DOCT. VI. That concupiscence it self, and the cor∣ruption of nature is a sinne.
ANd, if by the Law of God, that is condemned for a sinne, what∣soever
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ANd, if by the Law of God, that is condemned for a sinne, what∣soever
is not agreeable unto the first image of God, that is, in righteous∣nesse, holinesse, and uprightnesse, wherein man was created: we gather from hence, that not onely the a∣ctions done with consent of will con∣trary to the will of God, but also the very inward motions of concupi∣scence, and therefore concupiscence it self, and every corruption of nature is a sinne, and so condemned by the Law of God: because it is repugnant to the rectitude, or uprightnesse, and righteousnesse in which man was created, and in which he might have continned and stood, if he would.