Baxter - Houston-Packer Collection BT763 .B35 1655

( 3 fi pater Pio itccipienti pharma- cum amarum, gernmam pollicea- iur. Id ver.O donatio eft mere oratuita,quia res non incipit de- berifimulatj, acceptatur promif fio, fed cum impleta fuerit con- ditio : meritum ex condigno proprie cumoperans fibiipfi po. titto profit, guerre det alters, pro quo pretium xquale recipere de- beat : Sed eft meritum quoddam improprie didurn, quad ex paEo vacant, rale quid, refPalu to- norum operum in filiis quibus pnernia Demos promifit, admitti- mus. Et .pag, I I 3 3.- Si deri;i:7 in adultis omnibus ad beatitssdinem ( opera ) habent rationem medii, conditioni,.,caufie fine quit non,five antecedentis nece arii, quomodo- ad falutem neceffaria non ertint?] Lege reliqua ubi ex VOA) plura tranfcripfit. 71 ) and nothing in Commutation as if a father promife a child a. Jewell to take a bitter Medi- cine : And this is neither a Do- nation mcerly free, becaufe the thing begins not to be due as foon as the promife is accepted, but when the condition is per- formed : Nor properly is it Merit ofcondignity, feeing the worker rather profits himfelf then gives that to another for which he fhould receive an e- qual price : But is a certain Merit improperly fo called , which they call of Contract ( or promife. ) Such a thing we admit in refped of good works in Eons, to whom God bath promifed the reward. Rattly, if in all the adult, works have the nature ( or ref- pea ) of a Way, a Means, a Condition,a caufa fine qua non, a neceffaryAntecedent to blef- fednefs how can they choofe but be neceffary to Salva- tion ? ( Much of this was before Tranfcribed by C. Bergius.) 22. Mr, Brad- Bbb z E his

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