1231 lines
76 KiB
Plaintext
1231 lines
76 KiB
Plaintext
UNITARIAN CHRISTIANITY
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By William Ellery Channing
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Delivered at the Ordination of Rev. Jared Sparks
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in The First Independent Church of Baltimore on
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May 5, 1819.
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1 Thes. v. 21: "Prove all things; hold fast that
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which is good."
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The peculiar circumstances of this occasion not only justify,
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but seem to demand a departure from the course generally followed
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by preachers at the introduction of a brother into the sacred
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office. It is usual to speak of the nature, design, duties, and
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advantages of the Christian ministry; and on these topics I should
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now be happy to insist, did I not remember that a minister is to be
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given this day to a religious society, whose peculiarities of
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opinion have drawn upon them much remark, and may I not add, much
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reproach. Many good minds, many sincere Christians, I am aware, are
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apprehensive that the solemnities of this day are to give a degree
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of influence to principles which they deem false and injurious. The
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fears and anxieties of such men I respect; and, believing that they
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are grounded in part on mistake, I have thought it my duty to lay
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before you, as clearly as I can, some of the distinguishing
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opinions of that class of Christians in our country, who are known
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to sympathize with this religious society. I must ask your
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patience, for such a subject is not to be despatched in a narrow
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compass. I must also ask you to remember, that it is impossible to
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exhibit, in a single discourse, our views of every doctrine of
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Revelation, much less the differences of opinion which are known to
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subsist among ourselves. I shall confine myself to topics, on which
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our sentiments have been misrepresented, or which distinguish us
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most widely from others. May I not hope to be heard with candor?
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God deliver us all from prejudice and unkindness, and fill us with
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the love of truth and virtue.
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There are two natural divisions under which my thoughts will
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be arranged. I shall endeavour to unfold, 1st, The principles which
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we adopt in interpreting the Scriptures. And 2dly, Some of the
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doctrines, which the Scriptures, so interpreted, seem to us clearly
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to express.
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I. We regard the Scriptures as the records of God's successive
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revelations to mankind, and particularly of the last and most
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perfect revelation of his will by Jesus Christ. Whatever doctrines
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seem to us to be clearly taught in the Scriptures; we receive
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without reserve or exception. We do not, however, attach equal
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importance to all the books in this collection. Our religion, we
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believe, lies chiefly in the New Testament. The dispensation of
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Moses, compared with that of Jesus, we consider as adapted to the
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childhood of the human race, a preparation for a nobler system, and
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chiefly useful now as serving to confirm and illustrate the
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Christian Scriptures. Jesus Christ is the only master of
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Christians, and whatever he taught, either during his personal
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ministry, or by his inspired Apostles, we regard as of divine
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authority, and profess to make the rule of our lives.
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This authority, which we give to the Scriptures, is a reason,
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we conceive, for studying them with peculiar care, and for
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inquiring anxiously into the principles of interpretation, by which
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their true meaning may be ascertained. The principles adopted by
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the class of Christians in whose name I speak, need to be
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explained, because they are often misunderstood. We are
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particularly accused of making an unwarrantable use of reason in
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the interpretation of Scripture. We are said to exalt reason above
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revelation, to prefer our own wisdom to God's. Loose and undefined
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charges of this kind are circulated so freely, that we think it due
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to ourselves, and to the cause of truth, to express our views with
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some particularity.
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Our leading principle in interpreting Scripture is this, that
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the Bible is a book written for men, in the language of men, and
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that its meaning is to be sought in the same manner as that of
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other books. We believe that God, when he speaks to the human race,
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conforms, if we may so say, to the established rules of speaking
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and writing. How else would the Scriptures avail us more, than if
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communicated in an unknown tongue?
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Now all books, and all conversation, require in the reader or
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hearer the constant exercise of reason; or their true import is
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only to be obtained by continual comparison and inference. Human
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language, you well know, admits various interpretations; and every
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word and every sentence must be modified and explained according to
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the subject which is discussed, according to the purposes,
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feelings, circumstances, and principles of the writer, and
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according to the genius and idioms of the language which he uses.
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These are acknowledged principles in the interpretation of human
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writings; and a man, whose words we should explain without
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reference to these principles, would reproach us justly with a
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criminal want of candor, and an intention of obscuring or
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distorting his meaning.
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Were the Bible written in a language and style of its own, did
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it consist of words, which admit but a single sense, and of
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sentences wholly detached from each other, there would be no place
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for the principles now laid down. We could not reason about it, as
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about other writings. But such a book would be of little worth; and
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perhaps, of all books, the Scriptures correspond least to this
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description. The Word of God hears the stamp of the same hand,
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which we see in his works. It has infinite connexions and
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dependences. Every proposition is linked with others, and is to be
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compared with others; that its full and precise import may he
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understood. Nothing stands alone. The New Testament is built on the
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Old. The Christian dispensation is a continuation of the Jewish,
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the completion of a vast scheme of providence, requiring great
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extent of view in the reader. Still more, the Bible treats of
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subjects on which we receive ideas from other sources besides
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itself; such subjects as the nature, passions, relations, and
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duties of man; and it expects us to restrain and modify its
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language by the known truths, which observation and experience
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furnish on these topics.
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We profess not to know a book, which demands a more frequent
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exercise of reason than the Bible. In addition to the remarks now
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made on its infinite connexions, we may observe, that its style
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nowhere affects the precision of science, or the accuracy of
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definition. Its language is singularly glowing, bold, and
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figurative, demanding more frequent departures from the literal
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sense, than that of our own age and country, and consequently
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demanding more continual exercise of judgment. -- We find, too,
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that the different portions of this book, instead of being confined
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to general truths, refer perpetually to the times when they were
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written, to states of society, to modes of thinking, to
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controversies in the church, to feelings and usages which have
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passed away, and without the knowledge of which we are constantly
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in danger of extending to all times, and places, what was of
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temporary and local application. -- We find, too, that some of
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these books are strongly marked by the genius and character of
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their respective writers, that the Holy Spirit did not so guide the
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Apostles as to suspend the peculiarities of their minds, and that
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a knowledge of their feelings, and of the influences under which
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they were placed, is one of the preparations for understanding
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their writings. With these views of the Bible, we feel it our
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bounden duty to exercise our reason upon it perpetually, to
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compare, to infer, to look beyond the letter to the spirit, to seek
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in the nature of the subject, and the aim of the writer, his true
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meaning; and, in general, to make use of what is known, for
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explaining what is difficult, and for discovering new truths.
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Need I descend to particulars, to prove that the Scriptures
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demand the exercise of reason? Take, for example, the style in
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which they generally speak of God, and observe how habitually they
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apply to him human passions and organs. Recollect the declarations
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of Christ, that he came not to send peace, but a sword; that unless
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we eat his flesh, and drink his blood, we have no life in us; that
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we must hate father and mother, and pluck out the right eye; and a
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vast number of passages equally bold and unlimited. Recollect the
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unqualified manner in which it is said of Christians, that they
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possess all things, know all things, and can do all things.
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Recollect the verbal contradiction between Paul and James, and the
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apparent clashing of some parts of Paul's writings with the general
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doctrines and end of Christianity. I might extend the enumeration
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indefinitely; and who does not see, that we must limit all these
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passages by the known attributes of God, of Jesus Christ, and of
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human nature, and by the circumstances under which they were
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written, so as to give the language a quite different import from
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what it would require, had it been applied to different beings, or
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used in different connexions.
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Enough has been said to show, in what sense we make use of
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reason in interpreting Scripture. From a variety of possible
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interpretations, we select that which accords with the nature of
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the subject and the state of the writer, with the connexion of the
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passage, with the general strain of Scripture, with the known
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character and will of God, and with the obvious and acknowledged
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laws of nature. In other words, we believe that God never
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contradicts, in one part of scripture, what he teaches in another;
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and never contradicts, in revelation, what he teaches in his works
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and providence. And we therefore distrust every interpretation,
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which, after deliberate attention, seems repugnant to any
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established truth. We reason about the Bible precisely as civilians
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do about the constitution under which we live; who, you know, are
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accustomed to limit one provision of that venerable instrument by
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others, and to fix the precise import of its parts, by inquiring
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into its general spirit, into the intentions of its authors, and
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into the prevalent feelings, impressions, and circumstances of the
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time when it was framed. Without these principles of
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interpretation, we frankly acknowledge, that we cannot defend the
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divine authority of the Scriptures. Deny us this latitude, and we
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must abandon this book to its enemies.
