c~o A D~fcriptz"on of the confirmed I. To be fuch, \Vho are o£ the moft dif.;. cerr1ing and jt1dicious in the .Things of Rea(on, as well as any eHe. 2 •. · Whofe ·. VIallt and Practice ufe t() have the greatefl: Authority over l\tiens Confciences with whom they converfe. 3· Who are found ./ . 1noft intenfly taken up in the, retired Wark ai1d Duties: of Religion ; that can have no.Reij1eCl: to the ,Witnefs and Oh- - fervation of others. · 4· Wh~feek no im– plicit Credit from · any herein ; hut do 1)niy Meri to come, and fee, and prove the- fame in . their ow~1 ·Experience; ' with an Appeal to the tnoft exact Inqui– ry, and rational Trial of all Mankind, jf here he a-ny cafual Thing; and · if that Teftimony of the dottrinal and experi- ' n1ental Part of.Religion, Be not ftill one and the fatne. ) • Who alfo out of the moft remote Places of the Earth, and O• thj!rwife Strangers amongft themfelves,clo yet moft harmonioufly meet in the faJne Witne!s, and are thus 1nutually difclofed .to each other, by a near and feeling In- \ tercourfe of their Souls, from fuch an Onenefs in a f1?iritual State, and thofe fpecifick Properties of a fpiritual and new Nature, with as difcernible Evidence, as if one Man fhould.tneet with another of - the :
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