Excerpt from The Private Sentiments of a Member of P T: In a Letter to His Friend in London, Wherein the Grounds of Our Duty and Submission to His Present Majesty Are Stated and Defended, and Some Useful Remarks Made on the Present Posture of Affairs He has undertaken, in the following Treatijr}, an honourahle Defence of. His. Maje/ly's Title, in an H ijlorica'l Account ofour'co'nfiitutionfince the Great Rebellion 5 and points out to Confideration the Duty and Suhmiflion'we owe to Him, hoth hy the Law and the Gofp'el. He has undertaken likewifie hy way of Apology, a Vindication of our Primitive and Orthodox Church, from the fiveral Attempts of its avow'd Enemies, and the more threatningdangers' from Falfe Brethren. And I 'douht not h'ut the'ge nuine Sons of the Church of England, ' to whom he appeals, and from whom alone hes looks for Acceptance, will defend thenecefiiny Doflrines he has deliver'd, and by the Weight of their Reafonings, hath from the Prefi and improve the following Hints in futh Charac'ler, that hy a convic'lion and their erroneoue Opinions, of their difho and dangerous Refentments, our fellow'suhjeels may he kept within the Bounds-of Duty and Suhmzfiion 5 which as they are the tenderef't Methods of Re/lraint, [0 are they the mo]? Likely to prevail, mo/l agreeable to Chri/lian Comp/idiom and the Divine Example of the Au thor and Finiihet of our Faith, who went a bout doing good, and in a moral as wed as na curalfenfe', gwing Eyes to the blind.
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