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<p>This shows us that there is a way, 1. Of knowing ourselves. As the water is a looking-glass in which we may see our faces by reflection, so there are mirrors by which the <i>heart of a man</i> is discovered to <i>a man</i>, that is, to himself. Let a man examine his own conscience, his thoughts, affections, and intentions. Let him behold his <i>natural face in the glass</i> of the divine law (<a class="bibleref" title="Jas.1.23" href="/passage/?search=Jas.1.23">Jas. 1:23</a>), and he may discern what kind of man he is and what is his true character, which it will be of great use to every man rightly to know. 2. Of knowing one another by ourselves; for, as there is a similitude between the face of a man and the reflection of it in the water, so there is between one mans heart and anothers for God has fashioned mens hearts alike; and in many cases we may judge of others by ourselves, which is one of the foundations on which that rule is built of doing to others as we would be done by, <a class="bibleref" title="Exod.23.9" href="/passage/?search=Exod.23.9">Exod. 23:9</a>. <i>Nihil est unum uni tam simile, tam par, quam omnes inter nosmet ipsos sumus. Sui nemo ipse tam similis quam omnes sunt omnium—No one thing is so like another as man is to man. No person is so like himself as each person is to all besides. Cic. de Legib. lib</i>. 1. One corrupt heart is like another, and so is one sanctified heart, for the former bears the same image of the earthy, the latter the same image of the heavenly.</p>