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Dix, as the son of poet John Ross Dix and named after Thomas Chatterton, would regularly write Christian poetry in his spare time. [4] Dix wrote "As with Gladness Men of Old" on 6 January 1859 during a months-long recovery from an extended illness, unable to attend that morning's Epiphany service at church.
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Religion is man-centered, Jesus is God-centered. This poem highlights my journey to discover this truth. Religion either ends in pride or despair. Pride because you make a list and can do it and act better than everyone, or despair because you can't do your own list of rules and feel not good enough for God.
Swiss Letters and Alpine Poems (1881) edited by J. M. Crane; Under His Shadow: the Last Poems of Frances Ridley Havergal (1881) The Royal Invitation (1882) Life Echoes (1883) Poetical Works (1884) edited by M. V. G. Havergal and Frances Anna Shaw; Coming to the King (1886) Jesus, Master, Whose I am Hymns of the Christian Life 1936; My King and ...
The Catholic Church had technically banned the practice of selling indulgences as long ago as 1567. As the Times points out, a monetary donation wouldn't go amiss toward earning an indulgence. It ...
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The Styrian Lake and Other Poems (1842) The Rosary and Other Poems (1845) An Essay on Beatification, Canonization, and the Congregation of Rites (1848) All for Jesus, or The Easy Ways of Divine Love (1853) Growth in Holiness, or The Progress of the Spiritual Life (1854) The Blessed Sacrament, or The Works and Ways of God (1855) Poems (1856)