1736: Ministers must preach Christ Lord, and themselves servants
- 1737: The shorter catechism agreed upon by the Reverend Assembly of Divines at Westminster
- 1737: The psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs of the Old and New-Testament
- 1737: When the godly cease, and faithful fail; we must seek to God for help
- 1738: The number of deaths in Haverhil, and also some comfortable instance; thereof among the children, under the late distemper in the throat
- 1738: A monitory letter to them who needlessly and frequently absent themselves from the publick worship of God
- 1738: The history of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ epitomiz'd: in a catechetical way
- 1738: Some observations on the scheme projected for emitting 60000 l. in bills of a new tenour, to be redeemed with silver and gold
- 1738: The excellency of the Christian religion
- 1738: The service of the Lord must be chosen presently and without delay
- 1738: A journal of the House of Representatives
- 1738: The orthodox Christian: or, A child well instructed in the principles of the Christian religion
- 1738: The Lord Jesus Christ the only, and supream [sic] head of the church
- 1738: A faithful narrative of the surprising work of God in the conversion of many hundred souls in Northampton, and the neighbouring towns and villages of the county of Hampshire, in the province of the Massachusetts-Bay in New-England
- 1739: Children well imployed, and, Jesus much delighted: or, The hosannahs of Zion's children, highly pleasing to Zion's King
- 1739: People earnestly urged to be happy: or, A minister's address to his people, by way of intreaty, that they receive not the grace of God in vain
- 1739: The shorter catechism, agreed upon by the Reverend Assembly of Divines at Westminster
- 1739: A sermon preach'd at the ordination of Mr. Jeremiah Condy
- 1741: A professing people directed and excited to prepare to meet God, in the way of his judgments
- 1741: The experiences of God's gracious dealing with Mrs. Elizabeth White
- 1741: Christ's suit to the sinner, while he stands and knocks at the door
- 1742: The power and efficacy of the prayers of the people of God, when rightly offered to him; and the obligation and encouragement thence arising to be much in prayer
- 1742: The doctrine and glory of the saint's resurrection
- 1742: Some thoughts concerning the present revival of religion in New-England
- 1742: The united endeavours and earnest prayers of ministers and people, to promote the great design of the ministry
- 1743: The Christian history
- 1743: It being earnestly desired by many pious and judicious people
- 1743: The servants of the Lord Jesus Christ ought to be quickened to great diligence, zeal, and faithfulness in their work, because he tells them they must shortly die
- 1744: The untimely death of a man of God lamented
- 1744: The Christian history, containing accounts of the revival and propagation of religion in Great-Britain & America. For the year 1743
- 1744: The essential rights and liberties of Protestants
- 1745: A letter to the Rev. the president, and professors, tutors, and Hebrew instructor, of Harvard-College in Cambridge
- 1745: Boston, May 1. 1745
- 1745: Jesus persecuted in his disciples
- 1747: Preaching the Gospel, tho' foolishness to men, yet a saving ordinance of God
- 1747: True justifying faith producing evangelical obedience
- 1748: Copy of a letter from Mr. Howell Harris an eminently pious and successful preacher in Wales
- 1749: The duty and privilege of aged saints to leave their dying testimony behind them to posterity
- 1749: An humble inquiry into the rules of the Word of God
- 1750: A companion for prayer in times of extraordinary danger
- 1750: The living water to be had for asking
- 1750: True religion delineated
- 1751: The true state of the question concerning the qualifications necessary to lawful communion in the Christian sacraments
- 1751: The state of religion among the Protestant dissenters in Virginia
- 1751: A discourse on justification by grace
- 1751: The great duty of Gospel ministers to preach not themselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord
- 1751: The following letter is taken from Mr. Joseph Alleine's book entituled, his Remains