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We do not announce these principles as original, or peculiar
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to ourselves. All Christians occasionally adopt them, not excepting
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those who most vehemently decry them, when they happen to menace
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some favorite article of their creed. All Christians are compelled
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to use them in their controversies with infidels. All sects employ
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them in their warfare with one another. All willingly avail
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themselves of reason, when it can be pressed into the service of
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their own party, and only complain of it, when its weapons wound
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themselves. None reason more frequently than those from whom we
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differ. It is astonishing what a fabric they rear from a few slight
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hints about the fall of our first parents; and how ingeniously they
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extract, from detached passages, mysterious doctrines about the
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divine nature. We do not blame them for reasoning so abundantly,
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but for violating the fundamental rules of reasoning, for
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sacrificing the plain to the obscure, and the general strain of
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Scripture to a scanty number of insulated texts.
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We object strongly to the contemptuous manner in which human
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reason is often spoken of by our adversaries, because it leads, we
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believe, to universal skepticism. If reason be so dreadfully
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darkened by the fall, that its most decisive judgments on religion
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are unworthy of trust, then Christianity, and even natural
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theology, must be abandoned; for the existence and veracity of God,
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and the divine original of Christianity, are conclusions of reason,
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and must stand or fall with it. If revelation be at war with this
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faculty, it subverts itself, for the great question of its truth is
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left by God to be decided at the bar of reason. It is worthy of
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remark, how nearly the bigot and the skeptic approach. Both would
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annihilate our confidence in our faculties, and both throw doubt
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and confusion over every truth. We honor revelation too highly to
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make it the antagonist of reason, or to believe that it calls us to
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renounce our highest powers.
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We indeed grant, that the use of reason in religion is
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accompanied with danger. But we ask any honest man to look back on
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the history of the church, and say, whether the renunciation of it
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be not still more dangerous. Besides, it is a plain fact, that men
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reason as erroneously on all subjects, as on religion. Who does not
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know the wild and groundless theories, which have been framed in
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physical and political science? But who ever supposed, that we must
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cease to exercise reason on nature and society, because men have
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erred for ages in explaining them? We grant, that the passions
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continually, and sometimes fatally, disturb the rational faculty in
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its inquiries into revelation. The ambitious contrive to find
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doctrines in the Bible, which favor their love of dominion. The
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timid and dejected discover there a gloomy system, and the mystical
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and fanatical, a visionary theology. The vicious can find examples
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or assertions on which to build the hope of a late repentance, or
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of acceptance on easy terms. The falsely refined contrive to light
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on doctrines which have not been soiled by vulgar handling. But the
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passions do not distract the reason in religious, any more than in
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other inquiries, which excite strong and general interest; and this
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faculty, of consequence, is not to be renounced in religion, unless
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we are prepared to discard it universally. The true inference from
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the almost endless errors, which have darkened theology, is, not
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that we are to neglect and disparage our powers, but to exert them
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more patiently, circumspectly, uprightly. The worst errors, after
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all, having sprung up in that church, which proscribes reason, and
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demands from its members implicit faith. The most pernicious
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doctrines have been the growth of the darkest times, when the
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general credulity encouraged bad men and enthusiasts to broach
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their dreams and inventions, and to stifle the faint remonstrances
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of reasons, by the menaces of everlasting perdition. Say what we
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may, God has given us a rational nature, and will call us to
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account for it. We may let it sleep, but we do so at our peril.
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Revelation is addressed to us as rational beings. We may wish, in
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our to sloth, that God had given us a system, demand of comparing,
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limiting, and inferring. But such a system would be at variance
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with the whole character of our present existence; and it is the
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part of wisdom to take revelation as it is given to us, and to
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interpret it by the help of the faculties, which it everywhere
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supposes, and on which founded.
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To the views now given, an objection is commonly urged from
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the character of God. We are told, that God being infinitely wiser
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than men, his discoveries will surpass human reason. In a
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revelation from such a teacher, we ought to expect propositions,
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which we cannot reconcile with one another, and which may seem to
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contradict established truths ; and it becomes us not to question
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or explain them away, but to believe, and adore, and to submit our
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weak and carnal reason to the Divine Word. To this objection, we
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have two short answers. We say, first, that it is impossible that
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a teacher of infinite wisdom should expose those, whom he would
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teach, to infinite error. But if once we admit, that propositions,
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which in their literal sense appear plainly repugnant to one
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another, or to any known truth, are still to be literally
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understood and received, what possible limit can we set to the
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belief of contradictions? What shelter have we from the wildest
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fanaticism, which can always quote passages, that, in their literal
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and obvious sense, give support to its extravagances? How can the
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Protestant escape from transubstantiation, a doctrine most clearly
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taught us, if the submission of reason, now contended for, be a
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duty? How can we even hold fast the truth of revelation, for if one
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apparent contradiction may be true, so may another, and the
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proposition, that Christianity is false, though involving
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inconsistency, may still be a verity?
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We answer again, that, if God be infinitely wise, he cannot
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sport with the understandings of his creatures. A wise teacher
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discovers his wisdom in adapting himself to the capacities of his
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pupils, not in perplexing them with what is unintelligible, not in
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distressing them with apparent contradictions, not in filling them
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with a skeptical distrust of their own powers. An infinitely wise
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teacher, who knows the precise extent of our minds, and the best
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method of enlightening them, will surpass all other instructors in
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bringing down truth to our apprehension, and in showing its
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loveliness and harmony. We ought, indeed, to expect occasional
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obscurity in such a book as the Bible, which was written for past
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and future ages, as well as for the present. But God's wisdom is a
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pledge, that whatever is necessary for US, and necessary for
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salvation, is revealed too plainly to be mistaken, and too
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consistently to be questioned, by a sound and upright mind. It is
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not the mark of wisdom, to use an unintelligible phraseology, to
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communicate what is above our capacities, to confuse and unsettle
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the intellect by appearances of contradiction. We honor our
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Heavenly Teacher too much to ascribe to him such a revelation. A
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revelation is a gift of light. It cannot thicken our darkness, and
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multiply our perplexities.
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II. Having thus stated the principles according to which we
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interpret Scripture, I now proceed to the second great head of this
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discourse, which is, to state some of the views which we derive
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from that sacred book, particularly those which distinguish us from
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other Christians.
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1. In the first place, we believe in the doctrine of God's
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UNITY, or that there is one God, and one only. To this truth we
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give infinite importance, and we feel ourselves bound to take heed,
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lest any man spoil us of it by vain philosophy. The proposition,
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that there is one God, seems to us exceedingly plain. We understand
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by it, that there is one being, one mind, one person, one
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intelligent agent, and one only, to whom underived and infinite
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perfection and dominion belong. We conceive, that these words could
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have conveyed no other meaning to the simple and uncultivated
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people who were set apart to be the depositaries of this great
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truth, and who were utterly incapable of understanding those hair-
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breadth distinctions between being and person, which the sagacity
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of later ages has discovered. We find no intimation, that this
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language was to be taken in an unusual sense, or that God's unity
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was a quite different thing from the oneness of other intelligent
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beings.
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We object to the doctrine of the Trinity, that, whilst
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acknowledging in words, it subverts in effect, the unity of God.
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According to this doctrine, there are three infinite and equal
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persons, possessing supreme divinity, called the Father, Son, and
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Holy Ghost. Each of these persons, as described by theologians, has
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his own particular consciousness, will, and perceptions. They love
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each other, converse with each other, and delight in each other's
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society. They perform different parts in man's redemption, each
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having his appropriate office, and neither doing the work of the
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other. The Son is mediator and not the Father. The Father sends the
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Son, and is not himself sent; nor is he conscious, like the Son, of
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taking flesh. Here, then, we have three intelligent agents,
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possessed of different consciousness, different wills, and
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different perceptions, performing different acts, and sustaining
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different relations; and if these things do not imply and
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constitute three minds or beings, we are utterly at a loss to know
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how three minds or beings are to be formed. It is difference of
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properties, and acts, and consciousness, which leads us to the
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belief of different intelligent beings, and, if this mark fails us,
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our whole knowledge fall; we have no proof, that all the agents and
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persons in the universe are not one and the same mind. When we
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attempt to conceive of three Gods, we can do nothing more than
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represent to ourselves three agents, distinguished from each other
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by similar marks and peculiarities to those which separate the
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persons of the Trinity; and when common Christians hear these
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persons spoken of as conversing with each other, loving each other,
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and performing different acts, how can they help regarding them as
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different beings, different minds?
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We do, then, with all earnestness, though without reproaching
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our brethren, protest against the irrational and unscriptural
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doctrine of the Trinity. "To us," as to the Apostle and the
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primitive Christians, "there is one God, even the Father." With
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Jesus, we worship the Father, as the only living and true God. We
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are astonished, that any man can read the New Testament, and avoid
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the conviction, that the Father alone is God. We hear our Saviour
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continually appropriating this character to the Father. We find the
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Father continually distinguished from Jesus by this title. "God
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sent his Son." "God anointed Jesus." Now, how singular and
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inexplicable is this phraseology, which fills the New Testament, if
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this title belong equally to Jesus, and if a principal object of
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this book is to reveal him as God, as partaking equally with the
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Father in supreme divinity! We challenge our opponents to adduce
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one passage in the New Testament, where the word God means three
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persons, where it is not limited to one person, and where, unless
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turned from its usual sense by the connexion, it does not mean the
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Father. Can stronger proof be given, that the doctrine of three
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persons in the Godhead is not a fundamental doctrine of
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Christianity?
