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THE Preface.
'TIs the just Grief, and frequent Complaint of those that take to heart the Concerns of Religi∣on, that they see it now more furiously assaulted and studiously under∣min'd than ever, not only by the vicious Lives of Men, but by their licentious Dis∣courses. I know, there have been Vices in the World, as long as there have been Men: And 'tis an observation as old as Solo∣mon, Eccles. 7.10. That Men are apt to look upon their own Times as worse than those that preceded them. And because I remember too, that in reciting this Com∣plaint he disapproves it; I shall not dis∣pute, whether other Ages have been less faulty than this we live in: But this I think I may say with as much Truth as Grief, that, among us here in England, the Times, to which our memory can reach, have been less guilty, than the present Time is, of a spreading and bold Profaneness. For, though many allow'd themselves to