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The Doctrine of Salvation for all Men put out of all Dispute.
The first PART.
THE first pretended divine authority, which has of late been advanced in support of the doctrine of salvation for all men, is, I. Tim. ii. 4. The words are "Who will have all men to be saved." The inspired word here rendered sav|ed, is sootbeenai, and is often rendered to be kept, or preserved. It is used also, Matt. v. 23. to signify what JAIRUS wanted for his daughter, viz. to be healed, or preserved from dying. It is used also Matt. xiv. 30. and it is rendered save, as in the text in question; but every body knows what Peter meant by it, viz. "Lord preserve me from drowning. Again it is used Mark v. 28. where also it is plain, the woman afflicted with her bloody issue meant, that she should be healed, that so her health and life might be preserv|ed. The disciples also used it, when christ told them LA|ZARUS sleepeth. They say then he will do well. Mean|ing it is a sign he is recovering. And it is used ever in the same form, as is the text before us, viz. Sootheenai. Acts xiv. 9. Respecting the impotent man of LYSTRA, his having faith to be healed, i. e. restored to the use of his limbs. And so we gain easy light about the sense of this word as used in Matt. xxiv. 22. Where it is rendered saved, as in the text in question; shewing that the sedi|tious and murderous Fraction of the Jews, were so sin|gularly shocking and ruinous, that unless God had shortened the time of their ravagings, they would have destroyed e|very man of their nation; but God to preserve his elect among them, brought the Roman army on them; which brought the tragedy to a speedy issue; and so saved i. e. delivered and preserved his own elect. And as passages of scripture should be always understood consistently one with another: and as all judges of languages know that soozoo, the theme of the word in question, properly signi|fies