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This doctrine, were it true, must, from its difficulty,
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singularity, and importance, have been laid down with great
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clearness, guarded with great care, and stated with all possible
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precision. But where does this statement appear? From the many
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passages which treat of God, we ask for one, one only, in which we
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are told, that he is a threefold being, or that he is three
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persons, or that he is Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. On the
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contrary, in the New Testament, where, at least, we might expect
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many express assertions of this nature, God is declared to be one,
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without the least attempt to prevent the acceptation of the words
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in their common sense; and he is always spoken of and addressed in
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the singular number, that is, in language which was universally
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understood to intend a single person, and to which no other idea
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could have been attached, without an express admonition. So
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entirely do the Scriptures abstain from stating the Trinity, that
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when our opponents would insert it into their creeds and
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doxologies, they are compelled to leave the Bible, and to invent
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forms of words altogether unsanctioned by Scriptural phraseology.
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That a doctrine so strange, so liable to misapprehension, so
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fundamental as this is said to be, and requiring such careful
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exposition, should be left so undefined and unprotected, to be made
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out by inference, and to be hunted through distant and detached
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parts of Scripture, this is a difficulty, which, we think, no
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ingenuity can explain.
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We have another difficulty. Christianity, it must be
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remembered, was planted and grew up amidst sharp-sighted enemies,
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who overlooked no objectionable part of the system, and who must
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have fastened with great earnestness on a doctrine involving such
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apparent contradictions as the Trinity. We cannot conceive an
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opinion, against which the Jews, who prided themselves on an
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adherence to God's unity, would have raised an equal clamor. Now,
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how happens it, that in the apostolic writings, which relate so
|
||
much to objections against Christianity, and to the controversies
|
||
which grew out of this religion, not one word is said, implying
|
||
that objections were brought against the Gospel from the doctrine
|
||
of the Trinity, not one word is uttered in its defence and
|
||
explanation, not a word to rescue it from reproach and mistake?
|
||
This argument has almost the force of demonstration. We are
|
||
persuaded, that had three divine persons been announced by the
|
||
first preachers of Christianity, all equal, and all infinite, one
|
||
of whom was the very Jesus who had lately died on a cross, this
|
||
peculiarity of Christianity would have almost absorbed every other,
|
||
and the great labor of the Apostles would have been to repel the
|
||
continual assaults, which it would have awakened. But the fact is,
|
||
that not a whisper of objection to Christianity, on that account,
|
||
reaches our ears from the apostolic age. In the Epistles we see not
|
||
a trace of controversy called forth by the Trinity.
|
||
We have further objections to this doctrine, drawn from its
|
||
practical influence. We regard it as unfavorable to devotion, by
|
||
dividing and distracting the mind in its communion with God. It is
|
||
a great excellence of the doctrine of God's unity, that it offers
|
||
to us ONE OBJECT of supreme homage, adoration, and love, One
|
||
Infinite Father, one Being of beings, one original and fountain, to
|
||
whom we may refer all good, in whom all our powers and affections
|
||
may be concentrated, and whose lovely and venerable nature may
|
||
pervade all our thoughts. True piety, when directed to an undivided
|
||
Deity, has a chasteness, a singleness, most favorable to religious
|
||
awe and love. Now, the Trinity sets before us three distinct
|
||
objects of supreme adoration; three infinite persons, having equal
|
||
claims on our hearts; three divine agents, performing different
|
||
offices, and to be acknowledged and worshipped in different
|
||
relations. And is it possible, we ask, that the weak and limited
|
||
mind of man can attach itself to these with the same power and joy,
|
||
as to One Infinite Father, the only First Cause, in whom all the
|
||
blessings of nature and redemption meet as their centre and source?
|
||
Must not devotion be distracted by the equal and rival claims of
|
||
three equal persons, and must not the worship of the conscientious,
|
||
consistent Christian, be disturbed by an apprehension, lest he
|
||
withhold from one or another of these, his due proportion of
|
||
homage?
|
||
We also think, that the doctrine of the Trinity injures
|
||
devotion, not only by joining to the Father other objects of
|
||
worship, but by taking from the Father the supreme affection, which
|
||
is his due, and transferring it to the Son. This is a most
|
||
important view. That Jesus Christ, if exalted into the infinite
|
||
Divinity, should be more interesting than the Father, is precisely
|
||
what might be expected from history, and from the principles of
|
||
human nature. Men want an object of worship like themselves, and
|
||
the great secret of idolatry lies in this propensity. A God,
|
||
clothed in our form, and feeling our wants and sorrows, speaks to
|
||
our weak nature more strongly, than a Father in heaven, a pure
|
||
spirit, invisible and unapproachable, save by the reflecting and
|
||
purified mind. -- We think, too, that the peculiar offices ascribed
|
||
to Jesus by the popular theology, make him the most attractive
|
||
person in the Godhead. The Father is the depositary of the justice,
|
||
the vindicator of the rights, the avenger of the laws of the
|
||
Divinity. On the other hand, the Son, the brightness of the divine
|
||
mercy, stands between the incensed Deity and guilty humanity,
|
||
exposes his meek head to the storms, and his compassionate breast
|
||
to the sword of the divine justice, bears our whole load of
|
||
punishment, and purchases with his blood every blessing which
|
||
descends from heaven. Need we state the effect of these
|
||
representations, especially on common minds, for whom Christianity
|
||
was chiefly designed, and whom it seeks to bring to the Father as
|
||
the loveliest being? We do believe, that the worship of a bleeding,
|
||
suffering God, tends strongly to absorb the mind and to draw it
|
||
from other objects, just as the human tenderness of the Virgin Mary
|
||
has given her so conspicuous a place in the devotions of the Church
|
||
of Rome. We believe, too, that this worship, though attractive, is
|
||
not most fitted to spiritualize the mind, that it awakens human
|
||
transport, rather than that deep veneration of the moral
|
||
perfections of God, which is the essence of piety.
|
||
2. Having thus given our views of the unity of God, I proceed
|
||
in the second place to observe, that we believe in the unity of
|
||
Jesus Christ. We believe that Jesus is one mind, one soul, one
|
||
being, as truly one as we are, and equally distinct from the one
|
||
God. We complain of the doctrine of the Trinity, that, not
|
||
satisfied with making God three beings, it makes; Jesus Christ two
|
||
beings, and thus introduces infinite confusion into our conceptions
|
||
of his character. This corruption of Christianity, alike repugnant
|
||
to common sense and to the general strain of Scripture, is a
|
||
remarkable proof of the power of a false philosophy in disfiguring
|
||
the simple truth of Jesus.
|
||
According to this doctrine, Jesus Christ, instead of being one
|
||
mind, one conscious intelligent principle, whom we can understand,
|
||
consists of two souls, two minds; the one divine, the other human;
|
||
the one weak, the other almighty; the one ignorant, the other
|
||
omniscient. Now we maintain, that this is to make Christ two
|
||
beings. To denominate him one person, one being, and yet to suppose
|
||
him made up of two minds, infinitely different from each other, is
|
||
to abuse and confound language, and to throw darkness over all our
|
||
conceptions of intelligent natures. According to the common
|
||
doctrine, each of these two minds in Christ has its own
|
||
consciousness, its own will, its own perceptions. They have, in
|
||
fact, no common properties. The divine mind feels none of the wants
|
||
and sorrows of the human, and the human is infinitely removed from
|
||
the perfection and happiness of the divine. Can you conceive of two
|
||
beings in the universe more distinct? We have always thought that
|
||
one person was constituted and distinguished by one consciousness.
|
||
The doctrine, that one and the same person should have two
|
||
consciousness, two wills, two souls, infinitely different from each
|
||
other, this we think an enormous tax on human credulity.
|
||
We say, that if a doctrine, so strange, so difficult, so
|
||
remote from all the previous conceptions of men, be indeed a part
|
||
and an essential part of revelation, it must be taught with great
|
||
distinctness, and we ask our brethren to point to some plain,
|
||
direct passage, where Christ is said to be composed of two minds
|
||
infinitely different, yet constituting one person. We find none.
|
||
Other Christians, indeed, tell us, that this doctrine is necessary
|
||
to the harmony of the Scriptures, that some texts ascribe to Jesus
|
||
Christ human, and others divine properties, and that to reconcile
|
||
these, we must suppose two minds, to which these properties may be
|
||
referred. In other words, for the purpose of reconciling certain
|
||
difficult passages, which a just criticism can in a great degree,
|
||
if not wholly, explain, we must invent an hypothesis vastly more
|
||
difficult, and involving gross absurdity. We are to find our way
|
||
out of a labyrinth, by a clue which conducts us into mazes
|
||
infinitely more inextricable.
