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A Discourse Upon the Pharisee and Publican is unavailable, but you can change that!

From the editor's preface, "This important treatise unvails, in few but telling words, the nature of prayer, about which mankind has made most awful mistakes. Multitudes conceive that the heart-searching God can be influenced and propitiated by eloquent words and forms of prayer; whilst the few, who are taught by the Holy Spirit, feel and know that the ardent desire, the aspirations, the fervent...

And I say again, that all this pride and vain-glorious shew of the Pharisee, did arise from his not being acquainted with this; that a man must be good, before he can do good; he must be righteous, before he can do righteousness. This is evident from Paul, who insinuateth this as the reason, why “none do good,” even because There is none that is righteous, no, not one. “There is none righteous,” saith he; and then follows, “There is none that doeth good.” (Rom