An exact collection of the works of Doctor Jackson ... such as were not published before : Christ exercising his everlasting priesthood ... or, a treatise of that knowledge of Christ which consists in the true estimate or experimental valuation of his death, resurrection, and exercise of his everlasting sacerdotal function ... : this estimate cannot rightly be made without a right understanding of the primeval state of Adam ...
- Title
- An exact collection of the works of Doctor Jackson ... such as were not published before : Christ exercising his everlasting priesthood ... or, a treatise of that knowledge of Christ which consists in the true estimate or experimental valuation of his death, resurrection, and exercise of his everlasting sacerdotal function ... : this estimate cannot rightly be made without a right understanding of the primeval state of Adam ...
- Author
- Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640.
- Publication
- London :: Printed by R. Norton for Timothie Garthwait ...,
- 1654.
- Rights/Permissions
-
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- Subject terms
- Apostles' Creed -- Early works to 1800.
- Theology, Doctrinal.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A46995.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"An exact collection of the works of Doctor Jackson ... such as were not published before : Christ exercising his everlasting priesthood ... or, a treatise of that knowledge of Christ which consists in the true estimate or experimental valuation of his death, resurrection, and exercise of his everlasting sacerdotal function ... : this estimate cannot rightly be made without a right understanding of the primeval state of Adam ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A46995.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 5, 2024.
Contents
- title page
- THE PREFACE.
- A Table conteining the Principal Arguments of the several Sections and Chapters in this Book.
- A Table of the Texts of Holy Scripture Expounded or Illustrated in this BOOK.
-
A
TREATISE
OF
The Primaeval estate of the First Man. Of the Manner
how Sin found Entrance into, and is Propagated
in the World. Of the Nature of Sin. Of our First Servitude
to it. Of that poor Remnant of Free-will left in the Sons
of Adam, with directions to use it aright, and how we are set Free by the
Son of God. Of Mortification. Of the Right use of Reason, or Rules
of Art, for determining doubts in Divinity, &c.
- SECT. I.
- SECT. II.
- SECT. III.
- SECT. IV.
- SECT. V.
- Some Notes of the Publishers, relating to severall Chapters preceding.
-
An Appendix, or, Sixt Section.
- chapter - 37
- A Note Referring to Fol. 3159. Line 3. and to Marg. Note, 1.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
- CHAP. XL.
- CHAP. XLI.
-
CHAPT. XLII.
- The first General: The manner how God doth harden.
- The second General Point, concerning the Pertinencie of the Objection.
- The third General Point proposed, concerning the Logical deter∣mination of this Proposition [whom he will he harden∣eth:] or, concerning the immediate or proper Object of the Induration here spoken of.
- The fourth General Point concerning the Extent or nature of this di∣vision, He will have mercie on whom he will have mercie; and whom he will be hardneth.
- note to the reader
- To the Two Noble Gentlemen, his much honoured Friends: Mr. R. S. and Mr. E. S. sonnes to the R. H. L. S. The Bles∣sings of this Life, and of the Life to come be multiplied.
- SECT. VII.
- SECT. VIII.
- Though he that only reades this Author by Index is unwor∣thy both of him and it: and though the observant Reader may serve himself well of the Contents of the Chapters, the Table of Texts of Scripture, the Titles of every Page, and the Marginal Breifes; yet for his further Advantage is made this ensuing Table: To which every Reader may adde what he pleases, space being left for that purpose, at the end of every Letter in the Alphabet.