|
||
Surely, if Jesus Christ felt that he consisted of two minds,
|
||
and that this was a leading feature of his religion, his
|
||
phraseology respecting himself would have been colored by this
|
||
peculiarity. The universal language of men is framed upon the idea,
|
||
that one person is one person, is one mind, and one soul; and when
|
||
the multitude heard this language from the lips of Jesus, they must
|
||
have taken it in its usual sense, and must have referred to a
|
||
single soul all which he spoke, unless expressly instructed to
|
||
interpret it differently. But where do we find this instruction?
|
||
Where do you meet, in the New Testament, the phraseology which
|
||
abounds in Trinitarian books, and which necessarily grows from the
|
||
doctrine of two natures in Jesus? Where does this divine teacher
|
||
say, "This I speak as God, and this as man; this is true only of my
|
||
human mind, this only of my divine"? Where do we find in the
|
||
Epistles a trace of this strange phraseology? Nowhere. It was not
|
||
needed in that day. It was demanded by the errors of a later age.
|
||
We believe, then, that Christ is one mind, one being, and, I
|
||
add, a being distinct from the one God. That Christ is not the one
|
||
God, not the same being with the Father, is a necessary inference
|
||
from our former head, in which we saw that the doctrine of three
|
||
persons in God is a fiction. But on so important a subject, I would
|
||
add a few remarks. We wish, that those from whom we differ, would
|
||
weigh one striking fact. Jesus, in his preaching, continually spoke
|
||
of God. The word was always in his mouth. We ask, does he, by this
|
||
word, ever mean himself? We say, never. On the contrary, he most
|
||
plainly distinguishes between God and himself, and so do his
|
||
disciples. How this is to be reconciled with the idea, that the
|
||
manifestation of Christ, as God, was a primary object of
|
||
Christianity, our adversaries must determine.
|
||
If we examine the passages in which Jesus is distinguished
|
||
from God, we shall see, that they not only speak of him as another
|
||
being, but seem to labor to express his inferiority. He is
|
||
continually spoken of as the Son of God, sent of God, receiving all
|
||
his powers from God, working miracles because God was with him,
|
||
judging justly because God taught him, having claims on our belief,
|
||
because he was anointed and sealed by God, and as able of himself
|
||
to do nothing. The New Testament is filled with this language. Now
|
||
we ask, what impression this language was fitted and intended to
|
||
make? Could any, who heard it, have imagined that Jesus was the
|
||
very God to whom he was so industriously declared to be inferior;
|
||
the very Being by whom he was sent, and from whom he professed to
|
||
have received his message and power? Let it here be remembered,
|
||
that the human birth, and bodily form, and humble circumstances,
|
||
and mortal sufferings of Jesus, must all have prepared men to
|
||
interpret, in the most unqualified manner, the language in which
|
||
his inferiority to God was declared. Why, then, was this language
|
||
used so continually, and without limitation, if Jesus were the
|
||
Supreme Deity, and if this truth were an essential part of his
|
||
religion? I repeat it, the human condition and sufferings of Christ
|
||
tended strongly to exclude from men's minds the idea of his proper
|
||
Godhead; and, of course, we should expect to find in the New
|
||
Testament perpetual care and effort to counteract this tendency, to
|
||
hold him forth as the same being with his Father, if this doctrine
|
||
were, as is pretended, the soul and centre of his religion. We
|
||
should expect to find the phraseology of Scripture cast into the
|
||
mould of this doctrine, to hear familiarly of God the Son, of our
|
||
Lord God Jesus, and to be told, that to us there is one God, even
|
||
Jesus. But, instead of this, the inferiority of Christ pervades the
|
||
New Testament. It is not only implied in the general phraseology,
|
||
but repeatedly and decidedly expressed, and unaccompanied with any
|
||
admonition to prevent its application to his whole nature. Could
|
||
it, then, have been the great design of the sacred writers to
|
||
exhibit Jesus as the Supreme God?
|
||
I am aware that these remarks will be met by two or three
|
||
texts, in which Christ is called God, and by a class of passages,
|
||
not very numerous, in which divine properties are said to be
|
||
ascribed to him. To these we offer one plain answer. We say, that
|
||
it is one of the most established and obvious principles of
|
||
criticism, that language is to be explained according to the known
|
||
properties of the subject to which it is applied. Every man knows,
|
||
that the same words convey very different ideas, when used in
|
||
relation to different beings. Thus, Solomon BUILT the temple in a
|
||
different manner from the architect whom he employed; and God
|
||
REPENTS differently from man. Now we maintain, that the known
|
||
properties and circumstances of Christ, his birth, sufferings, and
|
||
death, his constant habit of speaking of God as a distinct being
|
||
from himself, his praying to God, his ascribing to God all his
|
||
power and offices, these acknowledged properties of Christ, we say,
|
||
oblige us to interpret the comparatively few passages which are
|
||
thought to make him the Supreme God, in a manner consistent with
|
||
his distinct and inferior nature. It is our duty to explain such
|
||
texts by the rule which we apply to other texts, in which human
|
||
beings are called gods, and are said to be partakers of the divine
|
||
nature, to know and possess all things, and to be filled with all
|
||
God's fulness. These latter passages we do not hesitate to modify,
|
||
and restrain, and turn from the most obvious sense, because this
|
||
sense is opposed to the known properties of the beings to whom they
|
||
relate; and we maintain, that we adhere to the same principle, and
|
||
use no greater latitude, in explaining, as we do, the passages
|
||
which are thought to support the Godhead of Christ.
|
||
Trinitarians profess to derive some important advantages from
|
||
their mode of viewing Christ. It furnishes them,they tell us, with
|
||
an infinite atonement, for it shows them an infinite being
|
||
suffering for their sins. The confidence with which this fallacy is
|
||
repeated astonishes us. When pressed with the question, whether
|
||
they really believe, that the infinite and unchangeable God
|
||
suffered and died on the cross, they acknowledge that this is not
|
||
true, but that Christ's human mind alone sustained the pains of
|
||
death. How have we, then, an infinite sufferer? This language seems
|
||
to us an imposition on common minds, and very derogatory to God's
|
||
justice, as if this attribute could be satisfied by a sophism and
|
||
a fiction.
|
||
We are also told, that Christ is a more interesting object,
|
||
that his love and mercy are more felt, when he is viewed as the
|
||
Supreme God, who left his glory to take humanity and to suffer for
|
||
men. That Trinitarians are strongly moved by this representation,
|
||
we do not mean to deny; but we think their emotions altogether
|
||
founded on a misapprehension of their own doctrines. They talk of
|
||
the second person of the Trinity's leaving his glory and his
|
||
Father's bosom, to visit and save the world. But this second
|
||
person, being the unchangeable and infinite God, was evidently
|
||
incapable of parting with the least degree of his perfection and
|
||
felicity. At the moment of his taking flesh, he was as intimately
|
||
present with his Father as before, and equally with his Father
|
||
filled heaven, and earth, and immensity. This Trinitarians
|
||
acknowledge; and still they profess to be touched and overwhelmed
|
||
by the amazing humiliation of this immutable being! But not only
|
||
does their doctrine, when fully explained, reduce Christ's
|
||
humiliation to a fiction, it almost wholly destroys the impressions
|
||
with which his cross ought to be viewed. According to their
|
||
doctrine, Christ was comparatively no sufferer at all. It is true,
|
||
his human mind suffered; but this, they tell us, was an infinitely
|
||
small part of Jesus, bearing no more proportion to his whole
|
||
nature, than a single hair of our heads to the whole body, or than
|
||
a drop to the ocean. The divine mind of Christ, that which was most
|
||
properly himself, was infinitely happy, at the very moment of the
|
||
suffering of his humanity. Whilst hanging on the cross, he was the
|
||
happiest being in the universe, as happy as the infinite Father; so
|
||
that his pains, compared with his felicity, were nothing. This
|
||
Trinitarians do, and must, acknowledge. It follows necessarily from
|
||
the immutableness of the divine nature, which they ascribe to
|
||
Christ; so that their system, justly viewed, robs his death of
|
||
interest, weakens our sympathy with his sufferings, and is, of all
|
||
others, most unfavorable to a love of Christ, founded on a sense of
|
||
his sacrifices for mankind. We esteem our own views to be vastly
|
||
more affecting. It is our belief, that Christ's humiliation was
|
||
real and entire, that the whole Saviour, and not a part of him,
|
||
suffered, that his crucifixion was a scene of deep and unmixed
|
||
agony. As we stand round his cross, our minds are not distracted,
|
||
nor our sensibility weakened, by contemplating him as composed of
|
||
incongruous and infinitely differing minds, and as having a balance
|
||
of infinite felicity. We recognize in the dying Jesus but one mind.
