28 results filtered with: Earthquakes - New England - Religious aspects
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The greatest sufferers not always the greatest sinners. A sermon delivered in Charlestown, in the province of South-Carolina, February 4th. 1727,8. Then occasioned by the terrible earthquake in New-England. Now published at the request and charge of a private gentleman. By Josiah Smith, M.A. Pastor of the Dissenting Church at Cainhoy.
Smith, Josiah, 1704-1781.Date: Printed in the year, MDCCXXX. [1730]- Books
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The day of trouble near, the tokens of it, and a due preparation for it; in three sermons on Ezekiel vii. 7. The first of which was preached on the Lord's Day, October 29, 1727. Which was the day immediately preceding the late earthquake: The other two were prepared for, and one of them was preached on a day of public fasting and prayer, Nov. 16. and the other on Lord's Day Nov. 19. To which is added, a sermon on Deuteronomy V. 29. Preached the Wednesday after that awakening providence; and an Appendix, giving some of account of the earthquake, as it was in Hampton, and something remarkable of thunder and lightning in that town, in the year 1727. By Nathaniel Gookin, M.A. Pastor of the Old Church in Hampton, in N. Hampshire.
Gookin, Nathaniel, 1687-1734.Date: MDCCXCVI. [1796]- Books
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Thunder and earthquake, a loud and awful call to reformation. Consider'd in a sermon preached at Brooklyn [i.e., Brookline, Mass.], November the first; upon a special fast, occasion'd by the earthquake, which happen'd in the evening after the 29th day of October 1727. Now published with enlargements. By James Allin, Minister of the Gospel there.
Allin, James, 1692-1747.Date: [1727]