Rev. Mr. Webber, Fellow of Exeter College. Mr. Weftcot. Mr. Weftlake of Exon. Mr. Martin White. Mr. Thomas White, Mr. Wigmore of Farnham. Mr. John Wilcocks. Mr. Charles Williams. Mr. Williams. Mr. William Williams. Mr. Robert Wills of Totnese, Mr. Wilshman. Mr. Lewis Wolcomb. Mr. Wrey, Rector of Tauftock, Charles Webber of Exon. Richard Weft of Chichester. Mark Weftern, Ufculm. Mrs. Whiting of Exon. Mr. Benjamin Wills. Mrs. Mary Wood. Mr. Woolcott of Sidbury, 2 Books, Simon Worth.. Reginald Worth, THE THE JOB Xxviii. 28. And unto Man he faid, Behold, the Fear GEN. iii. xv. And I will put Enmity between thee and ACTS ii. 27. Because thou wilt not leave my Soul in PROV. iii. 27. Withhold not Good from them to whom GEN. IV. 10. And he faid, What haft thou done? The ACTS XXIV. 25. As he reafoned of Righteoufnefs, and Temperance, and Judgment to come, Felix trembled, ACTS xxiv. 16. And herein do I exercife myself, to 2 TIM. iv. 7, 8. I have fought a good Fight, I have finish'd my Courfe, I have kept the Faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of Righteousness, SERMON I.. PSALM Civ. 24. O Lord, how manifold are thy Works! in Wisdom haft thou made them all. T I. . HAT there is a God, is a Propofi- SERM. that to endeavour to prove it would I. SERM. Thing whatsoever that can poffibly be accounted for; for if we could fuppofe God not to be, we could never suppose the Poffibility of any thing else. And yet, notwithstanding this, there are many obdurate Men, who have abandon'd Virtue, and are become Slaves to Vice; who are Chriftians in Profeffion, and Atheists in Practice ; whose Intereft, and Advantage it is, that there should be no God, nor Judge of hu man Actions; that would willingly cheat themselves into a Denial of this Truth, if they could do it with any tolerable Decency. Tho' 'tis very ftrange, how any one, who is endued with Reason, and has Eyes to look abroad into the World, to fee the Hand of God in all his Works, and trace the Footsteps of Providence, can doubt of the Existence of that Being, whom Nature proclaims in all her Works; for the invisible things of him from the Creation of the World are clearly feen, being understood by the Things that are made, even his eternal Power and Godhead; fo that they, if any fuch there are, who actually doubt of it, are without Excufe. These things tranfcend the Bounds of any muft of neceffity be fwallow'd up in Wonder and Admiration; for tho' the holy Pfal finite Capacity, and mift |