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spiritual taste, is rarely allowed to yawn or to fag in the perusal of them. The author was broadly awake and feelingly alive to what he wrote; and seems ever eager to arouse in the inquirer a similar awakened state of the mind. It is scarcely possible for a person to read many of his pages without feeling correction, instruction, and reproof, and catching a portion of his spirit. If he does not in every paragraph surprise his readers with something dazzling, he presents them always with something that is true. If he does not always charm them with what is novel and original, he furnishes them with what is solemn, and sometimes sublime. When he warns, he melts; when he thunders, he weeps; when he exposes the disease, it is to heal the wound; when he amputates the mortified member, he pours into the patient the balm of mercy. To the sinner he leaves no place to find rest to the sole of his foot, till he return and take shelter in the ark, or under the shade of the cross.

While, however, these writings bear, by unanimous consent of the Christian public, this high character, they are so voluminous as to be inaccessible to the greater part of purchasers from the necessary expense, or if that could be overcome, too numerous to allow of people, in the ordinary circumstances of life, fully perusing them; it soon therefore became obvious, that it was only by abridgement or selection that these valuable writings could be made available to the general class of readers; and hence, since BAXTER'S time, successive editions of many of his treatises, in a separate form, have been called for by the Public.

In the present selection, the Publishers have endeavoured to embody those treatises that have been found most useful, and have been most approved by the Christian public. The whole of them have undergone a careful revision, and the Latin quotations with which they abound, have been translated into English. If these improvements shall in any way lead to an extended perusal of these invaluable writings, the projectors of this edition will consider themselves fully repaid for the labour bestowed in preparing it for the public.

XI. 2. God's relation to man, as our Redeemer,..........

XII. 3. God's third relation to man, as our Sanctifier and Comforter,.............................

XIII. God is our absolute Lord or owner, our most righteous Governor, and our

most bountiful or gracious Father or benefactor,

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OR, THE BELIEVER JUSTIFIED AND THE DISBELIEVER CONVINCED.

[In this Treatise are described, both as to the principles, the matter, and the manner, what that religion and service
of God is, in which men must labour with all their might.]

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