Charles Chauncy
Active Years
Min year: 1641, Max year: 1791, Max count: 6
As Author
- 1641: The retractation of Mr. Charles Chancy
- 1642: The doctrine of the sacrament
- 1655: Gods mercy, shewed to his people in giving them a faithful ministry and schooles of learning for the continual supplyes therof
- 1659: YaHWeH Tsidkenu or the plain doctrin of the justification of a sinner in the sight of God
- 1731: Man's life considered under the similitude of a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away
- 1732: Early piety recommended and exemplify'd
- 1733: Nathanael's character display'd
- 1734: Character and overthrow of Laish considered and applied
- 1737: Prayer for help a seasonable duty upon the ceasing of godly and faithful men
- 1739: The only compulsion proper to be made use of in the affairs of conscience and religion
- 1741: Joy, the duty of survivors, on the death of pious friends and relatives
- 1741: An unbridled tongue a sure evidence, that our religion is hypocritical and vain
- 1741: The new creature describ'd, and consider'd as the sure characteristick of a man's being in Christ
- 1742: The wonderful narrative: or, a faithful account of the French prophets, their agitations, extasies, and inspirations
- 1742: The gifts of the spirit to ministers consider'd in their diversity
- 1742: Enthusiasm described and caution'd against
- 1742: The new creature described and considered
- 1742: The out-pouring of the Holy Ghost
- 1742: A letter from a gentleman in Boston
- 1743: Seasonable thoughts on the state of religion in New-England
- 1744: Ministers cautioned against the occasions of contempt
- 1744: Ministers exhorted and encouraged to take heed to themselves, and to their doctrine
- 1745: A letter to the Reverend Mr. George Whitefield
- 1745: Marvellous things done by the right hand and holy arm of God in getting him the victory
- 1745: Cornelius's character
- 1745: Marvellous things done by the right hand and holy arm of God in getting him the victory
- 1746: The counsel of two confederate kings to set the son of Tabeal on the throne, represented as evil, in it's natural tendency and moral aspect
- 1747: Civil magistrates must be just, ruling in the fear of God
- 1749: The blessedness of the dead who die in the Lord
- 1752: The idle-poor secluded from the bread of charity by the Christian law
- 1754: The horrid nature, and enormous guilt of murder
- 1755: Two letters to a friend, on the present critical conjunctune of affairs in North America
- 1755: Earthquakes a token of the righteous anger of God
- 1755: A letter to a friend
- 1755: A letter to a friend
- 1755: A second letter to a friend
- 1755: A letter to a friend
- 1756: The earth delivered from the curse to which it is, at present, subjected
- 1757: Charity to the distressed members of Christ accepted as done to himself, and rewarded, at the Judgement-Day, with blessedness in God's everlasting kingdom
- 1758: The opinion of one that has perused the Summer morning's conversation, concerning original sin, wrote by the Rev. Mr. Peter Clark
- 1762: The validity of Presbyterian ordination asserted and maintained
- 1762: All nations of the earth blessed in Christ, the seed of Abraham
- 1765: Twelve sermons on the following seasonable and important subjects
- 1766: A discourse occasioned by the death of the Reverned [sic] Jonathan Mayhew
- 1766: A discourse on "the good news from a far country."
- 1766: The duty of ministers to "make known the mystery of the Gospel"; and the duty of people to "pray for them", that they may do it "with boldness," or fortitude
- 1767: A sermon preached May 6, 1767
- 1767: A discourse on "the good news from a far country."
- 1767: A letter to a friend
- 1768: The Appeal to the public answered, in behalf of the non-Episcopal churches in America
- 1768: A letter to a friend
- 1769: A discourse occasioned by the death of the Reverend Dr. Joseph Sewall
- 1769: A discourse occasioned by the death of the Reverend Thomas Foxcroft, M.A
- 1770: Trust in God, the duty of a people in a day of trouble
- 1770: A reply to Dr. Chandler's 'Appeal defended:'
- 1771: A compleat view of episcopacy
- 1772: "Breaking of bread," in remembrance of the dying love of Christ, a Gospel institution
- 1773: Christian love, as exemplified by the first Christian church in their having all things in common, placed in its true and just point of light
- 1774: A letter to a friend
- 1778: The accursed thing must be taken away from among a people, if they would reasonably hope to stand before their enemies
- 1782: Salvation for all men, illustrated and vindicated as a Scripture doctrine
- 1782: Salvation for all men, illustrated and vindicated as a Scripture doctrine
- 1783: Divine glory brought to view in the final salvation of all men
- 1784: The mystery hid from ages and generations
- 1784: The benevolence of the Deity, fairly and impartially considered
- 1785: Five dissertations on the scripture account of the fall
- 1785: A sermon, delivered at the First Church in Boston, March 13th, 1785
- 1787: The mystery hid from ages and generations, made manifest by the Gospel-revelation
- 1791: "Breaking of bread," in remembrance of the dying love of Christ, a Gospel institution
Tue Dec 05 09:47:18 CST 2023