Lectures to My Students a Selection From Addresses Delivered to the Students of

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Lectures to My Students a Selection From Addresses Delivered to the Students of
C H Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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For another example under this class see how Habakkuk's sublime words are tortured, ' Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on PUBLIC PRATER. 103 sin without abhorrence, ^ The words of the Holy Ghost are (Heb. I. 13), ' Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on iniquity/ Need I say that the power of the figure, ' canst not look on iniquity ' is nearly lost when you add that God can look on it, only not without abhorrence ?
" A third class is made
... up of meaningless pleonasms, vulgar, common-place redundancies of expression, in quoting from the Scriptures. One of these has become so universal, that I venture to say you -seldom miss it, when the passage referred to comes up at all. ' Be in the midst of us ' (or, as some prefer to express it, some- what unfortunately, as I think, ' in our midst '), ' to bless us, and to do us good.^ What additional idea is there in the last expression, * and to do us good ' ? The passage referred to is Exodus xx.

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