|
||
This, we think, renders his sufferings, and his patience and love
|
||
in bearing them, incomparably more impressive and affecting than
|
||
the system we oppose.
|
||
3. Having thus given our belief on two great points, namely,
|
||
that there is one God, and that Jesus Christ is a being distinct
|
||
from, and inferior to, God, I now proceed to another point, on
|
||
which we lay still greater stress. We believe in the MORAL
|
||
PERFECTION OF GOD. We consider no part of theology so important as
|
||
that which treats of God's moral character; and we value our views
|
||
of Christianity chiefly as they assert his amiable and venerable
|
||
attributes.
|
||
It may be said, that, in regard to this subject, all
|
||
Christians agree, that all ascribe to the Supreme Being infinite
|
||
justice, goodness, and holiness. We reply, that it is very possible
|
||
to speak of God magnificently, and to think of him meanly; to apply
|
||
to his person high-sounding epithets, and to his government,
|
||
principles which make him odious. The Heathens called Jupiter the
|
||
greatest and the best; but his history was black with cruelty and
|
||
lust. We cannot judge of men's real ideas of God by their general
|
||
language, for in all ages they have hoped to soothe the Deity by
|
||
adulation. We must inquire into their particular views of his
|
||
purposes, of the principles of his administration, and of his
|
||
disposition towards his creatures.
|
||
We conceive that Christians have generally leaned towards a
|
||
very injurious view of the Supreme Being. They have too often felt,
|
||
as if he were raised, by his greatness and sovereignty, above the
|
||
principles of morality, above those eternal laws of equity and
|
||
rectitude, to which all other beings are subjected. We believe,
|
||
that in no being is the sense of right so strong, so omnipotent, as
|
||
in God. We believe that his almighty power is entirely submitted to
|
||
his perceptions of rectitude; and this is the ground of our piety.
|
||
It is not because he is our Creator merely, but because he created
|
||
us for good and holy purposes; it is not because his will is
|
||
irresistible, but because his will is the perfection of virtue,
|
||
that we pay him allegiance. We cannot bow before a being, however
|
||
great and powerful, who governs tyrannically. We respect nothing
|
||
but excellence, whether on earth or in heaven. We venerate not the
|
||
loftiness of God's throne, but the equity and goodness in which it
|
||
is established.
|
||
We believe that God is infinitely good, kind, benevolent, in
|
||
the proper sense of these words; good in disposition, as well as in
|
||
act; good, not to a few, but to all; good to every individual, as
|
||
well as to the general system.
|
||
We believe, too, that God is just; but we never forget, that
|
||
his justice is the justice of a good being, dwelling in the same
|
||
mind, and acting in harmony, with perfect benevolence. By this
|
||
attribute, we understand God's infinite regard to virtue or moral
|
||
worth, expressed in a moral government; that is, in giving
|
||
excellent and equitable laws, and in conferring such rewards, and
|
||
inflicting such punishments, as are best fitted to secure their
|
||
observance. God's justice has for its end the highest virtue of the
|
||
creation, and it punishes for this end alone, and thus it coincides
|
||
with benevolence; for virtue and happiness, though not the same,
|
||
are inseparably conjoined.
|
||
God's justice thus viewed, appears to us to be in perfect
|
||
harmony with his mercy. According to the prevalent systems of
|
||
theology, these attributes are so discordant and jarring, that to
|
||
reconcile them is the hardest task, and the most wonderful
|
||
achievement, of infinite wisdom. To us they seem to be intimate
|
||
friends, always at peace, breathing the same spirit, and seeking
|
||
the same end. By God's mercy, we understand not a blind instinctive
|
||
compassion, which forgives without reflection, and without regard
|
||
to the interests of virtue. This, we acknowledge, would be
|
||
incompatible with justice, and also with enlightened benevolence.
|
||
God's mercy, as we understand it, desires strongly the happiness of
|
||
the guilty, but only through their penitence. It has a regard to
|
||
character as truly as his justice. It defers punishment, and
|
||
suffers long, that the sinner may return to his duty, but leaves
|
||
the impenitent and unyielding, to the fearful retribution
|
||
threatened in God's Word.
|
||
To give our views of God in one word, we believe in his
|
||
Parental character. We ascribe to him, not only the name, but the
|
||
dispositions and principles of a father. We believe that he has a
|
||
father's concern for his creatures, a father's desire for their
|
||
improvement, a father's equity in proportioning his commands to
|
||
their powers, a father's joy in their progress, a father's
|
||
readiness to receive the penitent, and a father's justice for the
|
||
incorrigible. We look upon this world as a place of education, in
|
||
which he is training men by prosperity and adversity, by aids and
|
||
obstructions, by conflicts of reason and passion, by motives to
|
||
duty and temptations to sin, by a various discipline suited to free
|
||
and moral beings, for union with himself, and for a sublime and
|
||
ever-growing virtue in heaven.
|
||
Now, we object to the systems of religion, which prevail among
|
||
us, that they are adverse, in a greater or less degree, to these
|
||
purifying, comforting, and honorable views of God; that they take
|
||
from us our Father in heaven, and substitute for him a being, whom
|
||
we cannot love if we would, and whom we ought not to love if we
|
||
could. We object, particularly on this ground, to that system,
|
||
which arrogates to itself the name of Orthodoxy, and which is now
|
||
industriously propagated through our country. This system indeed
|
||
takes various shapes, but in all it casts dishonor on the Creator.
|
||
According to its old and genuine form, it teaches, that God brings
|
||
us into life wholly depraved, so that under the innocent features
|
||
of our childhood is hidden a nature averse to all good and propense
|
||
to all evil, a nature which exposes us to God's displeasure and
|
||
wrath, even before we have acquired power to understand our duties,
|
||
or to reflect upon our actions. According to a more modern
|
||
exposition, it teaches, that we came from the hands of our Maker
|
||
with such a constitution, and are placed under such influences and
|
||
circumstances, as to render certain and infallible the total
|
||
depravity of every human being, from the first moment of his moral
|
||
agency; and it also teaches, that the offence of the child, who
|
||
brings into life this ceaseless tendency to unmingled crime,
|
||
exposes him to the sentence of everlasting damnation. Now,
|
||
according to the plainest principles of morality, we maintain, that
|
||
a natural constitution of the mind, unfailingly disposing it to
|
||
evil and to evil alone, would absolve it from guilt; that to give
|
||
existence under this condition would argue unspeakable cruelty; and
|
||
that to punish the sin of this unhappily constituted child with
|
||
endless ruin, would be a wrong unparalleled by the most merciless
|
||
despotism.
|
||
This system also teaches, that God selects from this corrupt
|
||
mass a number to be saved, and plucks them, by a special influence,
|
||
from the common ruin; that the rest of mankind, though left without
|
||
that special grace which their conversion requires, are commanded
|
||
to repent, under penalty of aggravated woe; and that forgiveness is
|
||
promised them, on terms which their very constitution infallibly
|
||
disposes them to reject, and in rejecting which they awfully
|
||
enhance the punishments of hell. These proffers of forgiveness and
|
||
exhortations of amendment, to beings born under a blighting curse,
|
||
fill our minds with a horror which we want words to express.
|
||
That this religious system does not produce all the effects on
|
||
character, which might be anticipated, we most joyfully admit. It
|
||
is often, very often, counteracted by nature, conscience, common
|
||
sense, by the general strain of Scripture, by the mild example and
|
||
precepts of Christ, and by the many positive declarations of God's
|
||
universal kindness and perfect equity. But still we think that we
|
||
see its unhappy influence. It tends to discourage the timid, to
|
||
give excuses to the bad, to feed the vanity of the fanatical, and
|
||
to offer shelter to the bad feelings of the malignant. By shocking,
|
||
as it does, the fundamental principles of morality, and by
|
||
exhibiting a severe and partial Deity, it tends strongly to pervert
|
||
the moral faculty, to form a gloomy, forbidding, and servile
|
||
religion, and to lead men to substitute censoriousness, bitterness,
|
||
and persecution, for a tender and impartial charity. We think, too,
|
||
that this system, which begins with degrading human nature, may be
|
||
expected to end in pride; for pride grows out of a consciousness of
|
||
high distinctions, however obtained, and no distinction is so great
|
||
as that which is made between the elected and abandoned of God.
|
||
The false and dishonorable views of God, which have now been
|
||
stated, we feel ourselves bound to resist unceasingly. Other errors
|
||
we can pass over with comparative indifference. But we ask our
|
||
opponents to leave to us a GOD, worthy of our love and trust, in
|
||
whom our moral sentiments may delight, in whom our weaknesses and
|
||
sorrows may find refuge. We cling to the Divine perfections. We
|
||
meet them everywhere in creation, we read them in the Scriptures,
|
||
we see a lovely image of them in Jesus Christ; and gratitude, love,
|
||
and veneration call on us to assert them. Reproached, as we often
|
||
are, by men, it is our consolation and happiness, that one of our
|
||
chief offences is the zeal with which we vindicate the dishonored
|
||
goodness and rectitude of God.