- 1751: Christ, holding the stars in his right hand, and walking in the midst of the golden candlesticks
- 1751: Righteousness by the law, subversive of Christianity
- 1751: A vindication of a sermon preached at Braintree, Third Parish, December 25th 1749
- 1752: A defence of the Divine right of infant-baptism
- 1752: The servant's actual readiness for the coming of his Lord, described, and recommended
- 1752: The method of practice in the small-pox, with observations on the way of inoculation
- 1752: A sermon preach'd to the Ancient and Honourable, Artillery Company in Boston, June 1st. 1752
- 1753: The character of a pastor, according to God's heart, considered
- 1753: An humble attempt to give a clear account from Scripture, how the Jewish and Christian churches were constituted, and what sort of saintship is necessary in order to be a communicant at the Lord's table
- 1753: A letter to a gentleman, containing a plea for the rights of conscience, in things of a religious nature
- 1753: Jesus Christ the wise master-builder of his Church
- 1753: The sinner's refusal to come unto Christ for life, evinced and reproved
- 1753: A century-sermon preach'd at the First-Parish in Lancaster, May 28th. 1753
- 1753: The duty of ministers to preach doctrines of practice
- 1753: The necessity of God's drawing, in order to man's coming unto Christ, illustrated and improved
- 1753: A father's charge to his son, at his entrance on the ministry
- 1753: Preaching peace by Jesus Christ describ'd and urg'd, as the principal design of the Gospel-ministry
- 1753: The great evil of sin, as it is committed against God
- 1753: The Boston gazette, or, Weekly advertiser
- 1753: Historical memoirs, relating to the Housatunnuk Indians: or, An account of the methods used, and pains taken, for the propagation of the Gospel among that heathenish-tribe, and the success thereof, under the ministry of the late Reverend Mr. John Sergeant
- 1754: The duty of ministers, to testify the Gospel of the grace of God
- 1754: Advertisement. Province of the Massachusetts-Bay
- 1754: The vanity of human life
- 1754: A careful and strict enquiry into the modern prevailing notions of that freedom of will, which is supposed to be essential to moral agency, vertue and vice, reward and punishment, praise and blame
- 1755: The Gospel hidden to them that are lost
- 1755: The blessedness of such as trust in Christ, the King whom God hath exalted
- 1755: Divine power and and anger displayed in earthquakes
- 1755: The Triumphant Christian: or, Faith's victory over death and the grave
- 1755: Observations on the late and present conduct of the French
- 1755: Religion to be minded, under the greatest perils of life
- 1756: A tender heart pleasing to God, and profitable to men
- 1756: The case of Heman considered
- 1756: Observations moral and religious, on the late terrible night of the earthquake
- 1756: The character of Caleb
- 1756: Four sermons on the following subjects
- 1757: A discourse delivered at Halifax in the county of Plymouth, February 2d. 1757
- 1757: God's goodness, amidst his afflictive providences, a just ground of thankfulness and praise
- 1757: The true Scripture-doctrine concerning Christ within
- 1757: The true Scripture-doctrine of original sin stated and defended
- 1757: Reformers and intercessors sought by God; who grieves, when they are hard to be found
- 1758: The Scripture-doctrine of original sin, stated and defended
- 1758: The redeemed captive, returning to Zion
- 1758: The duty, character and reward of Christ's faithful servants
- 1758: The happiness of a people, having God for their ally
- 1758: A letter, to the reverend author of The winter-evening conversation on original sin, from one of his candid neighbours: who, having been urged, "that an honest man must be a Calvinist, or a Deist,"-- and being quite unable to extricate himself, sends to his minister for help
- 1758: The great Christian doctrine of original sin defended
- 1758: A sermon preached in Boston, New-England
- 1759: Looking to Jesus
- 1759: The duty of thanksgiving to God for favours received, explained and urged
- 1759: Soldiers directed and urged, to inlist under Jesus Christ, the Captain of the Lord's host
