346 Motive1 toget ag_ooac()1!fCience. Cap.~5 or would their heart fervethem todiefo~ ---refufing. So were they in a iniferablefirait between two dangers, of ~ofing Life, and wounding Confcience, and could no way f~tisfy themfelyes: whereas good Confci– ence had feea in fuch a cafe,what was preffntly to be chofen. 10Confciencenever made I goodMartyr ye~. ) . But there are three times efpecially whereltev.8.t3· in ill Confcience proclaimeth Terror, and as the Angell in the Revelation; flies over the headof a finner, ·cryingWoe, Woe, Woe•. Firfi, _ORe Woe in life. Secondly, T"tPo WoeJ at death. Thirdly, But Three Wouat the day 1 Woe in of Judgement. · thili life. The firfl woe i1 in thitlife: But this, how dreadfull foever , is the leaft becaufe the lhorteft, and hath an e d in a little fpace of a few dayes or years ; therefore it is faid,the firft woe is palfed, hue behold[t~o worfe rvo~r W . t comejhortlyup"1f!it,Rev.9.I2. ' tarh~e a The Second woe is at death ; This is agre"t w~e,9oubt~ tQ the former, the furnace i.J he~tttlfov~n times hatter ~han it couldbe in this ., Life. And as the ApoiUe faith of the God– lies affiifrions_, all the fuffering1 ofthisprefont ~ime ttre mt to be cqmpared to tb"t Glory that ir tofoOow; fo may we.fay, all the fufferings of this life to-the wicked, whether in Body or inSpirit, are nothing tobe compared to thofe that follow. This is a long lafling wot• .ft.ev;H. T 4 .13ut yet of .the fecond woe itis alfo (aid, ~he ' fec~nr:J woe u paft, to make way for the tbzrtJ th~greateft woe that cometh quickJJ, i.e. imme- , cf.iately upon it. . Many
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