|
||
4. Having thus spoken of the unity of God; of the unity of
|
||
Jesus, and his inferiority to God; and of the perfections of the
|
||
Divine character; I now proceed to give our views of the mediation
|
||
of Christ, and of the purposes of his mission. With regard to the
|
||
great object which Jesus came to accomplish, there seems to be no
|
||
possibility of mistake. We believe, that he was sent by the Father
|
||
to effect a moral, or spiritual deliverance of mankind; that is, to
|
||
rescue men from sin and its consequences, and to bring them to a
|
||
state of everlasting purity and happiness. We believe, too, that he
|
||
accomplishes this sublime purpose by a variety of methods; by his
|
||
instructions respecting God's unity, parental character, and moral
|
||
government, which are admirably fitted to reclaim the world from
|
||
idolatry and impiety, to the knowledge, love, and obedience of the
|
||
Creator; by his promises of pardon to the penitent, and of divine
|
||
assistance to those who labor for progress in moral excellence; by
|
||
the light which he has thrown on the path of duty; by his own
|
||
spotless example, in which the loveliness and sublimity of virtue
|
||
shine forth to warm and quicken, as well as guide us to perfection;
|
||
by his threatenings against incorrigible guilt; by his glorious
|
||
discoveries of immortality; by his sufferings and death; by that
|
||
signal event, the resurrection, which powerfully bore witness to
|
||
his divine mission, and brought down to men's senses a future life;
|
||
by his continual intercession, which obtains for us spiritual aid
|
||
and blessings; and by the power with which he is invested of
|
||
raising the dead, judging the world, and conferring the everlasting
|
||
rewards promised to the faithful.
|
||
We have no desire to conceal the fact, that a difference of
|
||
opinion exists among us, in regard to an interesting part of
|
||
Christ's mediation; I mean, in regard to the precise influence of
|
||
his death on our forgiveness. Many suppose, that this event
|
||
contributes to our pardon, as it was a principal means of
|
||
confirming his religion, and of giving it a power over the mind; in
|
||
other words, that it procures forgiveness by leading to that
|
||
repentance and virtue, which is the great and only condition on
|
||
which forgiveness is bestowed. Many of us are dissatisfied with
|
||
this explanation, and think that the Scriptures ascribe the
|
||
remission of sins to Christ's death, with an emphasis so peculiar,
|
||
that we ought to consider this event as having a special influence
|
||
in removing punishment, though the Scriptures may not reveal the
|
||
way in which it contributes to this end.
|
||
Whilst, however, we differ in explaining the connexion between
|
||
Christ's death and human forgiveness, a connexion which we all
|
||
gratefully acknowledge, we agree in rejecting many sentiments which
|
||
prevail in regard to his mediation. The idea, which is conveyed to
|
||
common minds by the popular system, that Christ's death has an
|
||
influence in making God placable, or merciful, in awakening his
|
||
kindness towards men, we reject with strong disapprobation. We are
|
||
happy to find, that this very dishonorable notion is disowned by
|
||
intelligent Christians of that class from which we differ. We
|
||
recollect, however, that, not long ago, it was common to hear of
|
||
Christ, as having died to appease God's wrath, and to pay the debt
|
||
of sinners to his inflexible justice; and we have a strong
|
||
persuasion, that the language of popular religious books, and the
|
||
common mode of stating the doctrine of Christ's mediation, still
|
||
communicate very degrading views of God's character. They give to
|
||
multitudes the impression, that the death of Jesus produces a
|
||
change in the mind of God towards man, and that in this its
|
||
efficacy chiefly consists. No error seems to us more pernicious. We
|
||
can endure no shade over the pure goodness of God. We earnestly
|
||
maintain, that Jesus, instead of calling forth, in any way or
|
||
degree, the mercy of the Father, was sent by that mercy, to be our
|
||
Saviour; that he is nothing to the human race, but what he is by
|
||
God's appointment; that he communicates nothing but what God
|
||
empowers him to bestow; that our Father in heaven is originally,
|
||
essentially, and eternally placable, and disposed to forgive; and
|
||
that his unborrowed, underived, and unchangeable love is the only
|
||
fountain of what flows to us through his Son. We conceive, that
|
||
Jesus is dishonored, not glorified, by ascribing to him an
|
||
influence, which clouds the splendor of Divine benevolence.
|
||
We farther agree in rejecting, as unscriptural and absurd, the
|
||
explanation given by the popular system, of the manner in which
|
||
Christ's death procures forgiveness for men. This system used to
|
||
teach as its fundamental principle, that man, having sinned against
|
||
an infinite Being, has contracted infinite guilt, and is
|
||
consequently exposed to an infinite penalty. We believe, however,
|
||
that this reasoning, if reasoning it may be called, which overlooks
|
||
the obvious maxim, that the guilt of a being must be proportioned
|
||
to his nature and powers, has fallen into disuse. Still the system
|
||
teaches, that sin, of whatever degree, exposes to endless
|
||
punishment, and that the whole human race, being infallibly
|
||
involved by their nature in sin, owe this awful penalty to the
|
||
justice of their Creator. It teaches, that this penalty cannot be
|
||
remitted, in consistency with the honor of the divine law, unless
|
||
a substitute be found to endure it or to suffer an equivalent. It
|
||
also teaches, that, from the nature of the case, no substitute is
|
||
adequate to this work, save the infinite God himself; and
|
||
accordingly, God, in his second person, took on him human nature,
|
||
that he might pay to his own justice the debt of punishment
|
||
incurred by men, and might thus reconcile forgiveness with the
|
||
claims and threatenings of his law. Such is the prevalent system.
|
||
Now, to us, this doctrine seems to carry on its front strong marks
|
||
of absurdity; and we maintain that Christianity ought not to be
|
||
encumbered with it, unless it be laid down in the New Testament
|
||
fully and expressly. We ask our adversaries, then, to point to some
|
||
plain passages where it is taught. We ask for one text, in which we
|
||
are told, that God took human nature that he might make an infinite
|
||
satisfaction to his own justice; for one text, which tells us, that
|
||
human guilt requires an infinite substitute; that Christ's
|
||
sufferings owe their efficacy to their being borne by an infinite
|
||
being; or that his divine nature gives infinite value to the
|
||
sufferings of the human. Not ONE WORD of this description can we
|
||
find in the Scriptures; not a text, which even hints at these
|
||
strange doctrines. They are altogether, we believe, the fictions of
|
||
theologians. Christianity is in no degree responsible for them. We
|
||
are astonished at their prevalence. What can be plainer, than that
|
||
God cannot, in any sense, be a sufferer, or bear a penalty in the
|
||
room of his creatures? How dishonorable to him is the supposition,
|
||
that his justice is now so severe, as to exact infinite punishment
|
||
for the sins of frail and feeble men, and now so easy and yielding,
|
||
as to accept the limited pains of Christ's human soul, as a full
|
||
equivalent for the endless woes due from the world? How plain is it
|
||
also, according to this doctrine, that God, instead of being
|
||
plenteous in forgiveness, never forgives; for it seems absurd to
|
||
speak of men as forgiven, when their whole punishment, or an
|
||
equivalent to it, is borne by a substitute? A scheme more fitted to
|
||
obscure the brightness of Christianity and the mercy of God, or
|
||
less suited to give comfort to a guilty and troubled mind, could
|
||
not, we think, be easily framed.
|
||
We believe, too, that this system is unfavorable to the
|
||
character. It naturally leads men to think, that Christ came to
|
||
change God's mind rather than their own; that the highest object of
|
||
his mission was to avert punishment, rather than to communicate
|
||
holiness; and that a large part of religion consists in disparaging
|
||
good works and human virtue, for the purpose of magnifying the
|
||
value of Christ's vicarious sufferings. In this way, a sense of the
|
||
infinite importance and indispensable necessity of personal
|
||
improvement is weakened, and high-sounding praises of Christ's
|
||
cross seem often to be substituted for obedience to his precepts.
|
||
For ourselves, we have not so learned Jesus. Whilst we gratefully
|
||
acknowledge, that he came to rescue us from punishment, we believe,
|
||
that he was sent on a still nobler errand, namely, to deliver us
|
||
from sin itself, and to form us to a sublime and heavenly virtue.