- 1759: Act [sic] and laws, passed by the Great and General Court or Assembly of his Majesty's province of the Massachusetts-Bay in New-England
- 1759: Theron, Paulinus, and Aspasio
- 1759: Heads of families to resolve for their housholds, no less than for themselves, that they will serve the Lord
- 1760: A thanksgiving sermon, preach'd at Pepperrell, January 3d 1760
- 1760: Grateful reflexions on the signal appearances of divine providence for Great Britain
- 1760: A sermon preached at the ordination of the Reverend Mr. Chandler Robbins
- 1760: Sorrow turned into joy
- 1760: The wisdom of God in the permission of sin, vindicated
- 1760: The Youth's instructor in the English tongue: or, The art of spelling improved
- 1760: A Congratulatory address &c. to all the faithful ministers of the Gospel of all denominations, in the highly favoured provinces and colonies of America
- 1760: The New-England psalter; or, Psalms of David
- 1761: The preaching of Christ an expression of God's great love to sinners, and therefore a sweet savour to him, though a savour of death unto death to them
- 1761: Seasonable advice to a neighbour
- 1761: Two discourses delivered at Southborough
- 1761: A sermon preached at the ordination of the Reverend Mr. Stephen Farrar
- 1762: Acts and laws, passed by the Great and General Court or Assembly of His Majesty's province of the Massachusetts-Bay in New-England
- 1763: The ministers of Christ should be careful, that they do not in their ministry corrupt the word of God
- 1763: Remarks on the Revd. Mr. Croswell's letter to the Reverend Mr. Cumming
- 1763: Animadversions on the Reverend Mr. Croswell's late Letter &c
- 1763: A blow at the root of the refined antinomianism of the present age
- 1763: The character and reward of the faithful ministers of Christ
- 1763: Mr. Moody's discourse to little children
- 1763: The marvelous works of creation and providence, illustrated
- 1763: Some unregenerate persons not so far from the Kingdom of God as others
- 1763: A serious address to young people
- 1763: The support of pious parents under the bereavement of promising children
- 1763: Discourse to little children
- 1765: Two dissertations
- 1765: The life and character of the late Reverend Mr. Jonathan Edwards
- 1766: A token for youth, or Comfort to children
As Bookseller
- 1732: Poems on several subjects
- 1733: Jethro's advice recommended to the inhabitants of Boston, in New-England
- 1733: The validity of Presbyterian ordination
- 1738: Some observations on the scheme projected for emitting 60000 l. in bills of a new tenour, to be redeemed with silver and gold
- 1741: Christ's suit to the sinner, while he stands and knocks at the door
- 1741: The experiences of God's gracious dealing with Mrs. Elizabeth White
- 1742: Some thoughts concerning the present revival of religion in New-England
- 1744: The essential rights and liberties of Protestants
- 1745: Jesus persecuted in his disciples
- 1745: A letter to the Rev. the president, and professors, tutors, and Hebrew instructor, of Harvard-College in Cambridge
- 1747: Preaching the Gospel, tho' foolishness to men, yet a saving ordinance of God
- 1747: True justifying faith producing evangelical obedience
- 1749: The duty and privilege of aged saints to leave their dying testimony behind them to posterity
- 1749: An humble inquiry into the rules of the Word of God
- 1750: A companion for prayer in times of extraordinary danger
- 1750: True religion delineated
- 1751: The state of religion among the Protestant dissenters in Virginia
- 1751: The great duty of Gospel ministers to preach not themselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord
- 1751: A vindication of a sermon preached at Braintree, Third Parish, December 25th 1749
- 1751: A discourse on justification by grace
- 1751: The true state of the question concerning the qualifications necessary to lawful communion in the Christian sacraments
- 1751: The following letter is taken from Mr. Joseph Alleine's book entituled, his Remains
- 1751: Righteousness by the law, subversive of Christianity
- 1752: A defence of the Divine right of infant-baptism
- 1752: A sermon preach'd to the Ancient and Honourable, Artillery Company in Boston, June 1st. 1752
- 1752: The method of practice in the small-pox, with observations on the way of inoculation
