Part II. The Living Temple. a 53 ate Will, accompany'dwithnothing of Perturbation ; that it bea confiant Will, in reference to all fuchOccafions, where- in the Sacrednefs of the Divine Go- vernment, violated, requires fuch Re- paration ; and without any Change, (o. ther than what we may conceive im- ported in the different Afpeds of the fame Obje!J, conceiv'd as future, prefent, or pall, and beheld before, with pur- pofe, afterwards with continual Appro- bation) the molt acknowledg'd PerfeA`i- on of the Divine Nature, doth, ma- nifeftly, not admit only, but require. For that fuch a calm, fedate, Ready, fixed Temper ofMind, in a Mag(irate, is anExcellency, even Common Reafon apprehends : Therefore is it faid, by a noted Pagan, That judges ought to be Legum Similes,like theLaws themfelves ; which are moved by no paffion, yet inflexible : And then where can fuch an Excellency have place in higheft Perfection, but in the Bleffed God himfelf? Yea, and that it be alfo a complacent)al Will, as fame of the Ex- prefíìons, above recited, feem to im. port, may very well be admitted, if we rightly conceive, and fiate in our own Minds, the thing willed by it; i. e. the
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