This volume concludes Manton’s exposition on Romans 8, with 37 sermons devoted to the work of the Holy Spirit, the groaning of creation, and the hope of salvation. The second half of Volume 12 is devoted to a detailed exposition of 2 Corinthians 5.
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“The great foundation that was laid for God’s being with” (Page 329)
“To smother and stifle checks of conscience doth increase our misery, not remove it; and produceth hardness of heart, and contempt of God; therefore when our souls are at this pass, that we see we are in bondage to sin, and know not how to help it; in bondage to wrath, and know not how to quench these fears which are awakened in us by the Spirit; surely we should look after solid satisfaction and peace of soul, settled on us upon gospel terms; run to the blood of sprinkling, Heb. 10:22.” (Pages 106–107)
“and having many mixtures of sin yet remaining in every faculty, in particular cases are apt to err” (Page 94)
“their foolish heart was darkened, and professing themselves to be wise, they became fools” (Page 94)
“Since it is threatened, we may conclude the certainty of its accomplishment. The world” (Page 44)
How hard and successful a student he was, and how frequent and laborious a preacher, and how highly and deservedly esteemed; all this, and more, is commonly known.
Ministers who do not know Manton need not wonder if they are themselves unknown.
The fertility of his mind seems to have been truly astonishing. Every page in his books contains many ideas . . . I regard Manton as a divine of singularly well-balanced, well-proportioned, and scriptural views. . . . As an expositor of Scripture, I regard Manton with unmingled admiration.
Perhaps few men of the age in which he lived had more virtues and fewer failings.
—William Harris