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CHAP. IX. (Book 9)
The Pleasure arising from knowing or con∣sidering our selves to be like God: from considering it, 1. Absolutely. 2. Comparatively, or respectively to the former state of the soul. To the state of lost souls. To its pattern. To the way of ac∣complishment. To the souls own expectati∣ons. To what it secures. The Pleasure whereto it disposes, of union, communion. A comparison of this Righteousness, with this Blessedness.
2. HEre is also to be considered, the pleasure and satisfaction involv'd in this assimi∣lation to God, as it is known, or refl••cted on, or that arises from the cognosci of this likeness.
We have hitherto discoursed of the pleasure of being like God, as that is apprehended, by a spiri∣tual sensation, a feeling of that inward recti∣tude, that happy pleasure of souls now per∣fectly restored? We have yet to consider a further pleasure, which acrews from the souls animadversion upon it self; its contemplating its self thus happily transformed. And though that very sensation be not without some ani∣madversion (as indeed no sensible perception can be performed without it) yet we must conceive a consequent animadversion, which is much more explicite, and distinct; and