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In sixteen powerful addresses, Princeton Sermons takes us inside the chapel of the Theological Seminary at Princeton during the years 1891–1892. These “represent the ordinary sermons preached Sabbath by Sabbath” by the esteemed Princeton faculty, including professors, the Dean, and the President of the University. The audience consisted chiefly of divinity students, and this collection provides a...

which are temporal, but at those that are not seen, which are eternal, that he can bear all things. Like Moses, he looks unto the recompense of reward, and endures as seeing the Invisible One. Like Abraham, he is content to dwell in tents for a season, because he looks for the city which hath the foundations, whose builder and maker is God. It is, indeed, with just this last figure that the Apostle expresses his feeling here. The reason of his strength, he tells us, is because “we know that if our
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