·. 34 . flhe confirming Work Ha~1d ~h~rein, who yet will not hear his . Vo1ce 111 the Word. _ VIII. By tl1efe · extraordinary - and wonderful Wor}(s q£ Providence, whieh have been in all Ages. . IX. BY fo ,evident a Reftra1int, both .. over Devils, ang \Viclced Men, without , . which, they would-qu-ickly c1ifturb the · _, whole frame of this Earth, .and make it , t uninhabitable for human Soc_iety__ ; it their being thus bounded and chained, - .._ were not . a~ vifible, as the Certainty ef · < their Being. _ - . . X. BY fuch a natural ,Ob1irgation to moral' Duties,· with .·the Se_nfe of a Dif– . terence betwixt Good .a·na Evil, as is founded in the .· very rational Nature of , ~- Man, that none can poflibly root ·out, . . even where~. the Scripture )s not kno\vn. XI. BY that natural Confidence alfo in QOD, which all Men have, ~- nd Re.. courfe to hiIn on any preferit ' e.xtr,eatn . Hazard, to witnefs ·not only tha£, the . moff High bears Rule in the Kingdoms • · · of Men, but that the Senfe and _Evi- __, - dence hereof is unavoidable. Queft. IV. But doth this great Adn1i– nifiration of Providence, ·about hu;na·n / _/ ..Affairs,
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