The Gospel Among the Bechuanas and Other Tribes of Southern AfricaAmerican Sunday-School Union, 1846 - 296 pages |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 26
Page 15
... word , that He would be pleased to raise him up again to tell us more of that Great Word . ' I asked , Do you pray for me ? Yes ; I pray that if the Lord should take away your hus- band from you , he would support and protect you and ...
... word , that He would be pleased to raise him up again to tell us more of that Great Word . ' I asked , Do you pray for me ? Yes ; I pray that if the Lord should take away your hus- band from you , he would support and protect you and ...
Page 33
... word of life , believed . And here a Christian church arose , extensive gardens were laid out , and these were cultivated with the Bushmen's own hands . Another mission was commenced among that people at Hephzibah , where there was a ...
... word of life , believed . And here a Christian church arose , extensive gardens were laid out , and these were cultivated with the Bushmen's own hands . Another mission was commenced among that people at Hephzibah , where there was a ...
Page 101
... word ; and he and his wife had both shown me kindness on my way to Namaqua - land . " On approaching the house , which was on an eminence , I directed my men to take the wagon to the valley below , while I walked toward the house . The ...
... word ; and he and his wife had both shown me kindness on my way to Namaqua - land . " On approaching the house , which was on an eminence , I directed my men to take the wagon to the valley below , while I walked toward the house . The ...
Page 118
... word of God , were very cheap ; and if they supposed that by such means they had obtained favour and respect , their success would be the subject of merri- ment in their own circles . Some individuals , to my knowledge , who had carried ...
... word of God , were very cheap ; and if they supposed that by such means they had obtained favour and respect , their success would be the subject of merri- ment in their own circles . Some individuals , to my knowledge , who had carried ...
Page 126
... word Morimo , the same that was used for the purpose by the Kafirs and Hottentots . Mr. Moffat says : One of the most convincing proofs that the minds of the people are covered by the pro- foundest darkness is , that after the ...
... word Morimo , the same that was used for the purpose by the Kafirs and Hottentots . Mr. Moffat says : One of the most convincing proofs that the minds of the people are covered by the pro- foundest darkness is , that after the ...
Expressions et termes fréquents
Africaner appeared asked Barolongs beasts Bechuanas blessing blood brought bushes Bushmen called Cape Town cattle chief Christ Christian clouds colony compelled dead death distance Divine Divine grace Dutch language ears enemy exclaimed eyes farmers fear feel feet giraffe gospel Gospel of Luke Griqua Town hand head hear heard heart heathen Hottentots inquired instantly Jantye Jesus journey Kafirs kill king Kuruman labour language lion live locusts London Missionary Society looking Lord Mahura Makaba milk mind mission missionaries Molala mother Mothibi murder Namaquas natives never night obtained Orange river oxen party peace Philippolis poor prayer prey rain rain-maker reached remarked replied retire Robert Moffat savage scarcely seen seized sionary skins soon soul South Africa spear spot station thing tion took tribes village wagon wives woman women word Zak river
Fréquemment cités
Page 240 - Seeing some individuals employed on the ground under its shade, and the conical points of what looked like houses in miniature, protruding through its evergreen foliage, I proceeded thither, and found that the tree was inhabited by several families of Bakones, the aborigines of the country. I ascended by the notched trunk, and found, to my amazement, no less than seventeen of these ae'rial abodes, and three others unfinished.
Page 296 - is the fountain whence I drink; this is the oil which makes my lamp burn." I looked on the precious relic, printed by the British and Foreign Bible Society, and the reader may conceive how I felt, and my believing companions with me, when we met with this disciple, and mingled our sympathies and prayers together at the throne of our heavenly Father.
Page 30 - He knows no God, knows nothing of eternity, yet dreads death ; and has no shrine at which he leaves his cares or sorrows. We can scarcely conceive of human beings descending lower in the scale of ignorance and vice ; while yet there can be no question that they are children of one common parent with ourselves...
Page 88 - ... the lion seemed well aware of his object, and was enraged whenever he attempted to move his hand. His situation now became painful in the extreme ; the rock on which he sat became so hot that he could scarcely bear his naked feet to touch it, and kept moving them, alternately placing one above the other. The day passed, and the night also, but the lion never moved from the spot ; the sun rose again, and its intense heat soon rendered his feet past feeling. At noon the lion rose, and walked to...
Page 101 - Don't come near me !' he exclaimed, ' you have been long murdered by Africaner.' ' But / am no ghost,' I said, feeling my hands, as if to convince him and myself, too, of my materiality ; but his alarm only increased. ' Everybody says you were murdered ; and a man told me he had seen your bones ;' and he continued to gaze at me, to the no small...
Page 29 - They take no great care of their children, and never correct them except in a fit of rage, when they almost kill them by severe usage. In a quarrel between father and mother, or the several wives of a husband, the defeated party wreaks his or her vengeance on the child of the conqueror, which in general loses its life.
Page 247 - I call you such because you have been my father. You have made my heart as white as milk ; milk is not white to-day, my heart is white. I cease not to wonder at the love of a stranger. You never saw me before, but you love me more than my own people. You fed me when I was hungry ; you clothed me when I was naked ; you carried me in your bosom ;' and, raising my right arm with his, added, ' that arm shielded me from my enemies.
Page 145 - When the earth reaches the height of the mouth, a small twig or branch of an acacia is thrown in, and on the top of the head a few roots of grass are placed; and when the grave is nearly filled, another root of grass is fixed immediately above the head, part of which stands above ground. When finished, the men and women stoop, and with their hands scrape the loose soil around on to the little mound. A large bowl of water, with an infusion of bulbs, is then brought, when the men and women wash their...
Page 100 - I should be the chief, and that he should assume the appearance of a servant, when it was desirable, and pass for one of my attendants. " Ludicrous as the picture may appear, the subject was a grave one, and the season solemn and important ; often did I lift up my eyes to Him in whose hands are the hearts of all men, that his presence might go with us.
Page 61 - He had no commentary, except the living voice of his teacher, nor marginal references, but he soon discovered the importance of consulting parallel passages, which an excellent memory enabled him readily to find. He did not confine his expanding mind to the volume of revelation, though he had been taught by experience, that that contained heights and depths and lengths and breadths, which no man comprehends. He was led to look upon the book of nature ; and he would regard the heavenly orbs with an...