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The Conclusion.
WE have now seen the Excellency and Beauty of Holiness, have dis∣covered the absolute Perfection of its Nature, and the Compleatness of its Rule; have taken a view of its Allurements and powerful Motives, and have disco∣vered the weakness of those Cavils that are urged against it: and what remains, but that we set about this work with the greatest seriousness imaginable; that we give no sleep to our eyes, nor slumber to our eye-lids, till we forsake our sins, and en∣ter upon a course of Holiness?
If God had imposed upon us a heavy and intolerable yoak; if he had com∣manded us to perform some grievous and uneasie service, had we not been obliged to have obeyed? But since he onely commands us to wash and be clean, re∣quires onely our consent to what is so much our own interest, onely exacts that we separate our selves from those lusts that pollute and defile us, that vex and