Chap25. according to S' M A r r H B vv. Yet bleflz me before' go. 'Depart ye coifed. To force good place then. Ob. To hellfire,not materiallEre, but worfe in manyrefpeds. sot. But let me then come out again. ©b. It is everlafting fire, eternity of extremity. This is the hell 'of sot. hell : this puts the damned to their 1.,ei ÿdß, as much as ifthey fhculd fay , 0Ee4, áix ¿, Not ever,Lord, torment us thus. But they have a will tofin ever ; and, beingworthleffe, they can- not fatisfic Gods juílice in any time : therefore is their fire ever- But let mehave force good company in my mifery, Ob. -The devil andhie e%Ingelr, Sol, But who appointed me this hard condition ? ob. It was prepared ofold. The allpowerfull wifdom did, as it Sot, were, fet down and devife mofttormenting temper for that moft formidable fire. And here it is hard to fay, whether be more woful1, Depart frommeye corfed, or that which followeth, Into everlafing fire; Painof loge, or pain of fenfe. Sure it is, that the tearsofhell are not fuf icient to bewail the loft of heaven ; the worm of grief gnaws as painful' as the fire burns. If thofe good fouls, dt. 20. wept becaufe they fhould fee Pawls face no more, how deplorable is the cternall deprivationof thebeatifi- call vifion ? Node 42. For IWat an btingred, etc.] Ill works aro the juR caufesofdamnation, as being pettedlyevil. But good works can be no fuchcaufesof falvation, becaufe dttedebts to God, and, at thebet}, impeded. Verfc43. IWat afiranger, &c.] Thefe, fools of the people Pr".' 7'16° had a price in their hands toget heaven (as yofephby his bounty bought the LandofeEgypt) but theyhad no heart to it. Richard fon to Henry the third of Eigland, was ele ied King ofRomans, . being preferred thereinbefore Alphonfite King of Spain his com- petitor. The Spaniard pretended andcomplained to have been firft ekded. But, being it feems a great Mathematician, he was t?a ielt Hiti. drawing lines, when he fh.ruld have drawn outhis pude, and fo of t g,74, came prevented ofhis hopes. And is not this many an Englííh mans fault and folly ? Verfe94. Lord, whenflaw Yoe thee, &c.] They were-fand t iwmgoilso; klinde, and could not fee Chrllf in poor Chriaians, whom they ecto.o... fhould,
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