- 1753: The great evil of sin, as it is committed against God
- 1753: Historical memoirs, relating to the Housatunnuk Indians: or, An account of the methods used, and pains taken, for the propagation of the Gospel among that heathenish-tribe, and the success thereof, under the ministry of the late Reverend Mr. John Sergeant
- 1753: The necessity of God's drawing, in order to man's coming unto Christ, illustrated and improved
- 1753: A letter to a gentleman, containing a plea for the rights of conscience, in things of a religious nature
- 1753: Jesus Christ the wise master-builder of his Church
- 1753: The duty of ministers to preach doctrines of practice
- 1753: An humble attempt to give a clear account from Scripture, how the Jewish and Christian churches were constituted, and what sort of saintship is necessary in order to be a communicant at the Lord's table
- 1753: A century-sermon preach'd at the First-Parish in Lancaster, May 28th. 1753
- 1753: The sinner's refusal to come unto Christ for life, evinced and reproved
- 1754: The duty of ministers, to testify the Gospel of the grace of God
- 1754: A careful and strict enquiry into the modern prevailing notions of that freedom of will, which is supposed to be essential to moral agency, vertue and vice, reward and punishment, praise and blame
- 1755: Religion to be minded, under the greatest perils of life
- 1755: The blessedness of such as trust in Christ, the King whom God hath exalted
- 1755: Observations on the late and present conduct of the French
- 1755: The Triumphant Christian: or, Faith's victory over death and the grave
- 1755: The Gospel hidden to them that are lost
- 1755: Divine power and and anger displayed in earthquakes
- 1756: The case of Heman considered
- 1756: Four sermons on the following subjects
- 1757: A discourse delivered at Halifax in the county of Plymouth, February 2d. 1757
- 1757: God's goodness, amidst his afflictive providences, a just ground of thankfulness and praise
- 1757: The true Scripture-doctrine concerning Christ within
- 1757: The true Scripture-doctrine of original sin stated and defended
- 1758: The great Christian doctrine of original sin defended
- 1758: The Scripture-doctrine of original sin, stated and defended
- 1758: A sermon preached in Boston, New-England
- 1758: A letter, to the reverend author of The winter-evening conversation on original sin, from one of his candid neighbours: who, having been urged, "that an honest man must be a Calvinist, or a Deist,"-- and being quite unable to extricate himself, sends to his minister for help
- 1758: The redeemed captive, returning to Zion
- 1758: The happiness of a people, having God for their ally
- 1759: Looking to Jesus
- 1759: Soldiers directed and urged, to inlist under Jesus Christ, the Captain of the Lord's host
- 1759: Theron, Paulinus, and Aspasio
- 1759: Heads of families to resolve for their housholds, no less than for themselves, that they will serve the Lord
- 1760: The wisdom of God in the permission of sin, vindicated
- 1760: The New-England psalter; or, Psalms of David
- 1760: Grateful reflexions on the signal appearances of divine providence for Great Britain
- 1760: A thanksgiving sermon, preach'd at Pepperrell, January 3d 1760
- 1760: A Congratulatory address &c. to all the faithful ministers of the Gospel of all denominations, in the highly favoured provinces and colonies of America
- 1760: The Youth's instructor in the English tongue: or, The art of spelling improved
- 1761: Two discourses delivered at Southborough
- 1761: Seasonable advice to a neighbour
- 1763: A serious address to young people
- 1763: Discourse to little children
- 1763: Remarks on the Revd. Mr. Croswell's letter to the Reverend Mr. Cumming
- 1763: Animadversions on the Reverend Mr. Croswell's late Letter &c
- 1763: Some unregenerate persons not so far from the Kingdom of God as others
- 1763: The ministers of Christ should be careful, that they do not in their ministry corrupt the word of God
- 1763: A blow at the root of the refined antinomianism of the present age
- 1763: Mr. Moody's discourse to little children
- 1765: The life and character of the late Reverend Mr. Jonathan Edwards
- 1765: Two dissertations
- 1766: A token for youth, or Comfort to children
Fri Mar 24 07:34:02 CDT 2023