Excerpt from A Treatise Upon the Walk of Faith, Vol. 1 of 2
Others, pretending to be better settled, at tain to some form 0] godliness, but are with out the life and power of it they appear to have some notions and opinions about the way of righteousness, but not being taught them of God, nor ever brought under the nighty influence of them, their walk is therefore very uneven and irregular, and generally in the end brings great scandal upon the name and cause of Christ.
We have also many at this day, who set out in the ways of religion, but never felt the ruin of the fall. Nor the plague of their own hearts: these are commonly very comi dent and presumptuous they make a shining profession, and go on with great parade, un til they come to be tried; and then, in the time of temptation, they fall away.
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William Romaine, evangelical divine of the Church of England, was author of works once highly thought of by the evangelicals, the trilogy The Life, the Walk, and the Triumph of Faith.
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