|
||
We regard him as a Saviour, chiefly as he is the light, physician,
|
||
and guide of the dark, diseased, and wandering mind. No influence
|
||
in the universe seems to us so glorious, as that over the
|
||
character; and no redemption so worthy of thankfulness, as the
|
||
restoration of the soul to purity. Without this, pardon, were it
|
||
possible, would be of little value. Why pluck the sinner from hell,
|
||
if a hell be left to burn in his own breast? Why raise him to
|
||
heaven, if he remain a stranger to its sanctity and love? With
|
||
these impressions, we are accustomed to value the Gospel chiefly as
|
||
it abounds in effectual aids, motives, excitements to a generous
|
||
and divine virtue. In this virtue, as in a common centre, we see
|
||
all its doctrines, precepts, promises meet; and we believe, that
|
||
faith in this religion is of no worth, and contributes nothing to
|
||
salvation, any farther than as it uses these doctrines, precepts,
|
||
promises, and the whole life, character, sufferings, and triumphs
|
||
of Jesus, as the means of purifying the mind, of changing it into
|
||
the likeness of his celestial excellence.
|
||
5. Having thus stated our views of the highest object of
|
||
Christ's mission, that it is the recovery of men to virtue, or
|
||
holiness, I shall now, in the last place, give our views of the
|
||
nature of Christian virtue, or true holiness. We believe that all
|
||
virtue has its foundation in the moral nature of man, that is, in
|
||
conscience, or his sense of duty, and in the power of forming his
|
||
temper and life according to conscience. We believe that these
|
||
moral faculties are the grounds of responsibility, and the highest
|
||
distinctions of human nature, and that no act is praiseworthy, any
|
||
farther than it springs from their exertion. We believe, that no
|
||
dispositions infused into us without our own moral activity, are of
|
||
the nature of virtue, and therefore, we reject the doctrine of
|
||
irresistible divine influence on the human mind, moulding it into
|
||
goodness, as marble is hewn into a statue. Such goodness, if this
|
||
word may be used, would not be the object of moral approbation, any
|
||
more than the instinctive affections of inferior animals, or the
|
||
constitutional amiableness of human beings.
|
||
By these remarks, we do not mean to deny the importance of
|
||
God's aid or Spirit; but by his Spirit, we mean a moral,
|
||
illuminating, and persuasive influence, not physical, not
|
||
compulsory, not involving a necessity of virtue. We object,
|
||
strongly, to the idea of many Christians respecting man's impotence
|
||
and God's irresistible agency on the heart, believing that they
|
||
subvert our responsibility and the laws of our moral nature, that
|
||
they make men machines, that they cast on God the blame of all evil
|
||
deeds, that they discourage good minds, and inflate the fanatical
|
||
with wild conceits of immediate and sensible inspiration.
|
||
Among the virtues, we give the first place to the love of God.
|
||
We believe, that this principle is the true end and happiness of
|
||
our being, that we were made for union with our Creator, that his
|
||
infinite perfection is the only sufficient object and true
|
||
resting-place for the insatiable desires and unlimited capacities
|
||
of the human mind, and that, without him, our noblest sentiments,
|
||
admiration, veneration, hope, and love, would wither and decay. We
|
||
believe, too, that the love of God is not only essential to
|
||
happiness, but to the strength and perfection of all the virtues;
|
||
that conscience, without the sanction of God's authority and
|
||
retributive justice, would be a weak director; that benevolence,
|
||
unless nourished by communion with his goodness, and encouraged by
|
||
his smile, could not thrive amidst the selfishness and
|
||
thanklessness of the world; and that self-government, without a
|
||
sense of the divine inspection, would hardly extend beyond an
|
||
outward and partial purity. God, as he is essentially goodness,
|
||
holiness, justice, and virtue, so he is the life, motive, and
|
||
sustainer of virtue in the human soul.
|
||
But, whilst we earnestly inculcate the love of God, we believe
|
||
that great care is necessary to distinguish it from counterfeits.
|
||
We think that much which is called piety is worthless. Many have
|
||
fallen into the error, that there can be no excess in feelings
|
||
which have God for their object; and, distrusting as coldness that
|
||
self-possession, without which virtue and devotion lose all their
|
||
dignity, they have abandoned themselves to extravagances, which
|
||
have brought contempt on piety. Most certainly, if the love of God
|
||
be that which often bears its name, the less we have of it the
|
||
better. If religion be the shipwreck of understanding, we cannot
|
||
keep too far from it. On this subject, we always speak plainly. We
|
||
cannot sacrifice our reason to the reputation of zeal. We owe it to
|
||
truth and religion to maintain, that fanaticism, partial insanity,
|
||
sudden impressions, and ungovernable transports, are anything
|
||
rather than piety.
|
||
We conceive, that the true love of God is a moral sentiment,
|
||
founded on a clear perception, and consisting in a high esteem and
|
||
veneration, of his moral perfections. Thus, it perfectly coincides,
|
||
and is in fact the same thing, with the love of virtue, rectitude,
|
||
and goodness. You will easily judge, then, what we esteem the
|
||
surest and only decisive signs of piety. We lay no stress on strong
|
||
excitements. We esteem him, and him only a pious man, who
|
||
practically conforms to God's moral perfections and government; who
|
||
shows his delight in God's benevolence, by loving and serving his
|
||
neighbour; his delight in God's justice, by being resolutely
|
||
upright; his sense of God's purity, by regulating his thoughts,
|
||
imagination, and desires; and whose conversation, business, and
|
||
domestic life are swayed by a regard to God's presence and
|
||
authority. In all things else men may deceive themselves.
|
||
Disordered nerves may give them strange sights, and sounds, and
|
||
impressions. Texts of Scripture may come to them as from Heaven.
|
||
Their whole souls may be moved, and their confidence in God's favor
|
||
be undoubting. But in all this there is no religion. The question
|
||
is, Do they love God's commands, in which his character is fully
|
||
expressed, and give up to these their habits and passions? Without
|
||
this, ecstasy is a mockery. One surrender of desire to God's will,
|
||
is worth a thousand transports. We do not judge of the bent of
|
||
men's minds by their raptures, any more than we judge of the
|
||
natural direction of a tree during a storm. We rather suspect loud
|
||
profession, for we have observed, that deep feeling is generally
|
||
noiseless, and least seeks display.
|
||
We would not, by these remarks, be understood as wishing to
|
||
exclude from religion warmth, and even transport. We honor, and
|
||
highly value, true religious sensibility. We believe, that
|
||
Christianity is intended to act powerfully on our whole nature, on
|
||
the heart as well as the understanding and the conscience. We
|
||
conceive of heaven as a state where the love of God will be exalted
|
||
into an unbounded fervor and joy; and we desire, in our pilgrimage
|
||
here, to drink into the spirit of that better world. But we think,
|
||
that religious warmth is only to be valued, when it springs
|
||
naturally from an improved character, when it comes unforced, when
|
||
it is the recompense of obedience, when it is the warmth of a mind
|
||
which understands God by being like him, and when, instead of
|
||
disordering, it exalts the understanding, invigorates conscience,
|
||
gives a pleasure to common duties, and is seen to exist in
|
||
connexion with cheerfulness, judiciousness, and a reasonable frame
|
||
of mind. When we observe a fervor, called religious, in men whose
|
||
general character expresses little refinement and elevation, and
|
||
whose piety seems at war with reason, we pay it little respect. We
|
||
honor religion too much to give its sacred name to a feverish,
|
||
forced, fluctuating zeal, which has little power over the life.
|
||
Another important branch of virtue, we believe to be love to
|
||
Christ. The greatness of the work of Jesus, the spirit with which
|
||
he executed it, and the sufferings which he bore for our salvation,
|
||
we feel to be strong claims on our gratitude and veneration. We see
|
||
in nature no beauty to be compared with the loveliness of his
|
||
character, nor do we find on earth a benefactor to whom we owe an
|
||
equal debt. We read his history with delight, and learn from it the
|
||
perfection of our nature. We are particularly touched by his death,
|
||
which was endured for our redemption, and by that strength of
|
||
charity which triumphed over his pains. His resurrection is the
|
||
foundation of our hope of immortality. His intercession gives us
|
||
boldness to draw nigh to the throne of grace, and we look up to
|
||
heaven with new desire, when we think, that, if we follow him here,
|
||
we shall there see his benignant countenance, and enjoy his
|
||
friendship for ever.
|
||
I need not express to you our views on the subject of the
|
||
benevolent virtues. We attach such importance to these that we are
|
||
sometimes reproached with exalting them above piety. We regard the
|
||
spirit of love, charity, meekness, forgiveness, liberality, and
|
||
beneficence, as the badge and distinction of Christians, as the
|
||
brightest image we can bear of God, as the best proof of piety. On
|
||
this subject, I need not, and cannot enlarge; but there is one
|
||
branch of benevolence which I ought not to pass over in silence,
|
||
because we think that we conceive of it more highly and justly than
|
||
many of our brethren. I refer to the duty of candor, charitable
|
||
judgment, especially towards those who differ in religious opinion.
