Benjamin Colman
Active Years
Min year: 1699, Max year: 1749, Max count: 8
As Author
- 1699: A manifesto or declaration, set forth by the undertakers of the new church now erected in Boston in New-England, November 17. 1699
- 1702: Faith victorious
- 1707: A poem on Elijahs translation, occasion'd by the death of the reverend and learned Mr. Samuel Willard, late pastor to a church of Christ in Boston, and vice-president of Harvard Colledge in Cambridge. By Mr. Colman, V.D.M. [Two lines in Latin]
- 1707: Practical discourses upon the parable of the ten virgins
- 1707: Imprecation against the enemies of God, lawful and a duty
- 1707: The government & improvement of mirth according to the laws of Christianity
- 1708: The piety and duty of rulers to comfort and encourage the ministry of Christ
- 1708: A sermon preached before His Excellency the governour, and Her Majesties Council, at Boston in New-England, on July 22d. 1708
- 1709: Practical discourses upon the parable of the ten virgins
- 1711: The duty and honour of aged women
- 1713: The hainous nature of the sin of murder
- 1713: A plain and familiar discourse of seeking God early
- 1713: The hainous nature of the sin of murder
- 1713: A plain and familiar discourse of seeking God early
- 1714: A devout contemplation on the meaning of Divine Providence, in the early death of pious and lovely children
- 1715: A humble discourse of the incomprehensibleness of God
- 1715: Some of the honours that religion does unto the fruitful mothers in Israel
- 1715: A humble discourse of the incomprehensibleness of God
- 1715: A holy & useful life recommended from the happy end of it
- 1715: A Gospel ministry the rich gift of the ascended Saviour unto his church
- 1715: The divine compassions declar'd and magnified: to engage and encourage the greatest sinners unto a speedy and earnest repentance
- 1715: A devout and humble enquiry into the reasons of the divine council in the death of good men
- 1715: A humble discourse of the incomprehensibleness of God
- 1716: A sermon for the reformation of manners
- 1716: A brief enquiry into the reasons why the people of God have been wont to bring into their penitential confessions, the sins of their fathers and ancestors, in times long since past
- 1716: A sermon preach'd at Boston in New-England on Thursday the 23d. of August. 1716
- 1716: The honour and happiness of the vertuous woman
- 1716: A sermon preach'd at the ordination of Mr. William Cooper, in Boston, N.E. May 23. 1716
- 1716: The warning of God unto young people, not to consent when enticed to sin
- 1717: The rending of the vail of the temple at the crucifixion of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
- 1717: Sermons preached at the lecture in Boston, from Luke XI, 21, 22
- 1717: A sermon at the lecture in Boston
- 1717: A funeral sermon, preached upon the death of the truly vertuous and religious Grove Hirst Esq; merchant in Boston New-England
- 1718: The religious regards we owe to our country, and the blessing of Heaven assured thereunto
- 1719: Some reasons and arguments offered to the good people of Boston and adjacent places, for setting up markets in Boston
- 1719: The blessing of Zebulun & Issachar
- 1720: Early piety again inculcated from those famous words of Solomon, Eccles. XII. 1. Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth
- 1720: Ossa Josephi. Or, The bones of Joseph
- 1721: The hope of the righteous in their death
- 1721: Some observations on the new method of receiving the small-pox by ingrafting or inoculating
- 1722: A narrative of the method and success of inoculating the small pox in New England
- 1722: A discourse had in the College-Hall at Cambridge, March 27. 1722. Before the baptism of R. Judah Monis
- 1722: Moses a witness to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
- 1722: The rending of the vail of the temple at the crucifixion of our Lord & Saviour Jesus Christ
- 1722: A narrative of the method and success of inoculating the small-pox in New England
- 1722: Jacob's vow upon his leaving his fathers house
- 1723: The death of God's saints precious in his sight
- 1723: David's dying charge to the rulers and people of Israel
- 1723: A blameless & inoffensive life
- 1723: The prophet's death lamented and improved
- 1723: God deals with us as rational creatures: and if sinners would but hearken to reason they would repent
- 1724: The master taken up from the sons of the prophets
- 1725: The doctrine and law of the Holy Sabbath
- 1726: It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God
- 1727: Fidelity to Christ and to the Protestant succession in the illustrious House of Hannover
- 1727: Parents and grown children should be together at the Lord's table
- 1727: Prayer to the Lord of the harvest for the mission of labourers into his harvest
- 1727: The judgments of Providence in the hand of Christ: his voice to us in the terrible earthquake
- 1728: Death and the grave without any order
- 1728: The holy walk and glorious translation of blessed Enoch
- 1728: An argument for and persuasive unto the great and important duty of family worship
- 1728: The duty of young people to give their hearts unto God, because they are his offspring
- 1729: The faithful ministers of Christ mindful of their own death
- 1729: The credibility of the Christian doctrine of the resurrection
- 1729: The character of His Excellency William Burnet, Esq
- 1730: Dying in peace in a good old age
- 1730: Government the pillar of the earth
- 1731: The friend of Christ, and of His people
- 1732: Ministers and people under special obligations to sanctity, humility & gratitude
- 1733: God is a great king
- 1734: The fast which God hath chosen
- 1735: A brief dissertation on the three first chapters of Genesis
- 1735: Reliquiae Turellae, et lachrymae paternae. The father's tears over his daughter's remains
- 1736: The peaceful end of a perfect and upright life
- 1736: A dissertation on the image of God wherein man was created
- 1736: Righteousness and compassion the duty and character of pious rulers
- 1736: The merchandise of a people holiness to the Lord
- 1737: The great duty of waiting on God in our straits & difficulties, explained and inforced
- 1737: It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed
- 1738: Christ standing for an ensign of the people
- 1739: Faithful pastors angels of the churches
- 1739: The wither'd hand stretched forth at the command of Christ, and restored
- 1739: The unspeakable gift of God
- 1740: A humble discourse of the incomprehensibleness of God
- 1740: The wither'd hand stretched forth at the command of Christ, and restored
- 1740: Souls flying to Jesus Christ pleasant and admirable to behold
- 1740: The faithful servant in the joy of his Lord
- 1741: Souls flying to Jesus Christ pleasant and admirable to behold
- 1741: The Lord shall rejoice in his works
- 1742: The great God has magnified his word to the children of men
- 1742: The glory of God in the firmament of his power
- 1742: Souls flying to Jesus Christ pleasant and admirable to behold
- 1744: The withered hand, stretched forth at the command of Christ, and restored
- 1744: The case of Satan's fiery darts in blasphemous suggestions and hellish annoyances
- 1744: Jesus weeping over his dead friend, and with his friends in their mourning
- 1744: A letter from the Reverend Dr. Colman of Boston, to the Reverend Mr. Williams of Lebanon, upon reading the confession and retractations of the Mr. Reverend James Davenport
- 1746: One chosen of God and called to the work of the ministry, willingly offering himself
- 1746: The vanity of man as mortal
- 1747: Practical discourses on the parable of the ten virgins
- 1749: Practical discourses on the parable of the ten virgins
Wed Nov 29 09:55:34 CST 2023