A Discourse in Which is Shown That the State of Man Was Originally Necessarily M
A Discourse in Which is Shown That the State of Man Was Originally Necessarily M
Thomas Baber
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The sin of Adam, and may, as they shall have have been unrepented of in this life ; for, as to all other sins, they will have been done away by Christ's death and suffer- ings, but which the church of Rome, by the doctrine of pur- gatory, virtually denies. 198 [part II. arrived at an age to disting-uish between good and evil, commit sins of which they will be conscious, it will follow, that except as their own sufferings may be available for the blot- ting out of these personal sins, in like ma...n- ner as the sufferings of Christ have been supposed to be for the blotting out the sin of their nature, it will be the same thing with respect to them, considered as individuals, as if Christ had not suffered at all. Christ's sufferings, it is true, will have been the effi- cient cause of these sins of theirs being blot- ted out ; seeing, however, this will not have been without their sufferings, these sufferings of theirs will have been the causa sine qua nm of their sins being blotted out. Having thus given an account of our au- thor's system, so far as, by a careful perusal of his book, I have been able to comprehend it ; for, it is not given in a connected man- ner, but is intermixed with other subjects, which, although not foreign to his principal subject, nevertheless make a clear account of his chief subject very difficult ; I proceed to the consideration of a doctrine wliich our author has had principally in view in the SECT.
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