7o The Living Temple. Part IL only becaufe he hath thereby wrong'd himfelf 5 or which he can, afterwards, alIedge againft his own Ad or Deed.For he bath no other Rights in any thing, than what are derived, borrowed, de- pendent, on the Supream Proprietor, meafurable by his Rules, by which they are not unalienable: Yea,Juf ice obliges, if he fwear to his own Hurt, not to change, Pfal. 15. V. But now, with the Supream Proprie- tor, there cannot but be unalienable Rights ; infeparably, and everlaftingly inherent in him : For it cannot be, but that He, that is the Fountain of all Rights, mutt have them, primarily and ®riginally, in himfeif; and can no more fo quit them, as to make the Creature abÍolute and independent, than he can make the Creature, God. Wherefore, tho' with Men there can be Do filch thing, as 7uflice towards one felf, difenabling him to forego his Rights the Cafe cannot but be quite o- therwife as to cod, and, for the fame reafon, for which it cannot agree to Man; becaufe, Man bath none but borrow'd, and alienable Rights; which he can forego, to hi.il own Prejudice ; and
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