of RELIG.ION. 91 feel an hut1dred Times ere they dieonce, - - beyond any oth~r ot the Creatures. · ' , IV. Tho' the Sentence of dying is on a11, yet fo great a Difference is betwixt the Saints and Refidue of Men here, hat . its penal Execution on .the ungodly, is fuch as Nature can give no Support u11- · deri~ . V. That fupernatural Prefages and Warnings 'hereof, ere·it -come, are inall / Times ki1ow.o and fure ; yea, fuch ex– traordinary , Evidences are fom itnes of . the precife T.ime, as coula have no poffi-: , ble Rife from any natural Caufe. 1 # • VI. That its immediate Commiffion from a fupreme and invifible Powet,- is (o ·evident, in fuch Executions oft, of \ _this·Sentence, by Sw.ord, famine, and · Peftilence, as the vifible Finger of God, · in a jufl: Retribution unto Men for Sin, may -be no lefs feen, and afupernatu– al Cafuality, than the Effect-s have been undoubted and clear; to fhew, that- fuch . is ~he State of Man, that this great Re· ,– volution by Death, doth eacnMoment depend on a Call fromHeaven. · -VII.~ That the Certainty offotnething fuper·natural in this Kit. g: of Terrors, is fo Atnown, that as no Re ·-f can po_ffibly ~ ·- - - ·~ · .. -:··, - ~ be
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