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A77834 Mans inbred malady, or The doctrine of original sin maintained, as also the necessity of infants baptism. / By George Burches B.D. late Rector of Wood-Church in Cheshire. Burches, George, d. 1658. 1655 (1655) Wing B5613; Thomason E1708_2; ESTC R10375 36,789 142

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out this year proceeds Originally though by the mediation of the body and branches of that root which may be was planted many hundred years agoe If the root be corrupt struck and die it is likewise corrupt strucken and dies with it and why because it is a part of that body that is of the same nature qualitie and condition with the root Even so it is with all men that both have been and now are born they lineally descended by the mediation of the body the generations and successions of men they proceed from the first parent of mankind as from the root they participate of his nature qualities and properties and therefore if his condition be sinful damnable their 's likewise is sinful damnable because the guilt of what he did is justly imputed unto them as being then with him and now descending from his loyns and that according to the rule of natures Law according to the equitie of divine justice all the species the whole kind of man were potentially in Adam and by right of inheritance from sin are intituled to the priviledges of nature whatsoever belonged to him they may justly challenge that is all kind of sustenance for the preservation of their being as nature hath given unto us a being so it owes unto us a sustenance shall we challenge God for maintenance and preservation of life in right of our first parents shall not he as justly challenge us as guilty of sin subject to his wrath descending from him who wilfully transgressed disobeyed his Law shal we not partake of the good and evil whereunto we are intituled in right of our first parents surely both alike belongeth unto us and therefore even in our conception when we as it were first sprout out even then are we justly accounted guilty of wilfull disobedience and sin because we descend from the loins of him that did wilfully disobey and transgresse the Law of his mighty Creator So that all excuse by just imputation hereof being taken away by this means sin being appropriated unto us we made guilty thereof in the highest degree as proceeding from the intent disobedience of the reasonable will Let us proceed to consider out of the Prophets words the Original of sin when after what manner or in what measure we are made sinful hence implyed in this word Mother that is from the very act of generation for the first she takes upon her the office of Mother after what manner expressed in these two words shaping and conceiving and lastly in what measure implyed in this particle I that is not this or that part of me but I wholly that is every part and faculty in me In the former clause namely of the guilt of the imputation of our first parents sin we speak of sin only in relation to the efficient cause who did it and how it was actual In this we consider sin in the form thereof namely as it transgresseth the law how it is originally diffused over every part and faculty of us and so it becomes habitual I was shapen c. By shaping is understood the first framing and fashioning of us in the womb and by conceiving is meant the first being and breeding and growing up unto perfection in the womb for Tremel translats it in peccando fovet me mea Mater In sin hath my Mother cherished me up And so is our Hebraisme in our English margent In sin did my mother warm me which implyeth the same thing both importing that man both in his first beginning also in his continual grouth increasing is sinful that is every way exceeding sinfull If a man should be born having his face standing backward and his legs coming out where his armes should be and his armes out of his belly and his belly upon his head it would surely be esteemed an ugly monster fearful and prodigious and yet the deformity and obliquity of the Soul and body of man by sin is much more monstrous where every part and faculty is disordered where every particular is both extra and praeter intentionem naturae both besides and beyond the intention of nature as by the sequel shall appear Now perfect and compleat shaping doth imply two several acts First the exact temperature of internal qualities 2ly the due proportion of the externall parts and lineaments In both these there is sin formally which is the transgression of the law For God in the creation had set down a law also for things of this inferior quality and respect which could not be transgressed without sin in the first place prescribing unto every thing such a just and limited temper and mixture of primari● qualities of heat and cold of drienesse and moisture whereof all mixt bodies consist and was most behoofeful to the perfection and preservation of his being and Secondly squaring out such a due and excellent proportion and fashion in all the body as might best adorn it with most beautie and comlinesse thereby so manifesting his power and wisdome in all things that there was neither distemper inwardly nor deformitie outwardly in any thing that he hath made Both these laws are broken and transgressed in the shaping of men For first there is such a distemper of such unequal iniquity of the radical heat and radical moisture which are principia vitae as the Physicians call them the very principles and grounds of life that the healthiest man living is not perfectly in health though yet not sensibly and throughly sick but lives as it were in a neutrality betwixt both yet rather sick then wel because the disease is still growing though not ripe until the distemper thereof wax so strong and predominant that nature is so weakened and subdued thereby that it is not able without grief to resist the same 2ly In the outward framing and fashioning of the body there is no man that hath that exact proportion and comelinesse in the parts of the body then Adam had that was immediately created by God but there is in it some imperfection or blemish which doth some way either di●figure or deform him Nay I will say that which many perhaps will think strange that there is not in us the least joynt but sin is in it not only formally as there is a want of perfection in the composition and constitution thereof according to the law of God but also imputatively because it became so by the rebellion of our will that thereby we have transgressed the law defaced the workmanship of God within us deprived our selves of health and perfection and so justly become the subjects of Gods vengeance Nay I will say more that there is no grief nor pain that the beasts or other creatures in the world do suffer but it is sin formally a transgression of this Law Because God intended no such affliction to any of his creatures by the Creation but by his Law both established it and ordained it otherwise that namely the creatures