A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter Quotes

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A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter by Robert Leighton
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A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“This sanctifying of God in the heart, composes the heart, and frees it from fears.”
Robert Leighton, A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter
“Dwell with them.” This, indeed, implies and supposes their abiding with their wives, so far as their calling and lawful affairs permit; but I conceive, that what it expressly means, is, all the conversation and duties of that estate; that they so behave themselves in dwelling with them, as becomes men of knowledge, wise and prudent husbands; which returns them usually the gain of the full reverence and respect due to them, of which they rob and divest themselves, who are either of a foolish or trifling carriage, or of too austere and rigid a conversation.”
Robert Leighton, A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter
“The common spring of all mutual duties, on both sides, must be supposed to be love; that peculiar conjugal love which makes them one, will infuse such sweetness into the authority of the husband and the obedience of the wife, as will make their lives harmonious, like the sound of a well-tuned instrument; whereas without that, having such a universal conjuncture of interest in all their affairs, they cannot escape frequent contests and discords, which is a sound more unpleasant than the jarring of untuned strings to an exact ear.”
Robert Leighton, A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter
“All the happiness of the most excellent persons, and the very top of all affection and prosperity meeting in human marriages, are but a dark and weak representation of the solid joy which is in that mysterious Divine union of the spirit of man with the “Father of Spirits,” from whom it issues.”
Robert Leighton, A Practical Commentary on 1 Peter