Preston - BX9318 P725 1633

will Co icupi ante. i 9 ; taeedes be bad , as forexample. ; Th'end that a huf- Simile. bandman doetb ayme at in tilling: ofthe ground and (owing ofhis feed.corne, is to havea goodhar- vefr, and ifhis harvell provebad; then all his labour is lofl,thóugh the beginnings ofa thingbegood,yet if the utmoft endofthatthingbe naught, all is bad 3 So that th'endofall..things inmoral! aûions, doeth make the thing either good or. bad : Every wicked mandoth feeke himfelfe in all his aäions , hee loth worfhippe himfelfe in the utmofl ende of all,his thoughts,fo that allhis a6ions,lufls, and defires , are evil! continually. Now I proceed to Phew you howit is the A - What is rd Male Paul would have you to mortifie, here force mortified, thing is rrefented, andtofhewyou plainely what it is, it Bothcon(fl in there twoparticulars. Firff,thehabitual! concupifcence,and fecondly,the inordinate lulls and delires that doe arife from it, one wee call habitual!, and the other aetuall. Now the Apofile wouldhave the habituall concupifcence in nature weakened and fecondly,he would havethe aces ofthe lufl tobe fuppreffed. Now that it is the Apotles meaning,that hewould have themmortified and that which is tobe mortified is fin , marke that place I-did citebefore, Rom.6. i z. Let xot_fnne raigne i your mortal! bodies. In thefe wordes arethree things obfervable, Firft,there is a finne, fecondly,a luft to the fin,and thirdlyobedience to thefin,thatis a wiI to executethedefire of thislull.When theÁp©+ filefaith,hewould have thémortified,he would have theheart robe clenfed from thehabitualcuflomofed viLconcupifcence,andfecondly hewouldhaue them fo

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