·state of a CHRisTIAN~ · 43 _/ - ~ ','-. . r nifin tnuft b~ .on the other Hand. ' -4· ., - Xea, who bath in that abftraa Manner , fought to fiate the Cafe herein with his own S.onl, as if he were juft come out of .Pagantfm, to give a_ferious A1Tent to the Divinity of the Scripture, and were now - preffed to join in with that Profeffion_of the ChriH:ian Faith, which is 1noft exaCt– ly confor1n to the fa1ne, in the genuine and 1)erfpicuous Senfe t~ereof. _ \· In ~~e fecond Plf!ce, he hath ~ fought t~ , . (' know, how he could embrace the Popijh Creed, and adventure ·t:lis eternal State therepn ; or, how _he could extinguifh ; his Reafon .and Confcience, fo far as to believe, that the holy God would ever itnpofe fuch a Faith upon IVIen as ·this is. , , 1. Where he tnuft abandon thefe Princi· -– ples of natural Reafon, in the tno]t ,ne... , ceffary Ufe thereof, which G'od hath him- " felf planted in Man's Soul : .fo as not to · truft his own Eyes, · -hut others, in that greaf Int~reft of his eternal State; .at1d · -with his own Confeut be ihut out from c all proper Knowledge of the Rule of his . Religion ; yea, account a blind and unli– mited .Obedience to Men, atnongft the higheft Excellencies of Faith.- 2. \Vhere , he Inufi at once believe the Fulne!s -and E \· Per• ? I
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy OTcyMjk=