|
||
We think, that in nothing have Christians so widely departed from
|
||
their religion, as in this particular. We read with astonishment
|
||
and horror, the history of the church; and sometimes when we look
|
||
back on the fires of persecution, and on the zeal of Christians, in
|
||
building up walls of separation, and in giving up one another to
|
||
perdition, we feel as if we were reading the records of an
|
||
infernal, rather than a heavenly kingdom. An enemy to every
|
||
religion, if asked to describe a Christian, would, with some show
|
||
of reason, depict him as an idolater of his own distinguishing
|
||
opinions, covered with badges of party, shutting his eyes on the
|
||
virtues, and his ears on the arguments, of his opponents,
|
||
arrogating all excellence to his own sect and all saving power to
|
||
his own creed, sheltering under the name of pious zeal the love of
|
||
domination, the conceit of infallibility, and the spirit of
|
||
intolerance, and trampling on men's rights under the pretence of
|
||
saving their souls.
|
||
We can hardly conceive of a plainer obligation on beings of
|
||
our frail and fallible nature, who are instructed in the duty of
|
||
candid judgment, than to abstain from condemning men of apparent
|
||
conscientiousness and sincerity, who are chargeable with no crime
|
||
but that of differing from us in the interpretation of the
|
||
Scriptures, and differing, too, on topics of great and acknowledged
|
||
obscurity. We are astonished at the hardihood of those, who, with
|
||
Christ's warnings sounding in their ears, take on them the
|
||
responsibility of making creeds for his church, and cast out
|
||
professors of virtuous lives for imagined errors, for the guilt of
|
||
thinking for themselves. We know that zeal for truth is the cover
|
||
for this usurpation of Christ's prerogative; but we think that zeal
|
||
for truth, as it is called, is very suspicious, except in men,
|
||
whose capacities and advantages, whose patient deliberation, and
|
||
whose improvements in humility, mildness, and candor, give them a
|
||
right to hope that their views are more just than those of their
|
||
neighbours. Much of what passes for a zeal for truth, we look upon
|
||
with little respect, for it often appears to thrive most
|
||
luxuriantly where other virtues shoot up thinly and feebly; and we
|
||
have no gratitude for those reformers, who would force upon us a
|
||
doctrine which has not sweetened their own tempers, or made them
|
||
better men than their neighbours.
|
||
We are accustomed to think much of the difficulties attending
|
||
religious inquiries; difficulties springing from the slow
|
||
development of our minds, from the power of early impressions, from
|
||
the state of society, from human authority, from the general
|
||
neglect of the reasoning powers, from the want of just principles
|
||
of criticism and of important helps in interpreting Scripture, and
|
||
from various other causes. We find, that on no subject have men,
|
||
and even good men, ingrafted so many strange conceits, wild
|
||
theories, and fictions of fancy, as on religion ; and remembering,
|
||
as we do, that we ourselves are sharers of the common frailty, we
|
||
dare not assume infallibility in the treatment of our
|
||
fellow-Christians, or encourage in common Christians, who have
|
||
little time for investigation, the habit of denouncing and
|
||
condemning other denominations, perhaps more enlightened and
|
||
virtuous than their own. Charity, forbearance, a delight in the
|
||
virtues of different sects, a backwardness to censure and condemn,
|
||
these are virtues, which, however poorly practised by us, we admire
|
||
and recommend; and we would rather join ourselves to the church in
|
||
which they abound, than to any other communion, however elated with
|
||
the belief of its own orthodoxy, however strict in guarding its
|
||
creed, however burning with zeal against imagined error.
|
||
I have thus given the distinguishing views of those Christians
|
||
in whose names I have spoken. We have embraced this system, not
|
||
hastily or lightly, but after much deliberation; and we hold it
|
||
fast, not merely because we believe it to be true, but because we
|
||
regard it as purifying truth, as a doctrine according to godliness,
|
||
as able to "work mightily" and to "bring forth fruit" in them who
|
||
believe. That we wish to spread it, we have no desire to conceal;
|
||
but we think, that we wish its diffusion, because we regard it as
|
||
more friendly to practical piety and pure morals than the opposite
|
||
doctrines, because it gives clearer and nobler views of duty, and
|
||
stronger motives to its performance, because it recommends religion
|
||
at once to the understanding and the heart, because it asserts the
|
||
lovely and venerable attributes of God, because it tends to restore
|
||
the benevolent spirit of Jesus to his divided and afflicted church,
|
||
and because it cuts off every hope of God's favor, except that
|
||
which springs from practical conformity to the life and precepts of
|
||
Christ. We see nothing in our views to give offence, save their
|
||
purity, and it is their purity, which makes us seek and hope their
|
||
extension through the world.
|
||
|
||
My friend and brother; -- You are this day to take upon you
|
||
important duties; to be clothed with an office, which the Son of
|
||
God did not disdain; to devote yourself to that religion, which the
|
||
most hallowed lips have preached, and the most precious blood
|
||
sealed. We trust that you will bring to this work a willing mind,
|
||
a firm purpose, a martyr's spirit, a readiness to toil and suffer
|
||
for the truth, a devotion of your best powers to the interests of
|
||
piety and virtue. I have spoken of the doctrines which you will
|
||
probably preach; but I do not mean, that you are to give yourself
|
||
to controversy. You will remember, that good practice is the end of
|
||
preaching, and will labor to make your people holy livers, rather
|
||
than skilful disputants. Be careful, lest the desire of defending
|
||
what you deem truth, and of repelling reproach and
|
||
misrepresentation, turn you aside from your great business, which
|
||
is to fix in men's minds a living conviction of the obligation,
|
||
sublimity, and happiness of Christian virtue. The best way to
|
||
vindicate your sentiments, is to show, in your preaching and life,
|
||
their intimate connexion with Christian morals, with a high and
|
||
delicate sense of duty, with candor towards your opposers, with
|
||
inflexible integrity, and with an habitual reverence for God. If
|
||
any light can pierce and scatter the clouds of prejudice, it is
|
||
that of a pure example. My brother, may your life preach more
|
||
loudly than your lips. Be to this people a pattern of all good
|
||
works, and may your instructions derive authority from a
|
||
well-grounded belief in your hearers, that you speak from the
|
||
heart, that you preach from experience, that the truth which you
|
||
dispense has wrought powerfully in your own heart, that God, and
|
||
Jesus, and heaven, are not merely words on your lips, but most
|
||
affecting realities to your mind, and springs of hope and
|
||
consolation, and strength, in all your trials. Thus laboring, may
|
||
you reap abundantly, and have a testimony of your faithfulness, not
|
||
only in your own conscience, but in the esteem, love, virtues, and
|
||
improvements of your people.
|
||
To all who hear me, I would say, with the Apostle, Prove all
|
||
things, hold fast that which is good. Do not, brethren, shrink from
|
||
the duty of searching God's Word for yourselves, through fear of
|
||
human censure and denunciation. Do not think, that you may
|
||
innocently follow the opinions which prevail around you, without
|
||
investigation, on the ground, that Christianity is now so purified
|
||
from errors, as to need no laborious research. There is much reason
|
||
to believe, that Christianity is at this moment dishonored by gross
|
||
and cherished corruptions. If you remember the darkness which hung
|
||
over the Gospel for ages; if you consider the impure union, which
|
||
still subsists in almost every Christian country, between the
|
||
church and state, and which enlists men's selfishness and ambition
|
||
on the side of established error; if you recollect in what degree
|
||
the spirit of intolerance has checked free inquiry, not only
|
||
before, but since the Reformation; you will see that Christianity
|
||
cannot have freed itself from all the human inventions, which
|
||
disfigured it under the Papal tyranny. No. Much stubble is yet to
|
||
be burned; much rubbish to be removed; many gaudy decorations,
|
||
which a false taste has hung around Christianity, must be swept
|
||
away; and the earth-born fogs, which have long shrouded it, must be
|
||
scattered, before this divine fabric will rise before us in its
|
||
native and awful majesty, in its harmonious proportions, in its
|
||
mild and celestial splendors This glorious reformation in the
|
||
church, we hope, under God's blessing, from the progress of the
|
||
human intellect, from the moral progress of society, from the
|
||
consequent decline of prejudice and bigotry, and, though last not
|
||
least, from the subversion of human authority in matters of
|
||
religion, from the fall of those hierarchies, and other human
|
||
institutions, by which the minds of individuals are oppressed under
|
||
the weight of numbers, and a Papal dominion is perpetuated in the
|
||
Protestant church. Our earnest prayer to God is, that he will
|
||
overturn, and overturn, and overturn the strong-holds of spiritual
|
||
usurpation, until HE shall come, whose right it is to rule the
|
||
minds of men; that the conspiracy of ages against the liberty of
|
||
Christians may be brought to an end; that the servile assent, so
|
||
long yielded to human creeds, may give place to honest and devout
|
||
inquiry into the Scriptures; and that Christianity, thus purified
|
||
from error, may put forth its almighty energy, and prove itself, by
|
||
its ennobling influence on the mind, to be indeed "the power of God
|
||
unto salvation."
|