Of the state and nature of reason, as it is in man; and how its perfection in matters of religion is to be known.

[CHAPTER V.]

Shewing that all the mutability of our tempers, the disorders of our passions, the corruption of our hearts, all the reveries of the imagination, all the contradictions and absurdities that are to be found in human life, and human opinions, are in effect the mutability, disorders, corruption, and absurdities of human reason.

[An extract] from Mr. Law’s Serious Answer to Dr. [♦]Trapp’s four sermons, on the sin, folly, and danger of being Righteous overmuch.

[Some animadversions] upon Dr. [♦]Trapp’s late reply.

[♦] “Trap’s” replaced with “Trapp’s”

[A short] but sufficient confutation of Bishop Warburton’s projected defence (as he calls it) of Christianity, in his divine legation of Moses in a letter to the Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of London.


An Extract from Mr. Law’s
SERIOUS CALL
TO A HOLY LIFE.