The cottage Bible and family expositor, containing the Old and New Testaments . Ecclesiastical History informs us that this wafulfilled in Peters crucifixion, about 68; and that, by h:own request, he was executed with his head downward, cor blanket, in which they wrapped themselves, and besides which thev had Jother. In this sense Virgil says, Nxidus ara, sere nudus, plough nakeu, aisow naked. i. e. strip otT your upper garments.]—Bfl^sr^r. ,i. .„ Ver. 9. Andjish laid thereon.— It was common to dress fish on ineseshore.—Hariner. esley. Come, eat. The ancients had usually out two iiieuis,


The cottage Bible and family expositor, containing the Old and New Testaments . Ecclesiastical History informs us that this wafulfilled in Peters crucifixion, about 68; and that, by h:own request, he was executed with his head downward, cor blanket, in which they wrapped themselves, and besides which thev had Jother. In this sense Virgil says, Nxidus ara, sere nudus, plough nakeu, aisow naked. i. e. strip otT your upper garments.]—Bfl^sr^r. ,i. .„ Ver. 9. Andjish laid thereon.— It was common to dress fish on ineseshore.—Hariner. esley. Come, eat. The ancients had usually out two iiieuis, .^....w. •-supper ; the word here used strictly means the former, whether taken later Times change ; Our ancestors, says Campbell, dined ai eievcand supped at live. ,, . , .,. > j_., „<•, Ver. 14. The third time.—Grotius understands this of the tlu-^ f°,cLords appearing ; Doddridge, of the tlurd time of appearing to sucd number of disciples. ,, . „,-„„i,. Ver. 18. Stretth fortA rty A<wids.—It was customary m the ancient (COfllRllSTr ®^ iriHliE (SlR(0)i I HENRY ARMSTRONG, I The subject of this notice, was born in Wexford,! Ireland, on May 2l8t, 1821. The following yearhis parents emigrated to Canada, settling in thetownship of Yonge, in the county of Leeds, whereho lived the remainder of his life. In April,1845. he was married to Miss Susannah Earl, ofthe same place. Brothfr Armstrong was converted when ^e wasabout seventeen years of age, connpcting himselfwith tho Wesleyan Methodist church of ( was a man of few words, and lived a quiet,honest and conscientious Christian life. He was afdthful reader of the Scriptures, and the Chris-tian Guardian was his chief religious January 18th, 1890, he died very suddenlyfrom pneumonia, developed from la grippe. OnJanuary 21st the writer preached his funeral ser-mon from John xiv. 2, 3, to a large congregationof sympathizing friends and relatives. The bodywas conveve


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, booksubjectbible, bookyear1855